Who’s Out There? Smartmobbers sign in, please!
November 11th, 2003

This blog is over a year old. It was started to help promote my book and to help promote the ideas that led me to write the book. I still believe that we are fighting a crucial battle over the kind of future citizens will experience, over whether we will be active users who shape mobile and pervasive media the way we shaped the PC and Internet, or whether we will be passive consumers, restricted by legal “rights management” and technical “trusted computing” platforms, whose only choice is which pay-per-play brand of predigested content to choose.

A great team of volunteers have coalesced to help. But I spend more and more of my time feeding this blog and fighting spam.

So now I’m wondering — who’s out there? And what do you get out of this? I know smartmobs.com gets 1000-2000 unique visitors a day (5000 or more when Slashdotted). Who are you? What do you do? Where are you? What do you want to be fed here?

If you are a regular reader, feel free to introduce yourself, make up a fake name, whatevever means you want to use to express yourself — and add a comment below.

If it turns out amusing enough, we’ll do this regularly.

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Comments
1 - pat kane

Hi Howard, I’m a writer, musician and activist, who runs a web site and is publishing a book called the Play Ethic. I dip into Smart Mobse once a week because I can see a new politics and society emerging here - the link between mobility and mobilisation is always strong. It sometimes feels like there’s all these Tom Paine’s here, testing out their information technology, seeing what change it can foment and what ideas it can disseminate. I hope you’re getting some payback, directly and indirectly, for keeping this space going - it’s certainly inspired me to reorder my own book’s supporting site in a similar manner. In lieu of a tip box, please take this expression of solidarity and satisfaction as some kind of payment.

You really expect a thousand people

a day to comment here? Here in this

teensy little box? Woah.

Howard, I hate to break this to you,

but maybe the spammers ARE the Mob.

Between organized spam-crime and “rulemakers”

who want to do nothing more than line

their own pockets at consumers’ expense,

you and yours have got a serious job of work at hand.

But I’m sure that, once again, an anxious nation

can turn its eyes to that great engine of

social innovation that is the Golden State

of California!

You know I love this stuff. I come by for technologies of cooperation and what’s new.

4 - Eric Lin

i’m here everyday, maybe more than once a day, because this seems like center around which my web universe revolves. many of the websites i visit and people i talk to i do because i learned about them in your book or on this site. it is a place where i grow, or at least learn. every day.

I am mostly me: professional knowledge munger and part-time visionary.

This is on my must-read list because it reliably clues me in without recycling (too much) what can be found one the rest of my must-read list.

Hey Howard (and gang)!

Alex Steffen here. I for one am very glad that y’all continue to crank out news from the future here at SmartMobs. I think you’re right, that “we are fighting a crucial battle over the kind of future citizens will experience,” and find that this site has become one of my key intelligence sources in that battle. Working together *is* the revolution, and you guys are documenting the tools for collaboration. Keep up the good work!

7 - alan

I read you through “mywireservice.”

8 - Howard Rheingold

This is exciting. Just knowing that seven people like y’all are reading gets me pumping. As to what I get out of it, I confess that the membrane between fun, obsessive-compulsive disorder, learning, making friends, and making a buck has been semi-permeable for some time. I feed on information and feel the need to feed others information. I was going to get into a digestion analogy, but I don’t think we want to go there.

Pat, Bruce, Ross, Eric, Alex, Alex, and Alan — the prospect of helping people like you do what you do fires me up.

love the book, love the site. i started a site called flashenabled, which then became a book, and now it’s back to being a mostly mobile/new technology site along with videos of robots here and there. your site is a daily thought starter and inspiration for me.

cheers,

pt

10 - Gerrit

Thanks for posting Phillip.

http://www.flashenabled.com/

I love your site. Great information. If your book is as good as your site. I just got to find out more about it. Tell us more about your book !

11 - Gerrit

Thanks for posting Phillip.

http://www.flashenabled.com/

I love your site. Great information. If your book is as good as your site. I just got to find out more about it. Tell us more about your book !

12 - Steve Siwy

Professionally, I spend the day chained to a phone at a call center, so it’s pretty much for personal satisfaction that I visit the site. I think I was pointed to Smart Mobs by one of Bruce Sterling’s Viridian Notes. So I got (and enjoyed) the book, and now I come here, and visit the linked sites over to the right, for news about what I might realistically be able to expect from the future.

13 - Swerdloff

I’m still here, Howard. I still love this site and wish I had more time to devote to writing for it.

14 - Ryan Kelln

Howard,

SmartMobs is inspiration for many people including myself (ryankelln.livejournal.com). Even though your site is mainly links and news I consider it required reading because I believe that great art comes from liminal experiences, and in many ways your site provides a proxy or catalyst for those sorts of experiences. More often than not I will read about some new use for communication tools and say to myself, “I never would have thought of that” but by then of course I have.

I spend at least a couple hours each day reading and thinking about the latest news and doing research on a broad variety of topics. I still haven’t figured out why I’m compelled to do so, but regardless SmartMobs is one of my daily reads.

Cheers,

Ryan

15 - Ryan Kelln

I reread all the comments and the other thing that I’d like to mention is that Smartmobs provides a sort of indirect telepathy between myself and many of my favourite writers: Bruce, Ross, and no doubt many others who have yet to comment. While the mass media provides an excellent shared history/story the narrow, future focus of SmartMobs and it’s opt-in nature provide a qualitatively different context.

This shared context allows for greater understanding of each others work in the same way a musician who has played the same piece has a greater understanding and appreciation when they hear that piece played by another.

The next best thing to actually collaborating with someone is to share their inspiration.

For anyone trying to better understand the social and cultural impact of technology, and the general direction we are headed, Smartmobs is a great resource because it is itself part and parcel of this phenomenon. All of the incremental changes in technology chronicled on the site seem to be leading to something very significant. For this reason, perhaps, Smartmobs has a real cliffhanger appeal. To see the curtain rise, and to see what is behind it makes for great drama!

17 - Jesse

Hi Howard,

I’m a graduate student at San Francisco State U. in the media studies dept. working on a Master’s Thesis on peer-to-peer networks and media distribution. I’m developing a broadcasting model for new media based on peer-to-peer networks, emergent bottom-up system behavior, and social reputation management. Your book has proved a great resource. I’m very excited about my project and hope to turn what’s currenty a theoretical excercise into a real media network in the very near future. I’m really optimistic about the opportunity here and see this technology as a legitimate leverage point for dramatic cultural change. I’ve had my head buried in research but would like to start getting in touch with like-minded people who also recognize this enormous potential. Keep up the good work and say hello if you have a chance

Just another geek writing social software and trying to keep a social software site running at http://www.ecademy.com

Too many ideas, too much code to write, too many words to read, and not enough time. No change there then.

19 - MarkDilley

Hello Folks,

I am a union organizer by day and when I can, a wiki/weblog fanatic by night.

Thanks for linking to the struggle I am involved at in Ann Arbor - Strike #1 at Store #1 - Borders Bookstore.

http://bordersreadersunited.2ya.com

Best, Mark

20 - danah boyd

Howard - i read SmartMobs because i believe in what you do and what this site stands for. And besides, it’s a great way to know about new ideas and approaches to the technology, beyond the typical SF culture.

Howard,

Your book Smart Mobs changed the way I thought about the world. I originally bought it because of the short Time magazine write-up and the really pretty blue cover (it is a really pretty blue cover.) I went from being a disconnected literary hermit to a wired-up technophile overnight (or at least it felt that way.)

As far as the blog goes: I swear to god I didn’t know boingboing from Bruce Sterling, and you were my launching point. Whose site do you think first went into my FeedDemon? It is a daily read.

The optimistic side to this spam problem is that the MT spam issue is being tackled by so many people, it must be a matter of time. (Which is what I believe Mr. Sterling was getting at, but he must be way past that “I’ve just met you and I must toot your horn for an entire post” phase of your relationship.)

By the way, from a critical standpoint, I marvel at the accessibility of your prose. Here is a brief conversation I had with a friend, another fiction writer, after insisting that he read Smart Mobs in order to overcome his fear of popular technology literature:

Friend: “You’re right, his prose doesn’t bore me in the least. There’s something about it, its very smooth and engaging, I’m enjoying this alot. I’ve been reading him for at least an hour before bed.”

Me: Blah Blah Blah Blah Blah Blah Blah Blah (not verbatim.)

Friend: Well, its getting late, I’m probably gonna go put away another chapter before I fall asleep. I really enjoy sleeping with Howie. That’s how I refer to it.

***

So, yeah.

My sporadic blog: Claudius Flauberius

22 - Manne

Hi! Glad to see so many people join the party. :) My name is Manne, I am bloglining (http://www.bloglines.com/, great service) SmartMobs and read it every day since I find the evolution in this space fascinating. I have been looking for a long time for traces of information technology finally conerging to tools and services that actually deliver the long promised efficiency increase and enhanced communication possibilities. To this day I still just keep getting more and more confused as more standards, new products, innovative services and tools and so on enter the arena wihtout the glue that I am looking fÀÜr to keep them together. Information overload is what it results in for me. I guess reading SmartMobs daily is a significant symptom of that. ;)

23 - Joe Klehe

I’m a product developer for SBC Communications, yes, one of the big bad phone companies. I drop by for insights into emerging technology trends. I think some of your core assumptions are flawed, e.g., “Smart” and “Mob” to my mind are mutually exclusive, as evidenced by the recent and short lived phenomena of groups of people assembling at some place to do essentially nothing. What came to mind was wildebeests and lemmings. I chuckle when I encounter the occasional ravings of the leftist/liberal moonbats on the site, but the insights into new technologies and the ways they’re being used is the sites major appeal for me. You may want to keep in mind that technology geeks come from everywhere on the political spectrum. San Antonio, Texas

24 - chip

I handle all the technology for a K12 school in Athens, GA. Our students are issued a laptop computer in 7th grade and then issued an upgrade in 10th grade. They use this at school and at home. All of the instructional areas of campus are covered by WiFi and most families have WiFi at home so our kids are learning early about the new mobile world we live in. They all have laptops, most have cell phones, a few have PDAs. Downtown Athens is covered by a wireless cloud so our students are very aware of all the new tech out there.

I read SmartMobs through NewsGator mainly to just keep up with what is going on in the 21st century and try and comprehend what its like to grow up with all this cool stuff.

25 - lorenzo23

Check your site daily - sometimes three times because of the time difference between Manchester, England & wherever u are. What makes your blog interesting is that it’s not a slew of “new product announcements”. It’s stories of actual use of new technologies - practical or arty. It’s new ideas. It’s inspirational. By day I sell grocery, days off just experiment with photos, video & writing.

Howard,

I’ve been an avid reader of your work since “Virtual Reality” and so naturally was drawn to the site when it was launched.

I’m a software developer working with various handheld and web platforms.

27 - Matt

Hello World.

28 - marcos

Hi Howard,

awesome book, really inspiring. been coming to the site since then. I’m mostly interested in the socio-technological factors that it presents. I’m self proclaimed artist, illustrator, web technologist sucked into computer supported collaborative work and online social environments design.

this piece was inspired by smartmobs among others:

http://www.marumushi.com/apps/perspectives/

keep it up!

29 - Howard Rheingold

Wowee yowee and thankee thankee! I really wasn’t begging for praise (immediately the image of my dog leaps into my mind’s eye — pant pant, waiting for a “good dog” so she can lick my mouth with her toilet-slurping tongue), but I must admit that it’s tasty to get up in the morning and discover readers of this caliber. I’m inspired! Why work for a living, when I can BLOG, BLOG, BLOG?

Any others? (Ass-kissing NOT required — I really simply enjoy knowing who you are)

Hi Howard and the rest of the gang!

I’m studying Information Science at Aarhus University in Denmark. And furthermore I work at Innovation Lab, which is a Danish company focused on emerging technologies and pervasive computing. Your site, is a very useful tool for me in getting a small glimpse of what is going on in the rest of the world regarding future technologies, as well as the impact it has on our everyday lives.

So if you ever need some updates on the smartmob status in DK/Scandinavia, just send me a mail.

Keep it coming!

Hi Howard and the rest of the gang!

I’m studying Information Science at Aarhus University in Denmark. And furthermore I work at Innovation Lab, which is a Danish company focused on emerging technologies and pervasive computing. Your site, is a very useful tool for me in getting a small glimpse of what is going on in the rest of the world regarding future technologies, as well as the impact it has on our everyday lives.

So if you ever need some updates on the smartmob status in DK/Scandinavia, just send me a mail.

Keep it coming!

Hi!

I came here initially because of the book, and keep reading (through RSS, of course) because I know that stuff that I miss on other blogs will appear here. It’s also been useful to find other sites and blogs I should be tracking. It’s also good to get interesting stuff from the US and Asia.

I am an interaction designer at Orange, a European mobile phone network, but also spend a lot of time thinking about location, self-expression, and communities - on both large and small screens.

Oh, and I created that awful social software quiz that is doing the blog rounds :)

33 - Jan

Hi. Since I wrote a review of your book for my norwegian newspaper website, I come here regularly. Mostly to find ideas for new stories, inspiration or links to new sources of information. A lot of your predictions are already reality in norway. My newspaper has alredy started to get call-ins via MMS from our readers including photos of accidents or incidets. An example: This

http://www.dagbladet.no/dinside/2003/10/03/380038.html

story of a car crash in a roundabout came to life because of one guy who put his cameraphone out his window and snapped the photo.

34 - Howard Rheingold

I’m delighted to see a global audience. Anyone else in interesting places? And by all means, please feel free to use the “suggest a link” link. I don’t use all suggestions, but I do use most of them.

BTW, I am looking into improving the comments here. I’ve grown tired of trying to get Moveable Type to make their comments more message-board-like, so I’ve talked a message-board vendor into experimenting with a way to make their product compatible with MT. Ideally, we will have a registration feature (you don’t have to use your real name, but you will have to use a legit email address) and the categories will be “conferences” or “folders” and each post will link to a thread in the appropriate conference/folder. That way if you register you can subscribe to conversations about categories and/or threads that interest you. Stay tuned.

35 - Tristan Lear

Hi,

I’m Tristan Lear. I currently live in Toledo, OH. I’m 19 and a Psychology student at Owens College.

I was excited by the idea of “flash mobs,” and decided to do a paper on them for a class. I came across your website, and purchased your book after having found many references to your work across different articles about flash mobbing.

I’ve been a citizen of the Internet as long as I’ve been able to read and write. Childhood mischeif took the form of 1’s and 0’s. I learned how to shave from a website. I stood in front of the capitol among thousands in a protest that was organized completely online. I was truely raised by this worldwide network.

Having witnessed the emergence of instant messaging, blogging, p2p, and 802.11 networking, I shared many of the epiphanies you wrote about in your book. I’ve always been excited by the seemingly explosive impact of “ad-hocracies” on democracy and freedom of information. I had the same questions you posed about about the future of the spectrum, and the same fears of the influence of top-down hierarchies.

It looks like we’re watching the emergence of a collective conciousness. We’re beginning to master the technology ants had long before we knew how to oppose our thumbs. Communication is becoming increadibly efficient. Emoticons. Hyperlinks. The syntax of language itself is evolving. Hieroglyphs and image-based communication is back on the rise. Leonard Shlain’s ideas about the Internet in The Alphabet vs. the Goddess also seem to connect to all of this.

This all excites the crap out of me and I’m geeked about being a part of it. I usually check your site daily for updates. My weblog will be back up shortly, I hope.

Thanks,

Tristan

Howard, I’m here for the sensemaking. As you know, I believe that we are entering a period of radical, technology-fueled change in the world’s social, political and economic structures. I also believe that we technologists are doing a pretty lousy job of helping the world make sense of what changes may be coming. I’m paying much more attention to folks from the arts, design, and social sciences these days, as they are raising the important questions about what kind of a world we are setting ourselves up for.

When smartmobs.com is at its best, it is a tool for sensemaking. The world doesn’t need another gadget blog, but it does need the thoughtful provocations and insights that can often be found here.

OK, if you absolutely want to know :-) — I’m Danish and 29 years old. I read “Smartmobs” this spring because I was working on my master thesis about designing mobile phones/technology. Since then I have read your RSS feed almost every day. In august I arranged the second Flash mob in Denmark (with the smallest mob ever…) and was interviewed to radios, newspapers and television about Flash mobs and stuff like that.

38 - the other matt

Hmm, I definately think I’m the youngest smartmob follower: sophomore in High school when I first found it last year. Smart Mobs is one of the few books that I felt I should own, instead of just borrow from the library, since the phenonema was something I began to observe around me as soon as I started the book. I stick with the blog because it’s great to see something I observe on a local level take place a few weeks/months after it’s announced here, and to see how trends affect the bigger part of society.

39 - Mona

I’m a grad student studying Musicology and Library Science, and I read your site a few times a week (when not overwhelmed with schoolwork).

I think I first found it through a link from either slashdot or boingboing.

I like reading about technology, people, and how it changes their interactions/how they stay informed. Especially as a future librarian, this place provides interesting reading.

I’m a journalist in San Francisco. Playing around with the limitations & possibilities of a Treo 600.

41 - St. Mae

I’m a student studying intercultural communication. I’m a web presence, the owner of Discordian.com. I read this blog via syndication on Livejournal. I live in the SF bay area.

I’m an editor on Microsoft’s online community site for Windows XP users. The first item I added to my favorite list from SmartMobs was the Noderunner article of Nov. 12, 2002, so this is my anniversary as a reader. I also attended Howard’s presentation when he came to Microsoft earlier this year. To me, this is a unique collection of exhilarating and challenging information about people and technology. Thanks for your efforts.

I’m an MFA candidate in Design and Technology at Parsons School of Design in NYC. Read the book and been reading the blog since early 2003. Always a great source of info, one of the best blogs out there. I’ve recently been working with Yury Gitman on projects such as NodeRunner and MagicBike, and am developing an extension of MagicBike to be used for direct action protest against the 2004 Republican National Convention in NYC.

44 - Howard Rheingold

What an interesting group! Those of you who are writers know what a thrill this is for me. For the first decade of my career, I wrote messages in bottles — years later, readers would introduce themselves at conferences. Then came email and virtual communities and I could enlist readers to help me critique, research, and write. Now, the membrane between writer, reader, researcher has become semi-permeable. I’m looking forward to enriching the community interaction in coming bikes. I am totally stoked by this sample of respondents. I’m on the road for a couple days, and will be more thrilled if there are more responses when I return. In the meantime, I’m sure the smartmoblog team will keep y’all fed.

45 - Howard Rheingold

Coming bikes? I must have been eyeballing the Magic Bike post while writing that. The perils of multitasking!

Howard, you are the most approachable authority I have ever encountered. Whatever topic you approach, you give back to the reader more than you take. It is an insanely great standard of teaching and guiding in this world, and an increasingly important role to model for those seduced by the deceptive power of technical fixes to human problems.

And I am saying this even though I don’t owe you any money.

But that could change.

Wow, great to see the responses. I know that when I blog stuff here, I just accept of faith that somebody’s reading. A little verification helps!

We should also mention Alex Steffen’s excellent new weblog at worldchanging.com, which he co-edits with Jamais Cascio. Smarb Mobbers (Mobsters?) should take a look…

48 - Howard Rheingold

Much appreciated, Zeit. I’ve grown to respect your opinion.

Thanks for the reminder about Alex and Jamais and their pals new blog, Jon. Want to post about worldchanging.com from the top level of this blog? Please do!

49 - Jeff Axup

I’m a phd student in Australia studying sociotechnical networks and their convergence with mobile communications technologies. My background in usability and HCI have given me a profound respect for watching what people actually do with technologies and what they want to get done using it. One step further than that is imagining new products that allow them to do useful things they’ve never even dreamed of yet. The blog here is a great way to keep up on the cutting edge of how it’s actually being used and the social impact caused by it.

My copy of smart mobs got stolen (yes, it’s THAT popular) while traveling Asia, but I’ll probably get a second copy for research purposes. It’s great to see that this book is drawing so much attention to the potential of mobile devices as tools to connect groups of people in new ways. It’s also been interesting to watch the spread of the word ‚àö¬¥Smart Mobs’ through research proposals and conference papers recently‚àö√±

50 - Patrick

Hello All! Software developer and longtime fan of yours, Howard. Loved the book and keep finding new thoughts to chew on here at the site. Keep it up.

Keep up the good work… I’m reffing you in an article I’m writng for eyecandy, the journal of film and digital media of UCSC.

Peace

Keep on cranking Howard! Your site is incredible inspiration into a future unfolding. 03 was the year of the blog, and sites like yours, boingboing, gizmodo and others really helped the blogsphere come together I think.

I have two copies of your book one at home and one at work. I’m a user experience researcher in columbus ohio.

53 - Eric Ison

Hey has anyone here heard of a girl that had an initmate encounter with a boy in a little bookstore on state street near the cat’ meow in about 1995-96. If so and the phrase “a land that has not been cleansed ” rings a bell do the best to contact me.

54 - Howard Rheingold

I can’t figure out that last comment. Too strange to be spam. Can you explain what it is doing here, Eric?

55 - E- sQaured

Great job everyone. Keep on keepin on as it is truly our burden to carry out the revolution of an enlightened society. Much Love

I tune into Howard and Smartmobs to remind myself of the urgency and fragility of the p2p media movement. While there are substantial collective efforts toward development of alternative media and realization of media reform, my focus is on the development of decentralized television and film production systems that transform video production tools and techniques into social activities. I’m currently seeking partners to build out the core infrastructure for video blogging- participatory media frameworks designed for smartmob media production, peer-to-peer production management, citizen journalism, and media games. The inevitable fragmentation of the highly concentrated media and entertainment economy is an opportunity to propagate sustainable economic models for media citizens. Connected committed citizens mature and flourish by organically cataloging, annotating, appropriating, transforming, and redistributing independent thoughts, feelings, and actions. Technologies and techniques that nurture this sustainable economic independence simultaneously fuel collective interdependence. And at the end of the first chapter, the mass media of the future is playground and battlefield for an audience that finds it natural to educate, entertain, and inform itself.

57 - Howard Rheingold

Sounds interesting Eli. When you have something for our readers, let me know, and I’ll blog it.

58 - Howard Rheingold

Anybody else want to sign in before this scrolls off the visible list of commented posts?

Over the past few years, I’ve been busy building web communities (a chat community, a business community, a moblog community and even a sex community). Smartmobs.com has been my browser’s homepage for the past six months or so. I like the crazy topic titles, the clear language, and the input of both howard and the other editors. Always first with breaking news from these modern times. Keep up the good work guys! :-x

60 - Jon Myers

I’ve found the SmartMobs site and book very inspiring. In particular, the intersection of social dynamics and technology explored in both, the patterns these networks form, and key drivers. WOW!

I’m the managing partner of a NY area software developer focused on 3D-Data Visualization. Our primary focus is in the area of Financial Services. We create 3D visual decision science tools that model/ explore complexity in financial markets.

Smart Mobs has led my thinking in new directions in terms of how we model and look at entire systems to get glanceable real-time snapshots. Whether they are social, financial, political, or biological, or a synthesis of each other. THANKS!

61 - Howard Rheingold

Thank YOU, Jon. It’s a thrill for a writer — I spend most of my live alone in a room — to hear that my work had some impact.

Well, that’s one of my websites I listed above, heh, there are many- http://www.aidenraine.com is another. I’m a media studies grad student and somehow also an assistant professor at another school teaching design. I wish you were affiliated with a University because I’d love to study with you- your books essentially captured the work I want to do when I finish slogging through some of the grunt work school provides- when I was an undergrad I tried to get a class going titled “The Anthropology of the Internet”- of course that was before we had some of the exciting technologies we do today. That really is my topic of passion and when I saw someone had written about it, well… yeah. I mean to write you an email a long time ago just saying thanks for your work which has given me something to strive to complement in my future work- and hoping some day to chat with you in person. My dream, after all is to be published for something worthwhile. Wow, I seem to be using this little box as my personal coffee house chat. Cheers- though I read this site through the RSS feed so I don’t know if I count for the hits- not sure about that one.

63 - Howard Rheingold

Thanks, Elizabeth. I sometimes lecture at Stanford, but I seem to be allergic to institutions and they seem to be allergic to me. The closest thing I have to a seminar is http://www.rheingold.com/community.html — anybody who is interested can email me.

Well if you ever want a really enthusiastic assistant ;> Seriously though it seems to be a rare person who can float without the resources and the paycheck provided by a University!

65 - Howard Rheingold

Freelance writing/speaking/consulting is extraordinarily financially insecure, extraordinarily intellectually rewarding, and the main payoff — freedom of how to spend my time and direct my thoughts — is, to me, worth the shortcomings. Thanks for the offer, Elizabeth. Email on its way!

66 - Leon Cych

I am an educator and writer - and I read this site on a regular basis. I am waiting for the day when mobile comms becomes totally ubiquitous and free to air.

thoughts on video blogging

I’m putting together some notes for my session at vloggercon next week and decided to aggregate some comments I’d left on blogs around the web. If there was a better tool for this than my blog, I would have used…

thoughts on video blogging

I’m putting together some notes for my session on the Masses’ Media at vloggercon next week and decided to aggregate some comments I’d left on blogs around the web. If there was a better tool for this than my blog,…

69 - unmediated

thoughts on video blogging

I’m putting together some notes for my session on the Masses’ Media at vloggercon next week and decided to aggregate some comments I’d left on blogs around the web. If there was a better tool for this than my blog, I would have used it. ;p From CamWorl…

70 - unmediated

thoughts on video blogging

I’m putting together some notes for my session on the Masses’ Media at vloggercon next week and decided to aggregate some comments I’d left on blogs around the web. If there was a better tool for this than my blog, I would have used it. ;p From CamWorl…