This page simply combines content from separate sections of IMR — the journal, the weblog, the moblog, the videoblog, and the reviews — and is generated primarily to provide combined RSS and Atom feeds (see right) for users of news aggregators. (My podcast and photo gallery are not included.) If you've arrived here by accident, I recommend you restart your browsing one level up. Mahalo!

August 04, 2007

IMR: Extras: HawaiiVog: Bon Dance by Flip Video

Scenes from the annual Obon ceremony and bon dance at Waipahu Soto Zen Taiyoji, including a performance by a local taiko troupe. This video is a test of the Flip Video camera out of Pure Digital. It's a cheap ($130), simple (four buttons), basic digital video camera designed for "the YouTube generation." It records up to an hour of MPEG-4 AVI video on its built-in memory and transfers to our computer via a built-in USB plug. It doesn't get much easier than this!

The video files don't work "out of the box" on Mac computers, at least not without a special codec (provided) or running QuickTime in Rosetta mode (for pre-Intel machines). But software is provided for basic viewing and transferring on OSX. Windows users get free "Movie Mix" software, a bare-bones utility to edit clips together, add some basic themes and a soundtrack, and export versions optimized for YouTube or Grouper (now Crackle). This movie was assembled using "Movie Mix" (running on XP under Parallels), which generated a WMV file. I then converted the WMV to an iPod-optimized H.264 encoded MPEG video for my videoblog.

Though obviously too limited for hardcore vloggers, the Flip Video is perfect for someone looking for an affordable and easy way to share movie clips online. It's also a great choice for kids who have the movie-making bug, but to whom you're not quite willing to entrust your more expensive gear.

You can also view this video at YouTube, Google Video, and BlipTV. The iPod-optimized MP4 file served up in the feed (MP4/60MB) is here. You can also download the movie in multiple sizes and formats here, courtesy the Internet Archive.

August 03, 2007

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt Lum, Todd Ogasawara, and Bill Spencer. Sent

from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt Lum, Todd Ogasawara, and Bill Spencer. Sent

from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt Lum, Todd Ogasawara, and Bill Spencer. Sent from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt Lum, Todd Ogasawara, and Bill Spencer. Sent from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt Lum, Todd Ogasawara, and Bill Spencer. Sent from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt Lum, Todd Ogasawara, and Bill Spencer. Sent from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: Lunch


Lunch downtown with Burt, Todd, and Phil. Sent from my iPhone.

August 02, 2007

IMR: Extras: HawaiiBlog: Capitalizing on Caturday

ThinkTech Hawaii
During yesterday's lifecasting talk at Hawaii Public Radio, I got to meet Eric Nakagawa, a guy who's impossibly close to one of the year's hottest Internet memes: lolcats.

Lolcats are those Photoshopped pictures of cats with ridiculous captions that are so pervasive, they've spread beyond inboxes and blogs and message boards to the mainstream media. Time, the Houston Chronicle, and dozens of other news outlets have attempted to explain the unexplainable.

Well, if you're a lolcat fan, your first stop on the web is very likely I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER. And if you're a lolcat fan in Hawaii, you can be proud that Nakagawa, one of the site's co-founders, lives right here in Honolulu.

Now, lolcats have been around for years. Hardcore fans will be quick to tell you that wacky captioned cat photos first surfaced at 4chan, an active and irreverent (to say the least) community of anime lovers. Every "Caturday" — ostensibly the day before Saturday, until it was decreed that every day was "Caturday" — members would post their cat-based creations, basically looking to one-up each other in humor or outrageousness.

It wasn't long before these pictures escaped into the wild, and they started popping up on other sites more and more frequently. Enter Nakagawa, who found a picture of a hungry looking feline bearing the caption, "I CAN HAZ CHEESBURGER?" He set up a website in January to showcase it, and the next few cat photos that caught his fancy. He dubbed them "lolcats." Only then did the meme inexplicably explode. Suddenly, Nakagawa's site became the hottest spot on the web.

Nakagawa was as surprised at the popularity as anyone else. He was profiled in Businessweek, which described him as "an accidental entrepreneur." He and his anonymous partner started selling ads, and investing in new features. It wasn't long before Nakagawa quit his full-time job in the bowels of a local health care firm and started wrangling lolcats full time.

Nakagawa knows that Internet memes are random and ephemeral, and that at the heart of "viral" and "buzz" is newness. He's already got big ideas for his next act. Now that I CAN HAS CHEEZBURGER has liberated him from the confines of corporate cubicles, the sky is the limit.

You can download and listen to Jay Fidell's interview with Nakagawa via the ThinkTech Hawaii website. Note that he also stuck around and joined the online-only aftershow discussion on lifecasting. For a transcript of Nakagawa's remarks, read on.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: ThinkTech Hawaii


At Hawaii Public Radio KIPO 89.3FM to discuss lifecasting on ThinkTech

Hawaii. Here's host Jay Fidell and news director Kayla Rosenfeld. Sent

from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: ThinkTech Hawaii


At Hawaii Public Radio KIPO 89.3FM to discuss lifecasting on ThinkTech

Hawaii. Also in the studio, Eric Nakagawa, cofounder of the immensely

popular lolcat repository, ICanHasCheezburger.com. Sent from my iPhone.

IMR: Extras: Moblog: ThinkTech Hawaii


At Hawaii Public Radio KIPO 89.3FM to discuss lifecasting on ThinkTech

Hawaii. Sent from my iPhone.

August 01, 2007

IMR: Extras: HawaiiBlog: Mixed Plate Special is Served


Today brings the official launch of Mixed Plate Special, a new online lifestyle magazine focused on Hawaii. A "virtual exhibition space" of sorts, Mixed Plate Special aims to chronicle modern Hawaii life in a variety of ways.

"We're really excited about bringing a fresh media outlet to the islands, one that adds new dimensions to storytelling — audio, video, flash — that we hope will enrich the reader experience," writes editor Catharine Lo in announcing the new site. "We want our stories to pop, and we want readers to become more engaged than they can in print."

And Lo knows print. She and fellow Mixed Plate Special contributor Ryan Senaga are longtime contributors to Honolulu Weekly.

Mixed Plate Special features four channels that will offer regular features: "People, " "Arts & Culture," "Food & Drink," and "Outside." Keeping things fresh is the "Daily Scoops," a blog that covers anything and everything in pupu-sized servings.

The site makes good use of the Joomla content management system, allowing Mixed Plate Special to showcase a variety of content with ease. And if you find yourself lost in exploring the many nooks and crannies, you can just subscribe to the site's main RSS feed and easily track the latest updates.

In addition to Lo and Senaga, other Mixed Plate Special contributors include 'Olelo veteran Angela Breene and Darin Isobe, accomplished designer and photographer for several PacificBasin Communications publications.

The masthead lists one Bruce Beinert as publisher, and he's also among the site's most active bloggers. Beinert was apparently once affiliated with Sugar Mill Inc., an ambitious high-tech start-up incubator that briefly occupied the old Waialua Sugar Mill. Years later, and it's clear he's still full of big ideas.

“Food is such an accessible metaphor for people who live in Hawai‘i — the multicultural population, their interests, and their varied lifestyles form a literal mixed plate," Beinert explains. "We want to extend that metaphor to media."

IMR: Extras: HawaiiBlog: ThinkTech Tackles Lifecasting

Lifecasting — live video streaming over the internet on a personal scale — will be the topic du jour on Hawaii Public Radio's "ThinkTech Hawaii" radio show, airing this afternoon at 5 p.m. on KIPO 89.3FM. Host Jay Fidell has invited "digital wonderer" Burt Lum and me into the studio to discuss new technologies and web services that's bringing live video broadcasting to the masses.

We'll also be joined remotely by PodTech.net web strategist Jeremiah Owyang, who has both written about and actively implemented lifecasting as a key "social media" tool for business.

We'll cover as much as we can during the hour, beginning with the technical, moving into the practical, and dreaming about the potential.

Sites like Ustream, BlogTV, Kyte, Veodia, and (of course) Justin.TV will be discussed as part of the "how." But the "why" will be much more interesting. We'll look at applications ranging from citizen journalism to education, from boardroom business to mass-market entertainment, from social networking to surveillance. We'll look at some of the challenges and problems as well, including privacy and intellectual property concerns.

Of course, it wouldn't be a lifecasting discussion without lifecasting, so you'll be able to watch us in the HPR studios live at HawaiiGeek.TV or at Burt's Ustream channel.

Don't want to watch, but want to listen from somewhere beyond KIPO's transmitter range? Try their live audio stream. We'd love to hear your thoughts and answer your questions, so don't hesitate to call in at (808) 941-3689.

July 30, 2007

IMR: Extras: HawaiiBlog: Checking Out the Hawaii Superferry

Hawaii Superferry
Even though the "Interisland Air War" between airlines has given us unrealistic $29, $19, even $1 airfares, there is an incredible amount of interest in the new Hawaii Superferry.

The Alakai — a massive 800-ton, 1,000-foot long double-hulled vessel — was built in Alabama and arrived in Hawaii to much fanfare at the end of June. Until it earns various certifications and passes various sea trials, however, it has quietly loomed over Pier 19 in Honolulu Harbor, taunting would-be passengers with its promise of comfortable, practical, car-and-cargo friendly interisland travel.

Demand for a day-long public tour a couple of weeks ago was so great, the company decided to hold a second day of tours this weekend. And thanks to the generosity of a geeky grandfather (who snared a reservation but couldn't attend), my wife and daughter and I were able to check it out.

It was great. And crowded. Even with the controlled guest list, the whole place was abuzz. And with good reason: it is indeed an impressive, attractive vessel. A well-appointed hotel lobby on the sea.

Hawaii Superferry

Every amenity made me compare the creature comforts of the Hawaii Superferry with the pain of sitting in an airplane seat, crammed in and fiercely controlled, being drained of my energy and patience. The Alakai's wide aisles, tables, snack bar and children's play area made me cringe at the thought of taking kids on another interisland flight. Even sitting still, the Superferry was a pleasure to be on.

Can you imagine getting to your destination and, for once, not jostling to get off your transport as quickly as possible?

As to the cost (roundtrip fare for an adult and a car between O'ahu and Kauai is about $300), it's clear at every level that the Superferry isn't out to compete on price. They're focusing on everything else! There'll be food... real food, from pasta dishes to spam musubi and saimin. There are airplane-style seats, small coffee tables, and large booths. (The largest booths, six on each side of the center cabin, were the only place I saw prominently placed power outlets.)

And for $20 extra you get to ride in the Hāhālua Lounge. Sure, you get a free drink and pupus, you have comfier chairs, and a complimentary copy of The Honolulu Advertiser. But you're really paying for the view out those front windows. It really is something.

An interesting side-effect of all that gorgeous glass, though? The Hāhālua Lounge is actually kinda hot!

Hawaii Superferry

The car bay will hold over a hundred cars and several larger vehicles. They had a UPS truck parked inside to illustrate! Despite all the creature comforts, it looks like the business market is a big part of their strategy. Farmers moving produce, contractors taking their tools, crafters bringing their wares interisland.

The Hawaii Superferry is slated to begin service in just a few weeks. The Alakai will serve O'ahu, Maui, and Kauai, but a second vessel is under construction that will reach the Big Island. Scheduled to arrive next year, that's the Superferry I can't wait to ride.

Of course, I couldn't pass up the chance to document the dickens out of the Hawaii Superferry. I brought my HawaiiGeek.TV lifecasting rig, and broadcast the entire walkthrough. Of course I took a heap of photos, both moblogged from my iPhone and with my digital camera. I caught a moment with Terry O'Halloran, director of business development for Hawaii Superferry, and interviewed him for the next episode of my podcast. And I put together a short video.