Obama Town Hall in LA 3/19

This was one of the most unique experiences I’d ever been to. Karim won tickets to President Obama’s Town Hall in LA, and he asked me to be his “plus 1.” Fantastic! It was an amazing and surreal day. We waited a little over two hours outside Miguel Contreras Learning Complex’s gym. We made new acquaintances in the line: a mother-daughter duo, a woman worked in the Mayor’s office in education reform, and a college girl whose dad paid $$$ to get a ticket for her. I took as many photos and Twittered as much as I could. I even took notes. Yes yes, I’m a nerd. I’ve heard that before. Here are a few photos:

Our Obama Town Hall tickets

Our Obama Town Hall tickets

A biodiesel generator in front of Miguel Contreras HS gym

A biodiesel generator in front of Miguel Contreras HS gym

Inside the Gym, getting ready

Inside the Gym, getting ready

Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis

Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis

President Obama

President Obama

President Obama

President Obama

President Obama and twin SS agents :\

President Obama and twin SS agents :"

President Obama and the twin SS agents

President Obama and the twin SS agents

Tech notes

Dear all,

I’ve been neglecting this blog. I’m not sure if it will stay here. I’m a little pressed for time, so I haven’t had a chance to revamp this website. (This is ironic. Trust me.)

While it might not be as sexy, I think I’ll make this into my Twitterfeed. Follow me at www.twitter.com/chrisin140.

I might also share my RSS reader on this site, so that you can see what I’m reading and I don’t have to keep posting awesome articles from the blog and news sources I read.

Tomorrow, Karim and I are going to President Obama’s Town Hall in LA! I had sent the link for the lottery, and Karim won! Never fear, I’ve got my Flipcam and digicam ready for filming. I’ll do my best to tweet while I’m there. W00t!

RSS feed readers

While some of my non-techie friends have been using Bloglines for a few years, I couldn’t get quite grasp the point. Why log in to another site and read my bookmarked news sites. Wouldn’t I miss the nice layouts of TWOP or the whole experience from Feministing?

Cut to last weekend when I spent my Sunday with Jenn and basically geeked out and shared social media experiences. Jenn showed me her Google Reader and explained how it made reading all of her bookmarked sites so much easier. For me, being able to see something “in action” is how I understand a concept. (Why do you think I wish I had a giant whiteboard as a wall in my apt?) I logged into Google Reader and started adding my bookmarked sites. And voila! It made my news-reading so much more efficient. It cut down the time that I once needed to click on each site from my bookmarks toolbar and menu. Some images don’t pop up within the news article but that’s ok. There is a link to the article which opens a new tab (Firefox) if I decide I want to visit the website. So far, I’m a fan.

This afternoon, I was IM-ing Joanne, and she mentioned that she visited websites by typing them by memory! Yikes. I explained the benefits of an RSS reader, just as pal Jenn did for me, and voila, I think we’ve got another convert!

Here’s a screenshot of what my Google Reader looks like:

Google Reader snapshot

Google Reader snapshot

If you click on All Subscriptions, you’ll see on the right-hand frame all the articles. All you have to do is scroll down.

Or if you’d like, you can click on each Category or specific website on the left-hand frame.

Have fun! One of these RSS readers will fit your preference.

Free and Easy Websites

Thanks to Twittersearch and friends, I found a couple of websites that offer non-techie people an easy way to build their own websites. Nice. I love technology, and I love the way the “digital divide” closes in some parts of the gap. Not everyone was schooled in HTML nor can everyone pay for hosting services. Here are two places you can build your own:

  1. Weebly – I learned about this one while perusing a colleague’s site. I just created another website there to see how easy it could be for a layperson. After all, after 10 years of not coding HTML and building my site, I’ve become somewhat a non-techie layperson.
  2. DevHub – Once I tweeted about Weebly, DevHub followed me. I looked at their site, and voila, another competitor!

Hopefully in the near future, I’ll be able to report back my thoughts on both sites, usability, and ease.