SXSW 2004
18th March 2004
SXSW 2004 was a blast: by far the geekiest weekend of my life. I was planning on writing a few updates from the conference but quickly discovered that laptops and socialising just don’t mix—there were just too many interesting people to talk to!
A special thanks has to go to Jeremy Dunck, who sorted me out with accomodation on his brother’s couch and gave me a lift up from Dallas to Austin. If he blogs half as smart as he talks his soon-to-be-launched weblog will be an absolute treat.
I attended a whole bunch of panels, and tried to sample a good range of topics. Surprisingly one of the most thought-provoking was Monetizing the Blogosphere, which I went along to purely to see if any fights would break out. It turned out to be a marketing pitch for Weblogs Inc, but their business plan and author package was impressive. Authors get the first $1,000 earned by their blog every month with the rest of the revenue split 50/50. The value proposition is that Weblogs Inc will actively seek advertisers and sponsorship deals—the kind of miserable task that most bloggers would run a mile from. Jason Calacanis added an element of fun to the proceedings by introducing a purple furry monkey as a “proxy” for rival blog promoter Nick Denton, who was unable (or unwilling) to attend the panel.
I hope to write some more about SxSW in the next few days but I’ve come back to a literal mountain of work (it’s NCAA tournament week) so I’ll be pretty busy for a while.
More recent articles
- Qwen2.5-Coder-32B is an LLM that can code well that runs on my Mac - 12th November 2024
- Visualizing local election results with Datasette, Observable and MapLibre GL - 9th November 2024
- Project: VERDAD - tracking misinformation in radio broadcasts using Gemini 1.5 - 7th November 2024