Halloween for Homies

26 10 2008

Check out the pictures I took at Matt & Lisa’s Annual Halloween for Homies 2008 bash! I’m in the bunny costume (recycled from Sara’s Alice-in-Wonderland-themed Birthday Party). Sara came as a Raven and brought the hooping vibe to the masses. Thanks to Matt and Lisa for being the best hosts and our dear friends!





Social Networking Can Be Social Activism

22 10 2008

Ok, this morning, I’m checking my Twitter stream and was happily surprised to find that Tim O’Reilley (yeah, the publishing and web 2.0 magnate) retweeted my post response referencing this story by David Wolman in Wired magazine: Cairo Activists Use Facebook to Rattle Regime. Besides being totally juiced that such a celebrated figure would deem it worthy to (a) follow me on Twitter, (b) actually reads my replies, and (c) thought this was worth mentioning, it got me thinking about a number of items I’ve seen recently regarding the marriage of social activism and Web 2.0.

One great example from this month’s Fast Company is an article by David Kushner regarding a “YouTube for unseen atrocities.” The article talks about a venture started by Peter Gabriel called the Hub, where on-site recorders of terrible events can post their movies such that a devoted group of online activists can react and start applying international pressure to correct the situations. While it is arguably difficult to ensure that cameras are rolling when “The MAN” is kicking the proletariat’s ass, today’s video-capable cellphones are making this a reality even in the farthest reaches of the third world.  More power to them.

Another good example is Amazee (thanks, again Tim!), which is kind of a startup incubator for social activists. Rebels with causes can find like-minded activists and resources to help them get their projects started.

All this makes you want to cheer for the little guy. Or as Arundhati Roy says “stand with the dispossesed.” What social activism will you engage in today?





Thanks for the T-Shirt

17 10 2008

In the interest of full disclosure:

Shout out to the folks at Strands for sending me a t-shirt. It’s a nice, dark gray number with Strands logo on the front and a nice letter from Kalong.

You have to admire this level of marketing engagement and service. I still don;t have much utility for the service, but look forward to improvements.  With the current financial turmoil, I hope these guys “keep their shirts” as well and weather the storm as the site doesn’t appear to have a discernible business model. Par for the course in Web 2.0, but you want to root for the good guys!





Achtung! Lifestream Delay

12 10 2008

So I check into Lifestream.fm to see what’s up. Ok, it’s a Sunday morning at 9 AM, but given that I’ve already posted to Twitter I would expect to see this morning’s posts in my stream. No such luck: The last post I see is from yesterday morning. Wow, that’s underwhelming.

I need to work on my German too, as it seems Lifestream has a larger proportion of German usership. Having one language, a foreign one for me despite all my latent RosettaStoning, on your Everyone page is somewhat limiting. Users often check out pages like this as a starting point in exploring a new social network, but not being able to read a single post is a turn-off to new users. If they only showed me posts in languages I knew, or allowed me to filter posts by language, that would be a big help.





Lifestream.fm is ho hum, ahem.

7 10 2008

Checked out another lifestreaming site: Lifestream.fm. Reasonable sign up and setup. The site supports lots of services, with some notable exceptions (e.g., It doesn’t support MySpace!).

The system shows you your updates, in order. That’s about it. With Twitter-like followership and in-system comments based on yet another group of friends you have to setup. They do offer friend import features to use your address book to invite them.

Again, what’s with the services that tell you only what you did? (You know: You where there.) Again, one of the interesting features of Web 2.0 is that it is about conversation! What I say is just not as interesting as what the community collectively says. It’s just like Jazz, baby. People require the canvas of social context and feedback to paint a whole that is greater than the parts, to riff upon each other and create harmony and discord. In short, to improvise the funky groove jam that is our collective symphony of communication.

Maybe I should give Lifestream a try and invite a friend or two. Maybe the site is more interesting with friends in it. Probably, but I really want feed aggregation in my life stream to capture the conversation. That conversation is already going on outside of Lifestream.fm on other services and without that in the application, the site leaves me a little bored and looking for more utility.

Hope they keep working on it though. I’ll come back and check out how they’re doing in a few months and let you know.





Pick of the Day

7 10 2008

Hey there! A big shout-out to Kalong for picking my picture for Strand’s Pick of the Day. The pic is from my wife’s 30th Birthday Party which had an Alice In Wonderland theme. Our friends from Detroit helped with DJing and decorations. Everyone came in costume, and we rocked the hizouse.  :)





Strands Response

3 10 2008

Here’s a shoutout to the Strands guys for taking it on the chin!

E-mail I just sent:

“Hey guys,

Much respect for the comment on my blog post regarding your service. Glad you’re listening and thanks for engaging me, even though what I said wasn’t that nice. That’s impressive and appreciated.

-Stephen
WhiskeyMambo.com”





Strands Kinda Sucks

3 10 2008

So I’ve been looking at a new service called Strands that’s in private beta right now. On the upside, Kalong, a University of Michigan student who provides support is earnest, trying hard, and engaging, though her humour ranges to the scatalogical. Still, she asked me to contact them via their feedback link, which I did, and I’m supposed to get a t-shirt for it. That’s cool, but I really just want an answer to my question. It’s been over 24 hours and nada, nyet, nothing. I could Twitter her instead, but I think that a startup service like this should provide way faster customer service.

As for the site itself, I’m not sure I get it. You enter your services just like most lifestreaming services, but what you get is an aggregated list of what you said or posted. What’s the point of that? I know what I said. I was there! I guess the point is that the service will find other items of interest based on the content of your various feeds, but the feature is kind of a let-down.

For example, I posted an entry about the new Facebook app a few days ago, so the system thinks that I want to read about some other guy who said he liked the new Facebook sign up page. Ok, but the only commentary about it is within the Strands Beta community, all of whom are people I don’t know. Hence, their opinion is of less interest to me than what people in the great old blogosphere, or better yet, my friends, are saying. It’s like having a conversation about fruit in the check-out line just because the stranger in front of you also has bananas. Ok for small talk and meeting people, but the online analog feels just as forced.

The interface is nice, but a little quirky. I’d give them feedback , but I’m not sure anyone is listening besides Kalong. And she probably has something better to do. All in all, Strands kinda sucks.





3 10 2008

My post-debate hangover might end by the time the House votes. Damn, I was having such a good time!





Palin vs Biden

2 10 2008

Biden is great. He does a great job outlining his positions: one, two, three, and out. Palin is almost completely avoiding the questions, though Biden is also drifting.

Honestly, I left to walk the dog and go to rest room when she spoke earlier. She bores me, and annoys me. I’m not sure why she’s here.

It’s like when Perot picked Admiral Stockdale and he actually said “Who am I? Why am I here?” during that VP debate. Those words made everyone question Perot’s judgement. Same old story, different cast. Slam dunk, Joe; great job!








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