Monthly Archives: August 2010

By Julie Blaustein

Don’t miss the Social Email Marketing Event to be held in San Francisco that will bring together marketing experts, email companies and brands to discuss integrated email and social media campaigns. It will be held one day on September 17, 2010 from 9 am to 5:30 pm at Hotel Nikko.

Join our very own Brian Solis and friends for a day of insights into how to integrate social media and email.

This one day conference offers expert-led guidance on how to engage with customers via email and social media, including tips on how to maximize the impact of your campaigns, insights into new tools and services, how to monitor and measure the results, and trends to watch out for. This is the ultimate event for anyone interested in combining email with social media marketing.

Book Tickets here and HURRY as the Early Bird is only available until September 3rd!


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NYC Fashion week is coming up once again to display the latest and greatest designers and frocks.  What eye candy to go and participate in the events, attend the shows and hobnob with the fashionably fabulous!

With the ever-growing popularity of fashion brands tapping influential bloggers for their marketing campaigns, fashion week is now sprinkled with self-made fashion blogging icons amongst the editors of Vogue and Elle.  As it says in a post in today’s WWD.com, “… some of the popular personal style blogs have bigger followings than many niche print fashion magazines.”

For bloggers or aspiring bloggers who are able to make it to NY Fashion Week for business or pleasure, there is one event that should be a can’t miss. Independent fashion bloggers this week announced their Evolving Influence fashion blogger conference on September 9th at the Hudson Hotel.

The one day event will begin at 9:00am and is filled with sessions on how to make a living with your blog, actively engage with your community and keep up that compelling content.  Speakers include Emily Schuman of the popular blog Cupcakes & Cashmere (who I wrote about before), Yuri Lee of LOOKBOOK.nu and Phil Oh of Street Peeper.

Tickets are $60 for the full day event that includes four seminars, lunch, an after-party and giveaways! Not bad at all! Now… if only I were in New York instead of Michigan… sigh!

Win tickets for two to see CATFISH
Thursday, September 2
7:30 PM at AMC Metreon in San Francisco, CA
Special screening event featuring Q&A with directors Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost and star Nev Shulman

Email your full name to sfmoviebuzz@yahoo.com with KRYSTYL in the subject line to receive a pass.

CATFISH
In Select Theaters September 17
www.iamrogue.com/catfish

In late 2007, filmmakers Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost sensed a story unfolding as they began to film the life of Ariel’s brother, Nev. They had no idea that their project would lead to the most exhilarating and unsettling months of their lives. A reality thriller that is a shocking product of our times, CATFISH is a riveting story of love, deception and grace within a labyrinth of online intrigue.

Please note: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. ARRIVE EARLY. This pass is the property of Universal Pictures, which reserves the right to admit, revoke admission or refuse access to the theater at the discretion of an authorized representative. Seats are not guaranteed, and are limited on a first-come first-served basis. EXCEPT FOR MEMBERS OF THE REVIEWING PRESS. NO ADMITTANCE ONCE SCREEN HAS BEGUN. This theater is not responsible for seating over capacity. This ticket is not for resale.

Gnomedex 10

This past weekend, I flew up to Seattle, Washington to attend what was being billed as the last instance of Gnomedex taking place…ever. I found that hard to believe, but sadly it slowly became true. Its founder and organizer, Chris Pirillo, declared on stage that this would be the last one (although I think secretly there’s a bet on when Gnomedex 11 will take place).

Nevertheless, Gnomedex 10 was sure to beat all expectations and IF this was to be its last show, it would go out with a bang – and we weren’t disappointed. The festivities began on Thursday night with a pre-party at the Bell Harbor conference center which got people to mingle with each other, conduct interviews and just have a great time. Then, Friday morning came and we moved into the real fun…with an opening keynote given by Brian Solis and then a series of speakers talking about technology – no, not social media, email marketing, or how to build an application, but how did THEY user technology in their lives to make an impact. If you haven’t been to a Gnomedex conference, I consider it a technology version of a TED conference where people present their case studies and how they have been innovative to create some really cool stuff.

As Pirillo puts it, Gnomedex is all about the “Human Circuitry” – influence, ideation illumination, inspiration, interaction and illustration. It’s the passing along of ideas and showing how technology can change the world beyond just a simple “check in” or tweet.

Some of the highlights from this year’s conference includes having the Chief Technology Officer of the city of Seattle speak and talk about what they’ve been doing with their government data & how they are trying to open it up for more innovation. Melissa Pierce, producer of the upcoming movie Life in Perpetual Beta, gave an inspiring speech about human kindness & her travels; Trish Millines Dziko spoke about how to improve public education through technology; Shauna Causey & Melody Biringer spoke about creating an organization to support women in technology; and perhaps the most inspiring was the rousing speech given by Violet Blue about human sexuality, technology, awareness and censorship – by the time she was finished, the crowd gave her a standing ovation.

AUTHOR NOTE: Fun fact about Gnomedex…in its 10 years of existence, there have only been three (3) standing ovations. Last year, Drew Olanoff received one for his talk about #blamedrewscancer & now Violet Blue for her talk about human sexuality.

By the time the conference ended, it was a bittersweet moment…people headed home to live out their lives once again, but never to return to Seattle for the Gnomedex conference. Will we see another version of Gnomedex take place and what will Chris Pirillo do next?

Only time will tell…

Here are some photos from the conference:

Gnomedex 10
Chris Pirillo

Gnomedex 10
Dave Delaney

Gnomedex 10
Robert Scoble talking to the kids from OmniTechNews

Gnomedex 10
Chris Pirillo with Robert Scoble

Gnomedex 10
Ben Metcalfe, Violet Blue & Kris Krug

Gnomedex 10
Kenji Onozowa

Gnomedex 10

Gnomedex 10
Brian Solis

Gnomedex 10
Trish Millines Dziko

Gnomedex 10
Steve Fisher & Michael Dougherty – producers of Browncoats: Redemption

Gnomedex 10
Betsy Aoki and Chris Pirillo

Gnomedex 10
Bill Schrier, the CTO of Seattle, WA

Gnomedex 10
The women of Tech Mavens

Gnomedex 10
Melissa Pierce – producer of Life in Perpetual Beta

Gnomedex 10
Violet Blue

All photos shown here were taken by Kenneth Yeung. You can view more photos from Gnomedex on Flickr by clicking here.

I hate doing taxes to such an extent that for the second year in a row, I’ve filed an extension. Most of this has to do with the fact that I start out organized each year, and then all my receipts, etc, deteriorate into stacks of paper everywhere. I hate paper.

While I was getting my taxes together a couple months back to take to the accountant, I had a brilliant idea. I needed a portable scanner. If I can just scan my receipts and save them out to my Evernote Receipts notebook, I’m set. Everything then is digital and searchable – just the way I like it. So I started pricing portable scanners.

There are some neat ones out there, but they were all a little out of my price range. Then I stumbled upon Doxie.

Doxie is small and comes with a carrying case. It has only one cable – a USB cable that connects it to your Mac OR PC and also provides the power. Yes, it’s a cute scanner, with the little hearts, but it also comes with skins in case it’s a little TOO cutesy for you. Personally, I like the hearts. Even the required software is rather sassy.

Shortly after receiving my Doxie, I started scanning in all my travel receipts from the front half of 2010. True to my nature, they were scattered everywhere in my office (and I may not have found them all yet). Now, however, they are all scanned in as PDFs and Doxie immediately sent the PDFs to my Evernote.

One of the neatest things about Doxie is its ability to share instantly to the app of your choice – including the ones in the Cloud. If I’m scanning in photos, I can send them to iPhoto or one of my Flickr accounts. I can even send it to Doxie’s cloud hosting service, where it will create a condensed URL for me and send that to Twitter. It also scans out to Google Docs (which I use extensively), to Scrib’d, Picasa, and to Acrobat and Evernote locally (amongst others).

It was a speedy scanner, getting me through 5 months of receipts in around 2 hours, including my various digging, finding, and organizing in that time period. It takes up to 8×11 or A4 and as small as a business card. It required a download of software, which I liked because that gave me the latest and great version.

In fact, the only downside to Doxie that I can find right now is that it does have to plug in via USB. Some of the more expensive versions are self-sufficient, but USB is a small price to pay for, well, a small price.  Of course, the USB thing (and the need for specific software) does preclude me from using the Doxie with my iPad.

Doxie fits in several of my purses, and definitely my various pieces of carry-on luggage. Since acquiring the Doxie, I’ve carried it with me on multiple business trips. If I have a laptop with me, then I grab a point during each trip to scan in my receipts. Maybe next year, doing my taxes won’t be quite as painful. If I’ve just carried the iPad however, then I can’t bring the Doxie.

Doxie costs $129 and is available only on the Doxie web site.

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Cheers!
Tweet Michelle @writetechnology, send her technology news at michelle[at]writetech[dot]net, visit her wine blog when you’re thirsty, and drop by one of her day jobs.