Changing Seasons

It’s a beautiful day and I’m starting to get in a more contemplative mood. At work it’s now the Spring term, which means that the graduating learners are out working for 5 weeks on work placements and the first year learners have just begun the process of making 6 short films over 5 weeks. It’s a lot of fun and since only half of the Screen Arts class is around, it’s a bit less hectic. With the seasons changing it makes for a very nice time of year.
I like being organized, but this past school year has probably been one of my more organizationally challenging years. The course load was a bit heavier, so I didn’t have a lot of time to file things, so my desk is covered with stacks of paper. I’ve been really wanted to implement Getting Things Done and with the help of Merlin Mann’s tips at 43 Folders I’ve been able to some things, such as keeping my email inboxes fairly empty, which makes me happy. I’m also on the verge of getting a more comprehensive GTD setup going with the wonderful kGTD system that is built around OmniOutliner Pro (which I recently upgraded).
I’ve given up on one unified system either electronic or paper to keep it all together, but there are some things that I will keep using and some that I’m moving away from. I really like OmniOutliner and I’ve been using it for a few years to organize all of my lesson plans, presentations and thinking. I also use it for keeping all my marks together thanks to the wonderful summaries that it can calculate.
One of my uncompleted goals was to organize my courses more through Basecamp. While I started to put some things in, I just didn’t have enough time to set it up, but I should be able to for the Fall. Planning and calendars are always fun for me and I have been sporadically using my Moleskine weekly organizer and I’ve stopped using Entourage after a server upgrade lost my address book and made the neat integration of address book, calendar and mail stop working because my address book somehow was lost. Now I’m using Google Calendar a bit, but I will probably spend a lot more time in iCal, since it works with kGTD. With Basecamp and iCal and Google Calendar I can share information through the iCal format and subscribe to various calendars, which is very handy. I don’t like to have my data locked up.
So while it was a busy term with a lot of unfiled paper, it was also a lot of fun. A class filled with some very cool people is going to graduate in June and next year should be a good year too as the filmmakers move from year 1 to 2. I’m happy with a lot less stress right now, and as usual, I’m smiling.

April 29, 2006 , , , , ,

Weaving a Web

One thing that I’ve noticed is that I’m increasing my presence online. I don’t know if the quality is increasing or if it is just more stuff, but I think that one of the reasons that I’m more prolific now is that is easier. I love using Blosxom to blog because I can create the entries with any text editor, but I always use BBEdit to write for bitdepth. But the bitdepth entries aren’t as frequent as I wanted them to be, but now with my increased use of Blogger for Screen Arts and now bitdepth digest, I blog more often using Blogger. The other things that I use often are Flickr and, increasingly, 43 Things. One thing that all these sites have in common are their fairly flexible and open APIs, which allows the information and the sites to interact with other applications and sites. What it means practically is that I now am able to blog using Flickr and 43 Things and to have Flickr images automatically show up on my 43things page as well as here on bitdepth.
Very exciting things are also happening with Technorati adding watchlists where you can follow discussions in the blogosphere based on keywords. I keep track of just about all of this stuff using NetNewsWire as if there isn’t an RSS feed, I’m not as interested in it as I don’t want to spend the time looking around to see if anything has changed. While Flickr and 43things are very fun and aren’t technically oriented, Technorati is a geeky data-rich backend that is starting to have some very cool applications built on their API.
So the exciting thing now is that we’re moving away from needing to use one application to view and share and just find and create and share. It’s exciting when you don’t have to code or understand how to code to use things (but if you can, it’s even more exciting now as you have a lot more to play with).

January 8, 2005 , , , , , , , ,

Community

I’ve been lucky to be part of many different communities in my life. At the time you don’t necessarily think of them as communities as they just seem to be the cool people that you are hang out with. One of the first communities that I was involved with (and I’m still connected to) was the NB Filmmakers’ Co-operative in Fredericton. I was born and grew up in Fredericton and when I found the coop I felt like I belonged. There wasn’t a lot that I had to explain why I was there and we shared a lot in common. We also made films and that becomes addictive. Filmmaking and community are closely connected.
Technology has seemed to also play a role in the communities that I’ve been involved with. Film is built around cameras and tape recorders and it is filled with specialized terminology like the NPR, the Bolex, the Nagra, and the Steenbeck. I love those things and for members of the filmmaking community they mean something. But filmmaking isn’t (or shouldn’t be) about the equipment. It’s about the stories and the people. That’s what keeps you there.
With my use of email via the universities where I studied I was able to connect with other communities thanks to that technology. As with many new communication media a lot of time and space was taken up with discussions of the technology itself and what it meant. Email was more complex then and numbers played a far bigger part in what you did online. I still have the black notebook where I wrote down the addresses that I used to connect to other systems. But what was amazing and fun and addictive were the connections that I could make with other people. I could be in touch with people from all over the world and we could discuss things and share our interests. Another place where I didn’t have to explain why I thought that this was so amazing.
But as a new technology becomes more widely dispersed we grow accustomed to it and take it for granted. I don’t have to think about using email now, I just use it. That’s how I stay in touch with people and keep track of things. This blog is one extension of that. With bitdepth I try to keep it fairly original and think a bit more and not just post collections of links. I’m part of the blogging community, but I like reading and watching others more than putting a lot of stuff out. So while I’ve been part of this blogging thing for a while (bitdepth has been up for 2 1/2 years now!) and with the new Screen Arts site I’m over 100 posts, which is quite amazing.
One of the things that has prompted this more reflective post is the recent US election and the IRC chats that I’ve participated in with some bloggers that I’ve been reading for a while. Kevin Marks combined the log of one of the chats that David Weinberger set up with QuickTime and an MP3 of the debate and then I felt a bit more connected. Then on election night I was able to chat again and it was still snarky, but not as much fun (most of us in there would tend to the left side of the political spectrum) since things weren’t going the way that we had hoped. During that chat Halley mentioned about posting that day and I checked out her posts and they changed my perspective a bit as a bit more of the personal side started in to my consciousness. She had a health scare which is the big shift, but a smaller thing is that I realized that we both do the same yoga routine. It made me realize again that it wasn’t just technology or topics, but humanity that connected us. More cool people who were human and good and sharing part of themselves.
So we commiserated and the evening got a bit more depressing and many people had colds and everyone started drifting away. But even though I wasn’t in the best mood I was happy that I shared the experience with other people and I felt that I was part of a community and that made me feel pretty good.
Yesterday was a great day at work as well. I get to work with a very talented and committed person every day in teaching a group of very cool people who share our interest in film so I love going in every day. What made yesterday great was that I was able to have two guests in to speak about filmmaking. One of them was one of my oldest friends and the other was one of my newest friends. But both love making films and the day reminded me of why I love this stuff and why I do it. It’s about people and stories.
The other thing that prompted this is my latest obsession, which is Flickr! and how my use of that has meant that I haven’t been doing much in this space. I noticed today that I’ve uploaded 500 pictures since I’ve started, which I didn’t think that I’d do. The reason I’ve been there so much is the sense of community that is there. It’s not sharing the photos, but it’s a way to communicate visually and get another perspective as you get to see how people see the world and the people around them. So it was appropriate that some of the first images that I uploaded to Flickr! were from a workshop that I took at the Film Coop in NB recently. The more recent pictures are from where I’m working now in Halifax. I was wondering if there were many other people taking pictures in Halifax and then one of those strange connections happened as I found through the tags that AKMA, who I occasionally read and who was in the election chats had been in Halifax a few months ago and had taken pictures there. So my communities had connected again and that made me think about how great it is that we can connect and share no matter what is happening in the world. We’re part of a virtual community, but there are real, live humans at the other end of these electronic connections. It’s about people and sharing and that’s why I love making films and why I’m glad that I have this space to share this.
I think that I’ve made up for the lack of recent posts… thanks for sticking with me!

November 5, 2004 , , , , , , , ,

Blogger

I’ve been using Blogger to create a new Screen Arts blog and I really like it. I tried out Blogger when it first started and had a bit of the usual, “that’s too simple for a geek like me” attitude, but it was an important step in the development of the blogosphere. I found In the Beginning: A Video on Weblogs History by Alberto Gonzales that takes us back to 1999 when Pyra was making Blogger and other cool stuff. Google bought Pyra last year and they’ve been revamping and developing Blogger. I was looking for an alternative to Movable Type since the pricing structure changed and I wasn’t sure if I could get all of the pieces in place to continue having the site hosted at work. So I tried out Blogger again and I was very pleasantly surprised. It’s simple and it works well. But the neat thing is how it is evolving. I can audioblog or blog by mail (which I haven’t done yet) and you can also work with Flickr to add photos to the free Blogspot hosting. They also removed the ads from Blogspot and added a toolbar at the top. It’s a good thing to be with Google and I’m hoping that somehow I’ll be able to get a Gmail account soon as well to play with that too. It’s all part of the evolution of a lot of this stuff where it doesn’t really matter where you are or what particular device you are using. Tim O’Reilly talks about it in the IT Conversations interview with Doug Kaye called The Software Paradigm Shift.

August 20, 2004 , , , , , ,

Acting Fun

I was lucky enough to be asked to act in a student production yesterday. It wasn’t much of a part, but I loved it as it let me see a bunch of my students at work. It was great to see them shooting and working as professionals. They were calm and even seemed to be having fun. I haven’t spent a lot of time on a set in a long time, so it was neat to be around for that. Even though the day was long I felt the rush of shooting which kept me going long past the time I would have been asleep. It’s always neat to see how people work together to make something creative. A group of creative and talented people working together is wonderful to see and even more amazing to be able to be a small part of it. The other great thing was the food. Mmmmm! A crew needs good food and great food helps thing go much more smoothly. It will be neat to see how things turn out.

April 6, 2004 , , ,

Whew!

It’s time for some updates to the site as I’m approaching my 1 year anniversary with bitdepth… soon I’ll probably update to blosxom 2.0 (maybe the beta, maybe the release) as I like the look of some of the plugins. Even though I’m using Movable Type at work, I like the more hands on approach of writing stuff up in BBEdit and uploading it for my own blog. I just don’t want to get too far from the raw content, but I don’t want to spend a lot of time coding.
Teaching Screen Arts is fun, but it takes up a lot of time during the school year (it is my job)… and it cut into my blogging, but things are easing off a bit now and I have to reestablish the routine of blog first, ask questions later. It reminds me of a video artist friend of mind who was frustrated with me with my film background and shooting style with a video camera…I’d carefully think about the shot and shoot very efficiently, but her aesthetic was to capture the moment. I’ve taken the same approach sometimes with the blog…not a lot of posts, but interesting stuff that I’ve thought about a bit more. But now I’ll try to rebalance it a bit.

April 29, 2003 , , ,