bb
In Bb 2.0 is a collaborative art project made of YouTube videos. The videos all feature someone doing something (playing an instrument, humming, talking) in the key of B flat. You can play them in order or together, starting any particular video at any time. They are all slow and somewhat ambient, so the resulting music always seems to work nicely regardless of the timing.

I’d love to see a bot that found these videos and categorized them in real time so I could have “the sound of YouTube” in any key on while I work.

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under YouTube, art, music, technology. Date: May 29, 2009, 12:24 pm | View Comments

This is a video of a panel run by NPower Seattle‘s Peg Giffels for the Kellog Action Lab. It features Zan McColloch-Lussier from the Pride Foundation, Jessica Ross from Treehouse, and me. We mostly cover Twitter and Facebook, but we frequently diverge into other web territories. Please feel free to spread the video around. I won’t sue you. ;)

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Some of the resources mentioned on the panel:

Ways to post to multiple sites at once: Ping.fm and Hellotxt.com
Short explanatory videos about technology and social media: Common Craft
Demographic information about social networks: danah boyd
Alternative copyright licensing options: Creative Commons

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under Facebook, YouTube, blogging, copyright, creative commons, fundraising, nonprofit, nptech, sns, technology, the intarwebs, twitter, video. Date: May 28, 2009, 10:45 am | View Comments

barry My friend Barry has been having some trouble lately. It seems his spine, which was so straight and strong last November 4th, is bending and crumbling. I think he needs a good old fashioned left-coast pep talk. I keep telling him to come out to Seattle so I can read the definitions of the words “fierce” and “advocate” to him from my Oxford English Dictionary, but apparently he’s a busy man.

So I’ve booked my flight to Washington. I’ve tried repeatedly to make appointments, but his secretary doesn’t realize who I am, so that hasn’t panned out. However, I hear he frequents modern dance performances, so I’ll have to attend those regularly. Posh restaurants might be a good idea too.

I’ll be telecommuting to my day-job, and never fear, I’ll be back to Seattle in the fall. My partner Brian got some dead-end fellowship to work for a scrappy little nonprofit called Public Knowledge, so he’ll be tagging along. And I figured I’d better bring the geekling for cover when I’m attending children’s events on the lookout for Malia and Sasha.

So ping me if you’re in or around DC. I won’t be spending the whole time harassing my backwards elected officials. I do like some of them – like that dreamy Jim McDermott and his fantastic single-payer health care plan. I should bake him some cookies. I will be hopping around the east coast some while I’m out there, and you should be able to find me at local tech or storytelling events (BarCamp, PechaKucha, Ignite, etc.)

Bon Voyage!

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under DC, Obama, YAY, geekling, kids, lefty news, life. Date: May 27, 2009, 12:56 pm | View Comments

26  May
Twitter on Prop 8

prop8

Twitscoop scans twitter in real time for words that are suddenly becoming popular. This screenshot was taken 90 minutes after the ruling. I think it tells its own story, but I would like to add my appreciation that the first three readable words in the cloud are “ban bigots bullshit”. A rallying cry if I’ve ever heard one!

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under lefty news, life, politics, sns, twitter. Date: May 26, 2009, 11:34 am | View Comments

Since when has due process been a “legal tradition“? I’m sorry, Mr. Glaberson, but this isn’t like dancing around a Maypole, or saying “trick or treat.” Using a gavel in courtrooms is a tradition. Locking up humans indefinitely without any hope of a trial is a gross violation of the very foundations on which our country has rested for the last 232 years.

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under Obama, World Domination, lefty news, politics. Date: May 23, 2009, 5:35 am | View Comments

I went to Seattle GreenDrinks a few months back and Grist was there asking everyone what they love!

brian
My boy Brian Rowe.
gregory
That’s my friend Gregory Heller from CivicActions showing some Obamalove.

The full set is up on Flickr. If it looks like the room keeps changing, that’s because it was actually held in a new condo building in several adjacent identical condos.

I don’t think I’ll be back to Greendrinks. I appreciate what they are doing, but the smug-white-people quotient was a little too high for me. They really should have called this photoset Stuff White People Love. (If you haven’t checked out Stuff White People Like, you have hours of laughter ahead of you.)

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under Seattle, life, smug white people. Date: May 12, 2009, 6:16 pm | View Comments

A print-friendly version of this post is available at http://sarahdavies.cc/suzuki.html

Opening
My husband, Brian, and I have a child in Suzuki violin. We have a quirky way of practicing, and our violin teacher keeps telling us that we should tell other parents about it, because it really does work. So this blog post has nothing to do with technology (although it does have to do with lifehacking). It’s aimed at other Suzuki parents, so if you’re one of my normal blog readers and you have zero interest in music or motivating children, then move along. I’ll be back to my normally-scheduled tech blogging next week.

Suzuki is hard work
Learning an instrument is a life-long endeavor. It requires daily practice over a long period of time. If you’re like my husband and me, you’ve made the decision that it’s worth it. Our little one (I call her the geekling) is seven. She started Suzuki violin at the age of five, and she can’t remember a time when she didn’t practice every day. That’s hard work! However, our job as a parents isn’t to help her (or bribe or intimidate her to) struggle through the hard work. I’m going to tell you about the way we practice. It’s a lot of work for us. The difference is that we know we’re working hard. If all goes as planned, she thinks it’s playtime.

Trust your teacher
There’s a reason we hire teachers. Any violinist could tell a child the 1,001 things that they are doing wrong. Edmund Sprunger says in his great book, Helping Parents Practice, that his job as a violin teacher is to tell the child the one thing that will help them the most. A good violin teacher (ours is the fabulous Christine Dunaway) will tell you exactly what to practice at home. We, as parents, have a strong urge to correct our children. It’s hard to watch them practicing bad habits, but if the focus for the week is a good bow hand, let the other stuff slide. There are a lot of things to think about while playing an instrument, and trying to focus on them all at once will overwhelm you and your child. Your job as a parent is to practice what you’re told to practice. It’s a no-brainer.

Teach your child’s body
Suzuki is about repetition. It’s about muscles and neurons. Your child wants to be a great musician, and they want to perfectly execute everything you ask them to do. Telling your child “you’re just not trying, try harder” is incredibly demotivating. You and your child have the same goals, you just need to help her whip her body and her brain into shape. Try using body and brain terminology with your child. Saying “you’re having trouble with that fast spot in Allegro” is really different from saying “your fingers are having trouble with that fast spot in Allegro”. The latter is both more accurate and more productive. The problem isn’t that the geekling always forgets the c-sharp, the problem is that we need to work together on strengthening that neural pathway, because it sure is stubborn! Get it?

Motivation
Just like adults, children need a good reason to follow directions. I think we all know that “because I said so” isn’t a good reason. We quickly learn that our children think “because it will make you a great musician someday” isn’t a good reason. There is a very important difference between adults and children here. Adults want the real reason. Children want a reason. This is the really important really hard work you need to do: making stuff up. Here’s an excerpt from a recent practice I did with the geekling:

“oh no!”
“what’s wrong?”
“gremlins have just kidnapped the willow princess, and somebody has to go save her!”
“I’ll save her!”
“okay, they took her into a dark cave. you’re not afraid of the dark, right?”
“no way! what do I have to do?”
“there’s water in the cave, but fortunately there’s a rowboat. To row the boat, you need to play the first four measures of Perpetual Motion three times with a perfect bow hand, then we’ll get to see what’s at the end of the cave.”
“okay”
“get into a good play position, here we go!”

You get the idea. If she forgets about her bow hand, then we’ve lost an oar and we need to go back to the mouth of the cave and start over. We’ve done dinosaur hunts and rock concerts and even saved the world from global warming. Take whatever excites your child this week, and roll with it. If I’m having a lousy day, and not feeling particularly creative, we’ll use a book or a myth (The Ramayana works great) so I don’t have to make up the structure. The teacher tells us what to practice, the story provides the motivation, and all I have to do is put the two together.

It’s a totally flexible method too. If she’s doing great, or it’s taking longer than I expected, then a gryphon swoops in and flies us to the end of the cave. If I feel like a little more practice is necessary, then there’s a gnome at the end of the cave who needs us to row him to his brother’s place so we can all get scuba suits because the kidnappers went underwater. We also throw in a liberal dash of Choose Your Own Adventure, giving her two (or more) productive choices to turn the story in a certain direction. We always end the lesson on an incredible victory, and she’s happy to practice the next day.

Our child is particularly kinesthetic, so we also include activities like “you’ve been sprinkled with fairy dust. put down your violin and touch every doorknob in the house so the fairies can come in.” We’ll toss a coin to decide what to do, or have her collect 8 pencils by playing something eight times, but then actually let her get a pencil out of the drawer each time she plays it. If she’s extremely wiggly, we’ve even been known to have her run around the block in the middle of a lesson then come back and play.

Some people (like my husband) can do this sort of storytelling on the fly. I usually need some prep time to look over my lesson notes and form a story outline beforehand. Do what works for you.

In closing
I hope that helps. All my work is public domain, so feel free to share this with friends, copy it, publish it, whatever. I won’t sue you. I would appreciate if you keep my name attached and let me know if you liked it and where you’re passing it on. Good luck with practice!

A print-friendly version of this post is available at http://sarahdavies.cc/suzuki.html

Posted by Sarah Davies, filed under Suzuki method, kids, life, lifehacking, music. Date: May 10, 2009, 11:42 am | View Comments