Updated: 11/26/09; 9:42:30 PM.
The Mediaburn Radio Weblog
"THE FOCUS OF DIGITAL MEDIA" - Gary Santoro and Mediaburn.net


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Sunday, April 4, 2004

(4/4) - New Weblog Four Corners
Welcome to Four Corners. 4/4/04 04:04 AM GMT "From the Four Corners of the Earth they come To kiss this shrine, this mortal-breathing saint." -- William Shakespeare, the Merchant of Venice, Act II Scene vii "The self-existing and invisible Creator of the universe;... [Four Corners]
9:15:25 PM    

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Lots of Wireless Going On
S.F. Bay Area tops in wireless cities survey. The San Francisco Bay Area takes top honors in a survey of cities that offer the most wireless Internet connectivity, as the trend of increasing wireless access sweeps through U.S. cities as well as airports and college campuses. [CNET News.com]
9:12:55 PM    

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Matt Hinrichs: Design - Illustration
Portfolio Update II.

My portfolio has undergone another update. I originally intended to just redo the front page with this logo (which also appears on some promotional postcards I'm doing), but the entire site's been redesigned top to bottom. That logo kinda looks like it belongs on a bottle of paint or air freshener, don't you think? It isn't very often that a design gives off an "aerosol spray can" vibe. [scrubbles.net]
9:09:42 PM    

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Phoenix Film Festival
A picture named thefalls.jpg

Phoenix Philm Phestival

This weekend is the Phoenix Film Festival and by all accounts it's doing quite well. Sponsored in part by The Sundance Channel, the festival is reportedly posting sales four times higher than previous years. This is significantly better than a couple of years ago when a famous (albeit fading) film star came in for the festival and huffed out of town a few hours later when it became apparent how tiny and inconsequential the Phoenix festival was.

One of the films I hope to see today (at 3:10 pm) is The Falls. Shot in New York with two (2) Canon XL1s, the film boasts over 300 visual effects shots done with Adobe After Effects. An extensive article on the post production is very informative and can be read at Film Festival Today. (The photos above are from that article.)

Director Paul DeNigris was born and raised in New York but currently resides in Peoria, Arizona. I'm wondering where he acquired his film skills. I've heard the film isn't as good as the effects. Given what I've heard about the effects, that would be tough. [Cyndi Greening's Radio Blog]
3:38:10 PM    

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No Festival Required Part 16, Tonight
No Festival Required Part 16. This is my ninth poster for No Festival Required, and it evoked the following testimonial from No Fes consprator Steve Weiss: I have to say this, with all sincerity and unabashed... [Fresh News]
8:10:42 AM    

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Microcinema - No Festival Required - Phoenix
No Festival Required at the Phoenix Art Museum. I've just completed another poster design for the curators of Phoenix's first successful Microcinema, otherwise known as No Festival Required. They wanted "funky and homegrown." This is what they got, and they loved it. [Fresh News]
8:07:11 AM    

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Crumb...and Merchandise From the Cartoonist!
A picture named thumbing-it.jpgThumbing it. The website of the Crumb family, maintained by his son Jesse. Everybody now order some of my bishop T-Shirts, so I can order some Robert Crumb stuff. Quick. [The Cartoonist]
7:34:32 AM    

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Back to the 'Website'
Kill Blog.

Kill Bill movieHands up who wants to get rid of the word "blog"? I'm beginning to wonder whether the word "weblog" has outlived its purpose. But before you call the white coats, let me try and explain.

You see, blogging to me has always meant writing and linking. Seb Paquet has a much more comprehensive definition, but in a nutshell blogging is all about publishing your writing and links. Nowadays we're entering a stage in the Read/Write Web (aka the Two-Way Web) where publishing to the Web is much more than writing and linking. It's about music, photos, videos, audio, situated software applications, editing your Orkut profile, etc.

Not everyone is, or wants to be, a writer. Boy have I found that out, the hard way, in my career so far as a Web Producer/Online Manager. Content Management has always been a big challenge in managing an Intranet or Internet website. The trendy strategy in recent years has been "distributed content management" - whereby you deploy a big 'ol Enterprise CMS, whack up some templates, and hand it over to the business to maintain the content. Well, that's the way it's supposed to work. But in reality, the majority of business people have little motivation to spend their time fiddling around with a website. Even the best Enterprise CMS's have a learning curve and all of them have some technical glitches and gotchas. So content maintenance often falls back on the IT dept or a Web-savvy team that specialises in content maintenance.

Motivation really is the key word - most business people have no desire to write and publish content and it's usually not in their job descriptions. Jeffrey Veen wrote an excellent article recently on why Content Management Systems have failed - websites need Editors, he says. Websites are a publication and so they need specialist publishers to maintain them.

To get back to blogging, there is a correlation with Content Management in the business world. Weblogging tools have undoubtedly made it easier for normal everyday people to publish their content to the Web. Just like Enterprise CMS's make it relatively easy for business folk to create and maintain content on their company's websites. But here's the crux: even though people have the tools nowadays, a large majority of them still don't have motivation to use them.

So far, the blogging world has been mostly all about writing and links. Therefore people who like writing and linking are attracted to blogging. But that's a small percentage of people who use the Web. A lot of the general public, particularly the young and affluent, are already producing things on the Web. Music, photos, code, and so on. All they need is a vehicle to "publish" those things. For example, I know a few programmers who have some fantastic ideas about web development. But writing words isn't their forte - writing code is. So they tinker with code, make some notes, try out a few ideas - but all of this never gets published. Weblogs aren't quite the tool for that.

And here's where I come back to the word "blog" and why I want to kill it off. Because it's so ingrained now as meaning writing and linking, it doesn't express the full variety of things that are beginning to be produced and created on the Web by 'amateurs'. The phrase "personal publishing" does a better job of describing this new range of multimedia production.

In order for the personal publishing revolution to take off, I reckon we've got to break free of "the blogosphere" and propel ourselves into a new Universe of Personal Publishing. Sure, writing is my forte and I use my weblog primarily as a publishing tool. But there's a whole other world out there, ready to explore!

[Read/Write Web]
7:29:33 AM    

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© Copyright 2009 Gary Santoro.
 

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