![]() |
|||||||||
SXSW 2009Wednesday Mar 18, 2009
SXSW '09 Wrapup: Interactive Festival Closes With Wired EIC Anderson in Fiery Final Keynote On 'Free'
In our view, however, the biggest payoff at SXSWi didn't stem from any one announcement, launch, speech or celebration, but instead spanned many of them, often at the same time... Tuesday Mar 17, 2009
Live-Tweeting SXSW Talk With Wired EIC Chris Anderson and Allltop's Guy Kawasaki
Follow Rebecca on Twitter here. Video @ SXSW: Alltop Founder Guy Kawasaki, Pre-Closing Keynote With Wired EIC Chris Anderson
We asked Kawasaki about the future of print media, the fate of free, how Alltop's new offering will aid time-crunched users, and why he has yet to acquire a Kindle for those trashy novels he claims he just can't quit. Watch what he has to say here. SXSW Opens Up, World Says 'Eh'
From the open APIs that dominated last year's sessions, the conversation has turned to openness in data, identity, and information sharing, as panel talks and smaller-scale 'Core Conversations' centered around freely exchanged information transferable across sites, properties, and platforms, regardless of their owners and operators. Still, the barriers aren't entirely permeable yet, despite the efforts of groups like OpenSocial, due to "fear of loss of control, fear of losing quality control and ability to filter and moderate content," according to MySpace's Max Engel, since it "has severe content implications." In the talk "Becoming Open," MySpace developer Max Engel, charged with overseeing the social networking site's open ID and offsite APIs, acknowledged, "opening out is still happening much more than opening in." Touting his veteran bona fides, a Thomson Reuters participant urged, "Maybe we can get the story out to old, big media companies that open doesn't just mean stuff you can download," pointing out its applications in software portability, data portability, personal identification portability, and business model portability. Other evolutions from last year's conference: Facebook's plunge from superstar to sad-clown status, and Twitter's total domination and elegant absence... Monday Mar 16, 2009
Live-Tweeting 'Sex Lives of the Microfamous' at SXSW
SXSWi Keynotes: Hsieh Proselytizes, Silver Wonks Out
Toothless: That was the assessment of many in the 1,000+ audience to hear Zappos.com CEO Tony Hsieh's opening remarks Saturday at this year's South by Southwest Interactive festival. Known in the tech set for its "customer service above all" ethos, Zappos.com is considered a model by many for its early embrace of Twitter to fuel customer service, and for its emphasis on transparency. In an address with a hearty helping of self-help, Hsieh told the crowd he turns reporters loose when they come to visit the company for a story. "We believe so strongly in our culture, we're not afraid of what employees will say," he enthused, describing the "weirdness" and individuality Zappos seeks in employees. "If [reporters] talk to three different employees, they'll get three different answers to what it's like to work at Zappo's." Given Hsieh's fanatical-sounding approach to recruitment and training in the interest of alignment, this reporter finds that tough to believe. All that indoctrination doesn't seem like the recipe for the diversity Hsieh was touting. We found ourselves wishing the format for Hsieh had been an interview with a tech/business journalist who could ask him pointed questions about what happens when the economy takes a dive and people are clinging to their jobs like life rafts -- can the same sincerity and singularity of purpose persist when employees are forced to consider the bottom line in their own lives? What of FiveThirtyEight.com's Nate Silver, number-crunching ingenue and presidential prediction prodigy? Friday Mar 13, 2009
WebNewser @ SXSWMediabistro.com's managing editor Rebecca Fox is headed to Austin for the SXSW Interactive Conference. She'll be on the lookout for stories on digital media innovations and about how the economy is affecting the industry. Her stories will appear here on WebNewser through the weekend and into next week. Rebecca is also heading up a core conversation, along with Rachel Sklar, entitled, "Why is Blogging Bloodsport for Women." That's Sunday morning at 11:30amCT, if you're there. Previously |
Social Media for Media Pros
|
||||||||
|
Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
|