TCD is dead! Long live TCD!

August 28th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) Story

So I’m killing Tech Check Daily for the time being, because I just got a job at CNET TV doing a tech check daily style show. I’ll link to it when I get a chance.

ComicCon ‘07 preview with Karina Longworth

July 25th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) beta, excuses

Karina Longworth of SpoutBlog was nice enough to sit down for more of a geek check, as we take a look at the weekend’s big event, Comiccon ‘07.

This time, we got audio working stellarly, but we’re sans video. We’ll figure out what’s going on soon enough, but thanks for bearing with us!

Improve your resume with eMurse

July 20th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) TCDVideo, beta, internet

Props to Alex from eMurse for taking some time out of his busy schedule to get in a tech check.

Yeah, I can hear my mic too. I know it was too loud. This show was a breakneck test to see how fast I could go from nothing setup to show, and it took 30 minutes from start to finish, with another 21 for upload time. The unfortunate consequence? The bad audio level. I screwed something up in my audio settings and didn’t do a good enough mic check beforehand, which i paid for dearly after the fact.

Lesson learned.

Tech Check Daily relaunch

July 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) TCDVideo, gaming

Hey everyone, today’s show is the first of a new style of show. I know it got screwed up, but that’s what alphas are all about! Enjoy anyway.

Thanks to Chris from Joystiq for coming on the show.

Comments to the bad: I know you can’t hear me, because my audio was only on one channel (half as much audio, sry!) second, I know it gets jumpy in the middle (new recording system bound to have bugs) so i’m now bug testing this thing and will figure out what happened / why, and get on it.

I think it has something to do with video throughput and hard drive recording speeds. I’m going to get a new USB2 hard drive and see if that remedies the problem. I figure i’ll either put all my b-roll / backgrounds on it and save my RAID to record, or vice versa. Probably the viceversa option, because i’m lazy and don’t want to relink all the old stuff.

Regardless, it’s changing, so watch out!

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Tech Check Daily: State of affairs

May 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured, meta

So, I’ll give you a completely transparent look at the Tech Check Daily newsroom. I’ve been dead for about two months for a few reasons: First of all, seizure. Ya, that derailed my chance at coming back in Utah. Second, Wikireview. Wikireview took literally all my time. Those out of the way, I’m going to try to go back to the february model of doing one show a day. I”m going to just do it. We’ll try to go to a weekly show at first, then back to daily.

It’s going to happen in mid-june after the iPhone launch.

Be excited.

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Breakout session - Embracing voter-generated content

May 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured

Wee! Breakout session time. Being from Utah, I’m pretty stoked that Steve Urquhart from St. George, UT (My hometown!) Rock it out!

Introductions - Joshua Marshall - Talking Points Memo
Eli Pariser - MoveOn.org
Moderator - Bill Allison - Sunlight Foundation
Steve Urquhart - House of Representatives from Utah
Jeff Berman - MySpace

Introductions are just about out of the way, so lets get started!

Steve - It was impossible to understand who voted on what issue, because “people would misunderstand the data.”

Currently, the extremes dominate the process, and the core in the middle is rotting. Why can the extremes dominate? Rockstar adulation, money and power to name a few. Since the extremes are controlling everything, it’s at odds with democracy. The bulk of americans can’t decide, since they’re not being pitched to. Since the fringes are the appeals, the bulk of americans are discouraged and disgusted with the current system. People with good will enter the system and are eaten by the system. Within two years, people at the PDF conference would be doing the same thing the people are doing now. Steve Urquhart started a blog, but it was to profesorial. Now, it’s an issues based wiki. Anyone can put up topics, and anyone can change what’s on there. It did help on there.

The conversation on the fringes doesn’t help. He wants to socially network in politicopia. How do we get the bulk in the middle participating?

Jeff Berman - MySpace

MySpace wasn’t started on politics, but in the same way it’s helped the Arctic Monkeys, Dane Cook, etc etc. could help people. There is a danger in relying on people outside your system, and apparently there’s some controversy between Barak Obama and some overzealous dude.

We get how myspace works. he’s demoing it, but lame.

Eli Pariser - MoveOn

We’ve got to get through the “gotcha” politics of macacaca and things like that. MoveOn tried to do an ad contest.. a “gotcha ad” contest… but admitadely the winner wasn’t too gotcha. Laughs in the room. Concern? People assuming that because user generated content appears on a site is controlled by them, and taking it out of context. Uses the phrase “new town hall.”

Running out of juice! BBL!

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Seth Godin - Flipping the funnel

May 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured

Oh snap… it’s seth godin. “Ted Stephens isn’t here”

“We need ugly presidents”

Seth is killing the crowd with stupid signs like “THIS SIGN HAS SHARP EDGES. BTW the bridge is out.”

Fundamental shift has happened. Ideas that spread, win. lots of pictures.

Successful democracy is about spreading ideas and causing action.

The century of idea diffusion cornered in TV. Thinking about TV helps us diffuse ideas. Seth godin is a comedian.

People who spend money on politics, make stuff work.

“TV industrial complex.” Buy ads, get donations, get elected, get donations buy ads, get donations… etc… You can ignore anything you want now because there are so many places to get info, and ignore. The problem? Too much clutter, too much noise. “Premium sausage at whole foods.” Now, there’s the Tofu department too. SO MUCH CLUTTER. Poeple are laughing. Shows a picture of a baby - WE CAN’T KEEP BRANDING EVERYTHING. It’s a 100 year old idea that is played out. We can’t keep spamming people.

We’re getting good at avoiding stuff now. The good way to get married? Propose marriage to everyone at a single bar? Instead, you could build an asset, a right etc. You could permission market instead. 91% of all the real estate brokers never contact the buyer or seller after the closing is over. Permission cuts through the clutter. Permission provides price and competitive insulation. People think they’re the most important person in the world. Get it?

Instead of marketing to everyone, create a niche. Get good at it.

Adoption curve basics. Middle crowd (early and late majority) are professoinals at ignoring people. The innovators and early adopters choose to pay attention. Sometimes the geeks and nerds are wrong sometimes. The message starts with the geeks and nerds. Get the influencers, win the world.

Hot or not reference. Seth godin is a 3.7. “Wicked big haystack, you’re the needle.” Stand for something.

How do we create movements as great as the macarena.

Cumulative advantage is the new seth godin buzzword. StumbleUpon is great! Fergie sucks, but once she’s close to number one, she’ll be number one. Opposite of long tail. Candidate to voters. “Targeting is a hunter word.” Instead, be a farmer. Most powerful non-elected official - NOT JACK VALENTI! Ralph Nader is successful after spending 0 on advertising. Word of mouth is bad, idea virus is the idea. It’s not a funnel, but turning it into a megaphone. The speech thesis.

Step one: BE AWESOME.
Step two: Tell an awesome story.
Step Three: They spread the word
Step four: Get more permission.

Buy this man’s book. In fact, buy five, and see him speak in utah!

Lunch time!

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Practitioners of flat politics - Sifry

May 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured

Sifry time! Snap!

Arianna Huffington is sick, but not allowed to fly, so she’s not coming here. *tear.*

TechPresident + TubeMogul press release. I’ll post about it later, my battery is going to die so i’m going to stop updating till I can find a plug.

Thomas L. Friedman - Politics is Flat: What happens when we have a dog’s hearing?

May 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured

Quick sampler of three new chapters of his book “the world is flat.”

Talking about guys CEOs fear — the new activist… BLOGGERS! *OH SNAP.* Talking about grassroots praise and social entreprenuers. Politic2.0 anyone? WikiReview anyone?

Talking about an environmentalist group that stopped building 11 power plants spewing co2. Company TXU. Pretty funny. Anacedotal stories aren’t my liveblogging forte, sorry. Get more deets.

Activism is so easy, so cheap and so readily available: If it’s not happened, it’s cause you’re not doing it. That mantra gets some claps.

On to chapter two: What happens when we all have dog hearing?

Some of the downsides of social entreprenuership. Relays a story about a paris taxi driver talking on his bluetooth headphone, watching a movie and driving while the writer writes a column, rides in his taxi and listens to the iPod. Two people doing six things.

Social downsides are parital attention. The technologies uniting us are seperating us. This is interesting, but you’ve got to just get the book, because that’s what’ he’s reading from.

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Liveblogging the Personal Democracy Forum

May 18th, 2007 by Randall Bennett (0) featured

I’m live at the Personal Democracy Forum, and going to do a crappy job liveblogging. I’m more here for another company, but I always like to put my ideas / notes on the site. Thanks for bearing with.

Right now, a spoksperson for the Pew Internet research group is up, talking… stats… Interesting stats from the slide? 92 million american adults use government websites. 52 million research issues. 32 million have emailed jokes about candidates. 25 million fact checked candidates in 2006 online. 21 million have watched political videos online as of february 2007. Four million donated to candidates online in 2006. Two million write about politics on their blogs. (not me!)

15% of americans say the internet was a crucial source for their political knowledge in 2006.

Broadband growth = political spread. 1/3rd of the political internet usage growth can be attributed to broadband. Under age 35 broadband users find the internet more important for their political knowledge than newspapers.

The big question still? Local races now have the ability to be hyper covered, but will it be useful?

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