Posts Tagged ‘Web Design’

Texas Strangers

6th Street (3)

I had a pretty good time at SXSW this year. It’s deeply satisfying to be around so many intelligent, creative people, and well, to get drunk with them. Jeremy Keith made the comment in the How to Rawk SXSW about how he felt he was amongst his tribe at the festival, and that’s certainly the way I felt - just hanging out with so many progressively minded, technically literate, enthusiastic and media-savvy people was a great feeling, and a reward in of itself. I also came up with a brilliantly catchy business-speak way of describing it, but Mark stole it for one of his tweets, so it’s dead to me now.

(At the same panel, Ben Huh asserted that without a doubt, at some point in the festival we would all end up in a strange car with strange people at 4am, to which I thought - bullshit; our hotel was 2 minutes from the conference centre, right in the middle of downtown where all the parties were happening - what possible reason did I have to get in a strange car. Then on the 4am Wednesday morning, I found myself in a strange car with a bunch of strangers. It’s funny how things turn out sometimes).

Anyways, here’s some of the talks I enjoyed:

  • The panel Moon 2.0: The Outer Limits of Lunar Exploration was great not just because of the engaging and novel subject matter, but also because I got to ask someone who actually works at NASA a question. If I ever go back in time, I’ve finally done something my eight-year old self would be impressed by.
  • Twitter’s Mark Trammell gave a great, inspiring talk in What Can Carl Sagan Teach Us About The Web?, making extensive use of Cosmos to illustrate points about design, engineering and team-working.
  • Bruce Lawson and Martin Kliehm demonstrated the awesomeness of HTML5 in HTML5: Tales from the Development Trenches. Let’s hurry up and kill Flash, eh? Just shoot it in the head or something. Twice.
  • How The Other Half Lives: Touring The Digital Divide - Jessamyn West and Jenny Engstrom gave an interesting talk on their experiences as librarians in rural and urban America, acting both as sometimes the only point of access to the internet for their communities, and as de facto trainers for a generation with no online experience whatsoever. Notes here.
  • And I have to mention Memory Matters: How Do Elephants Do It by Mark Channon and Paul Duncan, not only because it was good and entertaining, but because it was a big part of the reason I got to go.

Supposedly, most of these are going to be podcast at some point, but I can’t find them at the moment. All well worth listening to if they do ever appear, however.

The Miracle of Baker Street

It’s been a mad few weeks at work, where I’ve been involved in launching some fairly major sites, all within a few days of each other. Stressful, but ultimately rewarding, and now it’s all over I have a bit of breathing space to consider things, and take a more thoughtful approach to what direction I want life to go in moving forward. For starters, I’m thinking I need a holiday now…

After celebrating a friend’s birthday a few weeks ago, and leaving the public house in which said celebration took place slightly on the inebriated side, I had the misfortune to leave my rucksack on the tube on the way home. Whilst it didn’t have my laptop or any other high value items in it, it did contain a lot of personal items that would have been difficult to replace, such as Patrick Harpur’s OOP Daimonic Reality, which I was halfway through reading. Feeling like a bit of a tit, I filled in TfL’s lost property form with little hope of ever being reunited with Harpur’s revelatory work, but lo, they got back to me in just four days to say my treasured possessions were safely ensconced at their office in Baker Street. Fellas, as far as I’m concerned you can strike anytime you want from now on.

Last Friday I attended dConstruct, which is still a great conference in terms of pricing, venue and (generally) speakers, however it’s gotten increasingly ‘big picture’ over the years, to the point where no one is really saying anything anyone could possibly disagree with anymore. You almost want someone to step up with a keynote entitled ‘Welcome back to tables’, or somesuch. Still, it’s always good to hear the likes of Adam Greenfield speak, and Russell Davies wrapped things up in a masterly fashion. Throw in fish and chips on Brighton beach and after-con pintage and you had all the makings of a great day out.

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    Spunk and Bite: A Writer’s Guide to Punchier, More Engaging Language and Style by Arthur Plotnik

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    The Book of Jewish Food: An Odyssey from Samarkand and Vilna to the Present Day by Claudia Roden

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