Is the Internet Watching Us? Or Are We Just Crazy?

Is the Internet Watching Us?http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/28/fashion/28truman.html?_r=1&oref=slogins

Here’s a link to the NY TImes article by Sarah Kershaw.

And here’s some stuff about the Panopticon.

Vote For Our SXSW Panels!

SXSW 2009 Interactive Panel PickerThe SXSW 2009 Interactive Panel Picker closes Friday (8/29) at midnight.

Reuben is putting together a panel discussion - The Inevitable Future of Virtual Worlds, description: Virtual worlds and 3D interfaces are changing the flat web into an expressive experience. Copyrighted material of celebrities and real world talent are shaping the online experience through the distribution of virtual goods and likenesses. Google Lively continues to push the envelope as it introduces 3D socializing to mainstream Internet audiences. This panel will explore how virtual worlds are making the immersive web a reality for Internet consumers.

I proposed two how to demonstrations. Machinima Kung Fu - Sure machinima looks easy - record a game, drop it into iMovie and do some voices - but there’s actually a little more to it than that. This session will cover all the tech of making machinima - from hardware and software to in-game strategies to post production issues.

And Custom Video Players For Your Show - You’ve got a unique video show, why not have a player that matches? This session will take you through detailed examples using two popular Flash video players. We’ll show you how to create custom skins and get them set up on your site.

See you in Austin!

What is your Favorite Piece of Media on the Net?

What is your Favorite Piece of Media on the Net?Cut and paste links in Description box in reply.

Everyone’s Talking About Ubiquity


Ubiquity for Firefox from Aza Raskin on Vimeo.

Ubiquity is another release from Mozilla Labs that, along with Aurora has me thinking about the future of not just how we’ll use the web but also everything on our computers.

Over the last few years web apps have really transformed the way I use a computer. Every day I have less and less need for actual desktop applications. If it weren’t for all the video production I do on a daily basis I could just grab most any computer with wifi and be instantly connected to just about all of my stuff. And now that the iPhone has a mostly usable web browser, most of the time I don’t even need to take my laptop with we me anywhere. I love that.

So in the middle of watching this demo I started thinking it would be great if all the applications on your computer, not just web apps, could play together like that or maybe all your apps would be web apps (more likely) and your operating system would be the “browser.” Then you could just invoke a new view, document, video, website, virtual world or whatever and combine information in whatever way you needed to right then instead of in whatever way a particular application lets you do it. I can’t wait.

Kevin Kelly: Predicting the next 5,000 days of the web

My friend Rupert pointed me to this video of Keven Kelly. It’s a really great 20 minute summary of a lot of ideas that have been floating around for awhile. The basic thing that I get from it is that we’re all becoming part of one global machine and what really makes it powerful is us being open or transparent to it.

Being open to the network is an idea that I personally find inspiring and liberating. I have a few blogs, I participate in a number of social networks and virtual worlds and I post lots of videos and photos of myself, my friends and my family online. Some people find that kind of behavior somewhat alarming - especially where my kids are concerned. But I’m looking at it from a little farther down the road. A cell phone used to mean you were on call 24/7 but now it means you have access to everyone and everything 24/7 and that’s powerful. I think for many people, putting yourself out there on the web feels like an invasion of privacy. If you were only one, I’d agree it might feel like being the only naked person in the room. But if everyone were naked, then maybe it’s not such a big deal.

I’m not saying there aren’t issues with everyone putting everything online but I’m optimistic that we’ll figure it out as we go without turning the world into some version of Gattica or 1984. Either that or the cyborgs will be showing up soon and they’ll start making their way through the list of TED speakers.

Steiger in BW on Joi Ito and Creative Commons

BusinessWeek’s Kenji Hall recently sought Reuben’s input on Joi Ito’s still-relatively-new role as head of Creative Commons. Reuben has known Joi personally and professionally for some time, and we’re especially happy to participate in conversations about online IP given the July launch of our IP-protected celebrity virtual goods business, Virtual Greats.

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Do You Use Consumer Facing Social Media Tools for Business?

How? I would love to hear, because there are so many super powerful applications available for free, often without the 5 key features, uptime and security needed for an enterprise sale.

Hey All — Let’s Try This for WorkI was talking this morning about how I want our company to become ever more obsessed with all forms of social media. I also pointed to this great video done by Michael Verdi about Bart Cheever at MoU with Skype and SL http://millionsofus.com/blog/2008/08/24/inside-millions-of-us-bart-cheever/

Inside Millions of Us - Bart Cheever

Inside Millions of Us - Bart Cheever
by: vPIP
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Hanzo Steel Vol. 1Bart Cheever, our VP of Production also happens to be Bart Blackstone the DJ. I beamed him into my virtual studio the other day and we talked about his Kill Bill mashups (download Hanzo Steel Vol. 1), The Postmarks, Yo Gabba Gabba and more.

I love it when the web connects me with next door neighbors

Like Howard Rheingold.  We met in Seesmic (though it could just as easily could have been at Peets in downtown Mill Valley).  Now we’re going walking on Mt. Tam.   I’ll let you know what we discuss.

Re:Title Pedagogy of the Oppressed

The Web Gets Stickier: Seesmic, Virtual Worlds and Video

It Makes Me Wonder if Virtual Worlds Will Be More Reflective of Real Ones

Four weeks ago my wife and kids were out of town, starting their summer vacation in Cape Cod. This left me with more time on my hands than I’m used to and, in typical fashion, I stumbled into something that has now captured my imagination.

It’s called Seesmic. I found it while looking at the investment portfolio of Y-Combinator, the venture capital fund run by the guys who started Kazaa, Skype and Joost. Founded by French super-entrepreneur and social-media maven Loic LeMeur, Seesmic is essentially a public bulletin board with one major difference — instead of text it has live video.

The first-time user experience is really quite elegant and well-done. You see a central screen, always another person, somewhere in the real world, talking to their webcam, talking to the world, talking to someone in particular, talking to you. Surrounding the central video is a complex yet elegant piece of user interface work. The page displays a “Public” thread (all videos), a “Following” page of people you find interesting enough to track, and your “Inbox,” containing private video messages.

But the Eureka moment for me came when I decided to stop lurking and watching and to record a video. I have low patience for all things technical, but the Flash application simply asked me a quick question: “Can I take over your camera?” I answered yes and the rest was smooth as butter.

Already I’ve met cool people and formed friendships. It’s weird, compelling and addictive. It reminds me in many ways of a virtual world, with several key differences: There is no simulated environment — just the people and their real world backgrounds; there is almost perfect fidelity of appearance; it is slightly asynchronous (virtual worlds are synchronous real time and simultaneous, like the phone); and there is no currency, other than the ephemeral “social currency” of all human social groups.

Well, over this weekend I finally succumbed and bought the new iPhone 3G, and I did so because I heard of an application that can send video live to the web. It’s called Qik .

And then it struck me — the meaning of “sticky” has changed. It used to refer to a site’s ability to keep viewers “stuck” interacting with content. But now the trend that began with Flickr for photos and YouTube for video is accelerating as software and systems evolve to make it easier for us to leave behind digital breadcrumbs of our real lives on the internet.

Perhaps the virtual world will simply be a somewhat altered reflection of our existing one. What do you think?