Brian Solis visited Intel headquarters on August 7, 2009 to talk with the Global Communications Group, the public relations team that helps Intel share news, information and stories about the company at http://www.intel.com/pressroom.
Brian is an Intel Insider, a group of 10 social media advisors who help Intel evolve how the company communicates and participates with people online.
(Text from Wikipedia — testing from Posterous.com)
Mazzy Star was an American alternative rock band formed in Santa Monica in 1989 from the group Opal, a collaboration of guitarist David Roback and bassist Kendra Smith. Smith’s friend Hope Sandoval became the group’s vocalist when Smith left the band.[1]
Mazzy Star is probably best known for the song “Fade into You” which brought the band some success in the early to mid 1990s and was the group’s biggest mainstream hit, earning radio and MTV airplay. Roback and Sandoval were the creative center of the band, with Sandoval writing most of the lyrics and Roback composing most of the music.
Besides vocals, Sandoval plays harmonica, percussions, and xylophone, and occasionally plays the guitar. She writes nearly all the lyrics, with occasional input from David Roback.
Hope Sandoval was born in 1966 and grew up in East L.A. in a Mexican-American family. She started her career with her high-school friend Sylvia Gomez (who later played on She Hangs Brightly) in a band called Going Home, a folk duo formed in 1986. Hope and Sylvia admired Kendra Smith as a teenage Dream Syndicate fan. Gomez handed Smith a demo tape which was performed by Sandoval on vocals and Gomez on guitar. Roback offered to produce some recordings for them and they went into the studio and recorded an album that to this day has yet to be released. Sandoval and Gomez played gigs in California throughout the mid 1980s.
During the Opal tour in December 1987, Smith left the band. Roback called Sandoval to see if she would be interested in taking Smith’s place in Opal. They found Kendra and had some discussions. They did two more shows together, but then Smith flew home. Keith Mitchell flew home as well, and the next day he got back with Sandoval.
Sandoval reveals: :”For me recording is better. Live, I just get really nervous. Once you’re on-stage, you’re expected to perform. I don’t do that. I always feel awkward about just standing there and not speaking to the audience. It’s difficult for me.” – Musician magazine[citation needed]
In 2000, Sandoval joined with Colm Ó Cíosóig (formerly of My Bloody Valentine) to form Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions. The project retained the laid-back, slowcore sound of Mazzy Star. In 2001 Sandoval issued her first EP with the Warm Inventions, At the Doorway Again, and followed it up with her debut full-length album, Bavarian Fruit Bread, a year later. She has also contributed on several songs by other artists, such as The Jesus & Mary Chain, Chemical Brothers, Bert Jansch, and Death In Vegas.
You are a Mobile Misfit! Do you feel other patron’s eyes on you as you take up one too many tables in a crowded green coffee shop? With the amount of real estate you’re occupying, you may as well set up a desktop computer! Do you have bruises from walking into things (and people) because you’re too busy texting to pay attention to what’s in front of you? As a Mobile Misfit, mobile etiquette is not in your vocabulary. Mobile devices were created to make life easier for you and others, not to wreak havoc on those around you. It’s time for an intervention!
My Intel teammates and I had fun working with Intel Insider iJustine, who did a great job finding a creative crew in LA to shoot these. We gave her a sneak peek at early survey results, and her crew came back with the Gabby and Gurtrude skit. She did three Mobile Etiquette videos — Dating, Working, Privacy. I liked that much better than the “Miss Manners” or “Do’s and Don’t” storylines.
My mobile tech pet peeves? I’m pretty lenient. Maybe because I hope others will treat me with the same freedom to tech. But I believe I’m pretty considerate of people around me, and I never take a conversation into the bathroom. But I can slip in a quick SMS or email lickety-split in almost any situation. I like acknoledgements from others, so I’m quick to respond to people’s request when possible. I find that a lot of communication is timing, nurturing and keeping things moving ahead.
When I got my first laptop from work in 2000, well it was awesome. I could bring it home and almost anywhere, and have my everything I needed — as long as I could wait for the super slow boot up and slow Internet connection. When I got my blackberry three years ago, it levitated me and allowed me to roam, and “be there” in more places while still on teh front lines of communications.
The June 17, 2009 Intel survey showed that nine out of 10 U.S. adults feel annoyed by some behaviors they see in public. Driving while texting (guilty!) and loud mobile phone talkers (not me) were top complaints, yet, most of didnt think they were culprits (ummm, well).
“It is hardly surprising that we are still working out what is socially appropriate and what isn’t we are still developing our techno-etiquettes,” said my pal and inspiration Genevieve Bell, an Intel Fellow and cultural anthropologist who studies technology and culture.
I hope we can include our Intel Insiders in more video projects because I always learn something new — features available in YouTube.
I’ll work on shedding my Mobile Misfit label…I am a parent after all, and I’d like to influence my kids by showing good examples!
If you take the quiz, let me know if you’re a Gabby or Gertrude, and how you feel about it. Tech responsibly, but tech on!
Today I found an unboxed Canon PowerShot G9 for $339 at Need4Digital. So I watched the CNET video review again, recounted my experiences and advice about the camera…then placed my order.
I’ve had a hankering for the Canon G9 and G10 for a while now. In the past few weeks, I met two talented social media creators and got to try their Cannon G series.
During South by Southwest 2009, new media pioneer Eddie Codel showed me his Panasonic Lumix LX3, the same one he raved about to Rocketboom’s Ellie Rountree at the event. Some of Eddie’s photos can be seen here.
Eddie’s enthusiasm for the LX3’s ability to shoot in low light is something I’ve been carrying around with me. I’m just not sure how well the Canon G9 shoots in low light. I am glad it can capture video, but I’m not too jazzed that you can’t zoom while shooting video.
Well, I’ll put it all to the test in a few days and then I’ll consider some accessories: better grip, thumb rest, UV filter and possible lens adaptor with telephoto lense.
Friend and Forester Researcher Jeremiah Owyang sits down with Intel Insider Sarah Austin and shares his daily routine, ambitions, amazement and travel wishes.
Last week, Jeremiah gave me a quick shot out (I’m not worthy!) in this Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal story that offers even more insight into what keeps the social computing wiseman movin’ ahead of things.
I’ve been using Twitter @kenekaplan since…I can’t remember. I have updated nearly 900 times using my laptop, MacBook and Blackberry…from work, home, at conferences, at work (oh, I said that!) and while traveling, even on vacation in Italy.
Now I’m about to help my Intel team start using the @Intel Twitter account. I’ve been gathering lots of great suggestions and encouragement from people inside Intel, from Intel Insiders like @briansolis and from others I follow on Twitter.
Here is a good report by Laura Fitten, a.k.a @pistachio who is writing a book on Twitter. I got to meet her for dinner at Shel Israel’s house last year. Wow, she full of energy and great stories.
I certainly believe in God and loving my family forever, so there is something to the “everlasting-ness” of forever.
But even I learned from my work at Intel whenever the History Channel or another broadcaster asked to use our Intel b-roll footage and have us sign away rights for “perpetuity.”
We always inxnay perpetuity and add an adendum that allows us to review the final video every 10 years to make sure our footage is not being used out of context, or in a way that might cause problems for our company.
With this week’s (OK, for me I finally took notice) issue about Facebook’s Terms of Service, I found Rocketboom hitting the heart of the matter: never shouldn’t matter…well, unless it’s about the magic of never-ending love.