Forget Blogging, Start Tweeting

I’m going out on a limb here and just say it. If you’re an elected official and you aren’t blogging already just skip it. No disrespect to bloggers. I consider myself one. I love them. I love BlueNC. But times are changing and the tempo is speeding up!

A new site called Tweet Congress lists all the Congresspeople who tweet. This is a serious case of you waited too long and technology lapped ya. Don’t feel bad. Tech is fast.

So you may ask, “What the hell is Twitter?” This video can explain it.

No Twitter is not really about the silly mundane stuff you are doing. ex. what you had for dinner, how cool mowing your lawn is… Think back to when you first learned about blogging. I bet you thought that was silly and powerless too. So when the next Presidential election is swayed because of Twitter just thank your friendly early tech adopter.

Dig new communications trends now. Empower yourself!

Exposing the lies of Telco shills

Check out this blog post by Fiona Morgan picking apart a “technical report” by the John Locke Foundation.

John Locke Foundation’s tech analysis: Epic fail

Some choice bits:

In a report bashing a city-owned broadband utility, the conservative John Locke Foundation reveals a stunning level of ignorance about technology.

“Wilson’s Fiber-Optic Boondoggle,” written by research director Michael Sanera and intern Katie Bethune, criticizes Wilson, N.C.’s $28 million investment in a fiber-optic network that makes high-speed Internet, cable TV and phone service to every resident and business in the city. The utility project, called Greenlight, is funded by bonds which under the city’s business plan are expected to be repaid through subscription revenue.

JLF leads with the critique that the technology “could be obsolete before it’s paid for.”

Come again?

“WiMax wireless Internet technology is rapidly leapfrogging fiber-optic cable technology, making it obsolete.”

To anyone who actually follows Internet technology, that statement is a howler.

Fiber is far and away the most advanced technology available for connecting to the Internet. It offers effectively unlimited capacity and speed. WiMax is the next generation of wireless technology, reaching further and moving data faster than the WiFi most of us use now — but nowhere near as fast as fiber. And every wireless system has to connect up to some kind of backbone. WiMax works best if connected to a fiber network.

High-speed Internet must be a part of Carrboro's infrastructure

People who live, work and visit Carrboro love the free wireless Internet. But the Town of Carrboro’s wireless is a victim of its own success. I’ve heard from a lot of people who have problems with it and wish it worked in their homes. Fact is, the area the wireless signal covers is too small, the connection is unreliable and the bandwidth is too little. Now is the time for the Town of Carrboro to take the next step. I propose the town support the construction of fiber optic Internet connections to buildings within the downtown business district.

The idea of building a fiber optic network in Carrboro isn’t farfetched. Matter of fact, the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NC DOT) and the Town of Chapel Hill are already working on it. The Town of Carrboro and the Town of Chapel Hill share an old copper-wire traffic-signal system. Last year, the Town of Chapel Hill budgeted $50,000 toward a joint investment with NC DOT to replace this old signal system with fiber optics. One strand is planned for traffic signals and another is for the town’s use. Little has been publicly discussed about this project, which is slated for completion in 2012.

The small size of Carrboro’s downtown makes the cost of extending the network practical – primarily because the distances from traffic signals to local businesses are short. Right now, the Town of Carrboro rents the signal system from the Town of Chapel Hill. If Carrboro isn’t a full partner in this resource, they may not have the power to build our future access. Supposedly, the NC DOT is trying to squeeze the Town of Chapel Hill for more money to build a fiber loop. Now is a good time for Carrboro to put in.

There’s already a large customer base for high-speed Internet service in Carrboro. We have five planned new construction projects, including a mixed-use hotel, office and retail space. Public safety organizations like rescue, fire and police also could use the bandwidth, not to mention other creative and talented people. Fiber optic Internet can provide reliable upload and download speeds in excess of 100 Mbps. We can do a lot with that!

Diversifying our community’s tax base to relieve stress on property tax has been a goal for years. One way to do that is by enticing new businesses to move here and convincing existing ones to stay. A major bit of bait can be fiber-speed bandwidth for data and voice. Now is the time to invest in building the last mile of high-speed infrastructure in Carrboro. Not later, after the recession has killed development projects. Not after the Town of Chapel Hill gets around to doing something, but now on the cusp of major national infrastructure projects promised by our new president-elect.

Brian Russell is founder of Orange Networking, orangenetworking.org

(The above is an article I wrote for the Carrboro Citizen.)

Audio/Video and Animation Producer for Hire

One of the constants of my creative life and career has been audio/video production. In college I edited a lot of video for the web and shot film for animation. After school I learned the non-linear film editing software AVID and worked in Los Angeles. Since then I’ve kept my skills current and obtained all the gear needed for multimedia production. Recently I made a animated piece using After Effects.

This is all just a way of saying I’m looking for freelance work. Recently I’ve put in several bids for a/v production work. Please check out my portfolio for examples and my resume for work experiences and education.

Here are some of this things I’d like to do for you:

  • Produce, record, and edit audio podcasts
  • Produce, record, and edit video for the web
  • E-commerce design and setup for multimedia products
  • Write and produce animation for the web using After Effects
  • Train people on audio/video production for the web

If you know anyone who needs these kinds of services please pass my contact information along. The best way to reach me now is via the contact form on the Carrboro Creative Coworking site. I’ll respond quickly and help you all I can. Thanks!

The Journey to Build a Coworking Space

More specifically its a journey to build a sustainable coworking space. By sustainable I mean it should financially support itself and its operator (me) plus employees. I’m doing the best I can to document this unique journey. Mostly on the biz blog at carrborocoworking.com.

So far I’ve recorded five videos. Hope to do more. You can watch them here carrborocoworking.com/category/topic/video

This one is the latest.

What is Sculpture?

I just got an email that contained a beautiful letter from one of my Sculpture professors. He wrote it to two grade school kids to answer the question, What is Sculpture? With brilliance and humor Mr. Lester Van Winkle did what few humans can, explain the unexplainable…

VCU Department of
Sculpture and Extended Media
January 16, 2007

To: Mr. Chris and Mr. Henry:

Gentlemen:
I enjoyed reading your letter. I applaud the thoroughness of your research efforts. Trying to explain sculpture is sort of like trying to explain the taste of an apple. Sculpture is a discipline in art that has to do (most of the time) with the three-dimensional expression of ideas. Unlike all other art disciplines (like painting, design and crafts), sculpture has no material or format limitations. In other words, if you are a sculptor, you have at your disposal any existing material, from stainless steel to peanut butter. At the turn of the last century sculptors decided that space was also a material. Unlike painting which has rather fixed two-dimensional formats, either square/rectangular or shaped, sculpture has no prescribed format, genre, or profile. The silhouette of a sculpture can look like anything imaginable: automobiles in a line buried nose down in the earth, an orange curtain across a canyon, a room full of one meter long bronze bars, trees bent and grown in geometric configurations, a spiral jetty in the Salt Lake, an electric machine that tears itself apart, a person doing bench presses with a barbell made of two televisions sets which show him bench pressing the TV barbell. Of course there are traditional subjects that were most popular prior to l900. They are the figure, still life, and landscape. Sculptors are still mystified by these traditional modes of expression and continue to examine them.

The invention of the camera made it unnecessary for artists to concentrate on duplicating nature. They were free to examine the more abstract aspects of image invention. In the mid to late parts of the last century there was much debate concerning the merits of abstract art. Some artists think that all art is abstract, even photographs. They say the camera cannot see as the human eye sees. This notion of abstraction gives the artist great latitude in concocting images. Cartoons are great examples of abstracted figures. Muffler-men you see in front of auto repair shops are other examples of abstracted images. There are many more.

The industrial revolution changed the world for artists because it created surplus items, scrap materials, and throw-aways. Artists naturally began to use “found objects” as parts of their sculptures. The world wars and space program have provided sculptors with new processes like welding and explosion forming, and materials like aluminum, titanium and composites like resin impregnated wood. So you see that sculptors respond to social/technological change almost automatically.

Now sculptors are greatly intrigued with the technological revolution. The interfacing of electronic technology with mechanical systems has made robotics a new and exciting area that sculptors are investigating. Image scanners and instant prototyping machines are sculptors’ tools as well as the personal computer and video camera.

No one can predict what tomorrow’s sculpture will look like. All we know is that it will not look like what we see today, it will be mysterious, and we will have a difficult time understanding it. Most folks want art to be easy to read and have great entertainment value. This is not the intention of most sculptors. Most sculptors want to make you think about what you see, to figure things out, to fill in the blank, to solve the riddle, to examine your feelings, etc. So you must pay attention to the sculptures that maybe you don’t like, the ones that challenge your ability to accept them. The world of sculpture is a wonderful and very complex universe.

You fellows may want to share this letter with your teacher who may be of some help with decoding the technical terms. I hope I have been of some assistance and have helped extend your understanding of the field of sculpture. I do admire intellectual curiosity more than almost anything. You two young men are top of the line.

Good Luck,

Lester Van Winkle, Professor Emeritus
Department of Sculpture and Extended Media
School of the Arts
Virginia Commonwealth University

Lester helped me belive in myself. I was in such awe of him and his ability.

One day he reminded me that I had gotten an A from another professor not because it was given to me but because it earned it. The world needs more people in the world like this man.

Refresh the Triangle at Carrboro Creative Coworking

Thursday, Oct 23, 2008 from 6:30pm to 8pm Carrboro Creative Coworking will be hosting Refresh the Triangle. This is a great meetup that I’ve been to several times. (Not nearly as often as I’d like though.) Each time I’ve learned something valuable and met great people. We’ll have free pizza and drinks too.

Our topic is Unearthed Arcana for Web People. From the Refresh website:

Clinton Nixon, senior developer at Viget Labs, will present and facilitate this talk about how to avoid trivial, repetitive tasks and increase your productivity with your computer. We’ll cover both software you already have, and free/cheap software you might not. If you’ve got a tip of your own, bring it! We’ll have some free time to share at the end.

Check out all our events on our Google Calendar. Many more on the way!

Carrboro Coworking is moving along

Yesterday I signed a lease for office space in downtown Carrboro! After almost two years of work its FINALLY starting to happen. But this is only the beginning. So much more to do before we open. So much to do to run the space.

Last night I shared with friends and supporters the news.

Via Twitter
I signed a commercial office lease today for @carrborocowork WOOT!

Via the Carrboro Coworking Google Group and Facebook

Right now I’m sending my PR release to as many media folks as I can. Please forward this to people you know. CARRBORO CREATIVE COWORKING SIGNS THE DOTTED LINE PDF

To top it off I recorded a video last night. Its the first one in a series that will document the journey to create a coworking space. Should be a interesting roller coaster.

Please consider purchasing a seat, desk, or office at Carrboro Coworking now. I desperately need to pre-sell as many as I can. Contact me for more information. Lots of info on the biz website.