HyperHead

HyperHead

You can scroll the shelf using and keys

Hand-Made Gray Water

May 30, 2009

Watch as Susan Carpenter of the Los Angeles Times grapples with the difficulties of using waste water from a bathtub on a daily basis.

The water heading down the drain in your house is commonly called “Gray Water,” and while the idea is perfectly simple (redirect perfectly useful waste water to your yard or garden), the actual practice can be downright confounding.

Here Susan uses a product called the Enviro Water Boy.

Also, the LA Times appears to be experimenting with the use of short form video content.

Click here for mor info about the Enviro Water Boy.

How To Honor The War Dead

May 25, 2009 — 2 Comments

What exactly does this mean, to honor the dead? How do I do that–exactly?

It’s a mysterious act, this honoring the dead. Do you:

  1. Right hand over the heart
  2. Intone these words: [solemn blah, solemn blah, solemn blah]
  3. Look silently into the sky for 31 seconds

Have you seen an FAQ about how to honor the dead, or a nifty blog in the HowTo sphere? A YouTube step-by-step video?

I don’t think so (but if you have one, put it in the comments section here!).

Memorial Day is to remember and honor the war dead–a day of great opportunity. In addition to the main purpose of Memorial Day (see below), it’s a day that gives us a chance to cultivate our own personal sense of what “honoring the dead” means to each of us.

So, please take a minute here and use the comments section below to write down your description of HOW you honor the war dead.

I’ll start by adding my own, but first…

Memorial Day Overview

Wikipedia Entry:

Memorial Day is a United States federal holiday observed on the last Monday of May. Formerly known as Decoration Day, it commemorates U.S. men and women who died while in the military service. First enacted to honor Union soldiers of the American Civil War (it is celebrated near the day of reunification after the Civil War), it was expanded after World War I to include American casualties of any war or military action.

Here’s a snippet from the official, first Memorial Day Order by General John A. Logan, 1868.

Memorial Day has the purpose:

“of preserving and strengthening those kind and fraternal feelings which have bound together the soldiers, sailors, and marines… What can aid more to assure this result than by cherishing tenderly the memory of our heroic dead, who made their breasts a barricade between our country and its foe?”

– General John A. Logan, General Order No. 11, Headquarters, Grand Army of the Republic, Washington, D.C., May 5, 1868

For those of you who regularly attend Memorial Day ceremonies, I’m sure you’ve heard many speeches, both stirring and dull, about the history of Memorial Day. There is usually a formal ceremony of placing flowers to commemorate fallen soldiers–comrades, family members, neighbors, strangers. Those rituals are public and can be cathartic, and they symbolize the purpose of Memorial Day.

I’d like to invite you to translate that into a personal tradition and to share some words about that here.

How do you personally honor the war dead?

American Idol 2.0

May 21, 2009

american idol

American Idol 2.0

Internet 2.0, Government 2.0, Web 2.0, Capitalism 2.0, Me 2.0…

There are tons of conversations going on about 2.0 (by way of a quick background: it’s pronounced “two-point-oh,” as in Version 2.0, just in case).

The big idea is that in version 2.0 of anything, the fundamental rules are different from before (version 1.0, of course). Largely, cooperation and collaboration are cornerstones of 2.0 philosophies.

In Government 2.0, full transparency and massive collaboration are cultivated. In Internet 2.0, the audience creates the content and collaborates on entertainment. Capitalism 2.0 suggests the ideals of capitalism 1.0 have grown weary, and what this new century needs are an updated, sustainable, set of economic ideals.

Let’s duck the thorny details of any one of these intentionally provocative generalizations for now. (Oh, there juicy, folks; so jump right in using the comments section below.)

For now, though, let’s make some observations about a much weightier topic: the finale of American Idol.

This year’s competition seemed qualitatively different from the previous ones:

  • The core group of finalists genuinely like each other.
  • They are interested in each other’s success.
  • They are willing to help each other.
  • They encourage and support each other.
  • … and all despite the competition.

There has been plenty written about just how different the two finalists are (Kris and Adam) and yet, they each seem authentically excited about the other’s success. For crying out loud, we’re talking about a dramatic, gay man on the one hand and a religious missionary on the other. They have plenty of ideological cudgels easily at hand to start waling away at each other. Just imagine those two running against each other for a seat in congress, for example.

This didn’t happen–quite the opposite, in fact. Here’s a question: Why?

Define “Winning”

They define winning in a different way from a traditional competition. The idea that there’s only one “winner” is just too narrow and inorganic to their overall interests. I’m not suggesting that a competitive energy didn’t play a significant role, but, despite the power of this “one winner” model to create drama for the show, the core group of finalists fundamentally do not buy into it.

Collaborative Effort, Collective Benefit

That core group of finalists clearly embodies the idea that if they collaborate, the general quality of the work (the entertainment value of their performances) rises. Producing a better product, regardless of who takes primary credit for that product, benefits the whole group.

There is a goal at work here that transcends each individual’s goal of getting to the next level of the competition: producing good music. Serving the goal of producing artful music allows each contestant to contribute to a more meaningful purpose, which is more personally enriching than stark individual competition.

Authentic Regard

These competitors have a genuine regard for each other and an authentic vested interest in each other’s success. The big ideas of 2.0 philosophies are evolutionary, not revolutionary. These competitors did not, for example, take a stand on moral grounds and walk out of the competition or reject the concept of the competition out of hand.

They took part, delivered what they had to offer within the structure of the competition, gave their best, but conspired together nonetheless to collaborate, encourage, help, support and praise each other, regardless of the four old-school judges sitting at the 1.0 table.

Gee-Whiz Stuff 001

May 19, 2009

Welcome to the first in a new series of posts: “Gee-Whiz Stuff.” Oh, maybe welcome isn’t the best choice of words… look out, watch it, duck, uh-oh, gaaawwdd, a silent eye-roll… they all work, too.

Yes, it’s another unstructured, random list of things… but with a surprising twist. This time, it’s a list of things *I* choose. (Snap. You didn’t see that coming, admit it.)

So, to recap: things that excited, enthralled, amazed, amused or otherwise struck *my* fancy recently. Period.

End of introduction.

Oh, one more thing… my criteria: Anything that has triggered a distinct sense of gratitude in me for the someone who pointed me to these things. I have an overwhelming compulsion to cite the sources of ideas that move me, which, unfortunately, tends to distract from the topic I’m wanting to share; so, I’ll do my best to avoid giving credit where credit is due… (at least publicly).

Please comment and make further suggestions!


prezi11

#1 — Prezi, http://www.prezi.com

You’ll never look at a PowerPoint presentation again without–despite your best efforts–disdain.

Death to PowerPoint. Long live Prezi.

Prezi is simple and engaging. Use it to make presentations for public speaking, or meeting pitches, or just use it to tell a non-linear story, truth or fiction… illustrate your ideas and break the chains of linear presenting.

How many times have we heard a speaker say, “Oh, wait, can you go back a few slide to that one about blah-blah-blah?” What follows of course, is the audience and the speaker loose connection… there’s a breakdown, even if temporary, of the magic in the room when speaker and audience are “thinking together.” A good presenter can recover, but none of us either in the audience or holding the talking stick should have to endure that crap. It’s annoying and unnatural… like Microsoft. (I know, a cheap shot, but not at all inaccurate.)

Prezi is mind bending. Look at it. Try it. Pay for it.

I not only love Prezi in its current form, but it’s also clear that in the hands of creative visual communicators it will be many times more effective than any of us can begin to imagine yet.

(p.s. calling designers… I need help conceiving of how to better use Prezi for my purposes… please check out my work-in-progress sample at Casa Dana and leave comments or contact me with ideas on Twitter or email, please oh please oh please. ross[at]hyperhead[dot]com and @rossteasley)

Omair Hague of Harvard Publishing called Prezi “the world’s best business model. Insanely great.”

You can find a little more about Prezi at my company blog at Casa Dana Group.


#2 — SweetCron Lifestream Plugin

Super simple. Elegant. Attractive. Obvious. These are all good things when it comes to User Interface design, and while the ideas behind lifestreaming are simple, the technologies are not. This plugin is all of these things.

Apparently I’m late to this party, as SweetCron has quite a following already. That’s no reason to skip over something like this, though. Check it out in action here, on the author’s blog.

I’ll take a stab at integrating it into this site as soon as I clear a little time, which will likely trigger another post, btw.


chartbeat_dashboard

ChartBeat.com

#3 — ChartBeat

Real-time website analytics and uptime monitoring, like a ninja. Data visualization is the name of the game here, and this package gives a major-league dashboard.

Dana Point Harbor Video

May 17, 2009 — 1 Comment

Check out this hypnotizing, time-lapse video of the Dana Point harbor. Thanks to Dana Point council member Joel Bishop for dropping a Tweet with a link to this.

The video artist goes by the name “MeatPunch” on vimeo (links below the video), which is about all I could find about him. Good visual effects work, MeatPunch, (and for your sake, I’m hoping that’s not the name your Momma gave you).

Dana Point Beach Tilt-Shift from MeatPunch on Vimeo.

Government 2.0 – What’s Next

May 10, 2009 — 1 Comment

The power of online mass collaboration–how will it impact governments?

  • What is next in governance and civil service?
  • How will governments of all sizes and jurisdictions evolve?
  • Are governments out of touch with the behaviors of their own constituents?
  • What is Government 2.0?

If the world of social networking has wrested control of “brand experiences” from the companies who produce those brands, do you think the brand experience of the US Government, or the State of California, or a City Government, or a Water District public utility is also up for grabs?

On Tuesday, May 12th, a new documentary film called “Us Now” will launch online. “Us Now” is a documentary about the power of mass collaboration, government and the internet.

Want more clips? Click here for a boat load!

Current and emerging internet technologies are firmly based on concepts of collaboration. As people become more adept at online collaboration, and as we expand our habits of collaboration, what happens to governments that are bogged down in older forms of bureaucracy, especially top-down hierarchies?

From the “Us Now” blog:

The online launch of Us Now on the 12th of May will be marked by an event with Richard Sennett and Tom Watson MP in the UK and a simultaneous event at The Kennedy School of Government, Harvard.  The events, coordinated by FutureGov, will be broadcast live online, please visit this site on the day for further details. From the 12th of May onwards the full film will be available to stream from this website.

I think these issues are relevant and urgent. The Obama campaign used some of these emerging technologies to great effect, and the Obama White House is expanding government transparency and collaboration tthrough online tools.

However, are state and local governments learning? How can we contribute to our communities in meaningful ways using these tools?

BarCampLA An UN-conference

May 3, 2009

If you’ve never heard about (let alone attended) a BarCamp, the title of this post looks like gibberish or computer code to you.

barcamp_logo1

BarCamps are, as the Wikipedia link says, “user generated conferences — open, participatory workshop-events, whose content is provided by participants.” Some call these “un-conferences,” and they are simply put: self-organizing events.

Show up at the designated venue in the morning. You’ll find an empty bulletin board with a grid for each hour of the day, and anyone who wants to make a presentation (or just facilitate a working conversation) just posts a title on the board. Away you go.

My first exposure was only a few months ago when I noticed the phrase in some Twitter traffic and read some blogs about a BarCamp event that took place in Washington DC about transparency in government called, cryptically, TransparencyCamp.

“] (copyright by Al Pavangkanan)

Checking out the session board for BarCampLA7 [ photo credit: Al Pavangkana, http://www.flickr.com/photos/drtran

I wasn’t able to make the scene at that event in DC, but followed the event online via Twitter streams and the BarCamp wiki, which included some of the material that was presented, which was so compelling that I vowed to track this BarCamp meme and take part when possible.

Enter BarCampLA.

As I write this, day two of BarCampLA-7 is taking place. To my disappointment, I can’t be there today, but here are some notes from my first BarCamp

By the way, these are notes exactly as typed into Evernote (my favorite notetaking tool), plus some bits from the Twitter stream that I hope will give some flavor of the event.

(more…)

BarCampLA An UN-conference part 2

May 3, 2009

This is part two of yesterday’s post about my first BarCamp experience…

—————————-

Session: unknown speaker, The Glass Plate Game, Cooperative Thinking

This session was a failure, in my humble opinion. An interesting one–arguably–but a failure. The “cooperative thinking” part of the title pulled me in.

It’s a table-top board game meant to stimulate conversation.

Decidedly low-tek, which is usually a good thing in my book

Decidedly low-tek, which is usually a good thing in my book

Our speaker invented this game in 1976, based on Herman Hesse’s novel The Glass Bead Game.

It is a very German game.

The “cooperative thinking” part didn’t happen. Broken glass.

Rudely, I left the room after about 20 minutes.

(more…)