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PCPGH4 Session Appetizer: Sports Blogger Discussion Panel September 30, 2009

Posted by Anthony Closkey in Boxes.
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This is part of a short series of posts introducing you to Podcamp Pittsburgh 4.

The Pensblog, covering Penguins hockey, is one of the more incredible online communities in Pittsburgh. Its authors and fans are passionate, irreverent, often rude, and yet remarkably sincere. I just had to indulge and invite their Derek Rocco to participate in a panel discussion about sports blogging.

Sports blogging is pretty big in Pittsburgh, but to our knowledge no one here has put together a panel before. Sport blogs introduce a lot of people to blogging and podcasting, including fans and sports journalists. They also collaborate well.

Mike Woycheck, co-founder of Pittsburgh Bloggers, will moderate a panel of Jim Shireman of Sportsocracy, GoonSquadSarah of Draft Day Suit, and Carla Swank.

UPDATE: Chas from PittBlather will be on the panel, too, ambitiously fitting PCPGH4 in minutes before the football team plays Saturday afternoon. He claims PSAMP is in, but I had not heard confirmation of such rumors. You’ll just have to go and see for yourself.

PCPGH4 Session Appetizer: Nonprofit Discussion Panel September 29, 2009

Posted by Anthony Closkey in Boxes.
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This is part of a short series of posts introducing you to Podcamp Pittsburgh 4.

My sister Cynthia and I joined Pittsburgh Social Venture Partners (@PSVP) this year to learn about philanthropy and the nonprofit community in Pittsburgh. I invited some of my new friends to Podcamp to discuss the opportunities unique to nonprofit organizations and the challenges of investing their limited resouces.

The panel will include:

Pittsburgh TweetUp HeatUp! January 14, 2009

Posted by Jennie Roth in Boxes, Bricks.
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Earlier this winter season, my friends in Vancouver held a TweetUp HeatUp to benefit the local homeless population.  After seeing the success they had with their event, I figured it would be something the large Pittsburgh Social Media crowd could easily accomplish as well.

After a few Tweets, people were very interested and we’ve got it set in stone.

Monday, January 26, 2008
7:00 p.m.
Harris Grill

 

Please bring cold weather items for men of all ages to donate to the East Liberty Presbyterian Church Men’s Shelter.

After enjoying some snacks and drinks at the Harris Grill, a few of us will deliver the items to the Church.

Please see the Pittsburgh TweetUp Group for more info.  I’d like to be able to provide the Harris Grill an approximate number of people so we can reserve a meet up area.

If you are unable to make it and would still like to donate, please give your items to someone who will be attending the TweetUp!

If you’re in Butler, email Anthony to take your donations or to plan a ride. [acloskey  at  gmail dot com]

We drank cheap plastic wine out of cheap plastic glasses under mesopic light. November 15, 2008

Posted by Anthony Closkey in Boxes.
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The Mattress Factory invited bloggers and anyone else interested in social media to meet-up in conjunction with the opening of their latest 1414 Gallery exhibit PREDRVIE: After Technology. Anyone pre-registering was admitted free to the art, nice food, and for a while, beer and wine.

PREDRIVE: After Technology features new works by six international artists including Takeshi Murata, Brody Condon, Paper Rad, Gretchen Skogerson, and Antoine Catala that interrogate the “aesthetics of immediacy” produced by these technologies in contemporary art. The exhibition, guest-curated by Melissa Ragona, explores themes of digital effects and dysfunctions, readymade cyber-kitsch, software aesthetics, and the performativity of digital environments in real space.

First, the Mattress Factory is really tops in promotions. In 1999, as an architecture student, I fell in love with the place. During one visit I even signed up as a donor to impress a date. It didn’t last long. I haven’t donated in years, but they politely kept in touch with me. They’re one fine organization and I’m going to see what I can do.

I ended up taking three laps through the exhibit. One solo, one with my sister, and one with the Neills* which declined into hiding in a window away from the herd.

The highlight was sort of meeting a cute volunteer in a friendly hat. I stopped and asked what she was scribbling in her notebook. She told me the Gretchen Skogerson installation inspired some thinking about her own blacklight work. In this piece a curved wall in a windowless room is lit with changing levels of flourescent blacklight. We talked a little shop about low level light and spatial perception.**

Thank you Mattress Factory for your vision and generosity. I hope to step up my participation in Pittsburgh cultural activity.

Here’s Ballboy’s “Avant Garde Music” dovetailing with my experience. WARNING: This guy likes to introduce his song with a long story.

* Neither I nor any Neill really endorse John’s blog. Instead we suggest you visit John’s friend Evan’s blog Swan Fungus.

** Did a little Googling later if you’re intrigued. This “low but not quite dark lighting situation” is called Mesopic vision. “A combination of photopic vision and scotopic vision.” [All courtesy of Wikipedia] In Volume 8, Number 3, Article 14 of the Journal of Vision you’ll find the study “Motion processing at low light levels: Differential effects on the perception of specific motion types.” Finding:

That motion processing is affected by light level in dependence on the spatio-temporal characteristics of a specific motion type. Temporal pooling under rod-dominated vision primarily impairs detection of signals at high velocities and complex velocity discrimination. Deficits occur already at mesopic light levels and do not change when luminance decreases further. Furthermore, we suppose that co-activity of rods and cones as well as rod–cone interaction at mesopic light levels contribute to noisy velocity perception. In particular, the analysis of temporal dynamics, e.g., inherent to biological motion stimuli, seems to be vulnerable to interacting rod–cone vision. Since we manipulated light levels and did not control activity of photoreceptors directly, our conclusions have to remain preliminary. The effects of specific transmission mechanisms on motion perception could be clarified further by stimulating rods or cones selectively. Our results provide valuable clues to specific perceptual constraints at low light levels. They suggest that very early retinal signal processing can have complex effects on the perception of different motion types which is generally considered to rely on cortical areas.

Yeah, it’s a scorcher! From only skimming the article it looked to me that their test was a little similar to Gretchen Skogerson’s installation.