Rain, no icecream, but still a very decent first day at #rp11

It rained when I arrived this morning in Berlin, and it was still dropping when walking back to the hotel tonight. Unusual. I am used to have at least dry weather when spending some time here…

Anyway, after checking in at the hotel and also having a proper breakfast there, I made my way to re:publica at Friedrichsstadtpalast in the town center.

Forgot to mention that I was met by immediate international flavour when arriving in Berlin. On my way to town I had got company from a nice Taiwanese student who started traveling Europe in Stockholm, and after having arrived at my hotel, I shared the breakfast area with three ladies from France. I like!

The first one I met at the conference was @pottblog, one of the most popular German bloggers – can the day start any better? @tapio from @oseon was the next one I stumbled upon. He promoted his new book about how to use Social Media as vital part of a successful PR-strategy. A book with best-practice and how-to examples, and only as much theory as necessary. Nice addition to the available literature I’d say, and definitely worth checking out for the interested German speaking ones among us.

And so it continued, @martinweigert @peate @hetty @katti @klauseck and @thomasE @HerrSchmitz only being a few of them. At Kalkscheune, the other place of re:publica, I ran into @Vasco from @mokonomedia and @blog_de and we had lunch together with another nice guy from Carta.info. His  name didn’t stick to my teflon brain (for names that is, I remember faces – so please comment if you read this!). Topic among others was of course blogs, what else.

Finally, in the afternoon I also met @50hz, @prcdv @codeispoetry @elcario and @meerblickzimmer. It really is like @hirnrinde and many others said before – the re:publica a big meeting with everyone within the German social media sphere (“Klassentreffen”), means with everyone interested in it or working with it.

Apart from catching up with people and networking, I attended two really good sessions. One of them was about “Global Voices”. Remember? That one was on my list for the first day. It was inspiring to listen to Solana Larsen (@solanasaurus), their managing editor. Let me explain why.

For all of you who didn’t know what Global Voices is, it is a community that picks up topics and problems from all parts of the world. The editors and translators at Global Voices listen especially to bloggers and tweets from countries where free internet and publishing and sharing opinions in general is not at all as self-understood as it is in our Western countries. Simply since you can get in trouble by doing so, best case not ending up loosing your life… Global Voices gives subjects a room that main media only picks up long after i.e. a proper crisis has emerged, and then often only with one-sided reports. As an example Solana explained that in Iran there were not only the bloggers and voices that wanted to get rid of their government, but also a lot of people who wanted to keep it. Yet the only messages reaching us were the ones voting against the current government… Then GV monitored the situation in Egypt and Ivory Coast long before the recent dramatic events, just no main media picked it up… I wonder why – for journalists truly interested in world politics this must be a great additional news source, mustn’t it?

A valid question from someone was, who of these bloggers one could trust? Cos there are surely some set up by i.e. dictatorships that spread “wrong” news? Global Voices listens, said Solana, and only experience in monitoring a certain country helps them finding out who is a trustworthy source and who isn’t.

If you like me want to get started with checking out Global Voices, then Solana recommends to start with one country, maybe the one you want to go on holiday to. So, Swedes, you should monitor Thailand then maybe 😉 . And I pick Ukraine, because I am interested in this country since I started following the British ambassador Leigh Turner‘s blog last year.

The second session I went to was with @TimPritlove from Chaosradio about Podcasts and Radio as Tools for Public Relations. Thank you @Meerblickzimmer for taking me with you! And I tell you lot why. I am the occasional Podcast listener, and I never really got what this is all about – apart from that it is some interesting stuff you can listen to whenever you want basically. But Tim’s session got me a bit more curious about the whole thing. I personally like i.e. the idea that this is not a field where you have set formats. In contrary, new innovative formats arise from it, and the tendency is that podcasts inspire what we know as traditional radio, be it state radio or commercial stations. Also there is a huge variety of them. Okay, I was aware of that, but not about the many topics and areas one potentially could make podcasts about – as long as there is a target group who wants to listen to it. And – most importantly, that one is allowed (and wanted!) to have an opinion in most of them – unlike mainstream radio with the hyper political correctness we are exposed to, unless they send comedy satire that is… Anyway. Interesting and greatly made session by someone who knows his shit.

You read enough now, here are some impressions from the conference – not many, though. I swapped between iPhone and HTC camera, and these are the best results (of the few I have) that I can share.

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A great day finished with a long due German-Norwegian-Swedish catch-up with @meerblickzimmer at a nice Indian restaurant on Oranienburger Straße. And this blog update.

Can a rainy day end better? Don’t think so.

Awesome mail from Downunder!

Is there a better day than when you get home from work and there is a large letter waiting for you on your doorstep. Containing what? Awesome stuff from Downunder!

End of March The Axis of Awesome honoured little Norrköping in Sweden with their visit, giving us an unforgettable night out at Skandia Theatre.

They ran out of merchandise but promised free shipment to Sweden during one week after the performance. Can one miss such an opportunity? No. Now I have new stuff to listen to and a new ‘awesome’ t-shirt.

Thanks Jordan, Lee and Benny! And Good Luck for your US tour, guys!

Oh yes. Of course we got to enjoy this one, too:

My personal favourite was the Super Mario performance of Lee and Jordan right at the end, though. And I still suspect that Benny has German roots… when thinking back to his almost accentless German lovesong performance… No wonder he’s so cute ;).

Keeping track of re:publica-tweets #rp11

As you might have read in my last post I already thought a bit about which sessions to visit and who I would like to meet at re:publica.

Like always during the last days before re:publica starts, my Twitter timeline is crowded with #rp11-tweets – there are a lot of tips flying around as well as people fixing times for a coffee-chat.

My company last year developed a visual tool for conferences called “Liveboard” where one can see the latest tweet about a certain hash-tag, other hash-tags used in conjunction with that one, the top users by number of mentions and updates. Apart from that one can also see during which time of the day there was “tweet-high-time”,  and on which days most tweets were sent.

Today we set up a Liveboard for all tweets that contain #rp11, which is the official hash-tag for everything happening around re:publica.

Open this link in Safari, Chrome or on your iPad: http://liveboard.twingly.com/republica. Right now I have it open in Chrome on a second screen and watch the numbers just rolling in. Will be really cool to see what this looks like during and after the conference!

Please note that Liveboard is HTML5 based and works in Safari, Chrome or on your iPad!


re:publica approaching in vast steps!

The re:publica is approaching vastly, and finally I found some time to check out their schedule. Thought it might a good idea to kind of plan at least my personal “must-sees”.
So this is my list with the sessions where you will be most likely to meet me:

Day 1

Opening at 10.00 – I will try not to miss that, although I will be arriving only that morning…

Personally, I don’t feel that day 1 has that much to offer for me, but I think I will check out these sessions:

12.00 Wenn Linke Linke verlinken with @codeispoetry – Tom Pfeiffer is a great story teller, and although I am almost sure I won’t learn anything new there, I know it will be enjoyable to listen to what he has to say about what other people can learn about you on the web without you actively doing anything there…

16:00 Global Voices – Are you listening? I don’t know much about this blogger community and want to learn more simply!

18:00 Utopia London  I was a Londoner from 2003 to 2008, and in my heart I still am. So I follow everything happening there still with a great interest, and I look forward to look at this fascinating city with the eyes of Tom Cordell.

The sessions that I really want to see on Day 2 are:

10.00 The Internet of Elsewhere One hears a little bit about how internet is used in other countries, now, this is a chance to learn even more about which role it plays in other cultures and countries like i.e. South Korea.

12.00 Openleaks with Daniel Domscheit-Berg – not sure what he will manage to tell us about Openleaks during 30 minutes, but hey, seems to be worth checking it out, and maybe there will be signed copies of his book which I still have to and want to read? Am curious if this will result in much more than celebrity spotting.

12.30 Flattr 1 year  with Peter Sunde  – Another successful Swedish export, flattr launched on re:publica last year when I wasn’t there, but I saw it during the year being used on many blogs and even newspapers like taz. Personally I consider flattr a genious alternative to any kind of paywalls – if your content is good, people will pay for it. Voluntarily. Will be great to learn how flattr did so far!

15:00 Diaspora – building a better way to share Don’t know much about this project, but I would like to learn more about the principles of it. Not at last because we at Twingly also look at smart ways to share information for our current new project.

20:00 Twitterlesung ? Would be about time for me to attend one, but then again, maybe I spend the evening otherwise. We’ll see.

Day 3 – like on day 1 I don’t find a lot that interests me, so I will probably be visiting a few business partners in Berlin and just being around on the conference, catching up with people.

Anyway, these sessions I am interested in:

16:00 10 years of blogging in Germany I don’t expect anything new here since I follow the development, being quite a newbie in terms of blogger myself. Also, it seems in Germany bloggers have total different challenges to deal with than in other countries. I only say “Abmahnung”.

17:00 Fashion blogs and their role in fashion journalism internationally  This will be fun to listen to since fashion bloggers are big in Sweden, but they are also getting increasingly important in Germany it seems. So I expect learn a bit about the challenges for fashion bloggers in different countries, what influence they actually have and how they get treated by fashion journalists, but maybe also by shops and brands.

Right! Now you have the corner stones of my program at re:publica!

Otherwise I can see myself pottering around, networking and chatting all day, so comfy shoes will definitely find their way into my luggage.

Looking forward to seeing you around – feel free to ping me on Twitter if you want to catch up!

Now I just have to print this post and put it into my pile to take with me next week. Kidding 😀

What would we be without Pizza?

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And… ? (Lots more which would make this post too long.)

Italy turns 150 years today, you can read all about their history here, or on the official celebrations website.

Buon Compleanno Italia!!

150 years of spicing up life in Europe, in several respects that is if one believes this classic:

Google joins todays celebrations as well, and so do thousands of people via Twitter and Facebook .

Webciety, re:publica, NEXT, Geek Girl Meetup – Conference Springtime is on!

Seems this year I catch up with everything conferencewise what I missed in 2010 (reasons being family member passing away, ash cloud etc.).

Anyway, this year you can meet me “live and in colour” (German proverb translated) at these events:

Webciety on CeBIT (01st to 5th of March 2011)

This one is already a gonner, but in case you want to check it out, I had the pleasure to take part in a discussion panel about Social Media Monitoring. Other members on the panel were Yasan Budak from Vico Research, Guilhem Fouetillou from Linkfluence, and last but not least Michelle Chmielewski from Synthesio.

If you are in the need of some afternoon or Friday entertainment and have 42 minutes to spare, here is the video of our session, includes us juggling with English and German.

Next on the list is the re:publica in Berlin! (13th to 15th of April 2011)

re:publica is the conference about bloggers, social media and digital society in Germany. The event goes into its 5th round and it could double the number of visitors every year. When tickets went on sale in  November 2010, the blogger tickets were sold out within one or two days… Speaking of a popular event to attend!!

This year Jakob Augstein, publisher of the weekly paper Freitag.de will be part of it again, and I also look forward to listening to the journalist Richard Gutjahr who reported live from Egypt this year when the revolution started. There are lots of other great speakers, check out the list!

In May I will travel to Berlin a second time and attend the NEXT Conference (17th + 18th of May 2011). Data Love is this year’s theme, and already now it is worth following their blog and all the buzz around it. Participants are also welcome to write on the blog, especially the official NEXT11-bloggers! I should also think about something smart to contribute with since I am part of the group of official bloggers, as a matter of fact my role will be more a bit of a host for the international guests rather than a blogger… But having the honour of being there alongside names like Joakim Jardenberg, Henriette Weber and Paula Marttila (all renown Scandinavian bloggers), Oliver Gassner, Olaf Kolbrück, Martina Pickkardt, Tapio Liller, Nikos Anagnostou and many others, that still puts quite a bit of pressure on 😉 …

In case you want to go but don’t have a ticket yet, there is still a chance to get one with a 20% discount !

Last but not least and probably dearest to me, there is the Geek Girl Meetup in Stockholm! (21st and 22nd of May 2011). I managed to secure a ticket today, and I also convinced Charlotta to join in. She studies interaction design in Stockholm, and right now she joins our team @Twingly as an intern. The Geek Girl Meetup’s themes Gaming and Creative Technology might be giving not only her lots of new ideas and inspiration. Go, girls, go!

Looking forward to meeting at least some of you on these events! 🙂 My aim is also to share some interesting happenings from these events and trips here on Wha’ever.com.

Love, love, love…

All you need is love, that’s what the Beatles already sung, and before them (and later) thousands of other artists all around the world.

But what if one isn’t blessed with true love (yet)? For some Valentine’s day almost becomes a torture, it seems, and one tries so hard to find the true thing. However it lies in nature of love to sneak up when you least expect it. I can say that from my own experience and as well as from friends’ and mates’.

Valentine’s day however is so commercialised in some countries that one almost feels down and annoyed about not being as lucky to have someone to hug, kiss, take care of and share the good and bad times with. Every shop offering something heart-shaped, restaurants trying to get people to book special candle-light dinners etc. just makes one feel being one of the worst outsiders, more even, one starts thinking it is ones own failure not to have found  a soul mate. When I still  lived in London and I hadn’t met my true partner in love (and crime) yet my feelings went that way the weeks before the 14th of February. At literally every corner something red… Horrible when you are single but don’t really want to be.

But honestly – how many of us are lucky enough to have the right person beside us? When one looks at online dating sites booming, other advertisements seeking for love, online and offline, and not to forget the good old Friday night chatting up – realistically, the ones of us who really are entirely happy with someone are probably not that many. And these would not necessarily need any Valentine’s offers, since they appreciate each other every day. So it seems these hopeless ads and offers on the 14th are not of much use, are they? Potentially it makes unhappy people even unhappier.  And is it really something to strive for to try to make money from people who are unhappy in love or not in love at all? Probably not. But who cares as long as the cash keeps coming in? My personal point of view.

In Sweden all this commercial stuff around the 14th is luckily not as exaggerated as I have seen it in London or in Germany. I really do appreciate that and think that even if I would still be single, in this country it is much easier to look past Valentine’s day and to be happy even during the weeks before this “magical” date.

So – all single ladies & gents, it is just to survive this bloody 14th of Feb, maybe lock yourselves in tonight with a best friend and watch a horror movie (at least not a love movie) while enjoying some really good takeaway pizza and a bottle of red. After that the world will look better, especially with springtime and lighter days approaching. And who knows? Maybe this year you’ll be discovered by the one that is just right for you. In any case, be happy and enjoy yourself and life as much as you can. Remember, there are lots of people around that share their lives with the wrong partner, and that I consider to be even worse than being single. Been there, done that.

Picture credit to Life in Shanghai http://lifeinshanghai.blogg.se/

 

3 kilos in 4 days!

picture credit to http://www.dodietswork.com/

That is how much you can loose if struck by the power virus of the “vinterkräksjukan” or “winter puking disease” as you call it here in Sweden… And that is how much I lost last week, just by lying in bed and regularly visiting the bathroom…. Not. Much. Fun. At all.

On the other hand, why does one go to the gym, eats healthy and what not if one could loose weight this easily? Well, no, it is a horrible way of getting slimmer, even if it is without a doubt very effective…

In Sweden this Norovirus knocks out thousands of people each winter, and it therefore every year gets seasonal media coverage as you rarely have in other countries…

Anyway, I am back to normal again, thank goodness, and I would not wish this to my worst enemy.

Go and exercise, ladies and gents, if you want to loose weight, I hope you do not have to try this!

Chinese becomes increasingly important

Today I came across this article on The Next Web . Chinese is the new dominant language on the internet – with less than 100 million users distance to English!

Following the rapidly increasing importance of China as second trading partner to Europe after the U.S. one wonders if we should not also learn Chinese, preferably at the same level as English?

More and more people indeed take up the challenge already if one can trust this article on the American-Chinese Forum , and there is little doubt that for the younger generations and definitely the ones to come, Chinese language skills will be crucial if they would like to develop their careers. Already now people with knowledge of Chinese language and not less importantly Chinese culture are sought after.

I dare to suggest that at the very latest in  3 years Chinese will be offered at ground schools in Europe as a language option. Maybe even sooner, depending on how rapidly Chinese business in Europe and the Western world keeps growing, and more importantly, how soon we will react to this and actively meet this development by catering for these needs. Given the fact that China replaced the US as India’s biggest trade partner, Chinese will be offered in Indian schools as early as from March 2011.

When saying “Chinese”, one has to distinguish between Mandarin and Cantonese Chinese, Mandarin being the more important one and also allowing you to be understood even in Cantonese areas like i.e Hongkong. More details you can find on Khuang.com which gives you more insights regarding Chinese. (The site has been online since 1996!)

There are interesting times ahead indeed, and I do mean this in a positive way, not in terms of the meaning of the old proverb “May you live in interesting times”, which many people think is a Chinese curse. There the learning curve starts already, the proverb might firstly not be Chinese at all and secondly, even if Chinese, misinterpreted and mistranslated.

That much for a taste of the challenge we Westerners are up for 😉 .

If one looks at the time of colonialism and Westerners trying to force their language and culture onto China, then it seems only like a more than fair development in world history that the country gains more influence now. Important to know is that China never got conquered by any other nation, and that they have been ahead of all of us since way back before Christ. Take a look at the list of their inventions, paper making, printing and gunpowder being just a few of them. What would we be without these? Not to mention the Chinese martial arts we are fascinated by, and their philosophers like Confucius and Sun Tsu, their famous military general; we learnt from them all.

In terms of colonialism, only the bare rock of Hong-Kong was left to Britain, and that only for 156 years before it fell back to China in 1997, probably allowing them getting a valuable update on how the Western trade and business world functions.

These are just some thoughts I put together, simply because I feel that Chinese influence in Europe is more noticeable than ever nowadays.

I do not intend to get lost in the hundreds of thousands pros and cons of the fact that China gains more and more influence worldwide, among other reasons  because one could probably raise most of the same pros and cons for any other influential nation. Neither I would call myself an expert in all these matters. Only, when reading the TNW article followed by more browsing and reading, I realised that there is a huge amount left to learn for us, and that it is learning time now it seems. We really should make an effort since it will be important for our future.

Personally I find it really fascinating to follow this development. When I was little, China was a far away country, what we call a developing country in fact, and not almost every toy you held in your hands came from China. If any of them came from that region of the world, then it was usually from Hong-Kong or Taiwan. Certainly nobody back then even dreamt of taking classes in Chinese or even traveling there. Unless you were one of those weirdos that did not fit into society anyway… Nowadays, traveling to China is a vital, regular part of international business in a lot of industries, and learning Chinese seems bound to be one of the best investments ever into your own future.

Who would have thought that only twenty years ago?

Brand new commuter trains

A nice surprise after a long day – a ride home on one of the 5 barely a week old new commuter trains of Östgötatrafiken. First time! Definite advantages are that they are very airy, there is a socket at each set of places, it goes very silently (I can have a much lower volume on the earphones) and it even has a silent compartment with a star-ceiling! Part of it you can spot in the picture. What I miss are the adjustable backrests of the seats which you have on the old trains. However, I love both types of trains – a good addition to the fleet these new big buddies!