SXSW: The Beginning

by Francine on March 12, 2010

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I walked over to the Austin Convention Center and got my SXSW badge this morning, at the crack of dawn for geeks (9:30 AM). Walking through the Convention Center, it was easy to see that some things had changed.

1)The food has moved to a much more prominent place. Right at the northwest entrance, there’s a giant new food court with Starbucks and barbecue. I gather we are never supposed to leave the building now.
2)The registration has moved downstairs to Exhibit Hall 3 on the first floor. When I was there, the line was nil, and it took me no time to pick up my badge. Yesterday, however, I saw a tweet from Cathy Brooks saying she had been in the line for 30 minutes and it was slow, so my line jury is still out. If you get up early in a geek crowd, there will never be a line, so my own experience was not a test.
3)Glancing over the schedule, I didn’t see much I JUST HAD to attend. Don’t know if that’s my third year fatigue, or my immersion in social media all year long.  This hear I may sneak in and see films.
4)On the plus side, everything I listen to as a podcast is live-streaming from SXSW this year, so I will go see TWIST in person, and ditto TWIG. Leo la Porte is on my very short list of people to meet in person here, and he’s broadcasting out of Michael Sean Wright’s studio, so I will stalk him there.  I’m going to be on one of the shows that’s streaming out of the studio anyway — on Saturday, right after Robert Scoble. He’s a cinch to follow, so I don’t expect to be any less than enthralling.
Other than that, it’s “party on” until either my liver or my back give out. If you see someone lying on the floor of the Convention Center in plow pose , it’s more than likely to be yours truly.

Posted via email from Not Really Stealthmode

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We have all been talking about our issues with Google Buzz.  In theory, having your conversations aggregated in your email should be a huge convenience. But from the moment Buzz appeared in our inboxes, it was greeted as either a savior or a marauder. And a week later, even the people who had thought "savior," had gone to the dark side. In fact Dave Winer turned it off after only a few hours. Robert Scoble, however, keeps trying to use it, as does Thomas Hawk. Thomas, who is a brilliant digital photographer, thinks it's a great place to display photos, and for him, it seems to be. He puts some photos up, they are awesome, and one or two people say so.

 Scoble, however, is less fortunate in his use of Buzz. He is the original firehose. This weekend he started a Buzz asking his readers which of the location-based services they preferred. I suspect that was his swan song with the tool, because I could see he was determined to answer almost every commenter. About 60 comments in, I registered my own opinion. The next day, I returned to Buzz to see if he had responded to me.

In all fairness to him, he doesn't answer everything I write to him, even though we're friends. Sometimes when I comment on his blog, it's just my way of saying "hi, buddy, long time no see." But when I went back to the original Buzz, there were over two hundred comments, and I couldn't even find where I had weighed in. Yes, some of the comments had been collapsed, but still…I never found my original comment.

Conclusions:

Buzz is not good for conversations. Unlike Friendfeed,  when it was used by people like Steve Gillmor and Leo laPorte for chatrooms during their shows, it doesn't perform well in real time, and if you have a long conversation with many people in it, the conversation becomes more effort to follow than it's worth.

There's too much spam, or too many voices weighing in just to hear themselves.

Rooms won't help that much, because unless the rooms are semi-private, we will be having conversations with the wrong people sometimes.

I only want to have conversations (attention gestures) with two kinds of people: those I already know and respect (social graph), and those I want to know and respect (discovery). The rest, please, should be silence, not Buzz. 

Now, somebody solve that problem for me in the real time stream.

Posted via email from Not Really Stealthmode

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Real Estate Investors Can and Should Invest in Startups

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Paypal, this means you and the ridiculous customer service survey you sent me this morning.
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I'm in the process of judging the First Annual Hive Awards, to be presented on March 12 at SXSWi , which honor the unsung heroes behind the great products we're all using on the web. It's an awards program for the people who make the apps work: make them do what the marketing department says they do.

The [...]

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Meet Metro Phoenix (Again): Now Opportunity Oasis

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Every time the economy goes bad, Phoenix does a re-brand.  It makes up a new story about itself, and tries to sell that story to the masses.  We’ve gone from trying to be the “West’s Most Western Town,” to being the “Solar Oasis,” to being “Copper Square,” to being whatever the latest branding agency thinks [...]

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Bloggers Know Joe Stack is America

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The day an unbalanced, disgruntled Texan named Joe Stack flew a small plane into the IRS offices in Austin, I wrote an immediate blog post about it. As always, I wrote it to collate and express my own reactions, which were surprisingly strong. Only when I finished the post did I look back on it [...]

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Aurora Loan Services Saga, Part 2

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After my blog post on Huffpo about Aurora Loan Services, a friend of mine suggested I try to find someone from the company on LinkedIn, and I did. I found the COO, who referrred me to the VP of Quality, and within 48 hours I was in a trial modification program, supposedly 2% for 30 [...]

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