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Apr 15 / Francine Hardaway

LiveBlogging from Web 2.0 Expo

This is ignite! the speed speaking pre-conference at Web 2.0 Expo that determines who will be the keynote speaker on Wednesday. It’s Sunday night at the Moscone Center, and there will be two dozen five-minute talks from a random assortment of people, including the now-famous Justin.tv. The first speaker is from Dabble, talking about his computerized way of matching logos to the web pages they appear on. So what?

Ryan Stewart from ignite Seattle, however, is fascinating while talking very quickly about rich internet applications –web applications that have the features and functionality of traditional desktop apps. RIAs are much more usable. because they engage users, make emotional connections with them, and make things fun instead of just functional. But, he also says not to abandon the desktop. Adobe’s Apollo will be a big way of joining the desktop to the online world, and also Microsoft’s WPF/E. (Don’t know what that is).

Timothy Ferriss, author of the Four Hour Work Week is next. He talks about techniques for getting rid of interruptions and getting the critical few things done instead of the trivial many. Here are his key principles. They sound like a time management class I took in 1979.
1)batching: performing like tasks at set times and letting them accumulate in between
2)The 80-20 rule: apply it to people as well as customers. Fire those customers that take time and don’t give you revenue
3)Outsource your life. Calculate your hourly rate and anything that costs less should be outsourced. GetFriday.com.
4)For work life separation, schedule your life.
Focus on eliminating information instead of trying to consume it and organize it.
But his talk is the best so far.

A speaker on diversity doesn’t interest me; perhaps I’ve had too much of Don Imus.

The organizers of the Barcamps from Toronto spoke next. There’s a really interesting opportunity to use social media tools to effect social change in your community. Their Barcamps are about finding the things about which people are passionate in your community and using social media to effect change. I think there was one in Phoenix last year that I couldn’t attend; Refresh Phoenix and Sean Tierney did it.

Instructables
is a collaborative reference site for do it yourself projects. Turns out, it is a tool that lets fourteen year old kids make guns out of Legos or K’nex, the color coded building materials that make robots, and tell other kids how to do it.

The last guy in this section is talking about the process of raising honey bees, and the hive mind. It’s pretty interesting, especially since all the honeybees have recently vanished. One hypothesis for why they’ve gone is cellular signals.

What have I learned? That collaborative projects are more successful than anything undertaken alone, and that in this isolated country of ours, community is making a very strong comeback. And that most people can’t say anything truly persuasive or convincing in five minutes.

As usual, the chat back channel is more interesting and more brutal than the presenters.

UPDATE: Timothy Farriss won. The wisdom of crowds strikes again.

  • http://profile.typekey.com/burnunit/ burnunit

    Well, I must say I don’t think I said Imus’ name even once (there wouldn’t have been time! wow 5 mins goes by in a hurry when you’re up there!)
    What are ya gonna do, right? Took some time to think about and plan the presentation out and Imus goes and gets on every damn channel for two weeks just in time to fatigue peoples.
    Not to mention, we’re jumping in with some risks so to speak. I mean, I consider it a point of pride that none of ProGroup’s competitors have people at web20. The paths of the diversity industry and the internet are only just beginning to cross, and that quite slowly.
    It being my job and being the geekiest of the people at our company meant I really wanted to go.
    Only in the most general sense did I want to see if my fellow geeks confirmed to stereotypes or not. Still not getting hard numbers on that, though the anecdotal evidence is pretty strong, if last night is any indication.
    But yeah, that instructables stuff was pretty great, huh?

  • http://profile.typekey.com/burnunit/ burnunit

    Well, I must say I don’t think I said Imus’ name even once (there wouldn’t have been time! wow 5 mins goes by in a hurry when you’re up there!)
    What are ya gonna do, right? Took some time to think about and plan the presentation out and Imus goes and gets on every damn channel for two weeks just in time to fatigue peoples.
    Not to mention, we’re jumping in with some risks so to speak. I mean, I consider it a point of pride that none of ProGroup’s competitors have people at web20. The paths of the diversity industry and the internet are only just beginning to cross, and that quite slowly.
    It being my job and being the geekiest of the people at our company meant I really wanted to go.
    Only in the most general sense did I want to see if my fellow geeks confirmed to stereotypes or not. Still not getting hard numbers on that, though the anecdotal evidence is pretty strong, if last night is any indication.
    But yeah, that instructables stuff was pretty great, huh?