June 4, 2006

still in copenhagen

rickandhugh873.jpg
[Rick Segal & myself doing our sch­piel at Reboot8.]
I’m wri­ting this from the hotel lobby in Copenha­gen. Got a cou­ple of hours here till I grab a taxi to the air­port, arri­ving in Lon­don tonight etc.
Thanks to Tho­mas and crew, as always, for put­ting on such a great show at Reboot8.
Brief obser­va­tions:
1. Nobody was using the word “blog” much. Or “blog­ging”. The phrase “future of blog­ging” was cons­pi­cuously absent. It’s like we’re all too busy wor­king on our own pro­jects to worry about the “state of the blo­gosphere”; another phrase that was gra­te­fully nowhere to be seen.
2. I spent the after­noon yes­ter­day one-on-one han­ging out with Doc Searls. We ended up eating Mon­go­lian BBQ and tal­king about the mea­ning of life. We both see­med to have arri­ved at our calling rather late in life, which is great, of course, but also exhaus­ting. A lot of the peo­ple we hung out with this wee­kend were 10 or more years youn­ger than me, even more so with Doc. We seem to have lost a decade or so somewhere down the line.
3. Stowe Boyd is an inte­res­ting chap. They guy wants to change the world. Rock on.
4. Always good to run into Geoff Jones again.
5. I’m not sure if I get Doc Searls’ “Inten­tion Eco­nomy” idea yet. But I also think “Mar­ke­ting is Bullshit” is a lot clo­ser to the truth than “Mar­ke­ting is Dead”. When they talk about “mar­ke­ting” in this con­text, of course, they mean “mar­ke­ting depart­ment” mar­ke­ting. Add-on mar­ke­ting, as oppo­sed to baked-in mar­ke­ting. Exhe­rent, not inhe­rent etc. I have no pro­blem with the idea that “Everything is mar­ke­ting from now on”, even if it might make Tom Coa­tes a bit squea­mish. etc
6. This is my third visit to Scan­de­na­via. I find the place utterly agreea­ble, although I’m not crazy about the food [The beer, of course, is a com­ple­tely dif­fe­rent mat­ter alto­gether]. I would have no pro­blem living here for a while if the right gig ever came up. I also feel the same way about Swi­tzer­land.
7. One thing I like about living in Europe is the ease of tra­vel. You catch a plane, and an hour or two later, you’re somewhere inte­res­ting like Stockholm or Paris. When I lived in New York, an hour on the plane and you would end up somewhere like Bos­ton or Cle­ve­land. Not quite the same.
8. Would like to get more invol­ved with Rick Segal’s com­pany, Musi­cIP. We’re wor­king on it, but it’s hard as both of us are so damn busy with other things.
9. Had a great time with Lau­rent, Nico and all the chaps from CoCom­ment. Lovely peo­ple. Can’t wait to get back to Geneva again.
10. Nice to see more and more peo­ple snif­fing around, asking about Sigurd and Thin­gamy. The inte­res­ting thing about Thin­gamy is that it sca­les. Theo­re­ti­cally you can run Gene­ral Motors from your cellphone, if your thumbs could type fast enough.
11. Back in Lon­don tomo­rrow. Sig­ning more Stormhoek prints. Then home on Wed­nes­day. It’s been an intense month. Will be glad to be back in quiet mode again.

5 Responses to “still in copenhagen”

  1. Well, next time you come to Geneva, I insist that we meet up :-)

  2. Roger Wilks says:

    You worry about loo­sing 10 years I think I lost about 40 somewhere. I remem­ber lera­ninga little about basic back when now java HTML and so on thank god someone deci­ded to invent linux and improve now I think I might rejoin the elec­tro­nic age or something.Continue the revo­lu­tion even if I puff and pant trying to keep up I’l make it.
    Bles­sings to all.
    Roger

  3. Nice talk you two had there. What was up with that hair dude?

  4. I think maybe tech­no­logy is fue­led by time, which it sucks from us. There are gaping voids in many, many per­so­nal con­ti­nuums, I’d guess.

  5. Spencer_jf says:

    Merhaba!
    Check this out!
    *