
I spoke about Cyborg Anthropology, which is the study of human computer interactions and how technology affects the way in which we communicate with one another.
When you read this, you are acting as a low-tech cyborg, because you are using a computer to view text that I have written. My writing is stored here in my website, part of my actor network of external technological devices that, when taken together, comprise my technosocial self. As cavemen, we began skipping evolution by crafting spears instead of growing teeth. We began making hammers as extensions of our fists.

My social self is part technology and part human. My technological self does a lot of networking for me through my social networking profiles and my Google search results. So do yours (if you have them). My technosocial avatar of a self networks for me when I’m not there.
Each piece of my distributed social identity leaves a geological trail of past self that my present self can interact with. These all comprise my future self, which your future self or selves will most undoubtedly interact with. The online optimization of self, when coupled with the analog optimization of self (i.e. real-life networking, person to person) is the creation of a stable identity that is uniformly distributed and presented all over the web.
Technology is almost magical. Like the scrying pool of the past (or of fantasy novels), the iPhone or computer monitor allows us to view anything anywhere in the world through YouTube and Twitter, News sites and Facebook. We can summon up an image with a simple spell (a simple text entry into Google search or Twitter search) and we can extend our speech and ears across very large distances in seconds with the mere touch of a button.
Technology, when used well, gives us amazing superpowers. We are like gods, until we forget to charge our batteries. We are like gods, until we forget to upgrade our devices to the most recent operating system or device number. Our external prosthetic devices turn against us when they get old. Our old clothes go out of style. Our brick phones make us get laughed at in the streets.
In the same way that cars transport our physical bodies, computers and cell phones transport our spiritual bodies. Don’t like the word spiritual? Use the word mind instead. We’re increasingly entering into a world of mental machines - mental transportation devices. These devices transmit our thoughts invisibly to others. They are taking up smaller amounts of space, until vehicles, who require increasingly large highways.
We have traffic jams, too. Mental traffic jams. Jams on Twitter. Twitter fails. Rush hour around important events and deaths and wars and crises. We can now have multiple views of the same event.
When telephone technology first came out, people felt it was crazy. The idea of going into a room and speaking into a machine sounded schizophrenic.

There is more: enough to fill up a hour and a half speech, but I’ll leave that to you to see the next time I speak. Until then, you can follow me on Twitter @caseorganic, or you can check out BoCo.
I first heard about Autopagerizer through Marshall Kirkpatrick of Read Write Web. He demonstrated it by doing a Google search and scrolling down to the bottom of the page.Except there wasn’t and “bottom of the page”. Instead, page 2 of the Google search results loaded. And when he scrolled down to the bottom of page two, page three loaded.
“See?” he said, grinning, “it’s the best way to view tons of Flickr photos at once”.
I was hooked. I knew I’d never go back to browing the Internet the same way. I quickly installed Greasemonkey and installed the Autopagerize over it. It was simple to do, and you can do it within the next five or ten minutes.

First, you’ll need to install the Greasemonkey plugin, so make sure you’re running Firefox.If you don’t run Firefox (which you should, especially if you’re running Internet Explorer) then you can download Firefox here (it’s free).
Greasemonkey installs just like any other plugin. You may have to restart the browser after you install it. Just make sure to copy this URL when you close it so you can come back and finish the rest of the install.

Okay, now you’ve installed Greasemonkey. Now, all you have to go is install Autopagerize.

Got it installed? Great! Now type something into Google and scroll down to the bottom of the page. The second page should load automatically. If it does not, then try restarting your browser.
Jeremy Logan makes a good point when he says: “this is a neat and useful addon, but you should be aware that if you use other Greasemonkey scripts or add-ons to modify pages then they generally run once the page is loaded. This means the scripts won’t run on the second (third, fouth…) page’s content once it’s loaded”. Thanks, Jeremy!
That aside, it doesn’t end there. There’s a bevy of scripts out there that can help make your Internet experience much more enjoyable. Autopagerize is just the tip of the iceberg.
Nested Twitter Replies looks for the phrase “in reply to [user]” and recursively gets all replies to display the conversation thread as a nested block. You can get Nested Twitter Replies here
This is a cool Greasemonkey script because it removes all the ads from your Facebook experience. Unless you like ads. If you do, that’s fine with me. You don’t have to install the script.
Download Remove All Facebook Ads here.
Adds auto reloading, continuous scrolling, @reply highlights, last read tweet, auto-completion of friends in @replies, @mentions, and direct messages, inline replies, minified layout, map for coordinates, retweeting, tweet preview, and more!
You can download Better Twitter here.
First off all, this script is awesome. If you search for something on Google and a video comes up in your search results, you can play the video right in your search results without having to go to the page.
But this script doesn’t just work for Google - it works for all websites, and videos from most video sites, like glumbert, metacafe, google, yahoo, photobucket, youtube, myspace…(and many others) so you can view the video without opening a new page.
You can download Videoembed here.
Since you have Greasemonkey, you can install any scripts you want by finding scripts through http://userscripts.org/, an entire database of related scripts.

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Amber Case is a cyborg anthropologist, consultant, writer, and analyst from Portland, Oregon. You can contact her at caseorganic at gmail.com, or on Twitter at @caseorganic.
I was talking with Julian Chadwick of PDXPipeline this Monday about the tools he uses for search engine optimization. We recorded a podcast that will be posted Monday night on Hazelnut Tech Talk. However I wanted to pass on some of the information he gave me regarding the SEO plugins he uses for Firefox. I’d like to review the SEO Quake, as it has been very useful to me.
There are a few baseline pieces of baseline information that any SEO beginner. One of these is Page Rank, or Google’s consideration of what a given page is worth. Page rank varies from site to site, and there are a number of factors that contribute to pagerank. One of them is the amount of websites linking to a given website. This is called ‘inlinks’. One can find out this information by going to Google and entering the string “link:http://www.yoursite.com”.
The amount of links from a site to you website show up differently in Yahoo! Search vs. Google search vs. MSN. Obtaining this data takes a while without a good tool to help you find it. There are additional metrics one can find about a site, such as the page rank, sitemap, alexa rank, and whether the site has been indexed in search engines or not. Site indexing is different from checking inlinks.
If the pages of your site are not indexed by search engines, it is difficult for searchers to find them. Making sure your website has a sitemap and submitting it to Google Webmaster tools is an essential baseline step in the SEO process. You can generate an .xml sitemap for free by using the free tool provided at XML-Sitemaps.com.
SEO Quake is a plugin that adds another layer of information on top of your brower’s basic information. Instead of having to search for inlinks, the inlinks are displayed right on top of the site for you. You can also choose what information you want displayed about the site. There are plenty of options (accessible from preferences) that allow you to view any information you want about the page you’re on. There are Yahoo! inlinks, links to domain, Alexa rank, Page Rank, inlinks from MSN, compete rank, sitemap, and the robots.txt file, just to name a few.
Using SEO Quake rocks. It’s super-customizable and generates a ton of rich information without the need to click. Plus, you can click on the information and download into a spreadsheet or text document for later use or data analysis. Highly recommended.
This is a link to the download site for SEO Quake. Again, it is only available for Firefox browsers, so if you aren’t using Firefox (which you most undoubtedly should), then you’ll be missing out.
Thanks to Julian Chadwick for mentioning this plugin. You can check out Julian’s site at PDXPipeline or follow him on Twitter @pdxpipeline.
For more information on SEO, Julian and I both recommend SEOMoz.org, a Seattle-based company providing an extremely comprehensive database of resources and tools for beginner, intermediate, and advanced SEO specialists. Try the free Trifecta tool on your site for starters.
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Amber Case is a Cyborg Anthropologist from Portland, Oregon. You can follow her online @caseorganic.
This is the PowerPoint of a lightning talk given by Amber Case (@caseorganic) at Inverge: The Interactive Convergence Conference in Portland, Oregon on Sept 4+5th. NOTE: This was a 10-minute compressed presentation. From Telephone to Tweetup: an Abbreviated History of Technology and Social Exchange.
The invention of the telephone ushered in an era of ‘on-demand’ social connection. These conversations were freeing, but were still limited to location and time. As communication technology matured, telephones became detached from their cords and were allowed to travel with their users.This detachment from location allowed conversation to happen in more times and more places. As the amount of time and space between nodes of connection decreased, the intersection of rapid news methods such as blogging, mobile technology, and chatrooms begin to merge. This convergence allowed dramatic increases in the ability to rapidly convey information to others. Instead of engaging with one person at a time, many are now capable of talking at once. No where is this more prevalent than on Twitter. It has found ways to connect communities, stave off suburban isolation, and warn of earthquakes before medical help can access them. The distance between individual and community will continue to decrease, and those products and services which decrease the amount of time and space it takes to create an action will be the most successful. Actions and devices will become lighter and lighter, and the social will continue to become more and more mobile. The convergence of various technologies will result in rapid learning and communication never imagined before. For details on the original event, look at the SlideShare Link.
Slide 1: Every bullet point in this presentation is less than 140 characters.
Slide 2: This is because the text of these slides will also be broadcasted on Twitter at the time of this speech.
Slide 3: In this way, the speech can live in two places at once.
Slide 4: To one audience here at Inverge.
Slide 5: And also to 600+ followers on Twitter. [@Inverge] [#Inverge]
Slide 6: You can follow @caseorganic to see it in action.
Slide 7: [this is a waiting period because the Internet connection here is probably slow] @caseorganic
Slide 8: Hello.
Slide 9: My Name is Amber Case.
Slide 10: I am a Cyborg Anthropologist.
Slide 11: I study the symbiotic relationship between humans and computers…
Slide 12: And the psychology of space that is created by online environments.
Slide 13: Or, how the online experience is “ experienced” .
Slide 14: In Anthropology, one could call this a Digital Phenomenology
Slide 15: …
Slide 16: We live in a community that increasingly transcends time and space.
Slide 17: It is our relationship with technology that allows us extended capabilities.
Slide 18: Right now, search engines and people are interacting with your social profiles and websites.
Slide 19: While you aren’ t there.
Slide 20: And with social networking sites like Twitter, you can watch many conversations at once.
Slide 21: …
Slide 22: Consider Letter Writing, the first Internet.
Slide 23: The message to response ratio was very slow, but it was social.
Slide 24: Enter the Telephone.
Slide 25: Thus began the era of ‘ On Demand’ social communication.
Slide 26: This made the world very small.
Slide 27: You could stand on one side of the world, whisper something, and be heard on the other.
Slide 28: But to those who had never experienced a telephone, the device was as foreign as the Internet once was in 1993.
Slide 29: The fact that a human could speak into a machine and hear a voice on the other side gave the appearance of schizophrenia.
Slide 30: Over time, the strangeness of the new dissolved into formal society and the landline telephone started to get along with humans.
Slide 31: Those living in suburban communities were less capable of reaching actual members of society on a daily basis.
Slide 32: …and the telephone allowed them an escape from the isolation of industrial modernity.
Slide 33: But the telephone was limited by the length of its cord and its proximity to a phone jack.
Slide 34: So along came the cordless phone.
Slide 35: It was free! {yay!}
Slide 36: …to run around the house…
Slide 37: So then the Cell Phone arrived on the scene. {take that!}
Slide 38: While it was the least rooted to place,
Slide 39: The Cell Phone did not offer information transparency.
Slide 40: It only allowed one conversation at a time (excluding 3-way).
Slide 41: Cell Phone + Text allowed decentralized message access and multiple recipients, but limited message transparency.
Slide 42: Then Twitter happened.
Slide 43: It was not rooted to place and time.
Slide 44: It allowed multiple communication channels and recipients.
Slide 45: Users were praised for contribution and helpfulness to those in their network.
Slide 46: Why does it work?
Slide 47: Twitter is a centralized technosocial hybrid that asks a single question that can never be fully answered.
Slide 48: …
Slide 49: What
Slide 50: Are
Slide 51: You
Slide 52: Doing?
Slide 53: The question is asked by all, to all. Socialization is aided by machine.
Slide 54: The time and space it takes to absorb and disperse information is compressed.
Slide 55: Twitter takes advantage of the 4th Dimensionality of the Internet.
Slide 56: [Analog] [Demonstration]
Slide 57: Lets look at some Architectural Theory
Slide 58: “ Our daily existence is normally filled with short walks and passing through interfaces. It is not the number that we remember but rather the poor quality of them and the time spent in moving through them.\”
Slide 59: “ It is not the number that we remember but rather the poor quality of them and the time spent in moving through them.\”
Slide 60: “ Interference interchanges must be fast, convenient, comfortable, without undue effort in a controlled environment.”
Slide 61: The General Theory of Relativity
Slide 62: The shape of space makes people more, and people create the shape of space.
Slide 63: The Analog World is full of Friction
Slide 64: The level of Friction in the Digital world has far less.
Slide 65: Online, we are capable of innovating in a frictionless atmosphere.
Slide 66: There are dangers to this.
Slide 67: Frictionless development becomes cancerous if not restrained.
Slide 68: Too many features/innovations reduce overall value.
Slide 69: LIKE FACEBOOK.
Slide 70: Now, lets talk about highways.
Slide 71: Highways are giant projects requiring high levels of funding and cooperation.
Slide 72: To dig up a highway and move it costs millions of dollars.
Slide 73: But rerouting a path online takes a few minutes with a 301 redirect.
Slide 74: People, when compressed, can do more in less time and less space.
Slide 75: Actions flow to spaces with reduced activation energy and barriers to entry.
Slide 76: Humans and Technology Co-create each other through an Actor/Network of technosocial interaction.
Slide 77: “ In the search for itself and an affectionate sociality, it easily gets lost in the jungle of the self…”
Slide 78: “ Someone who is poking around in the fog of his of his or her own self is no longer capable of noticing that this isolation,
Slide 79: “ This ’solitary-confinement of the ego’ is a mass sentence. [Ulrich Beck, 40 in Bauman’ s Liquid Modernity 2000:37]”
Slide 80: [So Technosocial Interaction is about Transcending the silos of Mental Isolation]
Slide 81: Hello
Slide 82: The key to the semantic web is to always reduce the steps in user action.
Slide 83: Twitter engages the user in ways that do not decay.
Slide 86: See SlideShare for image
Slide 87: See Slideshare for image
Slide 88: Husband on Google Street View
Slide 89: Old map
Slide 90: See Slideshare for image.
Slide 92: @caseorganic On Social Sites Everywhere Thesis: “Cell Phones and Their Technosocial Sites of Engagement” Available @:oakhazelnut.com
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Amber Case is a Cyborg Anthopologist and Social Media Consultant from Portland, Oregon. You can contact her by E-mail at caseorganic at gmail.com, or on Twitter @caseorganic.
Convergence culture has moved swiftly from buzzword to industry logic. The creation of transmedia storyworlds, understanding how to appeal to migratory audiences, and the production of digital extensions for traditional materials are becoming the bread and butter of working in the media. MIT’s Futures of Entertainment 3 once again brings together key industry leaders who are shaping these new directions in our culture and academic scholars immersed in the investigation the social, cultural, political, economic, and technological implications of these changes in our media landscape.
The speakers and audience will be a mixed industry and academic crowd, and the diverse topics grouped together will give the conference both broad coverage of the new media and entertainment space and deep engagement across industries and disciplinary boundaries. This year’s conference will work to bring together the themes from last year - media spreadability, audiences and value, social media, distribution - with the consortium’s new projects in moving towards an increasingly global view of media convergence and flow.
Topics for this year’s panels include global distribution systems and the challenges of moving content across borders, transmedia properties, franchising and world building, comics and commerce, social and spreadable media, and renewed discussion on how and why to measure audience value.
The conference is on the 21th and 22nd of November at MIT. It works around a talk-show style model with panelists participating in a moderated discussion. Over the last two years this produced great, thorough treatments of the subject matter, getting industry and academic speakers together but avoiding product pitches. For a sense of what to expect, you can check out the site from last year’s event.
This will be the third conference of this kind.
Confirmed speakers for this year’s conference include: Javier Grillo-Marxuach (The Middleman), Alex McDowell (Production Designer, The Watchmen), Kevin Slavin (Area/Code), Donald K Ranvaud (Buena Onda Films), Amber Case (Cyborg Anthropologist and Social Media Consultant), Mauricio Mota (New Content [Brazil]), Alisa Perren (George State University), Amanda Lotz (University of Michigan), Sharon Ross (Columbia College Chicago), Nancy Baym (University of Kansas), Alice Marwick (New York University), Vu Nguyen (VP of Business Development, crunchyroll.com) with more to come.
Thanks to Joshua Green of MIT’s Convergence Culture Consortium for hooking me up with this excellent opportunity!
Hazelnut Tech Talk is a collaboration between Amber Case and Bram Pitoyo
This episode features Troy Harlan, wherein we talked about information gathering, filtering and consuming (naturally,) human factors, trilobites, reading at 2,000 words per minute, INTP’s, striving for objectivity, The Black Swan, hunches, and why it’s better to “have no map at all than have the wrong map”—all recorded on the road from St. Johns to downtown Portland.

Attending Portland networking/social events is one of the best ways to meet innovative locals, learn cool things, and get new clients/collaborators for various projects. A weekly list of Portland Tech/Networking events has been requested of me multiple times, and this list is the culmination of those requests. I hope it benefits you in as many ways as possible!
This week, Bram Pitoyo and I will be attending all of these events. Bram’s reviews can always be found on his blog, Link En Fuego, soon after each event. I’ll be reviewing/live-tweeting from the Internet Strategy Forum as well as doing some experimental analytics on it.
We hope to see you soon!
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LUNCH 2.0 at SOUK
See http://siliconflorist.com for details.
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Join SEMpdx & pdxMindShare at this networking and educational event. Meet SEMpdx board members, network with other Web professionals, and learn more about membership and sponsorship opportunities.
Who: Open to all - interested in search engine / Web marketing
What: Networking event
When: Wednesday July 16, 5:30 PM ? PM
Where: Paddy’s Bar & Grill
Why: networking, meet SEMpdx, learn about membership & benefits
How much?: Free, no host bar
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Writing For Web for Fun and Profit.
(At the Kennedy School - Ask me for details)
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Tweetup with Charlene Li (from Forrester Research, a keynote speaker at Internet Strategy Forums). This means drinking.
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/903763
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Internet Strategy Forum - Portland, OR
ISF Afterparty (Contact me for details).
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SECP Meetup/Portland Freelancer’s Meetup. NE Portland at the Stamp Society Building. $10. (Ask me for details).
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Morning Meetings: Marketing (Recurring)
[Full details at http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/634899/ ] Come into CubeSpace between 9 and 10 a.m. on weekdays to chat for free with the professional-in-residence about your needs.
The Friday topic is: Marketing, including web 2.0 and branding
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Beer and Blog at the Green Dragon! Yay!
928 SE 9th Ave
Portland, OR 97214
Generally at 4Pm
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Legion of Talk (Sponsored by Legion of Tech)
Mark Shuttleworth
Mark will be speaking out Ubuntu, the community-developed the open source operating system he founded, as well as his travels in space. Mark was the second man ever to travel to space on a private space craft!
McMenamins Mission Theater
1624 NW Glisan St
6:30pm to 8:00pm
Doors open 5:30pm (come early, have dinner & hang out with us before the talk)
This one is going to be HUGE.
Register and find out more at www.LegionOfTech.org
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PANEL DISCUSSION #2 - PDXplore PNCA - 6:00 Pm. “In The Round: Collective Leadership” featuring mayor-elect Sam Adams, Metro president David Bragdon, Hillsboro mayor Tom Hughes, Portland planning director Gil Kelley, and City of Gresham executive manager Alice Rouyere.
A transcript of the PANEL DISCUSSION #1 is here.
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PDX Net Tuesday July - New Tools for the Nonprofit Sector
AboutUs.org - 107 SE Washington St. Suite 520
This event is usually really fun, has beer, and then a sort of discussion of things.
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If you’d like more information on any of these events, or would like to contact the organizers about workshops, don’t hesitate to E-mail me. Please feel free to forward this to anyone who might benefit from it.
I’d love to see you on Twitter. You can follow me at: http://twitter.com/caseorganic
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dannysullivan Lines are funny. remember how in russia they were a symbol of failure. change context and suddenly a sign of success
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iPhone App Roundup
Thanks to WebMonkey - The Developers Resource for an overview of the various iPhone applications available. I’ll be attaching a truncated overview of Michael’s article here, but please read his article if you’d like to learn more.
iPhone Flashlight
Ever use your cell phone in the dark to find things?
Lightenhances your ability to do this by turning your iPhone or iPod’s screen into a flashlight by generating a bright white screen. A webapp version is here: vFlashlight.
Price-matching
Checkout Smartshop ($5) has bar code reader software. Take a pic of any UPC and the app will find the best deal online instantly. Shop owners who claim to “match any price” will hate it. It pulls up reviews, too, for on-the-spot purchase decisions.
On-the-go Paypal Integration
Use iPhone’s
PayPal integration to send money to anyone with a few taps of the screen. It’s great for iPhone-enabled Craigslist purchases — hook up online, meet up in meatspace to check out the merchandise, then seal the deal electronically on the spot.
Resource/Food Detection
Point your iPhone in any direction within WhereTo’s ($3) circular interface. The application pings the phone’s GPS to find nearby restaurants, pubs, auto repair shops, hospitals, shopping centers and airports.
Capture Anything
Evernote comes with the iPhone. Yeah, the software that you can use like a cookie cutter to cut reality. Business cards, signs and notes on napkins can be converted to text.
.
ravenzachary: Guy from Brazil desperately wanting to pay me cash to buy him a phone and break contract. Nope. (From the Portland, Oregon iPhone line).· Reply · View Tweet
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Conclusion:
Expect an entire suite of iPhone apps from sincere and money-dazed people. I was told that some people in the line were taking notes as to the iPhone’s app offerings in an attempt to find the holes and fill them with their own products. Will they charge for this service, or will some be free? I suppose it depends on the developers.
Oakhazelnut.com is getting a voice to tell some stories with.
Bram Pitoyo (if you don’t know of him, make sure to check out Link En Fuego) and I are working on a series of tech talks that touch on what’s going on in the Portland Tech Scene. We’re creating this podcast series to better show off the amazing ideas and people of Portland to the rest of the world. We’re also doing this because we love talking to people and getting to know how they’ve created such amazing ideas, networks, and projects.

Podcasts take time and effort, but we’d like to be able to release one every week, with a different person or idea as the main subject. If you’re interested in participating in one of the podcasts, please contact Bram or I at hello@oakhazelnut.com or brampitoyo@gmail.com. Or, simply message us on Twitter. I’m @caseorganic, and Bram is @brampitoyo.
See you soon!
It’s been a big week in Portland Tech, and it’s still going strong tonight with the Demolicious/Portland Web Innovators event at Cubespace. What is Cubespace? Rental office space for start-ups, consultants, and freelancers. What is Demolicious? 5 project presentations, 10 minutes per project. It basically means that a bunch of innovative people in the room, watching, sharing, and presenting prodigious pre-beta/beta/live web projects. Good stuff. Gone is the era of stale doughnuts and flatlined agendas. This stuff is groundbreaking, interactive and sweetopian.
There’s also beer here, provided by MyStrands, a social/community/aggregator startup based on music sharing (currently in Beta edition, but I can send you an invite).
There’s probably about 50 people here. A lot of faces from last night’s Gary Vanerchuck event at Portland’s ad agency Weiden+Kennedy, and W+K’s Monday Lunch 2.0 Event.
If you’re curious about what’s going on in the Portland Tech scene, and want to join in on some of these events, check out the next events at Yahoo’s Upcoming! website. (The next Lunch 2.0 Event is on July 16th at Souk!)
Presentation Map:
* Kevin Chen, Metroseeq
* Don Park, Do-it-yourself Friendfeed
* Matt King, Interface Content Management Framework
* Mounir Shita, GoLife Mobile
* Lev Tsypin, Green Renter
The first presenter is Kevin Chen of Metroseeq
“Metroseeq is a location-based search engine that aggregates offline deals,” says Chen.
The ability for users to be able to find information from both offline and online sources effectively is the difference between Citysearch and Yelp.
But there’s more - the website also digitizes coupons. Chen tries to demonstrate this with a manila envelope full of paper coupons, but accidentally drops them all over the floor. It’s great, because shows his point even more. Then Chen navigates to the screen, where coupons for each listed business have coupons available for online users. It’s very nice.
Number two: Don Park, with Do-it-yourself Friendfeed
He’s working on solving the problem that everyone faces when they join social networks and have to re-enter all of their social connections. “When you’re joining a new social network,” he says, “you want to bring your friends with you.” Everyone’s data is locked up in different silos. There’s the Twitter silo, and the FriendFeed silo, and the Digg silo.
The key is to drain the silos and bring the dis-separate user data into one place. Use an RSS reader to to it to conveniently track it, and you’ve got your own personal mini-PR system at your fingertips. Brilliant.
Park’s XFN Spider project utilizes the attributes attached to a user’s friends on Twitter, Digg and Wordpress to map out other connections and links associated with those users. The spider can show the blog, Facebook profile, news sources and other pointers that contain the user’s profile/identity attributes, and consolidate them in one resource list.
“Your friendview in Twitter only allows 50 ids to display at one time,” says Park. “A spider can index all of those ids…far past the 50 it allows in its display.” Attach an RSS reader to this process, and you’ll be able to read every RSS feed that your friends are reading.
The spill-over of extensive blogroll links on Wordpress and other Blogging sites can be put to good use by using attributes to track data.
He then uses Firebug to “inspect” one of his friends in Twitter. The whole sequence of links becomes a fractal. If someone The RSS does the updating. “You don’t have to depend on any other location to do the updating.” The speed at which you gain information is And it can go infinite levels deep. That’s a lot of Web 2.0 fractals. The downside? It’s kind of slow. But what is slowness compared to a social media site that’s often fail whaled?
Try it out at: http://donpark.org/spider/
Presenter numero tres: An Interface Content Management Framework, presented by Matt King
“I’m going to show you a content management system that builds content management systems.” he says. He then states that he’s going to build a fan site about the A-Team, because it rocks, and that he’s going to build the website in the next 10 minutes. He then brings up barebones interface. “Just to show you that I don’t have any tricks up my sleeve…” he points to the projection screen, “there’s no pages here”.
So he starts by adding a page. The audience watches. Click. Click. This page is done. “Lets hit save,” he says, “then we’ll add a page about the show, I guess.” He points out that you don’t have to assign a slug or a template. The site will do it for you.
The he does a pages about the A Team’s Van, because “the van warrants a page in and of itself, because it’s so cool.” Users can use templates to pull content in from the CMS.
The structure of the pages is easily modified, with the database automatically updating the url structure. Pages can also be infinitely nested.
King begins to add some dynamic content for the episodes and the characters. He does it this by adding models. “You can add as many as you want,” he states, explaining that “Models are the dynamic content of your site.”
There’s more. You can add as many fields to your content types as you like. You can upload images if you want. Add a location and the database will automatically give you an address and will geocode it. (this system reminds me of an ultra-fast, ultra light version of Drupal).
Once the page structure has been created and set, one can instantly start adding content to it. Models can all be associated with each other. This part is kinda meta-style.
Season:
Associations: “has many”
Volia.
Like some sort of computer chef, King previews the site. “And then we’ll go to the page here,” he says, and “out pops a really nice page.” Watching King make a website is like watching a chef make something, put it in the oven, pause the camera, and take it out again, completely finished. Except there’s no baking time.
“Okay, I cheated. I did the templates beforehand”. The audience laughs.
“Go to seasons,” he says, ” and Pick a season. We’ll actually get to see what episodes are associated with it.”
Lastly, when you add content it instantly gets an API. King says that they used this for a few flash-based websites. The websites didn’t even need to use html, “just our API”. Nice.
Q+A:
“Is this internal only?”
“We’re trying to make this a base camp-type setup for it, so that you can sign up and get an instance of this development”.
“As long as we can get a website setup for it”, says King’s partner.
Matt King’s website is here, in case you feel like checking it out. He’s done a variety of other tech experiments. Perhaps you can use Don Park’s spider to find them all.
Four: Mounir Shita, from GoLife Mobile
He’s presenting a mobile application platform for mobile applications. He shows a Traffic Camera Widget.
He accesses the platform on a sort of mobile device emulator. Then he swaps out the data source object without changing the code. “You can tie these UI components to different devices,” he says, “like switching one component traffic feed (Oregon) to another (Arizona).”
Simplified overview of the platform:
A widget contains UI components. UI components are attached to sources.
Platform layercake:
XML (standard Internet), SMS Vado (cell phone), HTML (iphone)
(Gateway)
(Virtual Widget Layer)
Action Layer (Show lists) (Show traffic information) (View article) (Write article)
(Personalization layer) (Content enhancement layer)
(Data Access Layer).
Simple use case: Person x wishes to find closest Starbucks. But a mobile device should also figure out where friends are. Mobile device will go and figure out where friends are and recommend a location on the basis of nearness. The device will then tell you where location is, how to get there, inform your friends of your trajectory, and smoothly handle any details, should they arrive.
A mobile device should also show you the menu options, deals, and drink selection of the location as well. Dynamically. You shouldn’t be telling every single application what you like and what you don’t like. “it’s very very semantic”, he points out, “you’re plugging in very very small semantic codes that plug and play together”. On the whole, these semantic codes help mobile nomads get together on the fly.
It’s as semantic as a roving a meeting maker that negotiates meetups across dynamic time and space, as if the entire geography were a mobile, roaming office.
The website meta tag states that “GoLife Mobile is erasing the barriers between the physical and electronic worlds. We let your mobile device get to know you, so it can…” Well…you know. Here’s the website, if you’re intrigued.
Finally: Green Renter, presented by Lev Tsypin
Green Renter is a database of Green buildings available in the Portland area. Tsypin states that this database is location-agnostic. It has data values for the Portland area because it was birthed here, but should expand to encapsulate every real estate area.
There’s a featured building, and a cetegory for renters and owners. A real estate site that satisfies a eco-niche. A nice feature of the site is that it provides a list of features like:
The Building’s surroundings…
Community resources (i.e. libraries nearby)
Services (i.e. grocery stores nearby)
Public transit nearby
Car share vehicle nearby
Bike lanes/paths nearby
Park/open space/wildlife areas nearby
The same type of list is available for building materials, like non-toxic concrete mix, and bike racks.
All of these categories and feature layers aggregate together to form the context of a ‘Green Score’, a scoring system similar to Google’s Quality Score or Page Rank. Over time, this will hopefully spur the community transparency and ethics which will lead to more green buildings.
Something Green Renter wants to include in the future is a glossary for their green categorization system. Including this glossary allow the side an educational/resource component for those who with to learn about how to find/develop increasingly sustainable and environmentally friendly buildings. It’s like the etiquette of a website that’s been correctly structured according to W3C standards or SEO code.
Visitors can utilize an aggregate map of all buildings in a given area and filter out which buildings have vacancies or not, or which buildings have LEED certifications for green building.
The site also has a blog that links to green events that are happening around town. In this way, Green Renter can bolster the education and awareness of its community of readers, but can also connect those readers to other individuals who are also interested in living in sustainable architectures.
The add building feature allows users to add commercial or residential property to the site, with property details, contact info, pictures, and renting or leasing information. It’s like a social network for the buildings themselves. Each building with its own avatar and characteristics. Pretty nifty.
The founders also own greenowner.com and are looking into develop that, but feel it is more important to really nail down a niche before going on to develop other things.
When addressing the massive market share that Craigslist holds over the rental/leasing market, Tsypin says that “if you post your green building on Craigslist, you can provide a link back to the site so that your viewers can see all of the green features and details of the building.” In this way, Criagslist and Green Renter can form a symbiotic relationship with one another. A Craisglist listing for a Green Building can function as a starting point into a extended database full of information about the given property, hosted by Green Renter.
And yes, the site supports OpenID.
GreenRenter is alive and well at http://greenrenter.com.
In Essence…
There is, of course, much more to say. I’ll leave you to analyize the nitty gritty stuff and add details. I left out a lot of important things, but it is late and there are only 110 hours in my workweek to get things done.
As always, I am blown away by the things that are happening in the Portland Web Community. Something amazing is happening in Portland. I’ve never seen anything like it. Everyone I meet is always working on something so interesting, and has an positive and innovative mindset on their shoulders. I’m eager to see what’s next.
Special thanks to Portland Web Innovators, Cubespace, and all those who presented. Impressive awesomeness. Bram Pitoyo inspired me to do this write up, but this pales in comparison to his precise assemblages of brilliant journalistic data.
Thanks for reading, and please excuse any inaccuracies incurred based on my Strands-sponsored state.
If you’re on Twitter, I’m @caseorganic. I’d love to follow and meet more of you.