How fun is it to hear new music…new takes on cellos…and lyric-tailored tunes! Thank you CelloJoe for this spin instructor gem!
[soundcloud url=”http://soundcloud.com/cellojoe/bike-girl”]
How fun is it to hear new music…new takes on cellos…and lyric-tailored tunes! Thank you CelloJoe for this spin instructor gem!
[soundcloud url=”http://soundcloud.com/cellojoe/bike-girl”]
The gracious organizers at the increasingly-popular and relevant HTML5DevConference invited me back this year after I finagled my way into a hands-on dev event last year. Luckily the markets have changed enough where I could still speak non-geek and hold some interest to this audience of over 1,000 web developers (not all attended my talk, fear not ;).
Today was perfect timing as my talk discussed why Mozilla is the perfect fomenter of the revolution that needs to happen in mobile. Why today? Because it is also Mozilla’s 15-year anniversary. And it’s our history that really illustrates how revolutionary our DNA is, and just why this is so important for our mobile world.
Here’s a glimpse at the slides. Hit me up at @tbiz with any questions or simply leave a comment here. Viva la revolucion!
The Internet exploded this week when Adria Richards chose to use her social media audience as the first channel to air her offense at some comments made at Pycon. Much has been written about this, including further offense that people have actually questioned Adria’s response to her own offense. Everyone’s offended.
To be clear: offense and even outrage is justified considering the vitriol that ensued (including real, disturbing threats and job losses). It’s worrisome and harkens of regressive tendencies in tech and the job security and safety of many in this industry.
However, the bigger picture so eloquently outlined by Amanda Blum is very important. Blum calls out a pattern of social media dysfunction where Richards has reacted to multiple instances of offense through public channels, which invariably (if you use social media, it’s not surprising) led to incendiary exchanges and a general degradation of relations.
Blum says it so well:
All she had to consider was “what outcome am I looking for?”. If the outcome is “change the way these men are speaking” she’d have taken a different route. If “make as big a deal of this as humanly possible with no thought to consequence” was her outcome, she chose right.
When I look at this big picture – what do we want things to be vs. how do we feel about specific incidents – I have little sympathy for the “if someone is offended they are off-limits to criticism” approach others (whom I love dearly) have put forth. There are SO many reasons why putting a quarantine on any critique of an offended person’s reaction is counter-productive and leads to horrid consequences…here are just a few:
In short, when you choose to involve social media as the key channel for your conflict, you go beyond your personal therapy. You affect lives. Think before you point, shoot and post.