Posts Tagged ‘PCPGH4’

13
Oct

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   Posted by: Dawn    in New Media, PCPGH4, PGH Podcamp & Bloggers, Thoughts

Podcamp Pittsburgh 4 was this weekend. 

As you can tell from my previous post, I was excited to go.  Thrilled, in fact.  But by now, you also know that I did not, in fact, get to go back to Pittsburgh for this year’s sold out PCPGH4.  Without going in to the gory details, let’s just say that digestive distress in cats is no joking matter, and it’s one hell of an expensive problem to have. Couple that with the fact that symptoms usually show up too late for any intervention and the need to visit Vet Emergency Hospitals, and you have a very hysterical Dawn worried about her cat and graduate school companion dying because they wanted to hospitalize him for $2500.  At least.  Long story short, we took him home, and complied with the required monitoring of him for 48 hours, and made him as comfortable as possible.  Hell, Jack even went out and bought him a water fountain in the hopes that it would make him feel better and help his water consumption.  ~*sniffle*~

So yeah.  No Podcamp for us.  I’m sad.  I miss YinzTeam as it is, and the opportunity to meet new folks and have discussions that open doors on so many levels come so infrequently anymore that it was just heartbreaking to be sidelined.  Because the crew organizing Podcamp this year was on the ball, I was able to watch a good number of sessions remotely.  But one thing that I noticed almost immediately on Saturday, was that the comments and chat system for the live streaming video stopped working.  I was struck with a whole new level of frustration.  The sessions are inspiring and informative, sure, but Podcamp happens (most innovation and idea hatching, for that matter) during the conversations.  The questions and answers. The discussions.  The panels and debates.  I’ve said it before, and I firmly believe, that Podcamp happens in the hallways.  And here I was completely shut off from the hallway conversations and even from the conversations in the actual sessions!

This all has a point. 

Trust me.  See, one of the things I planned on talking about at PCPGH4 was the culture of commenting.  It’s disappearing.  It’s no longer dwindling; it’s flat out dying.  It ages me to say this, I know, but I remember a time when blogs didn’t come with comment functions (~*gasp*~ I knnnnooowww!!).  And when some coder started passing out free code to insert comment features it exploded the entire notion of what websites and “blogs” were, and of the potential they had.  Suddenly people had interaction on a whole new level! Suddenly, you could rant about just about anything and have your friends and random passers by leave notes of agreement or rebuttal.  You could have a dialogue.

But that’s going the way of the Dodo now, and I think that’s a terrible mistake.  As blogs become more common place, and more and more people post whatever they want whenever they want, they’ve taken the dialogue out of the conversation, and when you do that you no longer have a blog.  You have a basement printed broadside that no one can discuss with you.** 

What happens when no one comments?  Comments and discussion fuel the conversation and development of ideas.  It becomes a tidal wave of thought!  So you may have tons of email responses, or comments on your site.  That’s grand.  But how many comments do you leave on other sites?  Are you closing off your fishbowl by only fostering the culture of commenting on your own site?  Look, I’m as guilty as the rest of you.  I have, sitting in my Google Reader, the dreaded (1000+) unread blog posts.  Some are from news feeds, but a good many of them are blogs just like this one.  I read daily, or weekly, and rarely leave a comment.  Why? 

 

You tell me. 

 

Why do you read (and I know you do.  I see you….)  and not leave comments?  Not just here, but elsewhere?

I’ll make a deal with you.  For one week, starting today, see if you can leave a comment on each blog you read.  It doesn’t have to be every post, but at least leave a thoughtful response indicating that you engaged the post.  Can you do that?  For a week?

I know @BurghBaby is in over at TheBurghBaby.com, and if a working mommy blogger who posts at least once a day, takes care of a zoo, a new house, and a family can do it, can’t you? 

Let me know how it goes.  Remember, we’re all watching

 

 

~*~~*~~*~~*~~*~

** I’ve never agreed with closing off comments on blogs.  That’s what makes a blog a blog.  I’ve also never agreed with News sites opening comments on fact based articles.  The news is the news.  It’s not up for debate.  Editorials are for debate.  Letters to the Editor are for debate.  Once you make factual articles something to debate, you undermine their validity and turn your entire news organization into a blog of editorial opinion by the masses and moderated by journalists. News sites are not for discussing ideas and hashing out positions and opinions.  Leave that job to the blogs and message boards.

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PocampPittsburgh.com

PocampPittsburgh.com

 

It’s that time of year again folks!  Podcamp Pittsburgh 4 is ready to kick off tomorrow night from 6 pm - 8:30 pm at the AlphaLab for the Meet-n-Greet, and then officially begin Saturday morning (9 am - 4 pm) at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh

This year I’ll be speaking in two sessions:

Saturday, 10/10/09, 1 PM:

Intellectual Property: What Are Your Ideas Worth?

In this era of “free” Internet content, copyright infringement and rampant plagiarism, who really “owns” an idea? And if you *do* have an idea, is it actually worth anything? Devil’s advocate John Carman moderates this debate about intellectual property changing business models between anti-IP advocates Nick Pinkston & Steve Klabnik and pro-authorship devotees Justin Kownacki & Dawn Papuga.

…and…

Sunday, 10/11/09, 3 PM:

Comments & Criticism: The central nervous system of consumerism

Dawn Papuga of Lyrique Tragedy Reviews (And Reality 101) examines the importance of comments, criticism, and reviews as a means/tool for finding out about topics/books/issues you are interested in but have no idea where to start.

 

The second listing isn’t as descriptive as I would like, but the development of the topic came a little late.  Originally I was planning on doing a fun session on “2009 in MEMEs” but that was waylaid for something more “useful.”  (Not that I disagree!)  I plan to discuss the culture of commenting and its importance to the social media machine, criticism & reviews as a way of expanding your comfort zone through trusted reviewers, and how quality interaction encourages the medium (and us) to grow.

Anthony, over at Bricks and Boxes has been posting wonderful Podcamp Pittsburgh Appetizers featuring some of the speakers, topics, and sessions that will be bouncing around this weekend, and if you have some time before hand, be sure to go check them out!  He put up an Appetizer featuring my second session, and one by Kathleen Danielson.  Go check it out!

I hope to see you there!  Don’t forget to join the PCPGH Flickr group, and tag your content for the weekend as PCPGH4 (or, #PCPGH4). 

:)

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…to the east side…. of Baltimore!

So amidst all the summits and meetings, my mother and grandmother visiting, and us making the trip to Bedford to spend the weekend with Jack’s family, we managed to decide on the townhouse we wanted and met with the realtor and applied.  This morning, when we were on the way to the doctor for some of my tests, we received the news that we were approved, and the townhouse is ours for the taking!!!

Needless to say, we’re off the chart excited.  The only bad news is that we might not be able to make it back to Pittsburgh for Podcamp on the 10th & 11th.  The plan is to move the weekend before Halloween, if possible (mostly to avoid paying for two places).  The problem there is that it only leaves us a scant few days to get everything packed up and ready to move in to the new place.  We’re working on how to make that happen, so the trip to Podcamp isn’t off just yet.  I just have to be creative.  :)

In the mean time, check out some of my favorite parts of the new digs! 

 

Kitchen

Kitchen

 

View of dining room and kitchen from the living room

View of dining room and kitchen from the living room

Laundry Room / Mudroom leading to patio

Laundry Room / Mudroom leading to patio

Patio

Patio

Fireplace and stained glass in living room

Fireplace and stained glass in living room

Soaking Jacuzzi tub in master bath

Soaking Jacuzzi tub in master bath

Yeah, so that tub happens to be my favorite room in the house… :)  Just off of the right of the picture is the glass door shower, and it’s connected to the master bedroom, so I totally win.  WOO!  The kitchen is actually much larger than those pictures can depict.  in fact, it might be the largest room in the place (which, in Baltimore terms, isn’t hard to do).  I love the sink and dishwasher on the island, and I’m pretty sure there are more cabinets than we’ll know what to do with.  The little garden spot in the corner of the patio is what I’m looking forward to as well… I miss my rose bushes, and maybe I can plant a creeper… who knows.  But how exciting! 
More updates when I know them (about moving, podcamp, and whether there’s an alien creature growing on my spine…Dun dun DUN….).  Now I’m off to read and try and write a few reviews.  Ciao for now!

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