CyborgCamp occured at around 10Am from a shoutout by Kris Krug and Dave Olson of RainCityStudios. I met them both at Gnomedex and we got along really well.
The only problem was that they both lived in Vancouver B.C., and I live in Portland, Oregon. Normally, it is difficult for me to travel unless there is a conference. So I told them that.
To which Dave replied “just have a Cyborg Camp!”.
Once Kris Krug retweeted the news, 30 or so people immediately jumped into high gear. Nate Angell built a Wiki with all sorts of capabilities, and more people got on board to discuss all aspects of Cyborgs.
Meanwhile, the Twitterverse was coming up with all sorts of speaker and venue suggestions, and by 6Pm that night, the first planning meeting for CyborgCamp 2008 occured as an offshoot of an Android Developers meeting at the Lucky Lab Pub SE.
That was only two days ago. Now we have a venue, a sponsor, and some potential speakers. Also a @cyborgcamp Twitter account, which Bram Pitoyo has been handling amazingly, as well as a preliminary poster design.
If you think this sounds like something you might be interested in, Sign up —> CyborgCamp2008 for Wiki access. Or follow the @cyborgcamp Twitter account for updates, general inquiries, speaker suggestions and sponsor ideas. Or you can directly E-mail caseorganic if you don’t use Wikis or Twitter.
A cyborg (shorthand for “cybernetic organism”) is a symbiotic fusion of human and machine. Join in our pre-conference discussion about what is a cyborg?
An unconference dedicated to exploring cyborg technology, anthropology, psychology, and philosophy.
Cyborgs, hybrids, androids, robots, and the people who love them!
Nov. 21-22 2008
This should be an interesting event. It needs a lot of film and audio coverage, as well as live casting and projection screens. As many channels as possible so we can exist in as many places at one time. Our minds can supply the rest.
You can follow along at CyborgCamp.org or on Twitter by following @cyborgcamp.
I had a great time hanging out on it, and found that while some of the apps were broken or missing, some of the apps were worthy of review. I’ve placed 5 here for your edification. At the very least, they should spark inspiration, critisim, or discussion: your pick.
FeedMap allows you to see Blogs from your neighborhood and subscribe to their RSS feeds after seeing their descriptions and latest posts.
When I searched for Portland, Oregon, I found a lot of blogs, but none that I recognized. Most were under the radar - not the big ones like eROI, or SiliconFlorist:
Loosely Coupled Human Code Factory - A.K.A. Mercenary Engineer Feed Blog
Recent posts: Your Agile and The Flow
The site has nearby blogs as well as tagging capabilities for each blog. Not bad for finding smaller blogs within one’s area.
EventSites allows you to make quick websites for your event.
I decided to make a site for Tweet PDX, and was amused to find that the hours were in 24 hour mode.
Excitingly, there was a Flickr tag prompt. I found this to be useful.
I was promoted to register an account with Eventful to create the event, so I did. Another caseorganic landgrab.
I really enjoyed one aspect of EventSites; the ability to send the event to Google Calendar, del.icio.us Events, Ping-O-matic, Upcoming.org and Facebook, Myspace and Technorati with a few clicks of a button (assuming you allow Upcoming.org access to EventSites).
Cool stuff.
Ask500People shows real time stats of poll questions geographically and numerically as they are asked.
Awesome.
a.placebetween.us says “Trying to find a meeting place between friends? Enter your addresses and the type of place you want to meet.”
So I did. I said I’d like to meet someone between the Portland Small Business Accelerator and Backspace. It wasn’t smart (I had to enter the exact address as well as the city and state), and the results only gave me Startbucks Coffee.
Good idea, terrible data granularity. So much for that Mashup.
Where is the Path is an interesting mashup that combines topographic maps with Google Satellite maps to help you match trails with what they look like in real life, from above.
The interface uses two targets that match up the topo map to the Google map. Not bad. Also works for cities. Might be useful for finding bike paths/alt routes.
If you find an awesome Mashup or set of Mashups, please tell me about it.
You can also send billions of links to @caseorganic if you happen to enjoy Twitter.