Nerd Love, Day 5: Score one for the Nerds

all my favorite Thanksgiving foods rhyme with d. lee

Nerds with a secret are like little kids before Christmas: they cannot—CANNOT, I tell you—wait for the big day.

The big day, in this case, was supposed to be closer to baseball season. Or at least post-Stupid Bowl. But I could not—COULD NOT, I tell you—wait one more second. Because I finally got my old pal, Tim Souers—the genius I blogged about a year and a half agoto start a blog.

True, there are only a few actual “posts” up there. But he’s uploaded two seasons to the image galleries—two seasons, people!!! Hours and hours of chewy, arty goodness.

Of course, the beauty part is, not only have I given this outstanding gift to the world (via, well, you know, Tim’s time, talent and effort), but Tim is cool! He is a Cool Person!!! Who has started a blog!!! Which means…

I actually converted someone to the Nerd Side!!!

Bwahahahaha!

I will get you all, my pretties…

xxx
c

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RIP, YMDB; hello, redundancy

Woodruff-Paskal

I know nothing lasts forever. I also know I’m overly attached to things. But a list of movies? Who thought I’d have to back up a list of my 20 favorite movies?!?

  1. If del.icio.us goes under? I lose my links. AKA I’m screwed.
  2. If gmail goes down? I lose my email backup. (I’ve got it all locally, but I’m perched on the edge of a rusty scimitar, AKA, I’m screwed.)
  3. If DreamHost goes down? I lose this whole blog, past the last time I backed it up (note to self: find that plug-in that backs up automagically) (and for good measure, back up when you’re done with this).

Before I go on, please know that I actually do have a keen sense of perspective when it comes to “stuff”, based in no small part to—well, I can’t even bring it up in a post this frivolous. You’ll just have to trust me, my friend: between my travels abroad and my travels, period, I have an acute understanding not only of the fundamental impermanence of life, but of priorities in general.

Still, we cling to what we cling to, idiotic or not. And today, I’m clinging to movies. I had a list of them on a site called YMDB—which I won’t even link to, because it redirects to IMDB, which needs more traffic like I need more holiday fat around my middle—and it Summed Me Up in Movies, and it was a link between me and my beloved Neilochka, and now it’s gone.

Worse, occasionally, when I’d be hard up for a good video rental, I’d hop on YMDB and find a similar list. You know, like how you people who don’t yet know amazon.com is the devil sometimes use it for other recommendations on crap you might be interested in. Who doesn’t want a nice page filled with crap they might be interested in!?! No one, I say!

So to hell with it. I’m putting my new and improved list of fave flickage right here. If anyone has any ideas on other stuff I might want to see, let me know. I gave up TV, remember? I need distraction!

Some disclaimers before I give up the list itself:

  • This list was cobbled together from dim, dim memory and a MySpace list, so, you know, it’s likely to change
  • Drastic change
  • This list is in no particular order (although I really, really love The Third Man)
  • My criteria have more to do with desirability of repeat viewing than inherent greatness, which is to don’t even start about Showgirls, people
  • That’s it, but bulleted lists look better in odd numbers

Now, without further ado, the list itself:

  1. The Third Man
  2. The Godfather
  3. Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
  4. Showgirls
  5. All About Eve
  6. Jackie Brown
  7. Brazil
  8. Nashville
  9. Caddyshack
  10. Ed Wood
  11. Fat City
  12. Le Rayon Vert (aka Summer, in U.S. release)
  13. Johnny Guitar
  14. Saturday Night Fever
  15. The Gay Divorcée
  16. Sunset Boulevard
  17. Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story
  18. Play Misty for Me
  19. Vertigo
  20. Singin’ in the Rain

As I said, list subject to change. Like me…

xxx
c

UPDATE: Thanks to commenter, Scott, I’ve found the relocated YMDB. Here’s my old list (a lot like this one, here; I’m pretty consistent…)

Image by bryanF via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license

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SXSW: All your Interactive are belong to us

SXSW baggie

I know what you’re thinking: she went to all of those movies; no way could she have hit up a bunch of geek panels, too.

Way.

Overall, the interactive panels/presentations portion of SXSW was a mixed bag. There was far less actionable information than I’d hoped for, but since I was mainly interested in how you turn something hopelessly unmarketable (i.e., this blog) into something that might bring you a comfortable living, a national forum and self-actualization, I was pretty prepared for finding my hopes unaligned with reality.

Unfortunately, after the first panel we attended—Podcasting 2.0, at my insistence—both The BF and I were ready to forego the interactive part of the proposition and slum at the film fest, where we at least stood a chance at being entertained. The entire proceedings felt thin, weak and hastily thrown together—which, it turned out, was the truth: the panel was a last-minute addition to the schedule, most likely because someone at SXSW realized (or had pointed out to them) that in the age of the podcast explosion, there was zero podcasting presence at this supposedly forward-thinking conference itself.

In stark contrast to the podcasting panel was the Daniel Gilbert Presentation: How to Do Precisely the Right Thing at All Possible Times. Desperate for the schwag—an advance copy of Gilbert’s forthcoming book, Stumbling On Happiness, to the first 100 attendees—I dragged the insanely tolerant BF to the next conference room. Like a scene from a movie starring ME, I made a beeline to the schwag girl, watching her hand off book after book from her dwindling supply, a sea of smug recipients peeling off to either side of me. When she handed me the 100th copy, I was certain that this presentation would be a winner; I was not disappointed. Gilbert, a Harvard professor and grampa when he is not giving presentations and writing books, is a smart, funny, engaging speaker who has honed his presentation to a fine edge. But in addition to the interest factor Gilbert for me, pundit-in-training, his material—an exploration of the evolutionary roots of decision making and its effect on the happiness of modern decisionmakers—was fascinating and compelling. I suspect this talk will not show up on the SXSW podcast page, but if you get the chance to hear Gilbert speak, I highly recommend it.

So I’m figuring that the dealio (for me, anyway) is to hit the solo presentations and skip the panels. With that in mind, I trucked on over to the James Surowiecki Presentation: The Wisdom of Crowds, the New Yorker writer’s live presentation of his book’s content, which was…disappointing. Curses! And so much for my ingenious ferreting out system. Granted, some of the difficulty stemmed from the presentation being held in a large, high-ceilinged ballroom with dreadful acoustics—which itself was adjacent to another ballroom serving as a band’s daystage—but Surowiecki himself was clearly at a stage where he’s more comfortable as a writer than a presenter, and having no slides or other media to distract from his slight awkwardness didn’t help. This is one case where I’d rather have read the book—and to be fair, because the talk’s content was pretty interesting, I just might.

I had no idea what to expect with Sunday’s Keynote Conversation: Heather Armstrong / Jason Kottke, except for a very large crowd in attendance. Since I’ve a mild obsession with both dooce (a mommyblogger who went nationwide!) and kottke.org (I became a micropatron after only being a short-time reader), I made sure The BF and I got there early. We met a charming young localblogger who was a freak for dooce and fought over the 12″ (PowerBook) until the show started. Again, no real actionable information, but I was there to hear about how they blogged and how blogging affected them and they didn’t disappoint. Even The BF enjoyed this one. Podcast available for download here.

Immediately following in the same room was one of the liveliest panels I attended, DIY Now More Than Ever. I’m a huge fan of Gina Trapani from Lifehacker, and she’s just as sunny and energetic in person as she comes across on her sites. And humble. Humility was sort of the watchword here: every one of the panelists seemed genuinely grateful that s/he had achieved whatever quantifiable measure of success s/he had. Again, not huge amounts of actionable information, but since I’m not really looking to start a web business or sell a piece of software, I doubt I would have found much more than inspiration and encouragement, which the panel provided in spades.

Personality was my main reason for attending Cluetrain: Seven Years Later, as well. I stepped on the internest bandwagon rather late (not counting my early obsession with epinions), so most of these rockstars don’t register for me. I’d heard of Doc Searls, though, and was curious. He’s a cool dude, is Doc—laid back and just into doing his own thing. Which, by the way, was my biggest takeaway from SXSWi: do your own thing and whatever will follow, but at least you’ll be doing your own thing, which presumably should be reward enough.

DL Byron ran my favorite panel at the conference, Does Your Blog Have a Business? He took his role as moderater seriously and had excellent questions prepared. Not that I have any information to share—I was basically there to see CSS god Jeffrey Zeldman, and wasn’t planning to take any notes. I am pretty shy and felt extra shy at my first SXSW, so I didn’t actually meet any of these superstars. I did run into DL at the Austin airport, though, and was able to tell him how much I enjoyed his panel. He, in turn, gave me a sample of his new product, clip-n-seal. Damned thing is simple as hell and works like a charm (that’s me in the photo above, holding up the new communicatrix cards I had printed up for SXSW, in a clip-n-seal). I hope he makes a bazillion dollars and can quit all his day jobs.

The last two panels I attended were about vlogging, although no one seems to call it that: How to Add Video to Your Blog and Video Blog Business Models. I was astounded at how many people crowded their way into the first panel…and how sparsely attended the second was, by comparison. Especially since, as Michael Verdi from FreeVlog put it, there’s an online tutorial that explains the entire thing in detail…for free! There was some useful information, mainly along the lines of length (keep it under 3 minutes), choosing the right medium for the message (blogging vs. podcasting vs. vlogging) and what makes for good subject matter (your hilarious, quirky family members, from the looks of things), but really, the first panel was just fun to listen to. I mean, hell—they’re good at presenting live, right?

My takeaway on videoblogging business models echoes my takeaway from SXSW, period: you will most likely get paid because of your presence on the internet rather than because of it. None of the people I saw speak at SXSW—not one of them—started blogging or podcasting or vlogging to make money. Well, I suspect one person who kept cropping up on panel after panel did, but he’s the anomaly, and so fucking annoying and full of himself I cannot believe anyone listens to his podcasts, much less that he gets paid for them.

The other great takeaway info I got was this: if you want to do something on the web, see who’s doing it now and figure out how you can ‘kill’ them. Time and time again, I saw that it wasn’t necessarily the first person to get there, but the one who did it best. In that way, I suppose all this geeky internutty stuff is like writing (all the stories have been told, you’re just telling them a new way) or acting (no one can do Hamlet like you do Hamlet) or anything else (build a better mousetrap, etc).

I guess I went to the oracle expecting something, and the oracle told me I should look first in my own back yard.

Actually, I told myself that…

xxx
c

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Quotation of the Day: “Me, Too” Edition

I’m inspired by new people every day, certainly, but most of all by artists who are living out their dreams and constantly creating and thinking and offer as much by their example of how they live their lives as their work itself.”

—”lustylady”, in the comments section of a Lifehacker post on who inspires you

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10 blogs…tag! You’re it!

Computer_1I find great things from my occasional random tumbles down the rabbit hole, but there’s a reason certain sites stick in my RSS aggregator: consistent high quality linkage for my surfing safety and enjoyment.

I am also a big (albeit newfound) fan of the tag. I’ve gotten reinvolved with Flickr! lately when it finally struck me that I could use it as a thought-starting, idea-generating, creative-juicing tool rather than just an electronic shoebox for all my snapshots.

My loves dovetailed nicely a few days ago when I was catching up with Jeff Jarvis’s excellent site and stumbled upon a post about collecting great blogs and sharing them…via tags, which I wish TypePad would get busy and implement, dammit.

Anyway, in a post about tagging, top-whatever lists and how relevant an issue it is (or should be) in the blogosphere, Jeff points to fellow blogger Steve Rubel’s Top 10 list, which Rubel artfully turned into a meme (“10 Blogs I Would Take to a Desert Island”) via a Technorati tag. Lovely symmetry, that.

So, as my way of giving back to the blogosphere—and of showing how arbitrary all lists are…

  1. For consistent, laugh-out-loud hilarity, Go Fug Yourself!
  2. For snark, sass, wit and kickass reading lists, The Old Hag
  3. For my design porn fix, Cool Hunting
  4. For thoughtstarting, link-following and all-around cultural hoo-hah, my beautiful Blowhards
  5. For compulsive readability, dooce
  6. For my intellectual design porn fix, Design Observer
  7. For outside the box thinking, Seth Godin’s blog
  8. For damn-the-wingnuts, full-speed-ahead punditry, Eschaton
  9. For my geek porn fix, 43 Folders (and the wiki…ooo, the wiki…)
  10. For all that is my adoptive city, blogging.la

Pass it on…

xxx
c

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