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go to SXSW Interactive


 

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. 6 months ago

won the 2009 screenburn casual games competition!! trip was so worth it :D



. 8 months ago

I have a free pass for being a semifinalist in the SXSW Screenburn! If I’m a finalist then I get to pitch my casual game idea to an audience and panel of judges. Should be a good time. =) My college is helping sponsor my trip.



lhl 22 months ago

I just got my pass for SXSW 2008. This will be my 9th SXSWi (and my first SXSW Music – I finally got a Platinum badge).



Untitled 2 years ago

SO SO SO SO SO FUN but music was even funner. I highly recommend it.



go to SXSW Interactive 2 years ago

this is the place to be. The career connections and friendships are unquestionably worth it.



Untitled 2 years ago

I am on a panel, my hotel is booked and I got a free pass. Totally achievable.



hotel booked 3 years ago

So i guess i am going! W00t!



done! 3 years ago

was fun, head still full of ideaz



awesome time 3 years ago

Hopefully I can go next year. posted tons of pics to flickr.com under username jenredstar. ta!



south bye 3 years ago

The most exciting talk i heard was by Adam Greenfield presenting his thoughts that have found published form in the book Everyware: The Dawning Age of Ubiquitous Computing. A man who understands Deleuze, who speaks with a engaging fluidity and intelligence that made many other presentations seem either dry or ho-hum. In general, the feeling at SXSW interactive seems to be that the CSS revolution has been accomplished, though not televised, and many are now basking in the radioactive afterglow of Web 2.0: Rails, Ruby, AJAX, tagging, bottom up development via community (Flickr, Wikipedia) and “design entrepreneurship” – becoming your own client, as was the focus at Coudal and Fried’s cushy chair conversation. It’s a rather insulated world with a disproportionate sense of power culled through blogging success, in which the real market economies and labor ebbs and flows and corporate consolidations are calmly sidelined in the spirit of the geeks have inherited the earth. But they really haven’t; they’ve just won a few battles. Deterritorialized movements of words, images and video publishing are thriving like poppy fields fed by fish emulsion, but the Machine still marches on. Google holds the odd position as both “one of us” and “Them”, a limbic existence in the development world that can’t always handle its own success. Self-congratulatory gestures don’t make for the best presentations – I’m thinking of ambient findability here and the self-consciousness of bloggers become stars. The Everyware presentation took off the blinders, widened the perspective and showed how the visibility of screens is giving way, to quote the Swans, to omniscient, omnipresent, omnivorous computing—hidden, tactless, segregating instrument of the society of control.



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