Filed Under ‘conversations’

March 22, 2011

SXSWi: Group Texting or Group Disappointment?

I just finished writing up a quick recap of my experiences at South by Southwest Interactive for Urban Omnibus, a project of the Architectural League of New York. I met UO co-editor Varick Shute last summer when she inquired about writing a piece on Project: Interaction. I was thrilled to help out again with a review of SXSWi!

From the recap:

After checking in at the Austin Convention Center using the location-based app Foursquare, it told me the place was “swarming.” I read a little more and discovered that I was there with 377 other people, including four of my friends who also checked in on Foursquare. I shared my location with my Twitter and Facebook friends and snapped a photo of the sun-drenched escalator using the “1977” filter on Instagram. The check-in earned me eight points and I moved up one spot on the leader board. Sweet!

Wait, what?

Read the whole article over at Urban Omnibus, and check out some of the other great stories while you’re there!

March 17, 2011

SXSW Interactive – An Internet Celebrity Wedding

To quote a friend of mine, “It’s like the internet exploded into the real world.”

It felt like a celebrity wedding, where all of the people you know from a distance (read: follow on Twitter) show up to say hi. Even all those distant “relatives” you thought you’d never see again are there. And they’re all having a drink with you.

In his article from a couple years ago, which was rightly mentioned in Chris Fahey’s Donahue App session, Robin Sloane posits that the future of media is events. Events enable collaboration and co-creation across diverse groups that come together because of a third object. It’s like the bridesmaid hooking up with one of the groom’s drunk college pals. Sometimes magic happens, or sometimes it’s best to leave it alone.

January 9, 2011

Conversations with Friends

Calendar - Busy

During the school year my calendar tends to look like a colorful array of meetings, classes and lunches. During winter break I have an imaginary excuse to stop paying attention to email, affairs and work and my calendar miraculously clears out to look more like this.

Calendar - Free

It’s totally awesome.

I’m a busy person. I like to have things to do and frankly, I’m really really bad at sitting still. I’ve filled my winter break days working on little projects and completing the hundred tasks that piled up during the semester. I also found plenty of time to hang out with friends, most of whom get pushed aside in favor of doing school work.

In grad school we get plenty of opportunity to have great conversations with smart people. That’s kind of the point of being there. I was missing that for the first part of break, and lately I’ve been filling the void by meeting up with friends and having other great conversations about design, art, life and other. It’s a great thing to take a break from your work and grab a coffee with someone who might have the answer to the problem you’ve spent all day trying to solve; it’s a nice reminder of the importance of getting outside of our own heads when working on a project.

I wish I had time for stuff like this every week, but school starts back tomorrow and soon enough I’ll be blissfully buried in colorful calendar-land again. Hooray!

July 24, 2010

The Glass House Conversations


Six students from SVA’s MFA in Interaction Design program are engaged with the Philip Johnson Glass House and the National Trust for Historic Preservation to create a space online for conversations between designers, architects, artists, writers, and community leaders. I worked on the project from beginning to end as student project manager. At other points, I was involved with the initial on-site immersion, research, project discovery, site map, and wireframes, and worked as a member of the core teams for design and development.

Liz Danzico and Jason Santa Maria were leaders and mentors for this project.