Tag Archives: las vegas

On October 14th, 2010, the worlds largest new media event will take place at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, Nv., BlogWorldExpo.

The event will be joined by thousands of bloggers, podcasters, social media pro’s, internet and tv personalities, and more!

And because we like sharing, Bubblicious would like to offer our readers a special 20% discount off of registration by using the code BUBVIP. The code is good for any pass to the BlogWorld and New Media Expo. Published discount pricing ends September 15th at midnight, but don’t stress! This code applies to the pricing all the way up until the event. So register now! By going here for your conference pass and discount prices.

Discount Hotel accomodations are already filling up quickly. So make sure to share this link to the Official Hotels of the event to get your discounted pricing.

Make sure to check out BlogWorldExpo’s Official Blog for the latest announcements!

Photograph: Miss Universe Organization

In case you missed last night’s Miss USA Pageant held at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas, here’s a quick recap:

  • Congrats go to winner Rima Fakih of Michigan – the first Arab-American and Muslim Miss USA.
  • Miss Oklahoma drew the short straw last night when she received the controversial question about Arizona’s new immigration laws. (video)
  • It’s now being reported that Fakih previously participated in a stripping contest for a local radio station. (Yawn. Certainly no more risque than the lingerie shoot for the actual pageant.)

And last but not least, here’s a quick video of the winner tripping during the evening gown portion of the show. It’s kind of like a NASCAR crash…makes things a little more exciting.

Back in early January, I went to CES and was completely overwhelmed. My constant joke was (and still is) that the so-called booths are big enough to have their own zip code. I took a ton of video footage, convinced I would return home and turn that into a montage that really showed everyone the absolute strangeness of CES.

I failed. I came home, switched out suitcases, and headed back out on the road again pretty soon after returning. However, I discovered a video today from my CES partner-in-crime. I spent most of the event with my friend Jason Griffey, who is Head of Library IT at the University of Tennessee Chattanooga. He’s in the midst of planning a new library building, and the place is going uber-digital. (Someday I should get him to write a post here on digital libraries.) Jason managed to put his own CES montage together and that’s what I’m dropping here.

Enjoy the oddness, the hugeness, and the just plain silly at CES 2010:

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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 her day job.

Thoughts from someone who has been on both sides of the fence:

As we gear up for CES 2010 this week, I want to point out what I think the Internet and Las Vegas have in common. Both are very special places near and dear to my heart. Everywhere I look, it amuses me with all this riff-raft about “media is dying.”  I often wonder what the hell a journalist is anyway. How is a journalist any different than a non-fiction storyteller? The fact is, we all have stories to tell. Every person on the planet is quickly being able to digital document their story as it happens.

In the past, “news” has been nothing more than what someone else, usually a wealthy high powered organization with direct ties to Wall Street and our government, would deem as important. Someone else controlling the flow of information to its audience, only producing content catering to whatever a room full of people see as important. Imagine that… until recently, the mindset of an entire city could be determined by maybe 100 or so people who produced “the news.” How do you know your priorities are the same as the man titled “News Director?” You don’t. When I write it out, it doesn’t even sound like a normal concept. I can’t imagine how nutty the dead concept will seem to future generations.

There is a little thing called Internet search that put old school media control to screeching halt. Before, humans have been forced to become products of a limited environment, living under geographic, informational, and cultural restraints. We have all been prisoners of prospective to whatever limited available media channels have allowed us to think. If perspective wasn’t greater than reality, well, America probably would not be at war right now.

Media is not dead, it is booming! Search is the new media. Access to almost anything is literally a point and click away. The key to controlling a channel is realizing that most intellectual, innovative minds don’t have time to untangle the unlimited amount of Internet streams for enriching stories relevant to their lives. That should be a media company’s role- pick out associated content relevant to your audience, create some, sort it, make it relevant.

The newspaper buyout initiative is such a huge waste of time, effort and government spending. Spend our taxes on increasing access of information to people, especially the poor, so they can learn about new opportunities and jobs. Don’t bail out large companies who are used to keeping control. Oh and create some jobs while you are it too, (that is a whole different post lol).

People want to talk about the public needing credible content they can trust. Ill tell you what is credible, a machine that generates facts with a probability of getting it right 99.999999 percent of the time. Who are you going to trust more? A police department’s data system that produces distinct data about crimes in your neighborhood, or the nightly news that tells you about a crime they think is important?  What a machine can’t do is tell an audience why they should care. That should be a media company’s (or blogger’s, or brand’s) role.

It amuses me how traditional media companies point fingers at companies such as Google and blame them for this revolution our world is enduring. To compare this to the last period of mast global economic change,  The Industrial Revolution; there was once a time in our culture where many people thought the the railroad industry would rule our country. Last time I checked, they weren’t.

A newspaper company blaming Google is like a woodcrafter blaming Henry Ford, or a village candlemaker blaming Albert Einstein. There are still plenty of wagon and candle makers, and they are probably doing just fine serving their set niche market. There will be more Googles of the world, more inventions and more game changers. Dominance does not last forever and eventually, all giants will take a fall. (ie. the current state of the auto industry).

Furthermore, what these insanely profitable technology companies cannot do is give you a relationship. If Google were a person to you, it would be the workaholic uncle always traveling the world. It may give you great resources to enhance your life, but it wont be at your backyard barbecue. New content channels should feed its audience breakfast in bed. Give them tasty tidbits that pertain to their life. Learn who they are, what they buy, where they live, and serve their every need with a silver spoon. More than anything, listen and give them an organized avenue to speak their mind.

I realize that new ideas = risk, and for many people thats why change is so difficult to implement. Risks are what allow you to grow. And I think the minute you are not growing, you are dead. I embrace change, discovery and innovation.

Las Vegas is a wonderful city that was built on fantasy, fulfilling dreams, equal opportunity, and instant gratification. To me, that is exactly what the Internet and the future of our global economy has become. Yes, just like the casinos, Google is the house and it will always win. It will always cash more than its players. So what. Learn to play game.  I am going to Double or Nothing in 2010, let’s hope luck is on my side. :)

Emily Gimmel is a TV reporter, producer, and writer with a decade of media experience. Visit www.EmilyGimmel.com for more of her thoughts and discoveries. You can also follow the self-proclaimed “Sexiness Advocate” on Twitter at @emilygimmel.

by Michelle Lentz

My conference last week was held at the Rio Hotel & Casino, owned by Harrah’s, in Las Vegas. It didn’t take long for me to find the iBar in the “heart of the casino” (or rather, the lobby). As I was sitting on my barstool, sipping a drink, I noticed people around the outer rim of the circular bar. Everyone was hunched over the tables, touching them.

As soon as a table emptied, I made my way over and was thrilled to discover that the Rio iBar has 6 Microsoft Surface Tables. Not only is the multi-touch technology pretty cool, the software created for the bar was equally as cool.

There were several games, but the most intriguing app was Flirt. I couldn’t find them, but I can only assume there were cameras above every table. In Flirt, photos of the occupants of each table are displayed like a deck of cards. You can scatter them, flip them over, and resize each image. Select an image and you can select a bad pickup line (or a cute pickup line) from an available choice of “magnet-style” words and send that to the other table. You can also send the other table a drink or a table-to-table email.

The table is in a bar, and there’s more to a bar than picking up someone at the next piece of cool technology. You need to order drinks or, when you’re in the mood, you can make your own drink.

Not interested in the other tables? That’s fine. You can occupy yourself with bowling or pinball or any of a series of branded games. I was rather impressed by the game branding, actually. For instance, when you launch the bowling game, you’re throwing a lime at some empty Patron bottles. After a few rounds, you can change to an actual ball and pins, but that initial branding is there.

One other feature is YouTube. There are speakers in the tables, but with the clang-clang of the slot machines and the thump of the music, you can’t hear much. It’s in your best interest to call up someone doing something stupid on YouTube (and that’s so hard to find) and watch that after you and your friends have bought a few rounds. Some things don’t need sound to be funny. The connection to YouTube was rather fast, so I assume that somewhere in the table is an ethernet connection.

Anything on the table, including video, you can flip, spin and resize.

Admittedly, I spent a little too much time playing with these tables. I was fascinated. In fact, I managed to crash the table twice in an hour, so it’s still Windows in there somewhere.

If you get the chance to swing by the Rio – perhaps for the buffet, make sure you swing by the iBar. The tables are quite entertaining.


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