Chad Capellman: July 2008 Archives
I helped organize and speak at two sessions: "The Future of News" and "Beyond Content: Managing Expectations with a new CMS" and both were very lively. The news one was very heated (and more "star" studded with the likes of Esther Dyson, Tim O'Reilly, Steven Levy among others). After the fact, a fellow attendee said to me "It seemed as if people were violently agreeing with each other. I, on the other hand, felt as if people were attempting to address four issues surrounding the death of newspapers:
:: The business of news
:: The demise / evaporation of investigative reporters and the impact on journalism
:: The tools needed to move newspapers forward (THANK YOU Nick Bilton) for an amazing tour of what The New York Times is up to)
:: Whether or not it's the reader's fault for the decline.
I regret not recognizing these classifications earlier and attempting to steer the discussion along one of these themes. Especially considering I've been hearing versions of this discussion for nearly 10 years now.
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The session on CMS systems was not as strongly attended, but I was grateful to hear from those who came.
Two thoughts popped into my head after the session that I wish I would have said in it:
:: My favorite John Wooden quote: "Never let what you can't do interfere with what you can do."
:: In a follow-up conversation about CMS, I posited that even if you were able to build the perfect CMS for an organization (The "impossible" task I listed on my short bio form), there is not another organization on the planet that your CMS would be perfect for without some tweaking.
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I found a title for a living person that I actually like better than the "Senior Editor, Obits and Fun" I once had: "Former Cult Leader." I didn't know such a title was possible while living.
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While I might like to experience the feeling of having a magnet in my finger to detect magnetic fields on surfaces, I would probably be as likely to embed that into me as I would be to swim on top of a pool of water that had a small nuclear reactor at the bottom of it.
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While it might be an expense, one way to bridge multiple geographic locations is to have couches and big-screen TVs with webcams pointing to the couch and showing what's in the other office. It can provide a "wormhole window" to the other office, and can make bride many divides and office cultures.
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Having former drama club members at your event can only raise the "interestingness" level of the environment, especially after the sun goes down over drinks.
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Printing names on both sides of a name tag is a simple, brilliant move that helps people connect. I regret not adding my twitter @chadrem to mine.
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According to the job descriptions bandied about in a session on the need for designers and engineers, I might actually be a designer. This worries me.
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When playing Werewolf, the healer can heal himself. Would have been really handy to know this ahead of time, but I'm not bitter.
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Hearing people who have become targeted Internet celebrities is a chilling, gripping experience. I thank them for their candor.
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To avoid public speaking disasters, it's a good idea to know your audience, including the country that audience is in/from. It's also very helpful to use a service like Slideshare BEFORE your talk so you can access your slides on any connected computer ... just in case.
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Camping is much more comfortable when you bring your favorite bed pillow. Perhaps it's a way to trick your head into thinking you might actually be on your mattress.
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Tony Stubblebine is a great guy and I wish him much success. Coming to Foo Camp after just one year at O'Reilly is a rather head-spinning experience, and hearing what he had to say about his experience was very, very re-assuring.
What's this? An actual blog post that isn't just a piped-in Tweet (tweet? ... still not sure on the capitalization of that)
Anyway, I'm heading to Foo Camp and I am getting psyched.
In my preparation for the event, which begins tomorrow, I've been immersing myself in the social networking platform Pathable and through it I've had to determine who I am based on a list of Star Wars characters (I chose R2-D2 ... but should have chosen Han Solo simply because I brought Erin's "Chewy is my co-pilot" t-shirt. Oh well.
I also have been enjoying who the system says I am similar to and opposite of based on the tags I chose to assign to myself. Through that process, I stumbled on (as apposed to Stumbled Upon) an "online reporter" for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer named Mónica Guzmán. One of her stated goals for Foo Camp is to explore the gap between the print and online worlds, which is a space I was very familiar with nearly 10 years ago from the inside.
Guzmán started at the Seattle P-I (It's nearly impossible to find the full name of the paper on the site without scrolling to the bottom of a page I found this interesting) in 2007 and I left my combo Washington Post (union) / washingtonpost.com (non-union) gig in 1998.
I mention this because she is leaving the paper, without leaving the company. She writes about it here.
"[I]t's one thing to be a reporter who has a blog," Guzmán wrote. "A lot of reporters have blogs. But it's quite another to be a reporter who has only a blog, and nothing whatsoever that one can roll up, tuck under one's arm and wrap a fish in, if one were so inclined."
This made me laugh because I feel at the core of Guzmán's lament was one of becoming invisible to large parts of her audience by going online-only. I had pretty much an opposite experience, on the opposite corner of the country, nearly a decade ago.
When I covered University of Miami sports for The St. Petersburg Times, it was sometimes a print-only experience, and I often felt invisible to the people I most wanted to read my articles.
I often had to call up the paper and ask them to post articles online, sometimes to no avail. The policy back then was to not put the whole paper online for fear of giving it all away. I personally wouldn't have cared if they ever put my articles in print, so long as I had an online version to quickly show the people I was writing about, as well as family and friends (and other potential employers) many miles away.
Guzmán prefaced her description of the Big Goals of her new year-old P-I project "The Big Blog" with this wonderful little nugget about the timeless responsibility of newspaper companies, whether online or in print: "You should let us know what you need from us, but we must make you want to."
As she described the goals of the Big Blog, my mind started racing with ideas for what such a project could include and should have as part of its DNA.
The first one, and one that I feel is absolutely vital for all newspapers to eventually embrace, is a more frequent use of Google Maps in geo-archiving stories, especially local ones.
I attemped a Google Maps hack for a freelance client that adds content on a map through a simple Movable Type interface. Such an interface, improved by people with much more skills in this area than me, would be addictive for an online audience addicted to and starving for context.
It's easy to think about the fact that not writing for a print newspaper means you lose the abilty to touch your work. But then again, there's so many more ways the online version can touch the audience, there's really no comparison.