Democamp 5.0

Bryce and chris democamp50

Attended democamp number 5 last night. Another great event that somehow put itself together last (kudos to camp councelor David and and all those who helped out). Wow, some impressive technology demo’d last night including blogmatrix and DableDB. Even with democamps running every 4 weeks, this town is not running out of technology to show off.

more photos here. None of me though so far 🙁 guess I’m not as photogenic as these characters. (Bryce and Chris Nolan btw)

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It’s all about the content stupid. Is it?

It’s popular to criticize Big Media and say stop whining about this into mediation we are falling profits or whatever, if you just made better quality content you would be making more money. Hmm I’ve always secretly wondered if that latter statement was true and so when I was, for some unknown impulse, browsing last weekend’s North American box office numbers, this relationship seemed to jump right out at me and made me laugh. (cry?)

People like bad movies

So here you have a scatter plot of the top 12 grossing movies (vertical scale) this weekend versus the RottenTomatoes rating (a measure of critic approval) for each of those same movies (horizontal scale). The pinkish line represents excels best guess at the linear regression for this relationship.

sigh. what does this tell us? possible theories:

1. People don’t actually like good content. In practice, they prefer not to be overly challenged by their entertainment and rather prefer the trashy stuff.

2. Bad content is actually good, or viceversa — a longstanding conspiracy of critics if you will.

or…

3. It’s All About the Distribution Stupid. Consumers will consume industry portion amounts those products which are disproportionately put in front of their noses.

distribution stupid

It’s all about the distribution, is I feel a point the new economy Web2.0 hypesters tend to forget about. Sure information technology should be helping to level the playing field, but if so, why are we still lining up in droves to see these terrible movies?

Or say I’m wrong and distribution scale advantages or not, say these are all the movies we really did want to see. What does that say about the wisdom of crowds? Another cherished tenet of the web 2.0 ethos…

Now caveat caveat these are only 12 data points from one weekend and there are all kind of statistical biases at work here so, for the time being, consider these “stat’s” as for entertainment purposes only. Also I realize the movie business is more complicated than this, one would hope that good movies make more money over time etc etc. Still, this should be worth investigating a little further don’t you think?

for the record, here is the data set I used, courtesy of RottenTomatoes.com

This
Week
Last
Week
Title Weeks
Released
Weekend
Gross
Total
Gross
Theater
 Average 
# Of
 Theaters
 
 T-Meter 
1 new   Silent Hill 1 $20.2M $20.2M $6.9k  2926  ROTTEN: 25%%   25%
2 1   Scary Movie 4 2 $16.8M $67.5M $4.6k  3673  ROTTEN: 38%%   38%
3 new   The Sentinel 1 $14.4M $14.4M $5.1k  2822  ROTTEN: 31%%   31%
4 2   Ice Age: The Meltdown 4 $13.3M $168.3M $3.8k  3540  ROTTEN: 58%%   58%
5 4   The Wild 2 $8.3M $22.2M $2.9k  2854  ROTTEN: 19%%   19%
6 3   The Benchwarmers 3 $7.3M $47.1M $2.3k  3094  ROTTEN: 13%%   13%
7 5   Take the Lead 3 $4.2M $29.5M $1.7k  2413  ROTTEN: 45%%   45%
8 6   Inside Man 5 $3.7M $81.3M $1.9k  2021  FRESH: 89%%   89%
9 new   American Dreamz 1 $3.7M $3.7M $2.4k  1500  ROTTEN: 44%%   44%
10 15   Friends With Money 3 $3.2M $5M $3.2k  991  FRESH: 67%%   67%
11 8   Thank You For Smoking 6 $2.8M $15.8M $2.7k  1020  FRESH: 86%%   86%
12 7   Lucky Number Slevin 3 $2.5M $18.7M $1.4k  1735  ROTTEN: 50%%   50%
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8 Ideas for the future of Barcamp Toronto

Everyday it’s becoming more interesting to be in Toronto. Picking up earlier conversations, and on what to do with Barcamp, Mark Kuznicki and I met for lunch the other day to talk some of our ideas. Who should we run into but Oshoma Momoh who also has been blogging on the subject lately (this city is getting smaller all the time). Here’s why we’re talking.

The toronto “Camper” Community reaching a tipping point. Participant turnout is snowballing and meanwhile there is growing policy interest at several levels of government now to sponsor inovation/interactive media intiatives in the region. This could be too good to pass up.

So, if we should we trade in the delightful if anarchic shape of our current un-organization into something with a little more structure, and -gasp- a budget…

Thoughts from lunch – 8 ideas for the future of barcamp toronto

  1. Develop Barcamp as a Talent Well
  2. Enhance camp events (and or just add a section to the wiki) to make it easier to match up tallent. Have an idea but need help to execute? [..]Camp should be the ideal way to build out your project “stack” whether it be back/front/middle end developers, marketers/business minds. I could imagine a wiki combined with an networking event, to help campers “hire” each other for wether it be their side projects, new idea or fulltime enterprise. As I said to Mark “Larry and Sergey” are out there somewhere in this city, we just need to get them to meet.

  3. Microfinancing
  4. Use [..]Camp support early stage projects either through grands or “micro”financing. Develop the [..]Camp organization as a funnel or support structure new ventures at a pre-VC, pre-Angel phase – or for the sorts of open bennefitting-many type projects that the traditional investment community might not “get”. (see also idea 4)

  5. Deeper workshopping
  6. I really like that democamp presentations are limited to 10 minutes but I do think there could be a role for a more structured, deeper dive format for those interested in greater or ongoing feedback. Albert I remember had a related idea for a smaller “CEOCamp” type spinoff. see also 6, 2.

  7. Public goods
  8. Harness the tallents of the campers to give back of meaningful to the world local/global scale. Select an inovation-based social or artistic project(s). Support could come in the form the sponsorship, granting or -and I like this one- for a project with a challenging but clearly definable technical goal an XPrize type purse for the first team to succeed. (see also ideas 2, 5)

  9. Redesign SlamCamp
  10. Slamcamp was fun. But really not enormously productive. What about slamcamp that lets us a)build something of value b) lets camper show off the skills they are best at (see also 1, 4)

  11. Structure and accountability
  12. It’s hard working alone in the “garage” [x]Camp could be a way to sign up for some voluntary accountability, maybe an informal board of sorts to help you remember the project goals and deadlines you want to set for yourself (see also Microfinancing)

  13. Jr Campers
  14. I believe Bryce is the orgin of this idea. Barcamp for highschoolers. Great idea, get them while they’re young and that sort of thing (see also point 1).

  15. Status quo
  16. This is another option (or what not to change). Presently the typical [..]Camp event offers inspiration, education and networking in a format format that turns out to be almost hillariously efficient in terms of money, time and organizational effort. The only question is whether the current format can continue to scale.

oh ya, and we need a new name.

(I’m happy so long as it doesn’t have the words ICT or 2.0 in it)

——–
update: Mark has just posted an excellent summary of my summary on his blog

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