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Sunday, November 7, 2004
Recursion du jour
| | Peter Kaminsky, on stage talking about wikis, answers the "What's a wiki" question with "Look it up on Wikipedia". |
You're infected, pass it on
| | By the way, you can get the same basic camera (a Sony DCR-PC110) I shot those with, plus all the cool black & whites at Bloggecon yesterday (like this one, of Dawn & Drew, shot from waaay across the room), on eBay for $600 now. It's a killer video camera that's also the ideal still camera for conferences. Can't beat it. Trust me. (Actually, I shot them with the '110's replacement, the DCR-PC120BT, which is the same but with Bluetooth you'll never get to work 'cuz it's Sony, which sucks at that kind of thing, even while they rock at raw performance. The 110 is the better bargain.) |
Cluetraining
| | Then he told me that when they do the show, the hosts typically keep chatting with the guests, while the audience files out. This time, after Jon Stewart, the audience was begging for more, and refused to leave. So they cut the microphones, and the audience still wouldn't leave. So the hosts and Jon Stewart had to leave the stage to continue their talk, in order to get the audience to leave. |
| | Most amazing though, that this broadcast camera guy had no idea that people were downloading the Jon Stewart/Crossfire clip, much less at such incredible rates right after the show. |
So there's your zero point.
| | Sitting here at the Accelerating Change conference at Stanford, where Stanford prof B.J. Fogg is talking about Captology: Understanding How Computers Manipulate People. He's talking about some stuff called BuddyBuzz and RSVP. When I search for those, I get zero results on Google. |
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