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Notes from the world of ETCon

April 28, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

My column about the O’Reilly Emerging Technologies Conference — a musing on the future of Web services, as the wave of idealistic technological innovation hits the breakers of proprietaty business thinking and legal constraint — is now up on Salon, here. (It’s a Salon Premium-only piece, but anyone can read it if you watch an ad and get a “daypass.”)

For those interested in more session-by-session reports from this conference, there’s a list of those bloggers who provided notes here.

This was beyond a doubt the most heavily blogged, WiFi-hotspotted, wiki-fied, IM-ed, chat-enabled event I’ve ever attended. There was even some cool, Rendezvous-enabled group-note-taking employing some software called Hydra.

At one point at the start of a talk I saw Cory Doctorow and Glenn Fleishman wandering the hall, laptops held open at waist level, moving intently, deliberately, up aisles and down rows. I understood on an intellectual level that their orbit somehow involved a hunt for good 802.11b reception; but what my eyes took in seemed more seance-like, a wireless ritual. It was as though they were scouting for the geek music of the spheres. I hope they found it.

Filed Under: Events, Technology

Digital Storytelling Festival returns

April 17, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Eight years ago I attended the first Digital Storytelling Festival in Crested Butte, Colo., at which a group of three dozen or so invited guests assembled to talk about the collision of narrative art and digital technology. It remains one of the high moments of my conference-going career — and not only because Crested Butte is about 9000 feet above sea level.

In the three successive years that I attended, the conference grew in size, and it acquired a more specific focus on how individuals — professional artists and everyday people alike — can use digital tools to tell their own stories and break through the logjam of “old” media. Yet that first event set a pattern of intelligence and camaraderie that held up through the years.

I was unable to go to conference number five, in fall 1999, and since then the event has been on hiatus — its founder and guiding spirit, Dana Atchley, passed away in Dec. 2000. But Dana’s wife Denise — working with Joe Lambert and Nina Mullen of the Center for Digital Storytelling, and with the core of people that have formed the Digital Storytellers Association — has revived and revitalized the festival this year. It happens June 12-15, and I’m going to be talking there, along with a bunch of great people (including, as of now, Brenda Laurel, Harry Marks, Jonathan Delacour, Derek Powazek, Kit Laybourne, and many others).

One big thing that’s changed is the location: The festival has moved to Sedona, Arizona. Arizona in June may sound like a recipe for frying, but Sedona’s up high (though not as high as Crested Butte) — I’ve been there in June, and it’s delightful. There’s lots more info here.

Filed Under: Events

Berkeley panel

April 10, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Tonight I’m participating in a panel at the Berkeley School of Journalism on “Weblogs, Information and Society” — along with Dan Gillmor, Ross Mayfield, Donna Wentworth, Ed Felten and Ernest Miller. Should be interesting. They’ll be Webcasting it, too.

Filed Under: Events

VisiCalc memories

April 9, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

As the father of twin three-year-old boys, I don’t get out much, I’m sorry to say. But I did head down to Silicon Valley last night for a special event hosted by the Computer History Museum. Titled “The Origins and Impact of VisiCalc,” the panel discussion featured Dan Bricklin, who dreamed up VisiCalc; Bob Frankston, responsible for coding it; and Mitch Kapor, the father of Lotus 1-2-3, which succeeded VisiCalc in the spreadsheet marketplace. Microsoft’s Charles Simonyi moderated.

The story of VisiCalc is the stuff of software-industry legend: It is widely viewed as the original “killer app” for personal computing (though Simonyi said that that term was actually first applied to Lotus 1-2-3 and only later retroactively extended to VisiCalc itself). People would see a demo of the spreadsheet, or see a friend using it, and decide to go out and buy a computer so they could use it.

VisiCalc first achieved its popularity on the Apple II, but it ceded its market to Lotus when the IBM PC arrived: 1-2-3, which was coded to take advantage of the PC’s 16-bit processing (the Apple II and CP/M computers popular before the PC were 8-bit) seized the moment of this “platform transition” to take the lead. (The panel, which was being hosted at Microsoft’s Mountain View campus, did not touch on the process by which Lotus, in turn, lost out to Microsoft’s Excel, as part of Microsoft’s cementing of its “Office suite” dominance in the ’90s.)

Though this is an oft-told story in the annals of computing, I learned a number of new things from listening to Bricklin and Frankston.

Bricklin explained that his father was a printer and that’s how he learned the importance of prototyping, doing quick mockups for customers first before you committed to stuff that was hard to change. He showed a manual page from a typesetting terminal, the Harris 2200, that also served as one inspiration for the spreadsheet, with its separate layers of data, calculations and formatting. He also mentioned that it was his background in computerized typesetting that inculcated in him the principle of “keystroke minimization” — because in that field, people were actually paid by the keystroke.

Bricklin and the other panelists agreed that VisiCalc succeeded because it was different from the kind of financial forecasting software that already existed — it was a free-form, general purpose tool, an electronic “back of the envelope.” It allowed non-programmers to do things at a level of complexity that, previously, you had to learn programming to accomplish.

Bricklin and Frankston recalled that their initial efforts to promote VisiCalc did not meet universal enthusiasm. Experienced computer people weren’t bowled over, Bricklin said; they would dismiss the spreadsheet with, “Hey, I can already do most of this in BASIC.” People who had no experience with computers tended to think that computers could do anything under the sun, and so VisiCalc didn’t wow them. “But when the accountants saw it — there was an accountant [at a particular computer store], he started shaking — he said, ‘This is what I do all day!'”

Kapor closed out the discussion with a tribute to this pioneering piece of software: “VisiCalc literally changed my life. It was a complete inspiration. I don’t think people remember what impact it had. It had an elegant minimalism — it got out of your way… My goal in life was to design something that could stand next to VisiCalc without embarrassment.”

As someone who was an undergraduate in Cambridge at the same time in the late ’70s that Bricklin was dreaming of a “magic typable blackboard” at the Harvard Business School, I found Bricklin’s photos from that era (posted on his own Web site here) evocative. Since I spent a lot of time in that era working on Compugraphic typesetting machines, I was amused and intrigued to hear him acknowledge his debt to the world of that technology.

Bricklin also displayed a copy of Inc. magazine from Jan. 1982, with a cover story on “The Birth of a New Industry” and a cover shot of Bricklin and Frankston. (You can see it on Bricklin’s site here.) As the photo appeared on the screen at the front of the lecture hall, someone in the crowd shouted, “Same shirt!” Then and now, Bricklin favored the plaid flannel look.

Filed Under: Events, Software, Technology

10 years of digital storytelling

February 10, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

If you’re in the Bay Area you should consider this event Thursday evening at the Yerba Buena Center: “Voices Known: Celebrating 10 Years of Digital Storytelling.” This is a kind of anniversary party for the Berkeley-based Center for Digital Storytelling, a major hub — maintained by Joe Lambert and Nina Mullen — of the digital storytelling movement that I’ve been writing about, on and off, for years now. It’s a live performance featuring Guillermo Gomez-Pena, Awele Makeba, Brenda Wong Aoki/Mark Izu, Scott Wells and more. Tickets are $15-25 (info at 510 548 2065).

Filed Under: Culture, Events, Technology

Live from the blogosphere

January 31, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

…is the title of a blogging panel set for 2/15 in Los Angeles. If you’re in the area, it looks to be worth your time, with a great lineup, including Salon blogs’ own Susannah Breslin, Salon contributor Heather Havrilesky, Doc Searls, Evan Williams, Tony Pierce of Busblog, and Mark Frauenfelder.

Here’s more info.

Filed Under: Events

Geek heaven

December 12, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

My column on Supernova is now up, here. A taste:

  The danger here is that the dynamo of the Silicon Valley boom-bust cycle, in its hunger for Next Big Thing fuel, will seize upon Wi-Fi, blogs and Web services and then spit them out, chewed-up and spent — before they’ve ever had a chance to mature and show off their potential.

Filed Under: Events, Technology

Supernova

December 10, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

I couldn’t make it back for Day 2 of this conference — too much to do back at the office — but Day 1 was full of interesting stuff. (And hey, I can keep up with the conference blog.) Look for a regular column later this week. I’m afraid I’m not much of a real-time blogger; I don’t have wireless and I’ve gotten so tired of lugging my laptop around at conferences that I’ve reverted to low-tech notebook scribbling. My motto: I Blog When I Can.

Filed Under: Events

At Supernova

December 9, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

Out today at Supernova conference….

Filed Under: Events

Supernova

November 26, 2002 by Scott Rosenberg

It has been a long time since I attended a technology conference. Somehow the last two years of industry implosion have left me feeling the opposite of gregarious. (Also, having become a parent, I’m not as quick to travel…) But the lineup that Kevin Werbach has assembled for his upcoming Supernova conference (Dec. 9-10) looks well worth the trip, and hey, it’s not much of a trip for me anyway (it’s in Palo Alto), so I’m planning to be there, barring a crisis. The theme is decentralization; the roster includes Sergey Brin of Google, Mitch Kapor, Clay Shirky, Howard Rheingold, and a lot of other interesting people.

Filed Under: Events

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