Category: Videos

  • Danny Way and his Megaramp

    Check out Danny Way’s Mega Ramp.


  • The Day Citizen Media Went Mainstream

    I couldn’t help but notice how different my media consumption has been surrounding the terrorist attacks in London from  September 11th.  When my girlfriend came and hammered on my door on the morning of September 11th I turned on CNN and just watched.  When I heard about the bombings in London I looked it up on Flickr, Nowpublic, Wikipedia, Wikinews to mention a few.

    It seems the editors/writers/journalists at the dinosaur blogs did the same.  In fact, not only did these old school media folks go online for their news gathering, but they took citizen’s media and ran front page stories with it.

    You probably saw the image that Adam Stacey took on his cameraphone:

    Moblog_c5e3bfbeddbfb

    It was posted here with a Creative Commons license.  Then the image immediately appeared here, then here, then here and then onto the cover of many newspapers in London and abroad.  It has been viewed almost 70 000 times on Flickr, as well as millions of times on other more popular sites and newspapers.  This was just one of the examples (among many) where normal people became frontline media gatherers.

    "On Thursday morning in London, only minutes after the fourth terrorist bomb blew the top off a red double-decker bus in Tavistock Square, editors at the Times of London on-line unit called for readers to e-mail photos of the disasters unfolding around the city. The BBC website did the same. Over at the Guardian Online, editors directed people to post digital pictures on the popular photo-sharing site Flickr.com. One cellphone snapshot at Flickr, which captured the murky despair and chaos on a crippled Underground train, became an early icon of the attacks and was picked up by the websites of the Guardian, the Evening Standard and other papers."  Globe and Mail 

    "A grainy cell phone video taken by a survivor gave viewers worldwide their first look at the London Underground bombing — and shined a spotlight on a small but growing part of electronic newsgathering."Hollywood Reporter 

    "Among the more striking photos appearing online after Thursday’s coordinated London explosions was one of a double-decker bus, its front intact but its sides and top ripped open. The image, on the BBC’s Web site, came not from a staff photographer but from an amateur who happened on the scene with a digital camera." Forbes 

    "As journalists scrambled to cover the London bomb blasts, ordinary citizens went online to share pictures snapped by cameraphones and reports of what they saw. At Technorati.com, a search engine for blogs, eight of the top 10 searches Thursday were related to the blasts." Wall Street Journal

    "Some of the most intimate images of yesterday’s bomb blasts in London
    came from cell phones equipped with cameras and video recorders,
    demonstrating how a technology originally marketed as entertainment has
    come to play a significant role in up-to-the-minute news." Washington Post

    "The images that defined the media coverage of the July 7 London
    terrorist bombings, which claimed more than 50 lives, came not from
    professional news crews but from everyday people."  National Geographic

    Wikipedia_timelapseAll of this inspired me to want to capture the day I’d like to remember not for the attacks (although I’ll never forget) but for the day citizen’s media officially went mainstream.  So I created this screencast (~40 MB .mov MIRROR 1, MIRROR 2 thanks Michael, MIRROR 3 thanks Jared, MIRROR 4 thanks andrew, MIRROR 5/CORAL?) of the Wikipedia entry for the attacks as animated by Dan Phiffer’s Wikipedia Animate Greasemonkey script.  The script was created as a result of Andy Baio’s contest.  The idea was inspired by Jon Udell’s screencasts.

    It shows the first 923 edits to the Wikipedia entry.  You can also see the date and time of the edits flashing near the top.  I sped the video up to keep it short and the result is a time lapse in the development of a Wikipedia entry as events unfolded that day.  The entry itself now has over 2300 edits.

    I think I created this as a response to how I feel about the events.

    Terrorism represents the absolute worst in humanity whereas the response to these attacks, from the Wikipedia, to the blogs, to the international solidarity, to the overall resilience of the Brits represents the best!

    Check out my feed for more videos

    You can plug it into iTunes like this.

    Update 1:  The song is called Future Proof and it’s by Massive Attack.

    Update 2:  Thanks for all the Diggs!

    Update 3Thanks for all the disses too! Yikes!  Why the negativity?  I made this thing for fun!  I didn’t expect anyone to take it so seriously…

    Update 4 Thanks for the mirrors dudes!

    Update 5 Looks like someone has put this on YouTube here.


  • 23 Weeks to GO

    Here’s the link to the 23 Weeks to Go video courtesy of Peter Jackson’s video blog for King King. (~16 MB .mov)


  • Danny Way Jumps the Great Wall of China .wmv

    Check out this video of Danny Way jumping the Great Wall of China on a skateboard.  Danny Way always does weird stuff like this…  More clips here.  [via]


  • Cloud Surfing

    Glory1

    "A cloud forms in the remote Australian outback of northern Queensland which offers some of the most dramatic and exciting gliding conditions in the world."

    By Gavin Pretor-Pinney

    I took the two videos I found here, which originally came from here and combined them into one video that I put here.  (~20 MB .mov)


  • Northern Lite – Treat Me Better

    I like music videos that have simple and well executed ideas. [via]


  • Walk LA with Me

    So it’s late at night and I can’t sleep.

    When I say late I’m talking like pushing 11:30 PM!  My girlfriend makes me go to bed early so this is late by my standards.

    I put my robe on, tip toe into the glass office and touch my mouse. The screen is sofa king bright.  I refresh my video feeds and this wonderfully engaging/bizarre video flashes up.

    The video consists of a woman walking around with a video camera pointed at herself.  The camera is mounted on a stroller as she walks around filming herself and the total strangers who happen to be pushing the stroller with her.  Her name is Lisa and she’s brilliant.  I think to myself:  what a fantastic idea.  Create a moving tripod, walk around and interview strangers on the street.  Not just any strangers either, these people are experts at being interesting.  They live in HELL A, Los Angelesita!  Good old Los Angeles…  A city so bizarre that walking is considered a radical act of defiance, an act of self assertion and individual choice/empowerment.

    What do the people of the streets in Los Angeles have to say?  You’ll have to go check out her project page, her video blog and then plug her RSS feed into Fireant or iTunes.  The more I dive into Lisa’s work the more she reminds me of my good friend Rick.  More about the Rickster in a future episode.

    Why1_11_1
    By the way, welcome to the future.  I know the future is already here but it’s noticeably more distributed this week.  Lisa has a show and I’m going to watch it.  I found it through a trusted filter and I enjoyed it.  It’s free, syndicated and entirely unmediated.  The cost of content production/distribution is rapidly approaching ZERO and I haven’t turned on my television in over a week.  Nothing on TV will engage me like something Lisa can and will create.  The quality of television has never been better in terms of production value but the content is like a race to the bottom.  Who can come up with the worst show ever!?  What is it now?  Evander Holyfield dancing or something?  Sofa king (#2) mindless.

    Why1_12_1
    Instead of sleeping I’ve had the pleasure of learning a little about Dérive, a little about the situationists, and about isolation.  But most importantly I’ve learned that we can be trapped into safe and or dangerous thinking by our preconceived notions of spaces and places we haven’t even explored, both physically and psychologically.  If you think its hack, amateur or stupid then you just don’t get it yet.  Turn your computer off and go back to watching TV and don’t say another word about the "main stream media."  Or pick up your weapon of choice and become the media!

    After watching all those videos, reading Lisa’s blog, her thinking, and drafting this little post it actually is getting late.  I’ll be able to sleep easier now.  Goodnight nerds.

    Walk_la_with_me_1


  • Watch Video in iTunes

    Rocket_2This screencast from Rocketboom does a good job of explaining how to watch video blogs in iTunes. Direct link (~16 MB .mov) I did a really hack version of this about a week ago so I’m glad he did a better version. Looks like other people are getting into it as well

    Thanks for making a better screencast Andrew!


  • syndicated me (us)

    Doesn’t it seem like text posts seem so quaint these days? It’s been a while since I did a regular old fashioned blog post so here’s some stream of consciousness for those of you who care. I was just thinking about how this site has changed over time. My presence online has gone from “my personal internet web page” to a full blown syndicated multimedia stream. In the beginning my brother and I made some web pages that only exist now as digital archeology in the waybackmachine. My sites we’re so crappy but I learned quite a bit from it. I can still remember my brother showing me FTP before most people had even heard of this new thing called “electronic mail”. Websites we’re hard to make and pretty boring for me so I stopped making them. My brother started his career as a web designer and this launched him into other things. But he has also since started blogging again.

    I eventually got back into making websites when my friend Bill showed me Blogger in September of 99. I made some sites which have also long since expired and completely disappeared. Then finally I decided I was going to have a blog for good. So I made thelastminute.blogspot.com with blogger because it was finally easy to maintain a site over time. At this point the blog has evolved (or de-evolved) from political link sharing, to anti bush whateverness, to personal journaling, to even more link sharing, to videoblog / video filtering. The current phase of (d)evolution of this site is syndicated me. The content has been ripped mixed and burned away from the format/design of the site and injected into one stream. With one feed you can passively/automagically obtain all the the text posts I’ve created, any video blogs I’ve made or linked to, any music I’ve linked to, and any photographs I’ve taken. All of that from one feed!

    If you don’t understand any of that just think of this. My feed is like a picture frame. You go and put that frame on your wall (subscribe to my feed) and the content of that picture frame changes from my words, to my pictures, to my music, to my video, whenever I update it. You don’t have to do anything other than put the frame on your wall. You can also paint on this frame or write your own words in response to whatever it is that I’ve put there. Tell that to Guttenberg!

    But you don’t care about any of that stuff… You want videos, podcasts, and interesting stuff to read while you pretend to be work. So put my feed into your aggregator, whether its Bloglines, Fireant, iTunes or whatever. Plug it in, lean back/forward and enjoy the juicy media that comes out the feed.

    Totally unrelated: I woke up this morning at 4AM and went down to the local wifi watering hole. It’s a strange crowd up and about at this time of night. It’s like the core finance dudes getting up for the market on the east coast and homeless people being woken by the sun and the Jaguars. I like to think successful people get up early.


  • 24 weeks to go

    Here’s the latest video from Peter Jackson’s King Kong video blog. (~15 MB .mov)