Mar 19

My Belated SxSW “What I Learned” Post

Color me a slacker. There are a million SxSW wrap-up posts that will get archived way ahead of mine. I figure I should document this somehow.

What did I learn at SxSW Interactive? Although I saw some interesting speeches, particularly from Frank Warren and Charlene Li, what struck me most was being able to meet the people I see online. Technology is amazing. It connects people. But if you sit behind your computer all day, you will not understand the subtle nuances to human interaction that you understand by meeting and interacting with people at a face-to-face level. That is what South by Southwest Interactive offered me.

At one point, I ate dinner with Dave and Erik from Nashville, Cian and his girlfriend (argh, name escapes me but she was a jeans designer) from London, and Graham from New York. It was a great time sharing with people who appreciate technology but use it to reinforce connections made in beyond a computer screen. We did not know each other before SxSW, and yet our use of Twitter, the internet, and a bunch of good jokes ensured we always had something to talk about.

If anything, it taught me that we have a long way to go in this world if we want to truly use social media effectively. At this point, we are a bunch of early adopters communicating with other early adopters. We are the elite. It is good to connect with early adopters to build and exchange ideas. As social media becomes easier to use and more accessible, we will see more “non-techie” people contributing their ideas to our lives with ease just by using social media tools. What tools will we use ten years from to ensure that people from all circles can communicate effectively? We are already seeing every social media site seeking to be the de facto standard social media site in its niche. How do these varying standards create social cliques on the web? How do these cliques raise the level of our collective knowledge by the forces of collaboration, and how do they take away from it by pigeon holing us into one group?

Five out of six people at that table use Twitter. Would I keep up with these people as easily if they only sent updates via MySpace? Probably not. They are thousands of miles away and communicating with them quickly would require me to login regular to a site I do not frequent often. Will we all be on Twitter in ten years? I have no idea. Did I have fun and do I think they are worth following? Yes I do.

Apparently the fortune cookie was right. We live in very interesting times.

Mar 10

Frank Warren SxSW Keynote Leaves Me in Tears…and On Camera (crap)

So I cried in front of a thousand people at Frank Warren’s keynote at SxSW. I hate crying in public but inevitably do it. I was feeling the love in the room and felt I could make something happen at that time.  My sister is very ill and it just doesn’t feel good when you are at a social media/technology conference and you are related to a blogger who should be there but seriously might die because people don’t know about host vs. graft disease. So I felt compelled to bring her message to this audience.

If you want to show a little comment love to someone seriously in need of it, please go to www.debutaunt.com.

Mar 09

Kicking It at BarCamp Austin III with Three Burmese Refugees, a Blue-Haired Dude, and a Lawyer

BarCamp Austin III effing rocked.

Not only was I accompanied by the most diverse entourage ever, I managed to:

So how did I score such an amazingly cool entourage? I met Erik, a very cool blue-haired postgres guy from Emma Email Marketing through Nuclear Taco chef Decibel. I met Elaine through the Austin Christmas Bureau and helped her create (albeit poorly) a presentation for her speech “Connecting the Disconnected: Using Your Sweet Social Media Skillz to Help Free Burma”. We are trying to get people to sign the petition to end oppression in Burma as well as get computers for refugees here in Austin, so if you have any lying around, let me know and I will inform you of a meetup place to deliver them.

If you want to see more, check out the Flickr pool and the footage on Viewzi. Much thanks to Whurley, Richard, and the folks at That Other Paper for putting together such a fun event.

Mar 02

Michelle Almost Turns into Pile of Goo in Front of Computer

I want to plan to see nothing but the best SxSW Interactive speeches available since I am taking time off for it. Unfortunately, the SxSW scheduling page only allows me to see the topic of a speech by a particular time period. I cannot see what speaker is speaking at what time, so it takes some work to create the best route of attack possible. I’m excited about going but I’ve been looking at this stuff for much longer than I’d like.

My advice to SxSW speakers? Make sure you come up with a title that blows all other titles out of the conference. Make it the Hollywood movie poster for your speech. Try referring to massive explosions, torid love affairs, or Denzel Washington. I mean really, who doesn’t like Denzel? You’d fill up the room in no time.

I have to clean my house and get away from the computer before my eyes glaze over.