Towse: views from the hill

December 2, 2006

Online Personas or somethingorother

Filed under: life,web2.0 — Tags: , — Towse @ 12:18 am

As I mentioned in a prior post, we were at a Commonwealth Club meeting 6-8 p.m. yesterday for a panel discussion titled, Online Personas: Defining the Self in a Virtual World. The meat of the panel discussion, of course, didn’t live up to the title of the discussion, but it was interesting/entertaining, nonetheless.

Discussants were (as placed L->R up in front)

ROBIN HARPER, Vice President of Community, Second Life
SHAWN GOLD, Vice President of Content and Marketing, MySpace (owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, although that was never mentioned last night)
MARK ZUCKERBERG, Founder and CEO, Facebook
REID HOFFMAN, Founder and CEO, LinkedIn

Or as some wag put it “in order of reality … from Second Life to LinkedIn.”

Moderator was David Ewing Duncan.

The event was sold out and started late as we waited for some folks not to show up so the people on the waiting list could get in.

The average age of the audience hovered around the mid-twenties, I think.

Duncan opened with, “If you could be anyone you wanted in a virtual world, who would you be?”

Harper, Second Life, says she’s just herself on Second Life, albeit with a different name. (Duncan mentioned he’d seen someone who was a dragon the night before. Short discussion of avatars. …) Gold said he’d be Will Rogers and there was some larking around with … but Will Rogers is dead. Zuckerberg said he didn’t know. Duncan tried to cajole him into saying something but no deal. Hoffman says he’s himself because LinkedIn depends on people being who they say they are.

Good start, eh?

The discussion ranged. I don’t know what I expected but I know I expected something more focussed, some ah-hah! moments, something I could carry around in my head for days after, but no. The following are my notes from the evening.

  • [chitchat before panel] Sony lady mentioned in previous post talked about eacademy, which she says is a UK social networking application where you add twenty things that you’re interested in that other people might search to find people with similar interests. (“Like, for me, maybe ‘travel’, ‘cooking’ …” “You mean like tags?” said one of the twenty-somethings nearby, listening in, helpfully. “What are ‘tags’?” Sony lady asked.)

    So I’ve been searching to try to find this UK app named something like eacademy (I even asked her if that was the way to spell it and she said yes). I’ve searched eacademy and e-academy and /UK social networking/ and all sorts of other things. Did find an interesting San Francisco-based app called bebo that I’ll check out later. The search for eacademy, though, was a bust. If anyone knows anything about it, give me a shout.

  • [chitchat before panel] Sony lady again (iirc) said that the highest rated YouTube vids seem to clock in at about 22 seconds. Be interesting to know if this is a true factoid. I’m wondering if YouTube users in general aren’t looking for meat and potatoes and are looking for amusing quick takes. Maybe.
  • “network” (as in “social network”) was a term coined by social anthropologist J.A. Barnes back in 1954 when he studied a small fishing community in Norway. He wrote that the maximum number of nodes in an effective network tends to be about 140-150, which, amazingly enough, is the average number of “friends” people seem to have on Facebook.
  • MySpace is #4 on the most busiest sites list. Facebook is #7.
  • Second Life has 1.7-2m users.
  • Facebook started out covering the students at Zuckerberg’s school. Then students from other higher ed campuses wanted in, so he recruited his roommate to help out. After hooking up the college campuses, they turned to high schools. Then friends started graduating, so they added companies and regions. (Zuckerberg dropped out Harvard somewhere in the midst of all that.)
  • LinkedIn has 8m users. Facebook 12m. (I found that last stat myself ’cause I was curious.)
  • Average age of users: SecondLife – 32; MySpace 18-25; Facebook 21-27 21-22; LinkedIn 39.
  • There are thousands of smaller social networking sites out there, including sneakerplay, a site dedicated to folks who are “avid sneaker enthusiasts, collectors, artists, designers, boutique owners, and photographers.” (Invite only)
  • Social networking is all about relationship maintenance. Make it easy to keep in touch, get back in touch.
  • Zuckerberg says Facebook is not looking so much for users to spend loads of time on the site. They do want users to come back again and again, daily, multiple times during the day. Zuckerberg claims Facebook has a 60% retention rate, which he defines as people coming back to the site again and again and again, daily, not just signing up and checking in once a month.
  • Facebook is now 50% college age but all age brackets are at 60% retention rate.
  • Gold says MySpace was allzasudden getting lots of 38-year-olds signing up and they couldn’t figure it out until they realized ah-hah! these were folks heading to or coming back from their twentieth high school reunions.
  • Harper says they analyze their users stats and have found that the top 10% of their users are using SecondLife an average of eighty-four (that’s 84!) hours a week. You have to remember, though, she says, that some people are making a living, a real living, on SecondLife.
  • MySpace gets ~ 320K new members a day.
  • Gold claims that MySpace looked at what Friendster was doing wrong when they went about designing MySpace. e.g. Friendster was booting people off who were setting up Fakester profiles. MySpace encourages people to do whatever they’d like with their profiles, even [gasp] fib, if that’s what they want to do.
  • Gold said that MySpace is 99.93% pure and that a few bad apples are acting up. They are working on the problem. They are trying to educate folks about what it means to put all that information out there in public. He tells people to tell their teenagers that they want to have the Web address for their MySpace page and give them twenty-four hours to clean up anything they wouldn’t like their parents to see.
  • Gold said MySpace took about a month for initial development. Zuckerberg said Facebook took far less time than that.

And that’s about all I cared to write down. Some of the stories and stats were interesting. (84 hrs/week ?!??)

Fun to see Mark Zuckerberg in person and sitting next to and in such sharp contrast to Reid Hoffman. Robin Harper was nothing like I expected. I don’t know what I expected.

Shawn Gold, btw, is dead cute and funny. Sharp. Mark Zuckerberg seems sharp and smart and incredibly shy up in front of a crowd of people, answering questions posed by a moderator. Reid Hoffman was about as far toward the business side of things as Robin Harper was toward the opposite.

Update: SFGate/Chron Tech Chronicle writeup.

Fun evening. The Q&A took far longer than expected. We were set free for wine and noshies about 7:55 p.m. We had a dinner reservation at Palio at 8 p.m. and had to forego the schmooze, networking and wine to hoofie over to Palio, alas. We were at Palio by 8:10 p.m. and settled in for a simple, delish dinner.

December 1, 2006

World AIDS Day 2006

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 9:36 pm

No, we’re not celebrating HIV/AIDS. Today is the day to gen up on the subject.

f’rex:

Nearly 40 million people worldwide live with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, 2.6 million more than in 2004. Sub-Saharan Africa remains worst hit with 24.7 million people infected.

Of the 2.9 million global deaths from AIDS last year, 2.1 million occurred in Africa, U.N. figures show. [ref: Reuters]

5.7m people are infected in India.

5.5m (almost 19%) of South Africans have HIV/AIDS. 600-800 people a day die of AIDS in South Africa.

A couple years back I heard Stephen Lewis, the UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, give a talk at AAAS. No, not “a talk,” a call to arms.

Lewis told of grandparents taking care of their underaged grandchildren because all of their children have died of AIDS. What happens when the grandparents, or whatever other adults have been handling that foster role, die? What is happening to sub-Saharan Africa as it loses its adult population to this disease and its children are raising themselves and each other?

Lewis railed against those who aren’t part of the solution, smarmy tokenism and gender inequality at the AIDS 2006 conference in Toronto, August 2006. [~30 min]

Lewis is leaving his post this month. What then? Who?

Learn more.

[WR] Characters

Filed under: writing — Towse @ 8:49 pm

in re the dooces of the world and my comment, “She’d make a great character in a book,” someone commented,

And as a character, such a one wouldn’t interest me much. Not unless they had something else going on, and the blogging was just a quirk.

I wasn’t thinking of the bloggers as blogging characters but as characters, characters who don’t necessarily blog but who have a certain personality, the personality that’s shining through on the blog.

Folks on m.w and elsewhere strike me in a similar fashion. Not to mention any names, of course.

That’s part of why I like the WWWorld out there. There are people and personalities I would never have experienced otherwise, folks I never would’ve met up with or talked to IRL — the braggarts, the drug cases, the nuts, the folks who can quote Nietzsche (or can merely spell his name) without having to look it up, the self-involved editors with their ups and downs, the folks with hearts as big as Texas, engineers who sing a capella, legal secretaries who write torrid romances and all those sorts.

My insular engineer-techie sort of world and my insular Telegraph Hill-dwelling world don’t really intersect with the down-and-out folks down on Market Street, f’rex, unless I make a conscious effort to do so, and even then we don’t necessary connect and have a conversation.

You meet a whole different sort of character standing in line to pay your phone bill at the phone office than you ever meet at a Commonwealth Club meeting.

You meet a wide variety of folks on Muni. Well, maybe not meet them, but certainly see them in action.

Plus it’s fun to make up stories about people you just catch a glimpse of.

In the WWWorld, you don’t even have to talk with folks to get an idea of what makes them tick, or to see enough of them that you can bounce off that to a character who acts a certain way because of their background or personality or history. You can read their blogs, follow comments they make on other peoples’ blogs, watch their antics in Usenet newsgroups or other networks.

We were at a Commonwealth Club meeting 6-8 p.m. yesterday (more on that perhaps later) that was a panel discussion: Online Personas: Defining the Self in a Virtual World, although, of course, the reality was very different from the proposed subject. Participants were

SHAWN GOLD, Vice President of Content and Marketing, MySpace
ROBIN HARPER, Vice President of Community, Second Life
REID HOFFMAN, Founder and CEO, LinkedIn
MARK ZUCKERBERG, Founder and CEO, Facebook

The event was sold out. The average age hovered around the mid-twenties, I think.

The woman next to me was up from LA, worked for Sony (she said) worrying about international distribution of Sony product, was interested in exploring the people and content available in online networks and working up some proposal for Fox (she said), had a son who was interested in film and looking at film schools (she said), and so on.

She also had never heard of Brookers, although she had seen Carson Daly speak and knew he was interested in all this online community/networking stuff that she was claiming an interest in. … and she’d only heard of mashups like a day or two before. And you have a seventeen-year-old? I thought, and have a job in the entertainment industry and are interested in all this stuff? I thought.

We decided she was a real-life avatar. Sure she’d flown up from LA. Sure she worked for Sony. Sure she had a college-applying teenage son.

She’d never heard of mashups? She’d never heard of Brookers? Who was this in-the-belly-of-the-cutting-edge-creative-beast person? Really, I mean. Was she who she said she was and just did not pay attention or was she something/someone else altogether?

Shawn Gold, btw, is dead cute and funny. Sharp. Mark Zuckerberg seems sharp and smart and incredibly shy up in front of a crowd of people, answering questions posed by a moderator. Reid Hoffman was about as far toward the business side of things as Robin Harper was toward the opposite. But more on all that later.

As we were walking to dinner (more on that too), we commented that there’d been no discussion of avatars IRL, but perhaps there should’ve been.

[LOWPAY MKT] Aaarrrrgh. Shimmer Magazine’s Pirate Issue (Summer 2007)

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 6:43 pm

Shimmer Magazine’s Pirate Issue call for submissions

The MS Shimmer has been captured by the Dred Pirate John Joseph Adams, first-mate of the Fantasy & Science Fiction. For the Summer 2007 issue, our pages will be filled with pirate stories. What better way to celebrate National Talk Like a Pirate Day?

What kind of pirates? All kinds — fantasy, science fiction, contemporary, historical, futuristic, high seas, deep space — if it’s got pirates and it’s speculative fiction, Captain Adams wants it. The usual Shimmer guidelines apply, but with pirates.

Bring us your pirate stories for Summer 2007, the Pirate Issue.

Submission porthole: December 1, 2006-January 31, 2007.

Submission guidelines

PAYS: $0.01/wd. Minimum $10. Maximum $30.
BUYS: First Serial rts & electronic rts.

[BLOG] dooce redux

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 4:48 pm

From the comments: Good god, I can’t stand Dooce. I’m surprised you like her. She’s so whiny and boring–all that momminess, ugh! One of my other blogpeeps mentioned her latest kerfuffle with a publishing company she wigged out on. But Dooce is always the victim, wah wah.

That’s it! That’s where I’d found her and why I’d stashed the link away.

Miss Snark wrote about the dooce vs. Kensington kerfuffle back in October and I toddled over back then to look at the blog and blogline’d the link. Hadn’t been back until yesterday.

The kerfuffle, for those just joining us, had Kensington offering Heather a two-book contract late last year and Heather accepting. After months of negotiating as to the details of the contract, Heather refused to sign the dotted line last May after her legal representative told Kensington the contract was a go because the editor Heather’d been expecting to have at Kensington was leaving the company. Oh, there was more to it than that. Heather said the negotiating took too long. She was upset that they hadn’t told her the editor was planning to leave. &c. and so forth.

Kensington said they had an oral agreement to a contract and were just working out the details. Heather said they had no contract at all until she signed. Kensington sued.

Great and gory gobs ensued.

Heather wound up settling and agreeing to edit an anthology of some sort for Kensington while she took her whatever she’d planned for them elsewhere.

Maya Reynolds wrote what I’d been thinking about the Kensington episode in a clearer fashion:

My first reaction upon reading Heather’s post was to shake my head. She seems to have no understanding that a verbal agreement negotiated by your duly appointed legal representative is a binding agreement. Then it occurred to me. Why should she?

As near as I can tell from her blog, Heather’s professional experience in the working world was limited to the period between her graduation from college in 1997 to her firing from her job in 2002. Five years as a graphic artist/web designer. While I can’t state this with certainty, she appears to have tumbled into her career as an “author” in the same impulsive way she began blogging–and with similar consequences.

As I mentioned yesterday, I’d wandered back to the blog yesterday, not remembering why I’d saved the link to it to begin with.

The blog’s quirky and entertaining to me. I like reading her view as a used-to-was LDS living in Salt Lake City. (Has she been officially excommunicated? If so, why is her family still hanging out with her? Naughty! You’re supposed to shun excommunicated members whether they’re family or not.)

Heather reminds me of another Heather I know (Hi, Heather!) in that she is an unabashedly self-centered navel gazer who’s wound up goo-gaw over her daughter. The Heather I know is less teetering-edge frail and neurotic in the head. (November 28th, f’rex, dooce wrote about her over-the-top worrying.)

Both Heathers write entertainingly about their it’s-all-about-me! lives. Well, dooce does. My other Heather seems to be too busy with the now-two-years-old (or is it three-years-old by now) baby to keep her blog going. We’re waiting, Heather. …

Heck, Paula. I wouldn’t want to live dooce’s life — drama exhausts me — and I certainly wouldn’t want to be the one she calls when she drops her marshmallow in the fire and wants someone to rescue it, but I like her voice, her out-there-ed-ness.

She’d make a great character in a book.

Say …….

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