How To Fix the Google+ Engagement Problem

I don’t log in to Google+ as much as I did when it first launched but I still find it a nice option when the stream of kid and vacation pictures on Facebook gets to be too much (and I’m as guilty of those crimes as anyone.)

My Google circles are mostly made up of people I don’t know but have something in common with (Reddit, MetaFilter, Librarians, Random People From Saskatchewan) and that’s the gist of this presentation – Google is a fundamentally different type of network than Facebook or Twitter.  Where Facebook is (mostly) for connecting with your friends and acquaintances and other people you know, and Twitter is (mostly) for following people you don’t know, Google+ is for discovering people you share an interest with, whatever that may be (and a natural extension of their circle metaphor.)

Interesting stuff indeed!

Family Hockey Pool Update

For the past few years, a cousin in BC has run a just-for-fun hockey pool for family members across the country, both regular season and playoffs.

I usually enter a few teams each time the pool comes up – a team or two for myself, a team for Shea using the strategy of picking either the funniest and/or longest name in each box (she used this strategy while picking for a guy who didn’t show for one of our local hockey pools when we lived in Calgary and ended up picking a team that came in second!  Who knew Miroslav Satan was going to have a banner year that year?  Plus that was a hockey pool with cash sums involved so I think the second place guy ended up giving her half his winnings as a thank-you!  Those were fun pools because instead of a set entry fee, you drafted based on the player’s salary.  So if a player made $10 million a year, it cost you $10 to draft him.  So that meant that instead of the usual suspects being picked in the usual order, you were trying to find under-priced diamonds in the rough to minimize your cash outlay and maximize your potential points production.  Tangent over.)

For Pace in the fun family pool, I use the fairly random strategy of just picking whichever name is listed first in each of the selection boxes.

This strategy is usually a disaster as the secret to winning a hockey pool is picking two teams you think will go all the way and the more players you have who go further into the playoffs, the more you maximize your potential for gaining points with each round that goes by.  (That’s why all the BC cousins did so well last year when the Canucks made the finals and sucked a puck this year when Luongo crapped the bed in the first round!)

But this year, the random names Pace “picked” included a few guys – like Claude Giroux – that a) put up a shit-ton of points and b) (another winning strategy) were guys that were off the radar which meant Pace was getting points from players that few other people picked.

Anyhow, Pace has been in the top spot for pretty much the entire Stanley Cup playoffs but without that concentration of players on the same team or two like some other top participants have, it looks like he’ll finally lose his top spot – maybe even tonight since the third place person has a lot of Kings in their pool (as does my dad who’s in spot #4 and who I think may end up taking the whole thing once the Kings put the Yotes out of their misery.)

As for me, I’d picked the Predators and Capitals to go all the way which is why I’m sitting in the middle of the pack.

Maybe next year!

 

Music Monday – “I want to help you lift enormous things/A pinch, a sting/I don’t feel a thing/And as the Earth revolved around the sun”

New Tragically Hip single!

And as a Hockey Night in Canada Intro:

Omni.com (and Some Thoughts on My Current Digital Life)

Information overload is a well-known condition these days and the situation is only getting worse as more useful web sites, more  granulated social networks and more cool media outlets gain popularity and battle for your attention.

I’ve been thinking a lot about that and increasingly, I find myself wishing there was a single web site where all aspects of my digital life – personal, professional – could combine in one place.  I call this idea Omni.com (which, if it were to come true, would mean a small metal fabricator would be in for a BIG payday!)

What would a single spot for your digital life encompass?  Let’s take a step back…

First off, I need to define what my Digital Life is.  For all that I do on computers and all the time I spend on the Internet, it really all boils down to a few main elements:

  • E-mail
  • Web surfing
  • Digital Photos/Videos
  • Music
  • Documents

That’s it.  Five things.  Now, let’s see how I work in those five areas (with things that are local to my computer rather than cloud-based in italics):

  • E-mail – Thunderbird for main account, Gmail as back-up I give to companies when I want to be on their mailing list but maybe not dealing with all their e-mail regularly/spam-catcher account
  • Web surfing – Firefox & Chrome
  • Digital Photos/Videos – iPhoto as main repository with iCloud enabled, also YouTube for some video clips
  • Music – iTunes was my main home for music but recently has been supplanted by Rdio which only lacks in some of my favourite artists – big (Beatles) and small (indies like Sam Baker)
  • Documents – OpenOffice for local archive of stuff going back to undergrad essays but have increasingly been transferring old stuff and creating new stuff in Google Docs

So you see what a mish-mash it is and also how things may come and go?  For awhile, Flickr was my main choice for hosting many of my photos.  But then, not even replaced by a better service, we just stopped using it.  (I think the amount we used it wasn’t enough to justify the paid account so we let it slip.)

There are lots of sites trying to be this all-in-one shop – Facebook is the obvious one but their blatantly abusive approach to user privacy is discouraging.  Google is another contender but they’re not much better than Facebook in the privacy department although they put up a slightly better front.  Right now, they’re probably the site that comes closest to being that all-in-one shop.  But beyond privacy, I always worry about outages and unexpected changes.  Google Docs recently updated their underlying software and so you were encouraged to update to the new version – except you got a pop-up that all your revision history would be lost.  For most of us, not a big deal but if you’re an author who’s counting on that revision history as you complete your work, that change could be disastrous.  Apple may be the best positioned as they’ve got the media-sharing stuff down (photos, video, music) and do have e-mail server capabilities although most people (even Apple fans) don’t use MeMail as far as I know.

Amazon is somewhat similar but also seems purely focused on external content they sell rather than being a place where you can share your own photos, videos, etc.

And there are lots of little up & comer sites that could perhaps grow into a type of Omni.com – Evernote, DropBox, etc.

There are lots of unresolved questions of how this service might work – privacy and guaranteed access are two of the biggies but there are also questions around cost, security (can I easily set one area to be private, another to be only accessible to certain people and other areas to be completely public) and function (Google Docs continues to improve but is still a long way off from being as flexible as MS-Word.)

Anyhow, that’s my current billion dollar idea.  Anyone reading this is free to take it and run with it.  I’d just be glad to not feel like I have to follow six different social networks to stay in the loop with what’s going on in my world!

Saturday Snap – Pace’s Fifth Birthday

Pace and friends enjoying “Dino Bouncers”…

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Meanwhile, back at the ranch, it takes three men to raise a loft bed…

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…a project which unintentionally echoes the day’s Lego theme! 😉

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Friday Fun Link – Saskatchewan 1973

A promo from local CTV affiliate, CKCK in the year of my birth…

Some Random Thoughts on TedXRegina

So I was one of the lucky 100 who got to attend TedXRegina on Wednesday at the ShuBox Theatre at the U of R.

Here are some random thoughts about the day…

– never realised until the night before while checking out the #tedxregina hashtag on Twitter that there were only 100 seats available as part of the license the organizers had from TED as a first-time event.  That made me feel extremely fortunate to have been able to get a ticket when I expected that the event would be in a huge auditorium with plenty of seats and getting a ticket would be no problem.

– it was cool to see how many people I knew there – from my real and digital lives – and the various circles they come from.  A former RPL employee was volunteering, lots of NDP’ers, tons of Twitter folks (most of whom I only know by their handles having not yet gotten out to a #yqr tweet-up), one guy I knew from the writing community, one guy I knew from MetaFilter (who still owes me $10 from the MetaFilter 10th Anniversary party I organized a couple years ago – but I didn’t bother reminding him of that! ;-))

– also cool to recognize the shared connections we have that you only realise through conversation.  Someone who went to the University of Western Ontario, someone who is a friend of a friend from a previous workplace and so on.  As a former colleague once told me, “Conversations are where the real work happens” and chatting to various people showed that to be true.

– I know the polite thing to say is that the day was amazing and all speakers were equally good but in all honestly, it was much like every other conference I’ve ever attended – whether it was for librarians, writers, book publishers, tech nerds or whatever – in that there were some speakers who were amazing and some who just didn’t do it for me.  I won’t go so far as to rank them as I thought about doing but that’s my take.  (And as you would would also expect, not everyone agreed with which ones were good and which ones weren’t.  Talking to one attendee at the after party, one of the speakers I found lacking was the highlight of the day for someone else.  Another speaker who had a message that I found very timely for my own life disappointed another attendee I spoke to.)

– In some ways, I see the TedX local events as sort of like the farm system for the big, mainstream TED conferences in the US (someone said that once the Regina videos are up in the next week or two, they get added to the main TED site and if they generate enough interest, that could lead to someone being “called up” to do their talk at one of the big multi-day TED conferences in the US.  Not sure if that’s true or not but it sounds good anyhow!)

– if that’s the case, in my own humble opinion, Dr. David Gerhardt and his Rain Board was head & shoulders above everyone else as the highlight of the day and is someone definitely ready for the call-up to the big leagues.  From a great presentation that succinctly explained the idea of trying to make a musical instrument that was easier to learn than the piano or violin but more complex than a kazoo to his ease at integrating the piano already on set into his presentation to the awesome “reveal” of the rain board to the fact that he allowed attendees to play with the device during the break, this one had it all as far as I’m concerned.  (Oh, and the rain board isn’t being commercially produced…yet…but you can buy the related iPhone/iPad app which does the same thing, just without all the cool blinking lights!)

– Ken Haycock is a big wig in the library world and lately he’s been writing a lot about how librarians need to raise our profile in places where we don’t normally go (in this case, a municipal affairs journal read by city administrators which has only had two articles on libraries in the last decade.)  Ken’s article kept occurring throughout the day as I was the only (current) library employee at this conference filled with some of the most plugged-in people in Regina.  And during conversations, when I told people I worked at the library, I ended up answering two main questions – what’s happening with the new Central Library and what’s going on with your contract?  In fact, in my dream world, somebody from the library should’ve been ON that stage talking about e-books or copyright or the future of libraries or the role of libraries in the community or one of the zillion other things that we have expertise on that non-librarians don’t always recognize or acknowledge.

– on that note, I handed my business card to one attendee who said “Oh, you’re a Libertarian?”  😉

TedxRegina

After an extremely long day, I’m pretty tired. Hopefully I’ll revisit my TedxRegina experience in the next day or two. But for now…

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Too Many Tabs Tuesday

Music Monday – “Thought you’d do right by me/But who am I kidding/You’re the Sask Party/Shows like Corner Gas/I guess you don’t remember.”

I went to the massive rally by the Saskatchewan film industry at noon today and it was quite the spectacle.

In Saskatchewan, when we have protests, it tends to be farmers rolling their tractors up to the Legislature that creates a big scene.

But the film community, as you might expect given their skills, put on quite a show today with a bunch of semis including catering trucks, equipment trucks, portable dressing rooms as well as a fleet of motorcycles lining up beside hundreds of protesters to protest the elimination of a film tax credit that helps us compete with pretty much every other jurisdiction in North America for film productions.

Here’s a song parody that’s quite appropriate given today’s event…