Elon University, Interactive Media, and Google

Recently in my Google Reader feed (my RSS feed reader of choice) I have been seeing ads for Elon University’s Masters in Interactive Media program. (below)

elonad

 

This begs the question: How much does Google actually know about me? Do they know I went to Elon and am involved in the web development community? Probably. They know that the majority of what I read is about user interaction design and web design. They know that many of my emails have to do with freelancing, and dealing with clients. They also know that I get a fair amount of emails from Elon asking for money. Do they log this information and then apply it to the ads that they generate when I read other sites? Or is Elon aggressively hitting the right markets so that their ad keeps popping up?

If anyone knows who at Elon is in charge of marketing and online ad placement, I would be interested in asking them how they are marketing this ad around the interwebs.

 

-Ben

The End of Location Dependant Life

Every day I speak / chat / work with many of my colleagues and friends. Normal, right? Kinda…

My housemates here in Istanbul are from the US, Germany, Spain, Brazil, and Mexico. The people who work for me on my team are multinational as well – a woman from Poland who is currently living in the Netherlands, and a Canadian.

The other people I work with are currently based in San Francisco, but they tend to move around every few months. A Columbian who has visa issues in every country, thanks to Pablo Escobar, a Dutch woman who spends her time finding places with views, some Spaniards who live in Malaysia work from their laptops on the side while teaching people how to Scuba dive.

It doesn’t seem like any of these people are far away from me. I get online and there they are, no matter where they are.

We discuss life, politics, the weather, work, travel (lots of travel talk…) and how to keep doing what we are doing. While we all come from different backgrounds, care about different things, and have differing methods of travel, one thing we all have in common is difficulty staying in one place.

National borders mean that crossing into different areas costs money, and often requires proof I am who I say I am. Trying to establish a bank account that works around the world means I need a permanent address. My driver’s license currently has a P.O. BOX on it – which excludes me from many foreign bank accounts.

Almost all of my money is virtual – why should I need a physical address? I pay with debit or credit cards, get paid by electronic fund transfer, and rarely see the cash unless I am headed to a cash only bar or little restaurant and when I do, I pull my money out in Lira, Colones, Baht, Kip, Pounds, and Euros.

The difficulties are there, but I accept these as part of the journey. My coworkers and friends are not jetsetters, we are something else. We are leading a revolutionary lifestyle change that will soon be possible for almost everyone. No geographical, national, or political ties. We are people who have roots only on paper. We work in a different country every time our visa’s expire, and work wherever we can find internet.

We utilize a wide variety of tools to make this possible. The internet is the gateway, and the efficient use of it is the key.

Below is a quick list of the tools we use to make this possible:

Money:

It is all digital.

  • HSBC – international bank with ATMs and branches all over the world.
  • Bank of America – Sharing system with banks everywhere, no ATM fees.
  • PayPal – Freelance clients pay me with this, and I can pull funds out of an ATM directly or transfer them to a different account.
  • Mint.com – Monitors all of my accounts and tells me where I have my money.
  • INGdirect.com – Online Bank. Doesn’t exist as a walk in location. Good rates.

Collaboration:

  • Skype – Voice, video, chat. It is my go to for connecting with someone in “person” or for a quick “Hello Mom!”
  • Google Services – Gmail, Gchat, Google Voice, Google Docs, and Google Wave. I use these to manage projects, communicate with team members, maintain a semi- local presence in the US, and organize my life.

Relationships:

  • Facebook – Events, where people are in the world, and what is going on in general
  • CouchSurfing – Places to stay, things to do, people to meet
  • Email – long form conversations
  • Skype – Same as above

Play/Life:

  • Earthclassmail.com – scans my real mail and emails it to me.
  • Grooveshark.com – Streaming music everywhere (no US only restrictions)
  • ninjavideo.net – TV shows and new movies
  • Craigslist – Find short term rentals, classes, activities, climbing partners, and furnishings for wherever I am.
  • Kayak.com – US based flights
  • Ryanair / Easyjet – Cheap Europe flights
  • Tiger air – Cheap Asian Flights

Sounds great – and it is. But it means sacrificing some things many people hold on to as core life values. Friendships from before tend to fade. Hard to maintain these for seven years with only marginal face time. Family life is scarce. Holidays only – and then not always. No stability of location. My home is where I happen to be. It helps that most of the people I live and work with have an “out of site, out of mind” approach to life.

While most people are building up assets- property, cars, clothes – I am checking off places, people, experiences. Here is a quick map of where some of my friends currently live. I could spend the next few years just visiting them – and I just might.

CouchSurfing - My Personal Connections_1265122508277

Peach Of State Mind

Some people from my highschool (Wesleyan) made this video and I got linked to it through the Dunwoody Mothers Association. Very well done – and lots of familiar sites, which are always nice to see when on the other side of the world.

New Launch: Litfi.com – Photo Progression

I just launched litfi.com, a once a day photo log of what I think is my best shot of the day.

Each day, one new photo will be uploaded until Jan 10, 2011 for your perusal, comment, inspiration, and viewing pleasure.

I have several reasons for this:

  • I want to get better at photography and would like your critiques on my work.
  • I want to track and see how my photo selection, composition, and subject matter changes over the year.
  • I want to showcase my better work in a place separate from my day to day postings at benhanna.com

So please comment on these photos! Let me know what you think – and if you would like any of them printed out in a large format for framing, give me a shout.

-Ben

The Need to Know

We have entered a new era of need. One that depends upon being connected. Connected to the most recent, relevant information, connected to to energy, and most importantly, connected to other people.

Humans have an obvious baser desire to be connected to other people. This is evident in the trend of urban growth, online social networks, networking events, social clubs, fraternities, sororities, bars, and families. We crave to know a little bit about what is going on in the lives of those whom we have a connection with. The more we know about someone, the closer we tend to be to them. Our spouses, significant others, and close friends have the most information on our activities, and are therefore a part of our inner circles. We keep them updated vocally, with one on one face time, and often they are present for a large majority of our day to day lives. New developments tend to involve them in some way.

The new addition to this club is social networks. They have transformed the way that we interact. At any given moment we can log on to facebook.com and within moments, gain a simple understanding of the state of our social network. By pursuing people’s updates, photos, comments and activity, we can judge the emotional state of our “friends”. As facebook’s systems get better at identifying who our real world friends are and showing us information that we deem relevant, this feeling will grow stronger.

We are approaching a network “hive mind”, a time when we will simply understand what people in our social circles are thinking and feeling. We will know when the economy is hurting because many we are connected to will be expressing financial woe. We will know when people have holidays because our connections will be talking about breaks, vacation, and travel plans. By analyzing certain words in updates, we can tell if people are generally depressed, or feeling optimistic about the future. This is already happening – look at Twitter’s advanced search:

 

 Advanced Twitter Search_1262828988316

I have to run and catch a plane, but think about this for a while:

How much do you inherently know about people you haven’t spoken to in over 3 months? Do you know if they seem happy? Or if they are going through a hard time? Where do you see this trend taking us? In the age of real time information, how long until I know what you just thought?

 

(Side Note: I am at an airport bar, and the people next to me are having a conversation about facebook, its stalking aspects, and people they know who don’t use it. He is expressing the wish that a friend of his used facebook so he could know what she was up to… that voicemail was outdated. How long until Techno Luddites are shunted into a different culture, where they no longer have the same feeling of community as those who spend long hours online following the minutia of their friends lives?)

How to utilize BitTorrent to improve your online experience.

It seems the cat is out of the bag and everyone had heard of Torrenting now. Great! The more people who use this system of file sharing the faster the downloads are! Several people have recently asked me about it, what it is, how it works, and if it is safe. Below is a simple guide that will take you no longer than 10 minutes to go through. When you are done you will be able to quickly download huge files at amazing speeds. Enjoy!

MakeUseOf.com – BitTorrent Guide

Keven Kelly – The Technium

On a similar note – he has recently sent his book based upon the blog he has been running fro the past years to his publisher and it should be out in October on 2010.