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Showing posts with label community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Diversity – or why I moved from New York to Hong Kong to create SML Universe

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There is a saying that ”every 7 years is a cycle”. I am not religious – but I did spend time studying philosophies from different religions and schools of thoughts – and interestingly the number 7 as an indicator for cycles kept coming up. This is interesting to me. Whether you believe in such numerology or not, I recognize that today, on my 36th birthday, was a moment of rebirth within my fifth cycle, for a decision which took me a year to finalize: my move from New York to Hong Kong after working and living for all of my adult life in America.

Those who know me for long know that I have traditionally been very active in social media – be it on Flickr, Twitter, Facebook, SoundCloud, Tumblr, FriendFeed, YouTube, Vimeo – basically as someone I met on these social network said, I am everywhere. But if you look at the year before July 2012, I could not be found on the internet. I tweeted a couple of times mostly as an ambient device to let people (mostly my family) know that I was not dead, but that's about it. I did this because I wanted to not have any outside influence on my decision. I wanted to make sure that it makes the most sense to me. But to tell you why I made such a drastic decision, I have to tell you a little bit of myself.

As a gay man growing up in Hong Kong, I remember crying every single day after school in private – there was not a single day that I was not bullied. When I was accepted to Yale, I got excited because I thought that if Yale truly lived up to the popular claim of “one in four and maybe more” then I should be ok. It turns out that although Gayalies was a nice support group, my being Chinese was not that awesome within the predominantly WASP presence. I was invited to some Asian American functions but because I was gay, I did not feel welcome either. As an art major with close to none art background, I was not much of an item. Being a programmer almost automatically labeled me as a non-artist. When I took an interaction design class at the MFA program, I focus on making the programs work and not how pretty they are – it was completely dissed. I also recalled telling my graphic design professors that I had a great time the summer after my sophomore year (1997) working at Agency.com and they just gave me a disapproving look and questioned why I would want to do web design which was (and probably still is) ‘99% garbage’ anyway. Even after I started working for an interactive agency, since I prefer PC (at the time) over Mac (seriously OS9 is crap, sorry), I don't really fit in. The IT department thought of me as a trouble maker and annoyed their software licensing process. And if you think that coming out to your parents is difficult (I did that when I was 14), try coming out as a PC user at an AIGA event. I also had a lot of trouble explaining what is that I do – I use programming as part of my prototyping process to design interaction – which I felt and do still feel is the only way you can design interaction – to experience what you design as you refine over time. Storyboards just don't cut it. People like to place me as either category, but I am neither and I am both. It was very frustrating. I am thankful that over time I have met some people who became mentors to me because they understand me, but they are also far and few between. As a minority in a minority in a minority, I have never felt my voice heard. I struggled my entire life but I also accepted that reality that I would simply be a loner. I am ok with that.

Fast forward to the summer of 2007, I was invited to cover the gay pride parade for a company. Since I was already there, I also took the opportunity to photograph everyone else in the event. It was a very emotional experience for me. Before then I had long disregarded the gay pride as a complete marketing machine. But after that day, I truly understood why so many gay men and women choose to march down sixth avenue every year – the joy of being accepted. On that sunny afternoon, the streets were packed. It was a city-wide party. People all over the tri-state area came to New York. They were cheering in ecstacy. Yes I know they were probably cheering for the hot guys and gals wearing close to nothing :) but it doesn't much matter. For the first time, I feel accepted. If you had not been accepted for who you are all your life, you would understand how it felt. I have never experienced that until then.

When I got home that night, I wrote a manifesto about life:

Life (Manifesto) / 2007.07.07-2012.09.25 / SML

Later, I created a Flickr group called Life Celebrates Diversity (Twitter) so people who do not feel heard can have a voice. As I started doing more photojournalism and started blogging about art, I suddenly recognized that there are a lot of artists around who do not have much media exposure because they are simply don't have the know-how to gain the social media klout. I have long been interested in network theories, and I enjoy using social networks and for a large degree Google as a testbed for network theory experiments, so I created SML Fine Art (Twitter), a Flickr group with the mission to preserve the diversity of art – be them small, medium or large.

All of my Flickr groups have a common objective and guiding principal: it sets no limits – no one is there to ‘curate’ the content. Life doesn't pose a limit on us, so who am I to set a limit on others? Subsequently I have created many others: SML Graphic Design (Twitter), SML Viz (Twitter), etc – all areas where I am interested in. I created them so it accepts everyone. It was also a really great way for me to notice works of interest and subsequently gave me the opportunity to meet them in person.

Since I belong to a ton of visual social networks anyway, I am more than happy to post things of interest to FFFFound, which get tweeted, and auto-post to Tumblr and basically let things sip inside the social net – a process which a friend called the ‘incestuous reality of any social network’. My hope is that through these networks the work which I believe to be important would at least gain a little bit of much deserved voice. This is what my passion lies: to do what I can to give a voice to the little guys – those whose voice were not heard mostly out of bigotry. I never had a voice when I was younger, and I wish for others that they could have the opportunity to be accepted.

I wanted to do this full time for a long time, but I could not while I was in New York. As an ’alien’ in America, I was bound by US law to work full time at a company. As such I joined a couple of startups whose philosophies appear to be in line with mine. Unfortunately, as investments come in and when revenue matters, so did their business plan. They were wonderful folks, but I cannot really work full time at a job which pays me no salary and are not inline with my philosophy. I am grateful and thankful for the experience – I have learned a lot, but I thought that it was time that I moved on and do my own thing. Having my own company allows me to do that. It doesn't really pay much right now. Starting from scratch is difficult. But you cannot measure value with a dollar sign. I have done a lot of freelance in the past in New York for lots of money but it never buys me happiness. I now only work on things which I believe to be meaningful regardless of pay. I am thankful for the support of my family to allow me the luxury to realize my dream. Conventional wisdom suggests that doing everything for free generates nothing in return, but my experience tells me that it is far from the truth. There are many things which could not be bought and those are most valuable. Even if we must focus on money, my experience with licensing everything for on my Flickr stream for free via Creative Commons suggests otherwise. It is a bit hard to believe but I actually made money from my CC content because people who had the budget for photography for their projects ended up giving me credits and send me cheques for photo placement. It's crazy. Those who couldn't afford to pay will never be able to pay anyway so what does it matter?

In any case, I still do some freelance projects on the side if it's meaningful to me. Money is not a measure of value for me. I prefer bartering – which before the concept of money was invented was how people do business anyway. I also hope to spend half of my time in the next 10 years documenting the change of China through photography as showing Chinese culture in a positive light is important to me. I may not agree with everything that the Chinese government is doing, but as a Chinese, I am proud of my culture. Which is exactly why I don't have an English name. You need not agree with the politics, but the people, the culture and the arts are really spectacular. I also hope to meet the local artists in my journey, as I have seen some really interesting things happening in contemporary art in China.

So there you have it. I am in Hong Kong now because after connecting all the dots of what I did in my life, I think that I have found out what I love to do and I want to do exactly that – which interestingly was the same conclusion that Steve Jobs came to while he was still alive.

Update: 2012-10-15

If you wish to learn more about how Creative Commons indirectly helped me gain influence on the social web, check out this article recently written about me where a photograph which almost got deleted from my camera ended up being the most popular photo on my Flickr stream and in turn became synonymous with Twitter when it comes to journalism.

Storyful tips and tools: How Creative Commons helps creators and journalists

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Human Calendar / Inspirations Are Everywhere

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Human Calendar = Human + Calendar / 2007-11-26 / SML Screenshots (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

The Human Calendar™ is a calendar created by Craig Giffen where portraits of everyday people and puts them into a calendar, where everyone is looking at the current date.

In addition to the main calendar, there are also portable versions, i.e. widgets for Google Homepage, your blogs, MySpace, etc. Very neat. Here's the blog widget. I will look forward to seeing it change for tomorrow:

"

SML Thank You
I found this on the Facebook posted items from Tom Ajello (SML Wiki). Thanks!

Related SML Universe
+ Inspirations Are Everywhere

SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

365 Special Days = Celebration of Life and Humanity

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Fernando Luis Lara is a brazillian artist living and working in the US. He draws the 365 days of the year based on stories submitted by people around the world. Each day will only be drawn once. For $182.50 USD, you get an original drawing (9 x 12 inches = 23 x 31 cm) by mail, and your story and drawing will also be shown on the site. The idea is that over time the site will become a collection of special days around the world, thus serving as a reminder of how special each and every day can be.

It's a genius marketing idea for an artist, and it utilizes the mechanisms of the collaborative theme seen today in the rise of Web 2.0. Very inspiring. Check it out!

365specialdays.com

365 special days | 365specialdays.com (by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML)

Related SML Universe
+ Inspirations Are Everywhere
+ SML Fine Art
+ SML Ideas


SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Mojiti = UGC on UGC

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Mojiti allows users personalize any videos online with annotation in text, audio, or even video on top of the original video!

Here's a demo of it in action (Mojiti: Sony Bravia)



It has certainly taken user-generated content to the next level--it's UGC on top of UGC. Pretty cool!

Related
Mashable: Mojiti Annotates Clips from YouTube, Revver, Google Video
Read / Write Web: Mojiti - China's YouTube 2.0 Adds Annotation To Mix

Looking at the published dates of these articles, it looks like that my radar is not very tuned at the moment but it's better than not knowing about it at all.

Here's a pretty funny spoof video of Microsoft Surface using Mojiti:


SML Copyright Notice


©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Gender Behavior Differences on Social Networks / Advertising Age

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Advertising Age recently did its annual survey on college students and found that there is a significant split in social-networking activities between sexes.

Gender behavior split on social networks
Stylistic edits are mine

  • Facebook ranked as the most popular website among the 18-to-24 set
  • Social networking was twice as popular with young women as young men
  • MySpace, which was No. 1 last year, ranked No. 2 with females but dropped out of the top five for young men
  • That means marketers using social-networking sites to target young people are reaching far more females than males
  • Men are far more likely to use social-networking sites for business purposes such as LinkedIn
Male college students + UGC / Community
  • While their tech savvy showed, particualrly among men who ranked Digg and Engadget among their top 10 websites, they didn't make the leap to consumer-generated media.
  • Only 8% said they had uploaded videos to YouTube
  • 64% don't make videos at all
  • 14% don't share them with anyone
  • 75% surf social-networking sites
  • 71% read news online
  • Only 14% write blogs

Popularity Contest
College students' favorite brands



Advertising Age: 2007-10-04: Apple, Target, Facebook Tops for College Students
Read full article online

SML Copyright Notice


©2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Gay Community + Stephen Baker + Jennifer Crowe + Hillary Savage + Celeste Bryant / SML Thank You

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  • I would like to thank my friends from the gay community who provided much inspiration and support while I worked on this project in 2006.

  • I would like to thank Stephen Baker of Red Antenna for collaborating with me on this project. Besides being the best ActionScript 2.0 - compliant Flash developer I have been able to find in New York City, his expertise in visual and interaction design have brought tremendous value to the project.

  • I would like to thank Jennifer Crowe who spent days and nights being our tagging engine.

  • I would like to thank Hillary Savage who provided me with a lot of courage and support during my stressful times working on this baby.

  • I would like to thank Celeste Bryant (LinkedIn) for submitting the project for awards consideration.

Related SML


SML Copyright Notice
©2007 See-ming Lee / SML Thank You / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Monday, September 17, 2007

All About the Groove - Madison Park / 2006 / SML Remix Music

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All About the Groove - Madison Park - 2006 - SML Remix Music
SML.MP.0.8.41.M2.128.44
Copyright 2006 See-ming Lee / Madison Park. All rights reserved.

My friend Steven Hall (SML Del.icio.us: Steven Hall) once said to me that it was very hard to make instrumental music sound good. I used to take vocal lessons when I was a teenager, but I am a counter-tenor. Do you really want to hear me sing? I can't sing these days anyway—my voice has been severely damaged after my prolonged nicotine intake.


In 2006, on my path to writing better dance tracks, I discovered that you can get pristine vocal tracks from DJ contests. I signed up for my an ACIDplanet account and was on my first path of remixing.


A few things that I discovered along the way:

  1. It is much easier to get your tracks listened to—and thus discovered—when you're in a remix contest.
  2. You learn a whole lot by being inside a universe of producers all working from the same materials.
  3. You get a whole lot better from the constructive criticisms you received from musicians across the globe.
  4. By listening to other people's tracks, you also discover new ways of turning your samples into all the crazy machines
  5. You don't have to take my word for it. Go listen to the other contest entries as well as the original track and you shall see that creativity is oozing everywhere, waiting to be discovered.

I have mixed about 10+ tracks since then. Until I have time to convert them all to MP3 and unload onto IMEEM, you can hear my music hosted on ACIDplanet. I have two identities: SML and Symphonic Electronica.


Alternatively, in typical SML fashion, here are my tiny URLs to related SML content in the SML Universe: smlMusic.com and smlRemixMusic.com


Cheers / SML


SML Copyright Notice


Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee 李思明 SML / SML Pro Blog / SML Universe. All rights reserved.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Gay Pride New York 2007

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Happiness = Pride


June 22 - 24, 2007 is officially the happiest weekend I have had in my entire life. I spent the weekend taking photographs of the most uniquely talented and creative bunch of people I have ever been with and in turn made many wonderful friends along the way.I thank you all for demonstrating the diversity and pleasure of life to me.


I took 1000+ photos over that weekend. My Gay Pride New York 2007 (Flickr Collection) consists of the following Flickr sets:


200 Highlights / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




200 Most interesting / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Annual Faerie + Church Ladies for Choice Drag March / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Coney Island Mermaid Parade 2007 / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Folsom Street East 2007 / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Gay Pride Parade New York 2007 / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Humanity / Portraits / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Radical Faeries Drum Ritual / Gay Pride New York 2007 / SML
Thumbnails / Detail / Slideshow




Here are 200 highlights (my favorites) from the complete collection:




I haven't been able to jot down every single name and email addresses. Please feel free to identify yourself or your friends in the comment area of the photograph.


Share the Gay Pride New York 2007 Collection


Digg | del.icio.us | Send to a friend


SML Flickr Groups


On July 7th, 2007, I finished processing all the photographs.


I was immensely touched by the humanity, diversity and the spirit of life from my experience, and I wrote a manifesto about the celebration of life. On the same day, I started the following Flickr groups to honor the men and women who have inspired and continue to provide support to me in the past, present and future:


Homo Magi is a term to describe a sub-race of magic-using humans in the DC Universe. The Homo Magi evolved in a parallel but separate line, alongside Homo Sapiens. Homo Magi and Metahumans account for most of the superhuman abilities in the DC Universe. (Wikipedia: Homo Magi)




Life Celebrates Diversity = all age + all attires + all builds + all classes + all colors + all cultures + all education levels + all flavors + all genders + all hair styles + all income levels + all interests + all lifestyles + all locations + all philosophy + all professions + all physiques + all races + all religions + all roles + all sexual tastes = all walks of life (Wikipedia: Diversity)




Meta Human is a term to describe superhumans in the DC Universe. It is roughly synonymous with both mutant and mutate (in the Marvel Universe) and posthuman in the Wildstorm and Ultimate Marvel Universes. Use of the term in reference to superheroes was coined in 1986 by author George R. R. Martin, first in the Superworld role playing system, and then later in his Wild Cards series of novels. (Wikipedia: Metahuman)




Meta Men = Men / Meta Humans




Meta Women = Women / Meta Humans




I invite you to join and post your photographs.


Content Syndication


You may syndicate this content for non-commercial purposes as long as you attribute credits to me. Commercial usage will be considered on a case-by-case basis.


Model Credits


If you are the model of the photograph, please email me at seeminglee+gaypridenewyork2007@gmail.com so I can give you proper credits.


Copyright Notice


Copyright 2007 See-ming Lee. All rights reserved.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

dux07 = conference on designing for user experience

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AIGA is holding a conference on user experience design called dux07.


Besides being an interesting event, the site is also very well-designed. Sweet typography. I also like how when you rollover the logo the type changes. True, it's not a new idea, but it's rarely done well. Check it out!


From the AIGA Communique newsletter dated 2007-08-16


DUX07: Conference on Designing for User eXperience: Early registration deadline is September 5
Chicago
November 5–7


Social media and networks are creating new design challenges. How do we inspire and enable people to contribute, create, personalize and share experiences? How are design roles changing in the face of this shifting landscape?


This conference is the premiere global forum dedicated to the exchange of radical new user experience strategies, providing exclusive insight and discussion about new design methods, and offering access to research and design practitioners with a visionary perspective on the future of the profession. Discuss current issues with other designers and strive to define your own role in shaping user experience.


DUX07 is presented by AIGA, the professional association for design, the Association for Computing Machinery’s (ACM), SIGGRAPH and SIGCHI. Register by Wednesday, September 5 for the best rates! For more information, visit dux2007.com