Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Friday, January 18, 2008

It gets worse!

What happens when you leave your cube


This is actually someone's desk I walked by today. Shrink wrapped somewhat professionally.





Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Friday, January 04, 2008

Hi from Seattle pike place market - Jan 4



I had to fly to Seattle today. Luckily I took off from the San Francisco moonsoon rains and wound up in a party cloudy, pleasant Seattle for the day. Unfortunately, my flight was delayed 2 hours to return home due to the weather, so I wandered around Pike's Place downtown and meandered past Qwest stadium down over to "Hooverville". This is a lively local's bar with peanut shells covering the floor. I met up with my Seattle friend for a drink and a hello. Not a bad way to make the best out of my delayed flight.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

More top 10's - Jan 6

I am still getting top 10's out of my system : a few more noteables:
Who else out there has a top 10 list? Feel free to share.

As for 2008 predictions, I found the following trend predictions from the Center of Media Research accurate and insightful into what 2008 should shape up to be in the dear to my heart "Geek Culture":

The research identified four key driving trends;

  • Immersive Living is the rise of lifestyles which blur the reality of being on and offline. Entertainment will no longer be segmented; people can access and create it wherever they are.
I couldn't agree more. This is something that I see everyday with my tech culture colleagues.
  • Geek Culture marks a shift as consumers become hungry for more sophisticated entertainment... the boundaries between being commercial and creative will blur.
  • A social force in Asia called G Tech, the feminization of technology currently underway, suggests that entertainment will be more collaborative, democratic, emotional and customized.
Now that I know there's a name for the "feminization of technology" - I will be sure to use it. G Tech doesn't exactly translate though....how about just 'socialization of technology' or something along those lines?
  • Localism, locally-minded sprit emerging in entertainment consumption, will become a key theme whereby Consumers will take pride in seeking out the local and home-grown.
It sounds like we're all trying to get a little more community oriented in the ever expanding cybersphere. Seeing my local community of twitter friends, facebook friends and neighbors in San Francisco I have to say it feels a little more local and less like the billions of web pages and visits that exist in a day.

Happy 2008 and my top 10 Geekout Things to do of 2007 - Jan 2nd

Thankfully, I no longer write hand-written checks. If I did, I probably would have had to cross out "2007" fifty times already and fudge my 7 into an 8 with some crafty penmanship. I find it hard to believe we're 8 years into this decade. I am still coming to grips with it, but I imagine by May 1st or so it will sink in that indeed time marches on and continues to tick and tock onward with or without my acknowledgement.

Since everyone loves top 10 lists, and they typically surface this time of year, I am jumping on the top ten bandwagon and chiming in with my top 10 list. I thought I'd share the top ten Internet happenings that made 2007 an enchanting year.

Honorable Mention: Giddy about all this virtual real estate
Do you really need to visit a realtor anymore? Zillow.com, local realty blogs, facebook realestate ads, ebay property bids, and 360 views make real estate hunting or competitive shopping an open book. So many great tools for the real estate shoppers in all of us. If only the housing market was doing as well.

10. Making and publishing slide shows for THE most laziest of web browsers.
Thanks to Slide and Rockyou.com, you the viewer can remain a mouse potato and not even bother to scroll down a page, or click a mouse to see all my photos in one neat wrapped up little package. Too bad my non-Internet friends didn't really understand the concept of a 'birthday slide show' and hence never bothered to check out the slides. Maybe in 2008.

9. Widgetized content
The world is going the way of the widget. Now a widget is not only a fictitious business-school term for a make-believe, nondescript manufacturing term. I was quite happy thinking they only existed in the ACME assembly line and outputting at 100% capacity. It's taken on a whole new (2) dimensional persona for anything you can mush together in an embedded object. Just check out the yelp, traffic, or other random widget on this blog and others. Wigetmania has taken 2007 by storm, and I'm sure will be along well into and beyond 2008.

8. Slingbox, Tivo and VOIP, ohmy!
2007 marked my 1st Slingbox, DVR device (not a tivo but that rhymed better), and the mass presence of VoIP in my everyday communications. I'm video conferencing over skype with family. I'm watching Robot Chicken without the poor resolution from youtube pirates and at a decent hour. Oh, and I'm doing all this on my laptop.

7. Consolidation of the online ad market
The pie just got a whole lot bigger. In 2007, Internet advertising finally got a seat at the adults table. This year earmarked online adserving viewed as a critical component for technology platforms that no major online presence can't be without. If only they all would close...

6. Rachael is Facebook makes me feel important!
What would I do without Scrabulous? Or making people zombies with no intentions other than to annoy my friends and waste time? Now not only can I stalk my friends, I can share with them every single divulged detail no one likely really needs to know. Ah, pure minutia for the masses. Seriously, I enjoy the newsfeed as much as the next facebookee.

5. Twittering (see box on right margin of this page for my own pathetic examples)
For the inner geek in you, there's twitter. If you really want to feel like nobody is listening, or you're a fly on the wall, or you have worthless things to share, just type in a twit over IM, SMS, or web and you have a twitter. Imagine if all the unstable people in the world knew about this form of communication, how much better they may feel. I know when I twitter, I'm yelling into a Grand Canyon-like void, with the exception of some random folks who for some reason follow me. It's fun to think you have all these friends!

4. iPhone - non US need not apply!
I don't own an iphone, but my brother and many friends do. It does have great mac integration. I don't own a mac, and my blackberry is doing just fine. I do hope it becomes open to other carriers beyond AT&T so my international friends won't need to ask me for US bought iphones that they can 'crack' in their own country.

3. Flash memory - perfect for capturing embarrassing moments
My camera now acts like a camcorder due to my $40 flash card I got from Santa. Who needs the flip cam now? I take some terrible movies, but maybe with my bigger memory, I'll be more motivated to take incriminating videos.

2. Meebo around blocked sites
I love Meebo. I don't use it much since my company trusts my discretion at what I view on the web at work. But for those less fortunate, or for school kids who may be lucky enough to find it, Meebo is your IM life perserver. It's under the radar enough that you can use your IM on Meebo/AOL/Y!/MSN as a thin client, and your boss will hardly know. I also think its a great business model and they have their heads on straight.

1: The common sense to unplug now and then
My number one highlight, an an ironic twist, is really the absence of technology. I spent last week unplugged from everything except my non-Internet savvy octogenarian grandmothers. Sure I flocked to the keyboard once I had access back in the comfort of my own home. It's absence made me aware of just how virtually connected I am. It's absence reminds me how connected I can stay with folks, soak up random or important info, and how dependent I can be on technology. I am a big believer in work-life balance and having both the plugged and the unplugged worlds exist in tandem. Don't forget to take a breather to unplug - try not twitting on weekends - and remember what life was like way before 2007 - when we had to rely on our people skills and penmanship to maintain connectivity.

Happy 2008 to all!

Rachael