Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 2nd of April, 2008 at 12:28 am under McLuhan, SXSW, communication, media, seesmic, social apps, social media, society, sxsw2008, sxswi, technology and twitter.    This post has no comments.

This is my last post on SXSW. It may be the most important one though. As I’ve written, I went to SXSW thinking it would be a tech event. I’ve come back to London with the realization that it’s not about bits and bytes. It’s about people. It’s about the keynotes and the audience who take on those keynote speakers. It’s about regular panels and the individuals who stand up and wait for a turn to ask a question at the mic. And it’s about all those lunatics who see a twitter calling for a mid-afternoon tweet-up at a random bar and despite knowing nobody turn up and make friends. Thanks for that twitter.

I would like to briefly go through some standout panels and keynotes at SXSW. He was subsequently outshone, or certainly out hyped by other big guns, but for me Henry Jenkins really brought his A-Game. Thesis: Society and its leaders and its media are switching from an ‘I’ culture to a ‘we’ culture. Examples: Survivor and Lost’s level of audience participation. These prime time shows do not exist without their online audience examining every last secret detail of every frame of every episode.
Exampe: Barack Obama talks using the post-boomer inclusivity language of ‘We’. Hillary Clinton does not. ‘I’ plays a big part in Clinton’s speeches and represents a person born of a political generation that wholeheartedly embraces the one way medium of TV. That’s over Mrs. Clinton.
Daniel light adds to Jenkins’ thesis in his excellent post:

“This isn’t presented as happening at the expense of individuality or self-determination. On the contrary, this is not communism but communalism, seeing the interests of the community best served by the divergent creativity and initiative of we, its constituents.”

Social Networks such as Twitter and Seesmic are obvious manifestations of this communalism. They represent the audacity and urgency of intimacy that I think Jenkins talks about.

Mark Zuckerberg
A whole ton of stuff has been written about the Zukerberg/Lacy interview. It was a cringe worthy affair. So what, let’s get on with the show. Neither Zuckerberg nor Lacy came across as particularly interesting individuals in person, but I do want to examine a few points Zuck tried to get out between acts of audience revolt. Sure, audience participation via online social network back channels is interesting but not in a huge manner right now. Come on, this is one of the biggest geek fests on the planet, if it’s going to happen anywhere it’s going to happen here.

One interesting side note is the reference Zuck makes to how Facebook is helping revolutionaries in Colombia. Look at the Guardian piece on FB’s backers. Is this thus a huge surprise. Government and big business have sought to control information and access to information since mankind invented media. ie forever. The reformation was enabled by Guttenberg’s wresting of information control from the Catholic church after all. If I’m the CIA, you better believe I want to control, or at the very least have readily available access to these information paths.

One worry here is that as with Google, as large corporations start to gain an ownership on our information and relationships they can massage these in different ways. McLuhan’s statement on medium and message rings true. Our thoughts and the way we think adapts to the medium. Control that and control the message.

Zuck stated quite audaciously that Facebook represents the biggest paradigm shift in media since the launch of the newspaper industry. Maybe he’s actually right, did anyone think of that?

Newspapers didn’t shift society’s thought functionality on their own, it took the invention and adoption of the telegraph to put them over the edge. The telegraph removed the limitations of space and time on the newspaper industry. The newspaper press was then free to become the first medium to involve human interest and sentiment en masse. With that the telegraph ultimately dimmed the privacy of the book form.

Nearly 200 years later social networks are doing a similar job in dismantling barriers of intimacy in our communications. The generation of school children on Bebo has grown up with almost a complete, non-technological, tool set to use social networks to communicate.

Commentators in their twenties and older wonder how this generation is going to grow up and hit the work force with all their teenage trials and tribulations shared online for the potential employer to vet. But that isn’t the employee’s problem. They are comfortable with their shared intimacy. It’s the employer who’s going to have to deal with it. In the past decade we’ve had two presidents in the US and a leader of the opposition in the UK who have crossed this Rubicon in terms of records and recollections of student drug usage. This is surely the start of a societal change from punishing past indiscretions to an open acknowledgment of mistakes.

We’ve already stated that the newspaper press wasn’t the catalyst for the changing of media consumption in the 1800’s. It was the Telegraph. And so social networks. Flash AJAX deployments and integrated APIs aren’t the killer app here. These aren’t changing society. But what might do that that is the integration of mobile devices. This is why Google is spending so much on Android and wireless. It may be that Social Networks will finally come of age and be the instruments of change that MZ proports them to be when they fully embrace a mobile world. This is the only way they are going to penetrate Africa for example.

So to Frank Warren
I’ve been a fan of PostSecret since I first saw it in some Sunday supplement or another. It’s collage like art/intimacy I think connects with a lot of people. We’ve all got something hidden inside us.

However seeing Warren’s name up beside Jenkins and Zuckerberg was something of a surprise. This guy’s an artist/currator. How does that fit into an interactive conference?

Well let’s look at what interactive means. Warren has created more direct interactions than perhaps anyone in the auditorium. And on an incredibly intimate level. It’s fair to say that Warren knows how to extract the intimate in just about anyone. The hour long talk featured quite a few tales of anonymous secrets, but the amazing thing was what this outpouring of secrets did to the audience. The Q&A section, or rather mass secret section produced one spontaneous proposal of marriage, lots of confessions and one hug from Frank for a woman who fell into floods of teams in front of 2,000 super-geeks. Wow. Nothing I write here can do him justice. Some of his talks are online. Find them.

Four points from Jane McGonigal’s talk on the happiness industry. All recent research on happiness points to four key areas that are pre-requisites for bringing happiness to a life:

1. Satisfying work to do
2. The experience of being good at something
3. Time spent with people we like
4. A chance to be a part of something bigger

What’s this to do with interactive? Jane’s a multi-player game expert. And multiplayer games bring all four of these in spades. If your industry doesn’t it’s time to think why not.

So on to other highlights. George Kelly gave the most sombre talk of the weekend. He read like a Telegraph obit. The funeral was that of the newspaper industry and George obviously cares. Not that that’s going to stop the declining sales, slash and burn approach to the world’s news rooms and a mass exodus of advertisers to green online pastures.
That leaves me with this question though which I want to explore over the coming months. is it a given that these forms of communication and participation will jump the gap between international geek community and mass adoption. Facebook has done it, but can Twitter and Seesmic really go mass market in their current guise or will they simply be sold off for their API’s. Does the real innovation lie in ancillilary apps?

Finally some learnings at a basic level. Despite our web 2.0 tools it’s vital to connect in a real way, not just at a Facebook or MySpace level. Without real interaction, and maybe even face to face communication these web2.0 relationships do not mean a whole lot. Gary Vaynurchuck understands this. Watch how he communicates with his audience. But big media doesn’t. It they get Facebook, Myspace and Twitter, it’s at a marketing level. Useless.

Nike is a company that I find absolutely offensive for their continued outsourcing/labour issues, BUT they get this. They are using their brand and social status to connect people in the real world. More companies need to get this too. And like Nike they may well be companies that haven’t done this before. If you work in the world of sport, an area that is invented to accomodate social interaction you better be thinking this or you’re going to be left way out by your audience.

I went to SXSWi expecting to be dazzled by technology. I wasn’t. Instead I was impressed by the application of technology. That may not sound like a huge difference. It doesn’t matter how good the technology is after a certain point, it’s the passion the user-base brings to the table that puts an application or a service over the edge.
So back to the point, the impressive technologies and apps were those that were being used, that had all the ad-spend but none of the on-the-ground grubbiness. I’m thinking you in particular Silverlight.
In no pearticular order shout outs to:

Utterz
If I had a US phone bill I’d have been using this in a big way. A tumblr crossed with friendfeed for mobile access (kinda). (I think).Utterz is just about unique enough to work. It can be accessed via any mobile or landline in the world and it connects to your kitchen sink.

Seesmic
Didn’t take the convention by storm the way it could have, but for my money it’s the best insta-vlogger on the market. Once it perfects it’s mobile interoperability and good video handsets (ie a few more N95 clones) come down in price Seesmic is going to explode. So see me after SXSWi 2009.

Friendfeed
I thought FriendFeed was going to save my life. It aggregates all you ‘friend’s’ web2.0 feed and delivers them in a daily dose. But now I’m not so sure. After using the service for a couple of weeks I’m starting to think spam! Maybe I should just turn off the daily notifying email. Lifestream services are 10 a penny right now, and the word on the twitter feed says the best two out there are FriendFeed and Social Thing. We’ll see.

Meebo
Meebo’s been around a while. The best thing about it? It works. Meebo were a major sponsor for SXSW but their investment went beyond some sales inventory in the guide books. They created a live chat room for every panel of the interactive conference and they were used as a pretty good back channel for some of the discussions. So far so 1999. But it worked. Social networking doesn’t have to ride the zeitgeist like a Harley every day of the week. Nothing wrong with improving proven concepts.

Twitter
Last night twitter saved my life. Glad to see Gary Vaynerchuck is on the same delayed reaction post SXSW buzz as Keepfakingit. Read and watch him here. garyvaynerchuk.com—twitter-vs-facebook kinda. I endorse his view on Twitter completely. Though my Jersey accent isn’t quite so pronounced.

Wordpress
When the bloggers of the world combined at SXSW they did it in a sponsored press-area-esque room called the BlogHaus. And Wordpress continues to dominate the market. Not an interesting statement but a true one.

Viddler
Is Viddler the most interesting streaming video player on the market right now? It could well be. I saw nothing at SXSW from Brightcove or YouTube or any of the other big players. It’s time for someone else to step to the plate. Viddler may be ready to go. It’s got the social comment thing down. And it looks nice too. Check it.
Drupel: Fast Company have just jumped aboard the good ship Drupel and at a panel on the current state of CMSs the open souce solution looked good.

Next New Networks
I’ve already said it but these guys are where CNN was quarter century ago. And they’ve got the feet-on-the-ground professional approach to content that means they may succeed where the podcasting and blogging aggregators have failed. Theirs was also one of the best parties. Public displays of Rock Band in an adult environment is a good thing.

Android
I didn’t hang with the Google guys. Not my scene. But amongst those whose scene it was, Android was making a serious impression. There may be no such thing as the mobile web, but it’s going to take a big heave to get the world’s population mobile access that really works. And there’s no denying that that’s what the world’s internet population wants.
I’ve seen enough shysters in my time telling me they were going to make me, and those I represent, rich from half-baked mobile apps. Mobile apps aren’t going to make anybody rich, but apps that can go mobile are. And Google are primed to pick up some of that revenue. If I were a startup, or a blue chip app creator, I’d make sure I had an incubator with with Android developers beavering away on something. On anything. Can’t win the game if you don’t know the rules.

Live.Rezpondr.com
So that’s the overview. But I keep coming back to the people and the talent at SXSW. live.rezpondr.com is a great example of smart creatives using a host of different services to put together a media package that meets specific events, in this case SXSW. So big shout out to Phil Campbell and Documentally. Big media could do worse than bring these guys in on a consultancy gig to shake up their news room.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 17th of March, 2008 at 10:58 pm under SXSW, austin, donovansmoke, mayoholly, photos, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

SXS-Eats
TrashBlanc get’s back to London on Tuesday and the first stop is going to be a trip to the personal trainer to lose the South-By-Belly. After that we have a ton of video and written SXS-Eeats to get live so stand by.

In the mean time we’re fully up to speed with our photo uploads. Check them out at flickr.com/photos/keepingitfake

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 13th of March, 2008 at 8:13 am under SXSW, austin, donovansmoke, ice cream, ice cream man, mayoholly, sxsw2008, texas, trashblanc and video.    This post has no comments.

Everyone should have a dream in life but few of us really do. The Ice Cream man does though. To give away a half a million sticks of frozen dairy throughout the US. A truly amazing individual

Watch video here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 12th of March, 2008 at 3:55 pm under , SXSW, austin, donovansmoke, mayoholly, pizza, review, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

Here at TrashBlanc.com we like to think we go the extra mile so that you don’t have to. We bite the burgers, finger the fries and taste the tacos so that you can get straight to the good stuff. 8 out of 10 times we come away with exactly what we put in. Three dollars worth of bland bananas. But every once in a while we hit the mother lode.

Ladies and gentlemen, the Stoney’s Pizza Van is something special. Check it out.

Overall rating ****
(out of 5)

Price: $3 per slice.

Video’s here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 12th of March, 2008 at 12:08 pm under Drink, SXSW, austin, bar, donovansmoke, hulahut, mayoholly, mexican, restaurant, review, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

We’ll have more on our trip to the wonderful Hula Hut out by the lake in Austin, but for the moment you can check the Trash Blanc lowdown on the Mexican Margarita. A little sweeter and greener than the standard tequilla cocktail, this house drink started off our last night at SXSWi with some style.

Overall rating: *****
(out of 5)

Price: $4 per shaker of liquid goodness.

Video’s here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 11th of March, 2008 at 5:18 pm under Desert, SXSW, austin, donovansmoke, icecream, mayoholly, review, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

Mr Blu don't be so blue
We’ll have our Nuclear Taco event video up later, but for us here at TrashBlanc.com the taco show was well and truly stolen by the Ice Cream Man. In fact, he may well have pilfered our entire SXSW food experience. In terms of right time, right place, right man, this guy hit a three run home run.

His stated goal is to travel the world and GIVE AWAY half a million ice creams,

“If I can do that I can do anything”

An obvious next question is how many have you given away so far mricecreamman. But TrashBlanc.com had brain freeze and we were thinking of nothing but blue food colouring. We had two ice creams, paid nothing and gave four TB stars to the man in the van.

Looking at theicreamman.com website, we can’t help feel there’s a more than a little corporate payola going on, but we’ll resist cynicism for the moment. Lick it up.

Overall rating ****
(out of 5)

Price: $0 per ice cream.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 11th of March, 2008 at 2:33 am under , SXSW, austin, bar, donovansmoke, mayoholly, sxsw2008, texas, trashblanc and video.    This post has no comments.

TrashBlanc doesn’t always have to enter a premises to bring you the full lowdown. This time it’s the 710 Room on Red River Street.

Watch video here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 11th of March, 2008 at 1:56 am under SXSW, Uncategorized, austin, donovansmoke, mayoholly, pizza, review, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

SXS-Eats: The 6th St. Pizza showdown part II.
TrashBlanc.com takes it to the house for the second in our heavyweight pizza reviews. Check it.

Overall rating: * */2
(out of 5)

Price: $4 per spinach/mushroom slice.

Video’s here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 11th of March, 2008 at 1:25 am under SXSW, austin, donovansmoke, mayoholly, pizza, sxsw2008, texas, trashblanc and video.    This post has no comments.

SXS-Eats: The 6th St. Pizza showdown part I.
TrashBlanc.com takes two for the team on 6th Street. We go where you doughn’t want to and take slices at Papparazzi Pizza and RoppoJo’s. Priced at $3 and $4 respectively neither stood out from the stodgy crowd of eateries on Austin’s party street. First through the sausage machine that is the TB review is Papprazzi.

Overall rating *
(out of 5)

Price: $3 per cheese slice.

Video’s here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 10th of March, 2008 at 11:01 pm under Drink, SXSW, austin, bar, donovansmoke, mayoholly, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

At Fray Café: Dimebag Darrell - Hero

There isn’t enough weeks in the year for TrashBlanc to properly review all the bars in Austin. But over the week of SXSW we’re going to bring you the ones that stand out. Red Eye Fly on 7th and Red River hits the spot for us. It hosted SXSWi’s Café Fray on Sunday night. It also hosted TB’s crack pool team as they took on the locals.

Heath the owner, friend to the stars, is booked 6 nights per week every week of the year. Quite the gent, he gave us the lowdown on south-by and graciously let us beat him once out of four occasions.

But one feature of the bar stood out above all else. The poignant tribute to Dimebag Darrell. We’ll let Wikipedia fill you in on DD, needless to say, a bigtime TB hero.

So cheers Heath, see you later in the week.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 10th of March, 2008 at 6:59 pm under Drink, Drinks, SXSW, austin, bass, beer, black and tans, donovansmoke, gingerman, guinness, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

The Gingerman taps
TrashBlanc.com has had some great drink since arriving in Texas. Good local and Mexican beer served cold and with a smile. Just the way we like it. How we don’t like it is mixed with stout and named after one of the most murderous group of mercenaries of the 20th century, the Black and Tans.

Quick history lesson for readers who think the B&T is a marketing creation concocted by Diageo (who should know better) to shift more Bass and Guinness.
The Tans were leftovers from the first world war sent by the English to quell some troublesome Irish in the early 1920’s. They did this with some relish and not a little wanton destruction. We’ll leave the finer points to the historians to argue about on Wikipedia, suffice to say these guys were major bad-asses.

So to the beer, or rather beers, and let’s leave the history in the paragraph above. WTF!!! Seriously. For our European readers, a B&T is half a pint of stout poured gently on top of half a pint of Bass, or some other variety of red/amber beer. This notion is hideous. It’s like whiskey and tonic. Or pizza and pineapple. Simply wrong.

In a former life TrashBlanc spent some time serving these monsters to clowns on the South New Jersey coast. Our inner stat absolutely guarantees people who order this shit have dramatically lower IQs, have shorter lifespan and have real trouble getting laid. Guys (and it usually is men), word of free advice from TrashBlanc. Give it up.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 10th of March, 2008 at 12:59 am under SXSW, austin, bdreily's, burger, donovansmoke, mayoholly, review, sxsw2008, texas, trashblanc and video.    This post has no comments.

Mayo Holly finally turns up which means we can start taking a look at meat filled dishes here on TrashBlanc.com. And no better start than a burger review outside BD Riley’s on 6th Street.

Overall rating ***
(out of 5)

Price: $8.95 for burger and fries.

Video’s here.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 9th of March, 2008 at 10:24 pm under Drinks, SXSW, austin, beer, donovansmoke, gingerman, review, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

A can-do kinda bar
Drinking at SXSW we’ve learned here at TrashBlanc.com can be a tricky activity. Sure there’s plenty of free drinks sponsored by the likes of Google, Frog Design and lots of other companies trying to retain a level of cool they once had (or is that me being cynical). But they’re not really free. Payment takes the form of hour long queue surrounded by the type of people who think said queue must mean there’s a kicking party inside. Guys, there isn’t. We’re all geeks.

However, sometimes the geeks do get it right, Saturday night at SXSW being a great example. Instead of joining a line in downtown Austin, the collective intelligence that is Twitter decided on the wonderful Gingerman bar on West 4th. No freebies, no queues and somewhat unexpectedly no hard liquor. Instead there were over 80 draught beers on tap and an outside patio full of ‘Internet Famous’.

TB ignored the celebs in the back and sat at the bar for some Texan hospitality. In terms of beers, Arrogant Bastard was going down a treat, and there was one punter whose eight horse accumulator came in when he saw the bottles of Westmuler Triple in the fridge. No doubt he was caught in a Trappist. So a pretty impressive selection of yeasty hoppy goodness then. Our tipple of choice for the evening was a Hacker Pschoor Oktoberfest. No, we hadn’t heard of it either and we can only describe it as an amber viking of a beer. Red, rough and likely to rape and pillage a small Irish village if left to its own devices. We had a second pint before leaving and we’ll be back before the end of the week.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 9th of March, 2008 at 9:54 pm under SXSW, austin, donovansmoke, mayoholly, sxsw2008, texas and trashblanc.    This post has no comments.

Order This
TrashBlanc.com has utterly disregarded its closely held environmental beliefs and flown from its London HQ to SXSW in Austin, Texas. Now, the last thing this place needs is more people blogging the conference. So we’re not going to bother. We’re going to instead keep doing what we do best. Track down the trash food and blanc it up. We’re going to be ably assisted by our close friend Mayo Holly who’s just landed so stay tuned.

Posted by Cian O'Donovan on the 9th of March, 2008 at 6:17 pm under SXSW, austin, café, food, mexican, review, sxsw2008, tacos and texas.    This post has no comments.

IMG_1634
Midnight on Saturday night and TrashBlanc needed sustenance before hitting GaryVee’s ridiculous wine party. Nowhere better than Torchy’s Tacos. A local mini-chain by all accounts but with more than a dollop of character.

One of the great things about the food in and around SXSW is that it’s traded in US dollars, and when you earn GB pounds that means cheap eats. But Torchy’s sets a new standard in terms of cost:tastiness ratio. TrashBlanc went with the fried avacado on a corn taco. In retrospect we should have had two, this was pretty special.