Announcing Domains 2017

Well, it’s official, Reclaim Hosting is partnering with University of Oklahoma to host Domains 2017.

What is Domains 2017 all about? Well, read Adam Croom‘s Letter of Welcome for more details, but in short it’s modeled on the idea of a two-day Record Fair where folks come together to share the work they are doing around domains projects. This is by no means limited to schools running Domain of One’s Own projects—though they are certainly one focus—but to showcase a wide array of approaches to everything from free web-based tools to SPLOTS to Personal APIs to teaching on the open web to Digital Identity to critical approaches to Digital Literacies and more. It’s a communal, fair-like event where pedagogy and ed-tech meets technical architecture so that we can begin to think through them together.

Where is it? Oklahoma City, right smack dab in the middle of the USA! The venue will be a Museum/Gallery space and the Record Fair is not simply a conceit, we will be running a significant portion of the conference as carnival-like showcase with records, tapes, live music and more.

When is it? June 5th and 6th, 2017. 

How much? Right now it’s $199 to register, and that includes a light breakfast and lunch on both days—a deal at twice that because we love you! 

I wanna submit? We have officially opened up the call today, and we have made the submission process as painless as possible. We are closing the call on February 1st, so get submitting

Can I register now? Yes, please do. Here’s the registration and venue information.

How do I stay updated? I’ll definitely be blogging about it regularly here, but we also have a website and a Twitter account (@DomainsConf), so be sure to follow/watch those spaces as well—sorry no Facebook group for this bad boy!

I’ll keep this short so you all can catch your breath, but we’ll be regularly posting about the event over the next few months. We’re really excited to be able to do this, and we hope to see many of you there!

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Get SiteSucker, Sucker

I had followed with great interest the discussion on the Reclaim Hosting Community site about archiving a dynamic, database driven site as static HTML files.  I share Alan Levine’s passion for trying to archive as much of the work I’ve done online as possible, I’m just not nearly as good at it. That said, today I had an occasion to use the Mac tool SiteSucker Tim Owens has been raving about for a while. The app costs $4.99 and takes any URL and packages up the entire site (including images and media) into local static HTML files. 

I finally decided to try it when I was migrating a website built with another host’s custom webpage builder. There was no export tool (why you gotta be like that?) and I was not going to copy and paste scores of HTML pages. I was prepared to tell the Reclaimer the migration was a no-go, but then I remembered SiteSucker. Given this was a custom web tool and they’re planning on building a new site after the move, why not simply package it up with SiteSucker which will provide them an interim home as well as an archive?  

So, I did. And it was as awesome as Tim promised. I just added the URL as illustrated above and 3 minutes later the entire site was downloaded as static HTML pages. I uploaded the entire archive to their Reclaim Hosting account and pointed the domain at our nameservers and that was that. Crazy how simple that was, it makes me want to start working my way through a bunch of old WordPress sites I have and start retiring them to HTML. 

I don’t pay for that many applications, but this is one that was very much worth the $5 for me. I can see more than a few uses for my own sites, not to mention the many others I help support. And to reinforce that point, right after I finished sucking this site, a faculty member submitted a support ticket asking the best way to archive a specific moment of a site so that they could compare it with future iterations. One option is cloning a site in Installatron on Reclaim Hosting, but that requires a dynamic database for a static copy, why not just suck that site? And while cloning a site using Installatron is cheaper and easier given it’s built into Reclaim offerings, it’s not all that sustainable for us or them. All those database driven sites need to be updated, maintained, and protected from hackers and spam. Something like SiteSucker makes a lot more sense than cloning a site for helping folks archive their work so that it can be accessible for the long term, and building that feature into Reclaim Hosting’s services would be pretty cool. 

Posted in Archiving, reclaim | Tagged , , , , | 10 Comments

Hello Blog!

Been taking a bit of a break from the bava blog the last few weeks, it’s been a welcome respite. September and October were fairly intense travel months, and after the US election I really wanted  break from the maddening media. I can only stomach small doses of Twitter these days and fortunately I never really Facebooked. Thankfully Reclaim has been keeping me honest, happy, and quite busy. We’ve been planning a Domains conference that will be formally announced Monday (very cool). We leased office space in Fredericksburg that we’ll be doing some major renovations to over the next few months and then opening up as a co-working space/video production house/makerspace. I also have dreams of cordoning off a small piece of the 3500 square ft office to open a VHS Movie rental store, complete with a couple of 1980s stand-up arcade games.

All that said, I have no immediate plans to return to Fredericksburg full-time. I’m still having way too much fun in Italy. I really do love Trento, and part of my hiatus has been to simply enjoy life here. America seems so very far away most of the time, and these days that’s reassuring. I have a blog series I’ll be digging into over the next two weeks to help me organize all the places I’ve been and people I’ve seen over the last year. I’ll probably get that started Monday, but until then let me leave you with the following mashup gem that the great Mikhail Gershovich turned me on to—see, not all Russians are election-throwing commies! Nothing like a Peanuts/Bad Brains mashup to get one in the holiday spirit. 

While a nice break, it’s always good to return to the bava. When the online social scene is broken, there’s no place like home to just blog. If something as lame as podcasting could make a comeback, why not blogging?

Posted in bavatuesdays, blogging, YouTube | 2 Comments

Our Portfolio Could be Your Life: The Video

Just got word the videos for ePic 2016 in Bologna are now available on YouTube.  Here is the full playlist. I’m including a link to mine in the original post as well as here because I had fun doing this one. The bit about Italy, Noodling, and Catfishing in the first 8 minutes were my attempt to try a stand-up routine, not all that good on second watch, but hey, what do you want from me? I’m trying, damnit!

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Our Portfolio Could be Your Life

Let me start by saying Bologna is a fine city to hold a conference.

Bologna’s significant university student population makes in one of the grooviest cities in Italy.

It’s famous for its radical left politics, and it’s home to Italy’s film archive Cineteca Bologna-just the other night I saw a gorgeous version of Night of the Hunter that they restored.

And in a country famous for its food-it may be one of the best culinary cities in the land. Not to mention it’s an Italian city, so it is all kinds of gorgeous between the towers and the porticoes you really can’t go wrong. I don’t believe I’ve ever eaten so well at a conference, nor presented in such a fabulously ornate venue as this one at Pallazzo Gnudi.

And that’s just during the day, it takes on an entirely different character
in the evening.

So just to summarize, Bologna comes highly recommended as a host city for your next conference. Just make sure you scope out the wireless situation, as Poison so profoundly pointed out, “every rose has its thorn.”

And kudos to the organizers of  ePIC 2016 for making it happen. In particular thanks to Don Presant and Serge Ravat for inviting me to speak. Don is hard not to like, he reminds me of Philip Seymour Hoffman in all the best possible ways, and he is a connective force in the world of open badges (more on those shortly). I also really dug Serge, he may have the best French accent ever when speaking English, and his presentation “Beyond Open Badges and ePortfolios” was a philosophical and poetic rumination on the relational vision of badges framing a richer, deeper holographic identity:

In fact, as it turns out, I had heard about this conference over the years, and it seems it has morphed from an event focused primarily on e-portfolios to one focused primarily on badges. I’m not sure of the precise lineage of this metamorphosis (or if this is a broader shift in the e-portfolio field), but while there were a few presentations dealing with portfolios days 2 and 3 (I particularly enjoyed TRU’s Tracy Penny Light’s on the topic), by-and-large the focus and energy at this conference was on badges, with a healthy dose of the blockchain thrown in. Portfolios and blockchain are not necessarily my fortĂ©, but I am not above exploiting the ambiguity of the former as a Trojan Horse to get folks to explore Domain of One’s Own. As for the latter, I admittedly remain relatively clueless.

I was quite skeptical of the push for badges four or five years ago, and remember being dismayed MacArthur had decided to channel just about all of its funding into this approach.  It dried up one of the few funding channels for experimental ed-tech in higher ed, and I just couldn’t understand how boiling down the seemingly endless possibilities of expression on the web to a predefined symbol of what you had accomplished was of any value. And to put that in some historical perspective, while MacArther and Mozilla were announcing they were all-in on badges as icons of achievement in 2011, we were prototyping the idea of thinking through what it means to take control of one’s own domains with ds106. The smaller, more modest vision there was to build on an existing movement of the open web to encourage narrating your learning publicly. Not all that revolutionary given how long blogs had been around, but given the sorry state of institutional adoption of anything resembling innovative ed-tech for more than a decade it still seemed radical. 

In terms of where Badges are now, I couldn’t say with any authority. They do seem to be heavily focused on vocational, corporate, and workplace training. Very little talk of any meaningful badge work within undergraduate universities. In that space, it seems Badges have moved on from any definitive idea of a portfolio, at least from what I could make out, and are exploring the implications of digital records and/or transcripts. Phil Long‘s keynote highlighted the work they’re doing at UT Austin experimenting with the blockchain to provide new ways of sharing and managing a data-rich transcript. What data and how this will be shared between institutions seems very much nebulous still, but giving students more control over their digital records seems to be the push. It was interesting how the idea of badges and academic records are converging (conflating?) in at least one part of the field that will focus on student ownership of data. This is something I really appreciate, but it seems far removed from teaching and learning. What’s more, there was little to no talk about open APIs, which you think would go hand-in-hand with such an approach.

In fact, much of the language used around Badges and Blockchain at the conference seemed more appropriate to a banking conference. Issues of transactions, earners, endorsement, and the like just made me wilt. I understand Blockchain technology is relatively new and our best example of it in action is BitCoin, but the lack of attention to how directly these terms frame this platform as the apotheosis of the Freirian learning transaction was alienating. I still remain as unconvinced about the value of badges as I was in 2011, and while I am moderately interested in the Blockchain I am resisting that urge at the moment. But for those who are, I’d recommend thinking through the vocabulary and asking yourselves if this new approach to banking through technology might have real limits—beyond the obvious linguistic ones— when grafted onto teaching and learning.

Anyway, I presented a shorter, 20 minute talk riffing on the idea of domains as portfolios, and again with nods to Grant Potter and the Minutemen, reworked the title of a previous talk to fit portfolios: “Our Portfolio could be Your Life.” The talk was pretty new, I introduced some really fun slides and elements about Noodling, Catfishing, and more. I was inspired by Alec Couros‘s on-going issues with identity theft and Catfishing on Facebook (which were unfolding on Twitter while I was preparing the talk) so I played off it it with Noodling (a way of catching catfish with your hand popular in the Southern US states introduced to me by Tom Woodward). Anyway, how could that fail? 🙂 I stole a piece of Mike Caulfield awesome keynote that celebrates of Anth101, which provided a quite compelling update to the vision behind ds106. I also relied on the recent writings of both Martha Burtis and Audrey Watters to make the argument of why taking control of one’s digital presence and being critical consumers is so crucial.

On a personal note this may have been one of the funnest presentations I’ve given in a while. I really liked the shorter presentation time limit of 20 minutes, and I used that to experiment with making it a kinda of stand-up gig. Im the end I wasn’t that funny,  but it was fun for me. I knew I was feeling it when I started the presentation by poking fun at my bad Italian, and from there the energy was just right. Maybe it was the gorgeous room? Maybe it was the home team advantage? I don’t know, but it was a good note to end my presentations for 2016. And it was not yet clouded by our current crisis.
The good old days.

Update: Here’s the video.

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Lifeclock One

In preparation for the future past almost 20 years ago I’ve supported the Lifeclock One Kickstarter so that I can always be reminded that cinema is realer than life. And while there’s always enough blame to go around, I personally have decided to blame the mole people! 

pliskens

I think this sentiment was easier for Snake to rationalize before they shoot the time-released cyanide pills into his bloodstream. 

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Muhlenberg College: The ‘Berg Builds

This post has sat in draft for almost three weeks while I finished traveling and decompressing from a month away. Like Cogdog, I have been a tired blogger these days, but unlike Alan I haven’t always been able to push through it. But maybe that’s not all bad, because during that down time there have been a number of other posts about the event at Muhlenberg by the people who are making it happen! Blogging is everything, indeed!  I would encourage you to check those posts out, and thankfully Lora Taub-Pervizpour provided an awesome round-up post with links to many of them.


Lauren Brumfield and I just returned from an intense two days on the ground at Muhlenberg College. I want to try and get down my impressions of our time there before they vanish because I really think that the thought, planning, and passion that the fine folks at Muhlenberg College have put into their domains pilot Berg Builds is exemplary. If anyone is wondering how they might build an open, inviting culture around their Domain of One’s Own project, I would say do everything Muhlenberg is doing.

Day 1

Lauren and I got into Allentown a bit later that night than expected, and we crashed immediately in preparation for a full day. And a full day it was, it started with Donuts and Domains. First rule of Domain Club, create a t-shirt! 🙂

Lora Taub-Pervizpour, professor of Media & Communication and Associate Dean for Digital Learning, organized the trip and was our most gracious host at Muhlenberg. Our first destination was the college Guest House to have a discussion with the Digital Learning Team (DLT). This was our first indicator things were happening at Muhlenberg beyond the t-shirts. The DLT (sounds a lot like DTLT, no?) was a recently formed group of instructional technologists, designers, media specialists, and librarians. While I have recently noticed the gutting of such groups at schools such as Plymouth State University, it was encouraging to see Muhlenberg doubling down on a robust support staff comprised of such an interdisciplinary ed-tech group.

This initial discussion was far-ranging and fairly open-ended, guided by the following questions: 

  1. How do we make our Domain of One’s Own initiative sustainable?
  2. How do we ensure its success?
  3. How do we generate support from highest levels of leadership?
  4. What can we learn from other institutions further along than we are?

What an awesome set of questions, and it is apparent this school is digging in to make this thing work. And the only real answer to the first two questions: do the work—get out there and demonstrate to faculty and students why this is important! And that will, in turn, take care of the 3rd. As for the 4th,  Muhlenberg has been so awesome in this regard, and Tim Clarke‘s push to build a cohort of schools starting Domains projects is a brilliant push that has already begun on the Reclaim Community forum. There is much to learn from how other schools are approaching this, and the best form that comes to mind is certainly not a Slack channel or email or even a Reclaim Community Forum (which I’m a big fan of), but blogging!

I think my pull quote from this session was “Domain of One’s Own is won one post at a time.” And while pithy, I firmly believe this. If you want Domains to be successful then get just one faculty member or one student or one staff member excited about claiming their own space and posting something they care about to the web. That will be the beginning of a long road of helping people see the value of “owning” their own space on the web and sharing what they do. And that consists of a lot of  work that has as many (if not more) failures than successes, but that’s the job. In my mind, everything else comes from this one small, but very powerful spark of excitement. 

After the morning session we got some lunch, and I finally got to meet Muhlenberg’s CIO Allan Chen. This was special for me, because I’ve been following Allan on Twitter since at least 2008. He was engaged in the EDUPUNK discussions at the time, and I really appreciated his nuanced take on its limits and possibilities. So, when I heard he was the CIO of Muhlenberg, I was really excited. It’s funny how 8 years later we finally meet with both of us at very different stages in our life and career, but also still dedicated to re-thinking how tech can best support teaching and learning in higher ed—and our blogs are proof of that! What did I say about blogging again? 🙂 Allan is a year into his new position, but it is more than apparent that he is one of the folks truly enabling this work at Muhlenberg. He has extended the IT department as a bridge for exploring new ways to integrate technology thoughtfully into the classroom.* That is really encouraging to see, and it is both strange and reassuring to see folks I came up with on the web in positions of power making good, meaningful change at institutions like Muhlenberg.

After lunch Lauren and I got some down time in Trexler Library to prepare for sitting in on Tina Hertel’s First Year Seminar. It occurred to me while preparing that it’s been more than a year since I’ve been in a classroom teaching. I don’t think I have gone that long since 1997, which is when I started in this racket. The class was scheduled to discuss Audrey Watters‘s post “A Domain of One’s Own in a Post-Ownership Society,” and we were asked to lead the discussion around that brilliant piece. It was really fun to be back in front of a classroom, and I realized just how much I miss it. That said, I also remembered how hard it is to do well, and how much work it is to direct a conversation. But those students were awesome (and they will have a second act in this post!), they took the reins and engaged in discussion, and if it was stilted and incongruous at times, that had everything to do with my being out of practice. 

After that, we sat down with the Office of Information Technology (Allan Chen’s division) and talked about how IT can best help ensure Domains success. Just take a moment to think about this: everywhere I went at Muhlenberg there was only on real question, how can we make this work? That’s exactly how you want to approach a pilot you are exploring! This meeting was fairly straightforward because when working with Reclaim we really only need to make sure single sign-on works (which was already finished), so our needs were fairly straightforward, and they had already been met! I simply said by making the single sign-on happen and deciding hosting domains in-house is not something you want to pursue, yet still enabling it for your campus through Reclaim—you’ve demonstrated your support for the project. Sometimes doing less is more when it comes to infrastructure for IT departments. What’s more, they appreciate the fact that this approach frees them up from worrying about the technical infrastructure of running web hosting for their campus, allowing them to focus on supporting it and making it work at the level of the course, the faculty member, the staff member, and the student.

Can you begin to see why this took a while to write, right? 

From there we went to Dinner with the Digital Learning Team (DLT), the Digital Learning Assistants, and the Domain of One’s Own Faculty Learning Community. I’ve already talked about the Digital Learning Team (that was our first meeting of the day), but it might help to spell out who the Digital Learning Assistants and DoOO Faculty Learning Community are. The Digital Learning Assistants are about 10 students ranging from freshmen to seniors at Muhlenberg who will be learning the intricacies of Berg Builds. They will be installing and playing with various applications, exploring media, and just generally playing with this web hosting environment to get more familiar with its potential. All this to prepare to support other students using this space, an approach very much premised on UMW’s Digital Knowledge Center (DKC) run by Martha Burtis. In fact, Muhlenberg had previously consulted with Martha—did I already mention they are doing the work?

The DoOO Faculty Learning Community was the other group at this dinner, and this group consisted of roughly 15 faculty who are taking part in a year-long cohort to explore the possibilities of Berg Builds for their personal sites, course sites, and research projects. Starting a DKC and running a faculty initiative like the one we did at UMW from 2013 through 2015 are the two pieces of practical I give to schools who wants their program to succeed. Muhlenberg had already gotten both up and running! I wasn’t kidding when I said Muhlenberg is a model of how to succeed, and I’m not alone in this sentiment, something which very much shines through in Adam Croom‘s brilliantly titled “The Berg is the Word!” You probably won’t be surprised to learn Adam is another person who Muhlenberg has consulted given his remarkable success at University of Oklahoma. Did I mention it is all about doing the work? 

So these were the various groups at dinner, and the dining room had a level of excitement and conviviality that reminded me of some of those early Faculty Academy dinners at UMW. If you were at UMW in 2006, 2007, 2008, and/or 2009 you know exactly what I mean. A sense of shared communal purpose that was palpable and truly electric. This was the stage being set for my talk that would happen right after dinner at 7:30 PM on the main floor of the Trexler Library out “in the wild.”

It was a wild space to present, there were students behind the stacks studying who could overhear my manic ravings, and it seemed open and porous in some interestingly symbolic ways.  Lora Taub-Pervizpour offered a more than generous introduction, and as you can see below, she was looking quite stylish in her Reclaim Hosting shirt…. #4life!

And after that I had a blast for the next 90 minutes presenting. It started off with some unintentional feedback that gave folks a taste of what they were in for:

That 6 seconds may be all you need, but if you are a glutton for punishment here is the other hour and a half!

The students we had spoken with earlier that day in Tina Hertel’s First Year Seminar came to the talk for extra-credit (which I heard someone call “the duct tape of education” recently, and loved it) and they made my night. I had said something to the effect of….

I think that might have ignited this group of students because they went nuts on Twitter, and it was awesome! Here’s a sampling:

https://twitter.com/heatherfys142/status/786725706181083136

And that’s just some of them, but you get the idea, just pure, unadulterated joy! If you want to see more, Lora Storifyied a bunch. So good! I just want to thank those tweeting maniacs for reminding me why I like doing this stuff in the first place, to have fun!

After the talk we were scheduled for a drink at a local tavern, but everyone was so exhausted from this extremely full and amazing day so that was kyboshed and I headed back to the hotel and collapsed.

Day 2:

The next morning we met with the Domain of One’s Own Faculty Learning Community and Tim Clarke and Jordan Moyes led them through both the conceptual vision as well as the the process of setting up their domains and installing applications.<Begin shameless plug>It was cool to witness yet another instance of just how seamless and straightforward the process has become for folks to manage their own open source web apps through Reclaim Hosting </end shameless plug>. 

I even scored a physical copy of Audrey’s “Claim Your Domain,” which was a treat.

For lunch we went to Cali Burrito, a local favorite featuring high quality California style burritos—a personal favorite. After that, we headed back to campus for the final event of the trip, an afternoon session with the Digital Learning Assistants. I mentioned that Lauren had accompanied me on this trip, and the idea was to start exposing her to more of the work we do on the ground at institutions. I think it was eye-opening that the work she did as an undergrad in 2014 and 2015 was actually a thing beyond UMW. What’s more, it is a thing she is uniquely equipped to speak about as a student and a professional and having her on the trip was amazing. She did a far better and way more timely write-up of our trip to Muhlenberg, and her contributions during the final session were awesome. It’s kinda strange because Lauren and I had a faculty/student relationship at UMW before working together at Reclaim—though I am not sure entirely what that means because I was never much of a Faculty member with a capital “F.” Nonetheless, being able to spend time with Lauren exposing her to what Reclaim Hosting is as an ethos on the ground at Muhlenberg was absolutely invaluable, and she ruled! What’s more, it just further built on our trip to Portland earlier that month, I really feel like Reclaim is congealing in some very powerfully positive ways these days.

And because no post on the bava would be complete without an overt reference to ds106, the final session was brainstorming a visual mission statement for the Digital Learning Assistants. Tim Clarke had the inspired idea to use the 1 Story/ 4 Icons assignment to accomplish this.

I think the icons they came up with to frame the mission of what Muhlenberg is trying to accomplish through this project pretty much sums up this post beautifully. Digital empowerment across the community! It was truly a pleasure and an honor to spend two days on the ground at Muhlenberg helping them imagine their take on Domain of One’s Own, but I also felt a bit vestigial. I’ve yet to see a campus that has aligned all the pieces so strategically from the get-go to ensure their initiative works. I remain in awe, and they really do set the bar high when it comes to expectations for my next campus visit.


*One of the questions I get asked fairly often is to whom should a group of instructional technologists/designers/media folks report? And that usually boils down to the CIO or the Provost. Abstractly you can make an argument for either, but practically it all depends who is currently in each role. More often than not, sustaining an edtech group is about allies and folks with a longer vision, and that has more to do with people than academic titles.

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Goodspell: Gospel Radio for the #ds106 Generation

Credit "Ask not what you can do for #ds106 ..." by Alan Levine

Credit “Ask not what you can do for #ds106 …” poster by Alan Levine

This past Sunday I was honored to be a guest on the very last episode of Mariana Funes and John Johnston‘s podcast the ds106 Goodspell. They have been talking in detail about 106 bullet points of ds106 that Mariana posted back in December 2013, and they have finally come to the final bullet point, 107, which was actually a comment I left on that post 3 years ago, back when I commented and made sense 🙂

Therein lies point 107 for your list: letting go. ds106 means letting it all happen with whomever wants to make it their own for whatever reason. For it to be truly great, it must contain multitudes and serve the one-off assignment, the community, as well as the random search on Google equally. ds106 is the web, just with fewer trolls 🙂

Always bizarre to re-read something you don’t remember thinking/writing, especially when you like it. Our far-ranging discussion talks about everything from the early days of ds106 to ds106 as community to ds106 as infrastructure to ds106 as socks, and then some. I love talking about ds106, and this hour and 20 minutes was no different. A special treat was talking to the other guest Ron “Daily Create extraordinaire” Leunissen, who, along with Sandy Brown Jensen, has done over 400 Daily Creates, which is truly impressive. I want to think John and Mariana for having me on their final show, but even more all they have done for the #ds106 community at large. They are two brilliant stars in the communal constellation that was, is, and always will be ds106. #4life

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Picturing Italy

I think I vaguely remember something about this technology called blogging where you share the inane things of your life. I might have even done it once upon a time….

I’m back, relatively guilt free, from a month long mix of work and personal travel to the U.S. and Bologna, Italy.  I only blogged twice for all of October thus far, but I enjoyed the hell out of it. I do have some catching up to do, and that means, at least for me, clearing the dust off the keyboard and just clicking publish. To prime the pump, I did want to share a small moment that made me happy. While traveling I noticed that the Italy Daily Pics Twitter account—a relatively new account that highlights gorgeous places in Italy—tweeted one of the pictures I took in Verona.

It’s a view from one of the Arena’s windows, and I think I took it almost a year ago when visiting the site with Shannon Hauser. It was cool to see one of the innumerable images I have posted of Italy over the last year retweeted by this account. And I was reminded of it this morning by today’s Daily Pic:

One of the things about Italy is there are so many beautiful cities to see that folks often settle on the big three of Rome, Florence, and Venice. All gorgeous, no doubt, but I have enjoyed the lesser known attractions like Verona, Bologna, Ravenna, Trento, and Trieste (and that’s just Northern Italy!) even more this past year. I guess it is a good problem for a country to have, so many riches in terms of natural, architectural, and artistic beauty that it’s hard to go wrong no matter where you end up.

I have said this before, but I will repeat it. Hands down the best part of finally getting a phone has been the camera, which is why the iPhone 7’s new insane camera is so attractive (Timmmmyboy will be making me jealous shortly!). I love taking photos in general, and given my current surrounding it is even more fun. That said, I am not so good about lugging a bulky camera around, so to think the camera in my pocket could almost be DSLR quality is enticing to say the least. Who know, I might even get another image featured on the worldwideweb one day!

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Reclaiming Portland

It’s been a whirlwind of a trip since I ventured back to the US two weeks ago. I have neglected the bava, and few things pain me more. But that was then, this is now.

2016-10-01-10-17-57

The trip started in Portland, Oregon, one of my favorite city’s in the U.S., and if we ever move back to the U.S. the Rose City may be atop the the list of destinations. I could see setting up Reclaim Hosting’s storefront there.

meta

Plus, the idea of living in a place where marijuana is completely decriminalized is very, very attractive to me. Before the Reclaim Hosting team met up in Portland on Sunday, I stayed with my old friends Zach and Aimee who were awesome in every way. We have a long history together between grad school in NYC, edtech, and just about everything good in my life. So catching up with them is always a real joy.

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I have found as I get older than nothing makes me happier than seeing old friends who are happy. And that was how I started my trip, which was awesome!

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From there I crossed the bridge to downtown Portland for an awesome five days with Tim and Lauren. This is the first time the Reclaim trio all got together since Lauren went full-time, and I have to say it was a perfect place for us to do some bonding. Portland is a really good reminder that my invention of Hipsterism in LA during the early 90s is still going strong.

Portland's Ace Hotel Lobby pano

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Photo Booth detail from Ace Hotel lobby

We stayed at the Ace Hotel, which has an old gold photo booth in it’s gorgeous lobby (click pano above for a distorted sense), so we had to indulge.

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A shacked up with Mr. Reclaim Hosting himself, and let there me no question I was that somebody!

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Tim answering tickets with his phone

It was also amazing to spend time with Lauren. As I mentioned earlier, this is the very first trip we all took together as a company, and I had no idea how important it was.

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Lauren digging Ace Hotel’s Lobby

I think we needed the time together to work on tickets, discuss issues, make plans, and dream of the future. Don’t get me wrong, we do all this remotely, but the proximity was very nice. For example, when the DNS for one of our servers had issues, it was nice to be working side-by-side with Lauren and Tim making sure we had all bases covered, were notifying the community, updating the status page, and figuring out just what was wrong. It felt good.

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Looking over Mike Caulfield’s shoulder to try and capture that blogging magic

Our first night we caught up with the great Mike Caulfield for dinner and a chat. Mike is Reclaim Hosting’s original benefactor, and despite him calling me a Libertarian Pirate, I’m still a big fan! It was a blast hanging out at Dinerant talking edtech, Portland and everything else. My favorite take away from the evening was his comment on the homeless population in Portland, he said something to the effect “You can’t call it urban camping and pretend it’s all fixed.” I think there was something about orange bikes in there too. I couldn’t stop thinking about that line while walking past homeless shanty after homeless shanty around downtown Portland. It was crazy.

2016-10-04-09-36-55The excuse we used to go to Portland was the cPanel conference. It was my very non-edtech/non-academic conference in the US ever? I’m not sure ever, but certainly in my memory. Couple of observations: the keynote and presentation bar is set pretty low. Academic and edtech conferences can be, and often are, annoying, but the level of thought and expertise that goes into the presentations was light years beyond this one. The keynote from the co-founder of Black Knight hosting Michele Neylon was about as bad as it gets. There was not a point to be made, and he made it clear that his company was pandering to the porn industry because it pays. Bizarre, and at times just downright uncomfortable. It was apparent that folks weren’t really there for the sessions, they were there for the open bar at noon and networking.

That said, I did catch two good sessions, both run by cPanel folks.  Jason Kiniry’s “Creating Custom External Authentication Modules” showed you how to create single sign-on for cPanel with other services like Google+, LinkedIN, etc. Tim has already done this for stateu.org, but it was nice to be in a session where you got taken through the process and it was explained for you in detail. The other was Dustin Scherer’s “Dashboard: The Secret to an Improved User Experience.” This session took you through all the improvements cPanel has made to the dashboard, and there have been many with Paper Lantern. But it also turned into a great back and forth about what we, as cPanel users and customers, would like to see. Awesome. We got to give feedback that they wanted, and it made us feel connected to a piece of software we use to drive much of Reclaim Hosting. That was the last session we attended, so that it ended strong.

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1980s arcade and bar Ground Kontrol

One of the greatest things about Portland all told is Ground Kontrol, a 1980s bar and arcade that is truly a time machine for an arcade rat like myself. I just broke 100K on Pacman, which made me very happy.

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And Tim and Lauren got a taste of how awesome it was to be a child of the 70s 🙂

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A noirish Lauren playing Centipede

We also spent some time in Portland’s Everyday Music. The OG record store and video rental aesthetic appeals to us, and we have had fun with it for the Reclaim Aesthetic—so spending time in the store was fun.

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Lauren also suggested we try and capture bands that we have (or will) name servers after. What a great idea.

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And visions of servers to come?

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I also found some traces of that historical artifact ds106, I had no idea it used to be a band called Sonic Youth? The things you learn by getting off the internet 🙂

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I even made a vinyl and laserdisc score that was region specific:

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The trip was a total blast, and the best parts of it were hanging out with Lauren and Tim exploring Portland. If you look hard enough you can see Powell’s Books and Sizzle Pie from our hotel room window, and we indulged in both!

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Can you find Powell’s Bookstore and Sizzle Pie?

We also were right around the corner from the office of the software company Panic, which makes the FTP software I have used for years Transmit (amongst many other things). And in classic Timmmmyboy fashion, as we were walking by he not only pointed its presence out, but proceeded to explain that there is an app online that allows you to change the colors of the company’s sign. And a video was born:

We saw 80s cover bands, ate really, really well, and sang karaoke all night long (but what happens in karaoke stays in karaoke). It was an awesome trip for all these reasons and more, but more than anything it demonstrated that we are building energy and momentum around this crazy idea we had over 3 years ago now, and it is starting to flower is some really beautiful ways, and that is probably a really good segue way to my next post about our recent trip to Muhlenberg College, but until then…stay weird awesome Portland and Reclaim.

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