semantic advertising video
from the internet week meetup that i moderated last week in nyc...

from the internet week meetup that i moderated last week in nyc...
here's a video of the opening comments i made at the nyc semantic web meetup that i hosted at the hearst tower this past spring - go into some changing aspects of journalism, how semantic tools can help and give a background on my role...
Mike Dunn at the New York Semantic Web Meetup from Marco Neumann on Vimeo.
http://www.dangillmor.com/
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i am not a journalist (which should be very evident by my writing style), but rather am an emerging media technologist who has worked with and for some of the worlds largest media entities, normally as a cto - currently at hearst interactive media...
in late march, i traveled out to phoenix to speak to dan gillmor's program at asu, the knight center for digital media entrepreneurship, which is part of the walter cronkite school of journalism and mass communication - i participated in 4 different sessions, a few made up of j-school students and a few made up of students focused on digital media and entrepreneurship related to emerging media - my talk and the conversations of the day focused on the changing nature of journalism, especially from a technology perspective...
since that trip, i've been traveling a ton and very busy (work & life) thus i'm overdue publishing both my thoughts on the day at asu and my presentation for broader consumption, so i wanted to get this post done for those who've asked - sorry for the delay and sorry in advance for the length of this post since it's meant as more of a reference than one of my normal posts...
a little background, while dan runs the program, my friend cj cornell is entrepreneur in residence and a member of dan's faculty - cj and i worked together earlier in our careers - we've stayed in contact so he's the person who proposed that i be invited to speak at the program...
so an overview of my talk and the various sessions in which i participated - i started with some basic assumptions and recommendations: cj was using twitter to both publish soundbites from the sessions and to gather questions from those who could not attend in person - this is a great mechanism for broadening involvement, a natural next step is to show a live stream of the interaction on a monitor during the live sessions, makes it a little more lively for the presenter but creates a nice live feedback mechanism in my opinion - i also differentiated the "i" and "we" aspects of my talk, "i" being my personal opinions and experiences not related to my current role and "we" being definitive topics that do represent my current employer that i am at liberty to publicly discuss, i think this is really important to state, though common sense its rarely in my experience clearly articulated - given my role i also stated that certain not yet public aspects of our projects could not be discussed - that was it for setup...
i spent some time providing background on hearst, my role there and my career - i won't go in to the same level of detail here since the sites i linked to will provide you with more detail if desired - so i explained that hearst is a private, mostly domestic focused, diversified media company, one of the nation's largest - its made up of broadcast, newspaper, magazine, entertainment, business-to-business and interactive focused operating companies - my technology leadership role is diverse as well, comprising venture, enterprise, strategic relationships, innovation and emerging media focused responsibilities - all pretty typical of other cto roles i've had during my career, such as corporate cto of time-warner; cto of dell online; cto of encoda and technology leadership roles i've held with other media, entertainment and advertising companies - i went over various board and advisory roles i've held or currently hold and relationships i hold with academic institutions such as mit media lab (sponsor), kellogg (coordinator) and columbia (mentor)...
i then provided some detail on certain aspects of my current role: for enterprise technology i provided an overview of what it takes to foster technology initiatives that are meant to benefit an entire corporation, how to focus on roi when recommending technology initiatives and the challenges that exist for a diverse company who's numerous industries are in a constant state of change due to competitive landscape & customer affinities; for venture technology i reviewed some of the companies we've invested in recently and motivations behind them such as pandora, eink, brightcove, sling media and sphere which were all minority investments and ugo, kaboodle and 1up which were all acquisitions - i then reviewed the scope and methodology behind my technology due diligence process which i won't go through here since it is already well documented via blog posts and supported via my wiki; i then reviewed what strategic relationships mean for a large media entity (some folks call this vendor management) especially related to leveraging scale across numerous digital media efforts: such as embracing best practices for operations and development, commoditizing platforms, developing consistent mechanisms for technology and product feature assessment, and finally how to leverage relationships for traffic growth, syndication, sponsorships and advertising - so instead of lots of silos and one offs, how to instead create uniform approaches that from a cost and revenue perspective benefit all involved...
the following aspects of the presentation are contained in the pdf (at end of post) that i've provided for downloading (or for subscribers it's in the rss 2.0 enclosure) so i'll just summarize here: i discussed the changing nature of journalism and the need to embrace becoming a networked journalist - i recommended that the students follow established journalists who have embraced digital and social media (jay rosen, ryan sholin, steve outing, dwight silverman, mathew ingram and their own dan gillmor are just a few), that they subscribe to beatblogging.org for its excellent posts and podcasts all about the changing nature of covering a beat, moving from traditional print to community building via blogging, i went over my belief (and many others) that all journalists need to start considering themselves multimedia creators and i recommend ryan sholin's post on alternative business models for news from a similar session at syracuse university that he held at newhouse; that they read steve outing's excellent post on digital news production; i recommended a number of emerging tools that they should experiment with for news gathering, research, publishing, distribution and community engagement: friendfeed, social median, yauba, zemanta, filtrbox and adaptive blue were those that i suggested but i also recommended that they develop a proficiency for trying out emerging tools as a way of staying current and find what works best for them; i recommended that they look at emerging online news sites such as hearst's seattlepi, now public and outside.in...
i then went over the differences i'm seeing in communication methods leveraged by social tools which i've blogged about previously so i won't rehash here but i thought it was important for students to experiment with a variety of tools and platforms and understand that they aren't all created equal nor universally applicable to every interaction or requirement - so pick the right tool for the job...
given the audience i thought it was important to provide an overview of semantic web technologies and why learning about emerging content publishing capabilities such as these are so important not only for those already in the media but especially for those seeking to enter the industry, namely what it'll mean for the changing nature of journalism and the newsroom of the future (pointed them to an excellent post by john cass, formerly of forrester research) - simply stated semantic technologies provide a way for information and services on the web to be defined, making it possible for the web to understand and satisfy the requests of people and machines desiring to utilize web content systemically - for future journalists it can give them the ability to leverage social media mining tools to determine which stories are of most interest to a community, giving the journalist the information and metrics to incentivize investigating in greater detail as well as enter the conversation proactively - i'm a member of the semantic web community in nyc, having hosted a well received semantic web meetup at the hearst tower in april and then the following week meeting up with tim berners-lee and other research focused semantic web technologists at mit in boston, the consensus seems to be that these technologies, while nascent from a broad business perspective, are extremely active amongst computer scientists, researchers and the w3c.org - for those in the media it can and will be a valuable tool in our kit, both as aspects of the content management systems used to publish and as seperate research and collaboration tools used to gather information and interact...
i finished up with a session for the students who are part of the entrepreneurial program, allowing about a dozen teams to first pitch me their startup ideas, then i ask them a few followup questions and then i provided them feedback and gave some recommendations - i heard some great ideas and had a lot fun interacting with these very passionate students, as a parent of a college student i can safely stay that these kids are getting a solid educational foundation that they'll be able to leverage immediately upon graduating...
overall, i was really impressed with the way dan, cj (i had a nice dinner with them in downtown phoenix after the packed day) and the rest of the faculty are preparing these young journalists and entrepreneurs for their future - they're getting the traditional grounding of j-school but layered with a strong influence from digital media creativity and startup innovation skillset, hence their future's bright but different than those that preceeded them...
Image by luc legay via Flickr
in today's highly social online world i've noticed a trend over the last few years that i think will really change the way we seek, receive and share our experience and knowledge with others - i refer to it as open sourcing our experience...
last summer i posted the technology due diligence process that i've developed after years of being responsible for performing venture and acquisition related analysis of the technology and product development utilized by companies seeking funding or for sale. i originally posted the process in advance of a venture related media summit that i was hosting at my building (hearst tower) but i'd been sharing it with start-ups and other vc's for years. by posting it to my blog though i basically open sourced my experience so others could both leverage it as is or take it as a starting point and add to it in a way that makes sense for their specific needs. since posting it i've gotten lots of positive feedback and some start-ups coming to visit us have even shown up with answers to my tech dd questions already prepared in advance of our first meeting...
another aspect of open sourcing your experience is mentoring, something i've been doing for years, both through formal programs and informally upon request. mentoring has been around forever, but today's online social tools make it easy and convenient, both for those with knowledge to share and for those seeking a mentor...
social tools such as friendfeed, twitter and facebook make it very easy to ask questions, provide answers and generally share your experience in a very straight forward way...
Barack Obama | Change We Can Believe In | Technology.
"Obama will appoint the nation’s first Chief Technology Officer (CTO) to ensure that our government and all its agencies have the right infrastructure, policies and services for the 21st century. The CTO will ensure the safety of our networks and will lead an interagency effort, working with chief technology and chief information officers of each of the federal agencies, to ensure that they use best-in-class technologies and share best practices."
i'm pretty apolitical by nature, when pressed i usually state that i'm a libertarian, the passive non-freak show kind - i stayed out of this discussion when it happened online awhile back but being a cto for the latter half of my career and now that barack will be putting this into action, i felt the need to chime in along with the various reactions (scoble, riley, wag, rizzn, riley to rizzn & others) to the obama campaign's statement that if elected he would appoint a cto of usa...
in reading his technology page there really are multiple areas that need focus and not all of them are well suited for a traditional cto - btw, this is a great well meaning list of concerns that should be bipartisan, i couldn't find anything similar from mccain regarding the need for a cto however his campaign did have a good technology focused section on his site that was also worth reading...
this cnet article is a little more current and does a pretty good job of breaking down some of the issues and concerns, whether the cto role is more of an adviser or an active change agent...
of all the proposed candidates, i like vint cerf best - but i also think the role needs to be more clearly defined before the person filling it can be identified...
i also don't think it'll be an active cto in the prime of their career, commercial compensation is always better than what the government can afford - seems obvious but i haven't seen anyone w/ that take yet...
the government is a federation of entities that utilize technology in a wide variety of ways and degrees of competence (much like any big complex company btw) - for the cto to be successful they will need to understand how to motivate effective change via more than just the authority their role will grant them but rather via the ability to influence the various diverse organizations to want to change, its a subtle difference but a very important one in my experience...
who ever ends up being chosen, i wish them well and will enjoy watching them tackle the challenge...
i've noticed for some time in all the social networks that i've participated in over the years that there is a select group of participants who tend to attract trolls as if they were magnetized, now granted it's usually the abrasive curmudgeonly a-listers who bring out those with a trollish tendency because rather than ignore them like the rest of us, their ego seems to require that they debate with them - now some social environments (like friendfeed) have very useful blocking functionality so that you don't see a trolls activities and they won't see yours - but you have to first identify the trolls, and it seems these magneticly popular folk are the best at accumulating them and bringing out their true trollish nature for all else to see - it occurs to me that there's a new online role in the making here - trollmaster, an online personality that simply by participating can rid any community of its trolls - this would be very useful as new social networking environments startup, conspiracy theorists are always claiming that a-listers only use and talk up these new social sites because they are paid - forget about that, i say openly pay them to participate and rid the site of all its trolls - long live the trollmasters, pissing off and ridding the web of all trolls so we don't have to ;)
i'll still will be posting here of course but if you really want to track what i'm up to online as i mentioned in an earlier post, i suggest you follow me on friendfeed or swurl - that way you can get all the other services i interact w/ in one interface or via one rss feed...
see these two posts from my other blog for additional background: changes & personal soa...
for those of us that adopt new tech early and often, such as social networking and lifestreaming tools, things have been pretty interesting lately - while twitter has been growing in popularity it has also been extremely unstable, to the point of user abandonment - along comes friendfeed which i first started using as a presence aggregator - a place that i could subscribe to everything my many online friends do whether its twitter, blogging, photos, bookmarks, netflix, whatever of the 41 services they chose to integrate into their friendfeed flow - a really neat platform that optimizes keeping up with the many different communities i participate in online - it appears to those new to the platform to be a chaotic mess, a sort of rss aggregretor on steriods, but then again its also a very dynamic communication platform that allows commenting just like blogs have and "rating" something/anything via a "like" which allows those who subscribe to you to discover the things you've liked algorithmically even if they don't subscribe to the original person via a pretty neat friend of a friend (foaf) feature - there are lots of other configurable options in friendfeed which others have done a really good job of chronicling so i won't...
what i really wanted to go through in this post is the differences between the communication styles that exist in twitter & friendfeed, from my perspective of course - which could be very different for others - this is the way i explain the communication practices in twitter and friendfeed to folks new to these tools: i use an escalator analogue...
this image shows three escalators side by side, the one on the left is going down and the two on the right are going up - twitter is like the conversation that occurs between two people passing each other in opposite directions on the up and down escalators - its brief, short and cryptic - while friendfeed is like the conversation that occurs while folks are traveling in the same direction on the escalator, if the conversation that starts while traveling up or down together is interesting it can continue either up into the building or out into the street - also the friendfeed conversation could have the potential to include multiple participants because you're going in the same direction while twitter feels more like many, many ships that pass in the night - i still use twitter but i prefer the depth and level of experience that happens in friendfeed...
one other presence aggregator that i've recently enjoyed exploring is swurl, it has a lot of similarities to friendfeed but is more of a record of activity for me than a place i'd live in - i especially like the timeline view, my impression is that folks will use swurl to track or locate elements that have been contributed to a lifestream & will use friendfeed to interact w/ others while lifestreaming...
personally, twitter is something that i'll decrease fulltime participation in as my time & community of interest transitions to friendfeed (or some other more robust social media environment to be named later) - i used to like whales ;)
my accounts are: friendfeed, swurl & twitter follow if interested (friendfeed is what i recommend)...
to make it easier to point to this set of posts in the future, here is a link summary of my venture technical due diligence process:
part 1 - introduction
part 2 - staffing
part 3 - infrastructure & architecture
part 4 - workflow & governance
a word doc version is enclosed (or download direct) as well, pls feel free to utilize it if it helps you in your process or if you're on the receiving end of a due diligence process such as the one i've laid out here...
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