our world to yours. | techaffair.com

Tech events and videos, original media, and technology - TECH AFFAIR

Oakland Social Media Event: March 25th @ City Hall

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Oakland Digital (ODALC) presents Social Media for Small Business

Oakland Digital (ODALC) presents:
“Social Media for Small Business”
an Online Marketing Symposium

When used properly, social media can be a great tool to help your small business reach untapped, potential customers and stay connected to current ones. But there are a few things you’ll need to know to help you get the most out of social media as well as your online presence in its entirety. “Social Media for Small Business” will help break social media down into easy-to-understand pieces, so you can make sense of and make use of this powerful resource in a way that grows your business.

You’ll receive information and educational demos full of ideas and tips you can start using right away to build your online brand using social media. This is a historic technology event you won’t want to miss!

Who Should Attend? Small business owners, non-profits, entrepreneurs, realtors, consultants, associations, social & community activists, neighborhood leaders, churches, and chambers of commerce (any organization that wants individual social media consultation).

Keynote speakers include:

  • Social Data Revolution, Andreas Weigend, Ph.D.
  • GetSatisfaction, Wendy Lea

Oakland Digital (ODALC) presents Social Media for Small Business

Presentations and Educational Demos from:

  • City of Oakland, Mayor Jean Quan [A New Oakland]
  • Oakland Digital, Shaun Tai [Overview of Social Media]
  • Constant Contact, Kelly Flint [Social Media & Email Marketing]
  • YP.com, Stephen Perez [Online & Mobile Advertising]
  • InOak, Patrick Hurley [Collaboration and Community]
  • The B on Broadway, Zach Seal [Free Downtown Shuttle]

SPACE IS LIMITED. REGISTER EARLY!
www.oaklandsocialmedia.com

Inspiration Awards Gathers Oakland Community on a Historic Night

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Rick Quan (KGO-TV Sports Anchor) at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

It was a night of culmination for Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC). After more than a year of striving to establish itself in a time of economic downturn, the local technology nonprofit succeeded in hosting its first annual Inspiration Awards, which celebrated the City of Oakland and honored three influential people for their significant contributions to the community:

Andreas Weigend at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

Andreas Weigend (former Chief Scientist of Amazon.com and world-renowned data expert),

Joe Kennedy (CEO of Pandora Radio) at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

Joe Kennedy (CEO of Pandora Radio), and

Donald K. Tamaki at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

Donald Tamaki (known for successfully reopening the landmark Supreme Court cases of Fred Korematsu, Gordon Hirabayashi and Minoru Yasui).

ODALC - Inspiration Awards : 2010

Held in Oakland’s historic Preservation Park, the event sold out to approximately 130 guests: some came representing prominent tech companies (Cisco Systems, Pandora Radio, Intel, Hewlett-Packard, Amazon.com); others came from reputed financial institutions (Cathay Pacific Bank, Morgan Stanley); others still came from Oakland’s rich assortment of local businesses and organizations (Uptown Body and Fender, Rosewood House, Gente Bella Salon Spa, OneCalifornia, It’s a Grind Coffee House).

Shaun Tai (ODALC) at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

ODALC made a point of thanking its key partners at the event, namely East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation and Oakland Unwrapped. Executive Director Shaun Tai also announced plans to work closely with the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programs of Cisco Systems. In addition to celebrating the Oakland community and all its assets, the event and its honorees looked to the city’s future, impressing the urgency of ODALC’s mission to make computer education more accessible to underserved communities.

Norman Weekes at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

“ODALC is teaching people to embrace, not fear technology,” said Norman Weekes, Strategic Advisor at ODALC. “To be a user of technology and not one of the used. To be a producer and not a consumer. To take your life experience and combine it with the infinite possibilities technology offers and to better yourself, your business and maybe even society.”

As ODALC celebrated a year of hard-earned accomplishment and looked ahead to 2011, so did Oakland’s recent Mayor-Elect Jean Quan. Within thirty minutes of announcing her victory at Oakland City Hall, Quan made her way to Preservation Park in support of ODALC and Inspiration Awards 2010.

Mayor-Elect Jean Quan at ODALC's Inspiration Awards : 2010

“I’m particularly honored to be here because [ODALC] has had this vision of inspiring Oakland and looking at Oakland in new way,” said Quan. “[ODALC] is part of the new Oakland, the next generation. Let’s support them!” [see video below]

When she takes office on January 3rd, 2011, Quan will be the first Asian American woman mayor of a major U.S. city. ODALC considers her an invaluable ally in the effort to promote greater prosperity for Oakland and the Bay Area. After a year of struggle and hardship, Oakland hopefully awaits a new era of leadership and social change. Inspiration Awards 2010 exceeded its original scope and served as a platform for that change.

Oakland-Digital-Arts_ia2010

For 2011, ODALC plans to recruit more board members and raise $80,000 to support its program “Digital Equity for Local Commerce,” which helps struggling small business owners in Oakland compete with the rest of the market via online advertising. If Wednesday night was any indication, the Oakland community has the passion and the drive to make ODALC’s vision a reality.

[CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD PRESS RELEASE, .PDF FORMAT]

Craig Newmark (Founder of Craigslist)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Craig Alexander Newmark (Internet entrepreneur best known for being the founder of the San Francisco-based website Craigslist) and Andreas Weigend meet and have a fascinating discussion covering Craigslist, Wikipedia and the Social Data Revolution!

Newmark resides in San Francisco’s Cole Valley and is active at Craigslist in customer service, mostly dealing with spammers and scammers. In 2009 he became a member of the Wikimedia Foundation advisory board.

Craigslist is a centralized network of online communities, featuring free online classified advertisements with sections devoted to jobs, housing, personals, for sale, services, community, gigs, résumés, and discussion forums. Craig Newmark began the service in 1995 as an email distribution list of friends, featuring local events in the San Francisco Bay Area, before becoming a web-based service in 1996. After incorporation as a private for-profit company in 1999, Craigslist expanded into nine more U.S. cities in 2000, four each in 2001 and 2002, and 14 in 2003.

As of 2009, Craigslist operates with a staff of 28 people. Its sole source of revenue is paid job ads in select cities $75 per ad for the San Francisco Bay Area; $25 per ad for New York City, Los Angeles, San Diego, Boston, Seattle, Washington D.C., Chicago, Philadelphia and Portland, Oregon and paid broker apartment listings in New York City ($10 per ad).
Andreas Weigend is a former Chief Scientist at Amazon.com and the author of over 100 scientific papers on the application of machine learning techniques to finance and business problems.

He currently lectures at Stanford, Berkeley and Tsinghua Universities on the application of data analysis to electronic business problems. He is an advisor to many technology companies including MySpace and Nokia, and is a limited partner in The Founders Fund.

Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

odalc_logo_techaffair

OAKLAND DIGITAL ARTS & LITERACY CENTER:
NEW SOURCE OF INSPIRATION AND PRACTICAL TRAINING

OAKLAND, Calif. (Nov. 16, 2009) — Oakland has long been recognized as the birthplace, growing-up place or residence of artists and social visionaries. Just a few are actors Tom Hanks and Clint Eastwood, architects Julia Morgan and Bernard Maybeck; authors Amy Tan, Jack London and Ishmael Reed; dancer Isadora Duncan, politicians Jerry Brown and Barbara Lee; musicians John Lee Hooker and the Pointer Sisters; and entrepreneurs who founded Mrs. Fields Cookies, Ghirardelli Chocolate Company, and Kaiser Permanente.

The founders of the Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center (ODALC) stand on this legacy with their new vision to help turn Oakland into a thriving center of digital arts and entrepreneurial innovation. They envision great economic and creative success by partnering currently jobless or underemployed people in Oakland with some of the brightest minds in Oakland, Silicon Valley and beyond.

ODALC, which will formally launch first quarter 2010, is already putting together its first offerings: an online community and collection of resources for small business owners and non-profit organizations. Prominent guest speakers and instructors with a passion for helping others succeed are already being booked for presentations early next year.

The vision for ODALC began while Bay Area architect/designer/videographer and marketing expert Shaun Tai was filming a guest lecturer in social data guru Andreas Weigend’s class at Stanford. As he enjoyed the enthusiasm of the Data Mining and Electronic Business students, Tai wondered, “What if anyone in Oakland could also have world-class teachers in the field of digital arts and technology? What if they, like Stanford students, could also discover the benefit of sites such as LinkedIn or cutting-edge Google applications from passionate experts who give their time to help others learn?”

Tai’s vision and enthusiasm soon caught the attention of prominent San Francisco attorney Donald K. Tamaki, a partner at Minami Tamaki LLP, who specializes in business and nonprofit law. He helped Tai formally establish the Oakland Digital Arts & Literacy Center as a non-profit organization.

In Tai, Tamaki recognized a fellow social visionary with his feet on the ground and his brain fully engaged. Tai’s youth (age 29) didn’t faze Tamaki. As a UC Berkeley student 20 years ago, Tamaki and three fellow students had created the Asian Health Services, which now experiences approximately 80,000 patient visits per year.

Tamaki also understands the power of drive that’s connected to a passion for social justice. A nationally recognized “Super Lawyer,” he served as a member of the pro bono legal team that successfully reopened the landmark Supreme Court cases of Fred Korematsu, Gordon Hirabayashi and Minoru Yasui and overturned their convictions for refusing to be interned during World War II. He lectures at UC Berkeley in connection with these historic legal events.

Andreas Weigend soon came on board as an advisor to ODALC, bringing his worldwide connections in the field of technology, and his enthusiasm for the possibilities of social data to impact the world. “Without meaning,” he says,” the world can be pretty empty. People create meaning not alone but jointly with others. Look at how many people so passionately volunteered for Obama. Now that he’s in the White House, it’s time to direct some of that passion into meaningful projects that help people share and belong.”

Weigend is excited about how technological innovation can be a great gift to people who now are under- or un-employed. “The costs of technology used to be a bottleneck to learning,” says Weigend. “Now, people are more limited by their imagination or mindset because technology has become so cheap.”

Ben Hazard, the former curator at the Oakland Museum and former director of the Craft & Cultural Arts for the Office of the Mayor, City of Oakland, is another enthusiastic advisor to ODALC. Hazard, who has taught art at Stanford, is now a full-time artist.

Founder Tai and his advisors are adamant that there are three keys to success: vision, a positive mindset and practical action. “We see ODALC helping people get up and move, to feel more important and better about themselves. We dream of being a source of inspiration and information for people of all cultures, ethnicities, backgrounds and ages. We see them helping each other to dream, to create positive mindsets, and then employ effective practical strategy to turn their creative, job or business dreams into reality.”

ODALC will serve people of all ages. Its target service base, however, are 18-35 year-olds. This group went through school (if indeed they finished school) before the computer revolution, and many of them cannot commit to a community college. Many lack a support system that could help them stay out of trouble and move towards a satisfying life. Tai and many other youthful presenters for ODALC have a special bond and ability to communicate with this group.

The organization also targets entrepreneurs. “Digital arts are enormously versatile,” says Tai. “Digital art means everything in society today. A website, for example, combines a number of skills: graphic design, digital photography, illustration and coding. We want to go beyond just computer training. We want people to become fascinated with new opportunities to develop saleable skills – everything from creating impactful presentations for business meetings to using the internet as a source of networking.”

Board member Doris Newsome is excited about the range of ages that will benefit from ODALC programs. Having served in the healthcare industry for over 20 years, she knows firsthand both the benefits of technology and the resistance that many people have to learning new procedures. “Everybody benefits when they are sparked with new possibilities. Kids may know Facebook and how to search for games, but how many of them know how to find the best information on the Net and elsewhere to guide their lives?”

“Kids need to learn to grasp things in their own ways and they need to be inspired,” she adds. “Mama’s telling them to go to college isn’t enough. If they also hear people from Silicon Valley tell them how college can help them do something bigger and better, they’re more likely to go to college and build a career they love.”

Newsome is passionate about helping seniors enjoy the digital arts. She knows many doctors and grandparents who still don’t know how to compose an e-mail or attach a photo or document. Others may be ready to delve into the digital arts for their own pleasure or part of a new volunteer or service opportunity.

The advisors and board members of ODALC are as practical as they are visionary. That’s just how founder Shaun Tai envisioned it. Like his advisors, Tai has a solid track record of following a vision through to completion by applying sound thinking and a lot of solid work.

Tai can’t remember when he wasn’t learning the basics of business and design. He has been a lead designer in an established firm serving Uptown Oakland for over forty years.

After obtaining his bachelors of arts in Digital Graphics at Cal State East Bay, Tai received a second degree in advertising (magna cum laude) and masters in Architectural & Urban Design from San Jose State University. While in graduate school, he partnered with McCall Design Group of San Francisco and won a grand award for an affordable, sustainable second-unit green building. That architectural design now helps citizens of Humboldt County easily gain approval to build on their lots without going through a costly permitting process.

Tai is also an accomplished videographer whose clients include global social media power-house Facebook. His documentation of the history of Bay Area hip-hop culture exceeded 14-million video views in 2008. A car club he co-founded became the inspiration for a popular movie, “The Fast and The Furious” (2001).

Much as he loves exercising his many skills, Tai is most excited when he can connect and help bring people together through the digital arts. He believes that ODALC will be the vehicle to do so. “Our goal is to inspire,” he often says. “We want people to create something new for themselves in a way that is innovative, practical and dignified. As technology expands its power, so will the ODALC and so will the community.”

 

ODALC officially launches in the first quarter of 2010. For further information and to get involved, visit www.odalc.org or email info@odalc.org. Their blog www.inspireoakland.com includes a network of organizations, current events and stories of exciting visionaries. To donate, you can visit their donation page at www.odalc.org/give.

About the Author

Pat McHenry Sullivan is the author of several books and many articles on how all work can be filled with increased integrity, purpose and joy. She loves helping entrepreneurs, artists and social visionaries create bankable business plans that are anchored in their deepest values and guided by their most compelling and creative visions.

Sullivan is the co-founder of the Spirit and Work Resource Center and the owner of Visionary Resources in Oakland. Pat’s blog offers insights from all faiths about how all the ways we earn, spend, invest or share money can be more satisfying. Contact Pat at 510-530-0284 or pat@workwithmeaningandjoy.com.

DJ Patil (LinkedIn) on Data & Product Development

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

dj_patil_linkedin

DJ Patil and Andreas Weigend sit down and have a fascinating discussion covering the following “LinkedIn-related” topics: product development, organization, manipulation of data, being clever, exclusive LinkedIn insight. and much more!

DJ Patil‘s has diverse experiences in a wide range of domains. Strong experience in working in ambiguity to solve complex problems. Focus on strategy, development , operations, and defining unique solutions. Experience in developing unique solutions via broad partnerships. Always looking to innovate by bringing smart people together.

DJ has an excellent track record of innovating using data & machine learning to develop revenue generating products. Some of LinkedIn’s products include “People You May Know“, “Who Viewed My Profile” & “Groups You Might Like“. Currently DJ is Chief Scientist & Sr. Director – Product Analytics at LinkedIn.

Andreas Weigend is a former Chief Scientist at Amazon.com and the author of over 100 scientific papers on the application of machine learning techniques to finance and business problems.

Video filmed and produced by Shaun Tai.

© 2009 our world to yours. | techaffair.com | All Rights Reserved.