Blob
>the personal blog of david n wallace
[aka Dave the Lifekludger]

March 2, 2007

Suffolk ‘n’ Cool Second Life T-shirts

Filed under: People,This Blog,Thoughts — dnw @ 11:52 pm

sfncSo here’s how a net works.

Mike emailed me about Peter Clitheroe (suffolkandcool.com) saying he’s a mate of Pete Cogle (pcpodcast.podsahow.com) and how he was heard on his podcast talking about having tshirts in Second Life and needing a hand with getting them out in-world. So, I left a comment on the suffolk ‘n’ cool site offering help.

albert&dave_sfnc.jpgSo, there I was in SL and Peter IM’d me. I was in middle of an opening where my art was being exhibited but he joined us and I got one of his t-shirts and a shot of us wearing them.

If you have SL you can get your own shirt from this location using the following slurl : http://slurl.com/secondlife/Sobaeksan/67/5/65

Now, if I can just get a t-shirt designed for our podcast, extraordinary everyday lives.

February 13, 2007

Share Overlap Connect

Filed under: Blogging,Openness,People,Signal — dnw @ 10:18 am

Well it seems too much is happenning in my life at present. Which annoys me. It annoys me because I desire connection and in the world of connection sharing is key….another word I spin on that sharing meme is openness.

But it takes time to share. And right now I don’t have time to share. So I’m making time to share a little bit, show the overlap and the connections from that.

Mike, my mate, brother in munge and podcast co-host is in Sydney at the Unlimited Potential conference where Hugo is who is also a mate and was the first guest on said podcast. Hugo leant me a Tablet to review after hooking up with him on a podcast on TPN, a hookup which Mike is going to play the audio of . I see Mike is thinking of a UMPC which reminds me. Hugo, isn’t it time a UMPC got a Lifekludger going-over? Meanwhile Beth Worrall, a friend of Mikes, appeared on her first podcast and gives the shoutout to Mike and I.

Remember…connections happen when stories overlap!
Stories need to be shared for the overlap to occur.
Share or die!

Dave

January 19, 2007

Cam The Podfather

Filed under: People,Podcasting — dnw @ 9:39 am

Cam‘s had a write-up in the Age about TPN and podcasting. Way to go Cam. Check it out here at the Sydney Morning Herald site.

This was a piece by Fran Molloy as part of her series on how people use technology. Fran is the same person who featured me as Lifekludger a few weeks back in the same section.

Show your support…Digg Cam’s piece here.

Dave

January 18, 2007

Beth’s Birthday Mash

Filed under: Blogging,People — dnw @ 8:13 pm

Beth is a blogging contact who is turning 50. She’s running a competition where you do a mashup for her birthday and submit it to her flickr pool.

The winner gets $50 donated to a charity of their choice. Here’s the details.

Here’s my entry. Now the mashup might not be obvious unless you are a Second Life citizen…but I’m sure Beth will see it.beth_50

Dave

BTW: For those interested, this was created from a screen shot in SL, then mashed using mostly LiveQuartz on a Mac….and took 35 layers and most of the afternoon…probably because I don’t have the exact right tools for this kind of thing on the Mac. A donation of photoshop for Mac would be greatly appreciated. :-)

October 22, 2006

Oz loses another opportunity

Filed under: People,Podcasting — dnw @ 12:01 pm

geekIn case you missed it, Cameron Reilly, the esteemed leader of The Podcast Network, where my Extraordinary Everyday Lives show is hosted, is leaving Australia bound for the US to try and get some deserved support.

He was on the front cover of The Bulletin this week featured in an article on how Australian entrepreneurs are being forced to leave home in search of the funding they need to become the next YouTube in the Web 2.0 dotcom boom.

Read the article online.

Shame, Australia, Shame.

September 27, 2006

My first appearance in an online video

Filed under: ConnectingUp,People — dnw @ 2:51 pm

I don’t believe it. Mike has unearthed a video online over at googlevideo of him and I presenting at the Connecting Up conference earlier this year.

I knew these things would be used for unsavoury purposes, but never dreamt it would be this shocking!

Dave

June 8, 2006

Hob-knobbing with the Governor

Filed under: People — dnw @ 9:54 pm

Just got back from town where I attended the Dawn Slade-Faull Awards ceremony.

It was held where I work and my Boss, who was ill, was suppossed to meet and greet the Governor of SA, Her Excellency Marjorie Jackson-Nelson. All other Staff had prior engagements so the batten passed to me at the last moment.

It was a pleasure as my family had known her over thirty years ago. My Mother and her were friends and so she tagged along and they caught up. She didn’t recognise me, naturally, but remembered me as a little, blonde, 12 year-old.

Someone was taking pictures so will most likely get something for a momento sometime down the track.

May 30, 2006

Portrait of a Lifekludger

Filed under: People — dnw @ 11:08 am

Roy Blumenthal is an artist from South Africa who paints – ‘inks’ – what do you call it – portraits on a TabletPC.

After a comment on one of my posts on my Lifekludger blog and some discussion we had Roy went and did a portrait of me in my natural state – Lifekludging!

portrait of dave the lifekludger

Thanks Roy!

Check out Roy’s work, no, his passion, over on his Flickr site.

March 24, 2006

Empowering a conversation based on Focused Intention

Filed under: Disability,People,Technology — dnw @ 11:51 pm

Caught up with Dr Lloyd Walker today. He was in at where I work with some 5th year biomedical engineering students he gives lectures to about rehabilitation engineering so he dropped by my office.

We were talking about the Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) bid and the desire to engage people with disabilities, and those whom to the CRC will be potential ‘end-users’, as an integral part of the CRC operations. Blogging and emerging citizen publishing and communication mechanisms is expected to play a big part. However the bigger question is what are the barriers for participation and being involved? What stops the conversation?

The goal is to get input from the end result – lets call it ‘5‘. However this requires enabling those you are wanting results from to be at a level of ability – this end result – this ‘5‘. But not all will be. Sometimes they’ll be starting at ‘3‘ or ‘2‘ or some even ’1‘.

Empowering the people with technical and even moral support that goes beyond (or even behind) the actual end result that is trying to be achieved is a huge part of enabling the conversation in my thinking and experiences.

There are some things you can’t get straight at. Sometimes you cannot get ‘second‘ things simply by seeking them. Often you have to do ‘first‘ things first. Even further than that, some things are only ever a RESULT of doing ‘first‘ things first and ‘second‘ things evolve naturally as a result of those actions.

Now Lloyd and I totally agree we need this. But the question we were pondering is how do we show or put up a good case that investment in the arena of getting from ‘1 to 5‘ is worthwhile and neccessary?
How do we do this so we can agrue that the CRC bid includes funding for those activities?

It concerns me that CRCs are so ‘output‘ focused that those ‘inputs‘ required that are sort of ‘outside’ the scope of what would traditionally be seen as ‘core’ business, will be overlooked. Or it might be argued that it’s ‘easier’ or more ‘efficient’ to bypass such empowerment and building.

This would be such a waste, both in terms of the potential of the relevence of the ‘outputs‘ from the CRC but also in the lost opportunity to build the ‘inputs – the real people’s skills and abilities and talents and self, to be raised to new levels for the long term.

What we need is someone like Seth Godin onboard to challenge the ‘traditional’ thinking.

While it might be seen as a different context, I see similarities to what Doc Searls’ termed the ‘Intention Economy‘. Doc says …

The Intention Economy grows around buyers, not sellers.

We have an intention for a CRC to build technology for independent living to improve people’s lives. In effect we have people saying ‘build us widgets so we can have a better life with this disability’. The ‘buyers’ here are the people and organisations who will use the technology.
The ‘sellers’ will eventually be the companies formed out of the CRC endeavours, but at this bid stage the selller could be considered as the CRC.

Doc also outlines that …

The Intention Economy is built around truly open markets, not a collection of silos.

The whole CRC concept is about developing and growing a ‘market’ around disability based on research outcomes. The crafted mechanism to deliver that needs to be driven by those it is intended for -and to do so it must include them! To come at it from the other direction, the traditional way, is to build a silo. And we all know what silos are used for – to store stuff – not distribute it!

For the CRC to build and grow the market it aims to, it must engage all the ‘buyer’ groups and individuals in its’ ‘economy’, and it must do it in an environment and ‘spirit’ of openness – in an ‘open’ (not merely transparent) way.

The CRC should be all about the people in a holistic sense, not just about ‘outputted’ technology.

People-centric not technology-centric.

[tags]crc, lloyd+walker, intention+economy, disability, disabled, independent+living[/tags]

December 24, 2005

Who’s the Turkey?!

Filed under: People — dnw @ 7:01 pm

I don’t believe it! Mike keeps a Turkey Journal? No wonder he’s right into blogs….he’s been paper-blogging all along…I wonder if he pasted hardcopy pictures in there….

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