Take A Look at ‘The Flaw’

I know a lot of you would really like to understand how the economic meltdown happened. Well, OK some of you, as we’re not all econogeeks like yours truly. It’s kind of hard to wrap your mind around everything that happened.

May I then recommend The Flaw which is available at Netflix? Weirdly it’s tag “what happens when the rich get richer” doesn’t really sum up the film’s scope, but I suppose it sells well.

It’s an interview-based documentary on the economic meltdown of 2008, told via interviewing people in the middle of it, analyzing it, and involved in it. Stringing together these interviews it creates a smart narrative – and does so without a lot of doomsaying and drama. It’s an oddly human take on a horrible occurrence, which is one of its strengths.

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AODSF 2012: Convention Report And Speculation

Just finished up my latest visit to AODSF, a con in San Francisco I’ve been doing events at for awhile, and wanted to give my latest report.

Sadly I didn’t get to to do much as my day and life was pretty busy.  Though I did note I was up to my armpits in Homestuck characters.  Not literally.  Much.

The convention was as usual quite fun.  It’s a tight, focused affair that runs in a hotel next to Japantown San Francisco – which cleverly means the con basically triples it’s size.  It’s friendly, crowded, and pretty active.  This year was no different, and as usual, it was a lot of fun – the convention runs smoothly.

In fact it’s an odd convention to review as it’s consistently high quality.  However there’s a trend I’d like to note . . . so let’s get on with that . . .

Anyway, I ran three events there, two progeek, two for fun – and what went on was pretty interesting to observe.

Fanart And Careers:  Based on my Focused Fandom book, this was a panel on my findings about, you guessed it, fan art and careers.  Attendance was a little higher than I expected, and the amount of professional interest was definitely higher.  More on this later.

Fan To Pro: The panel I always do – this one was even more packed and a lot of people were sharing stories and participating.  The stronger attendance was pleasing of course, but as noted, I think there’s a trend . .

Crossover Mania: This is my gameshow of creative crossover creation.  Not professional, and in fact by the end pretty damn unprofessional, but that’s not the point.  Also the phrase “Timey-Wimey Scooby-Doobie” was used.

So what’s the trend I’d been noting all along?  Basically that AODSF in particular seems to be getting more and more of a “professional” orientation in its events, because I certainly wasn’t alone with my panels.  There were other panels on similar subjects, and interest was high.

Lately, the last few years, I think cons and fandom have become more “progeeky” over time.  Things that I once said that were unusual, about how hobbies can affect careers, are now normal and mainstream.  Maybe it’s the economy, the internet, culture changes, but hobby-merged-with-job is a lot more normal in the geekosphere.

This pleases me greatly of course, but at AODSF it’s the first time I’d really felt it viscerally.  I’ve seen them take a lead on organizational techniques and base-broadening, so it fits . . .

I’m quite pleased with that . . .  and it just means I have more to do . . .

– Steven Savage

Steven Savage is a Geek 2.0 writer, speaker, blogger, and job coach.  He blogs on careers at http://www.fantopro.com/, nerd and geek culture at http://www.nerdcaliber.com/, and does a site of creative tools at http://www.seventhsanctum.com/. He can be reached at https://www.stevensavage.com/.

Review: The $100 Startup

Review: The $100 Startup: Reinvent the Way You Make a Living, Do What You Love, and Create a New Future by Chris Guillebeau

ISBN-10: 0307951529
ISBN-13: 978-0307951526

PROS:

  • Gives simple advice on doing your own startup.
  • Provides many useful examples.
  • A focus on action.
  • Admits up front your “dream” may not be what you’ll actually end up doing.

CONS:

  • Doesn’t cover everything you’d need, and though it admits it, it’s not complete.
  • Targeted at a pretty sophisticated audience – which might not be you initially.

SUMMARY: A good book to read when you want to found your own startup, and good to give you a kick to get going.  Worth buying and rereading if you’re serious.

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