Emballée par le déballage

Le Web n’en a que pour un certain appareil téléphonique ces jours-ci et les billets sur le sujet s’accumulent dans mon lecteur de fils RSS. Oui il est beau, oui il fait bien les choses, oui c’est dommage qu’il ne soit pas encore arrivé au Canada, etc, etc, etc.

Pour faire changement et parce qu’il y bien d’autres jolies choses qui viennent dans de jolies boîtes, j’ai décidé de faire ma propre version de la découverte d’un nouveau produit, dans la plus pure tradition des unboxing de produits Apple.

Et parce que je préfère le chocolat aux pommes, bon.

C’est par ici le diaporama!

(Note: produit test acheté chez Petits Gâteaux, à Montréal.)

24 heures Flickr Montréal

24 heures Flickr Montréal from Martine on Vimeo

Beaucoup de monde et beaucoup, beaucoup d’appareils-photos à la soirée organisée par Flickr et Yahoo Québec hier soir à la SAT sur St-Laurent. Juste pour faire bande à part, j’ai décidé de filmer au lieu de prendre des photos.

L’événement était organisé dans le cadre d’une tournée de Flickr dans quatre villes dont Berlin, Paris, Londres et Montréal, pour célébrer les 24 heures de Flickr et la disponibilité du service en plusieurs langues.

Tag sur Flickr: 24heuresflickrmontreal
ou
24hoursflickrmontreal

Women and online/tech communities

Two bloggers I read regularly (Patrick and Darren) pointed to two interesting blog post/article about women, technology and online communities. They are both written by women and represent two different point of views. I found myself agreeing with both of them at different times.

1. Let’s All Evolve Past This: The Barriers Women Face in Tech Communities, by Gloria JW.

Destructive criticism is the best way to keep a site predominantly male. It implies that there is no concern about whether a person can learn from a response or not, or whether they would find offense. It is an outward display of ego, a territorial “pissing rite” in which most women do not and will not participate.

That being said, there are many men who flock to women-only groups for the same reasons as women. They do not want to be subjected to the predominantly male style of communication where there is no sense of community, or even just simple accountability. They grow tired of the “pissing rite”, the absurd declarations of false boundaries, the outward display of insecurity through harsh criticism, implicit claims of “my way, my expertise, my right, never yours”, and poor display of ego. This mode of communication is an unproductive waste of time, and many men realize this as well.

2. The insidious danger of danger, by Tara Hunt.

I’ve received endless emails from women who mention the incident (re: Kathy Sierra), telling me that they are ‘more careful’ of how much they participate in online discussions. They blog less. They make their twitter’s private, their flickr photos ‘friends only’ and they limit their openness in the variety of social networks out there.

And then we wonder where the women are?

Man, it sounds as if they are cowering in the shadows of the most empowering medium I’ve ever encountered! But where do you think those “invincible young guys” get all of their attention? Cowering? Hiding? No. Blogging. Forums. Being open. Out there. In their posted work on the social networks.