Veronica Belmont And Ryan Block, Engaged

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Ryan Block & Veronica Belmont

Thirty years ago, my client at Coleco, Barbara Wruck Belmont, called to tell me she was pregnant. “Guess what?” I said. “So am I.”

We both screamed in delight. Not only were we pregnant at the same time but we were also going to share a lifetime of experiences. The business relationship only lasted a few more years but our friendship is still going strong.

We both raised sensational looking daughters who turned out to be geeks. My daughter Whitney is very well known in the field of UX–User Experience–and Barbara’s daughter is the famous Internet personality, Veronica Belmont.

Barbara just emailed me from Hartford, CT, that Veronica just got engaged to long time boyfriend Ryan Block, Founder of gdgt. I am presently touring in Croatia but my thoughts bounced back 30 years ago when we made Whitney and Veronica hold hands for a photo op. As we snapped their picture we told our daughters we would all be friends forever.

I now have the pleasure of publicly wishing my dear friend Barbara a hearty congratulations and wishing the newly engaged couple the best of everything.

Eliot and I are thrilled for all of you.

For those who don’t know Veronica and Ryan, here are brief bios.

Veronica is a technology and gaming-centric video host based out of San Francisco. Currently her projects include Tekzilla (a weekly tech help and how-to show on Revision3.com), and The Sword and Laser, a science fiction and fantasy podcast and community, co-hosted with Tom Merritt. She has also written for Slate, DoubleX, MaximumPC and PC Gamer, and was the original host of Qore on the PlayStation Network.

Veronica initially made her mark as a producer and on-air talent for CNET Networks (now CBS Interactive). She worked on such shows as Buzz Out Loud, MP3 Insider, Crave, and Prizefight. In 2007 she left CNET to host the eclectic video show Mahalo Daily, which was named one of the top new podcasts in 2008 on iTunes.

Ryan Block is co-founder of gdgt, a consumer electronics media startup (funded by True Ventures, Spark Capital, and Betaworks, among others). He was also former editor / editor emeritus of Engadget, a web magazine and network of sites focused on obsessive coverage of consumer electronics and technology.

As a technology critic and commentator, he has been quoted by the BBC, Business Week, Chicago Tribune, The New York Times, The Guardian, The Times, and The Wall St. Journal. Ryan also appeared on such networks as the BBC, CNN, NPR, PRI, and G4. He was also named one of Forbes’s 2007 Web Celeb 25.

The Museum Of Broken Relationships

20120603-042507.jpgWhen I decided to write a blog about my life’s journey through technology, I never thought I would be talking about Skype as the increasingly popular way to break up a romance. A visit to the Museum of Broken Relationships in Zagreb, Croatia showed several presentations where Skype was being used as a new stage for “Dear John” scenarios. Go to the website to read more about this.

http://brokenships.com

The museum was established after a traveling exhibition of failed relationships and their ruins. The description for the museum says, “Unlike ‘destructive’ self-help instructions for recovery, the exhibits offer a chance to overcome an emotional collapse by contributing to the collection.”

Conceptualized in Croatia by Olinka Vištica and Dražen Grubišić, the Museum has toured internationally, amassing an amazing collection.

 

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Gadgets Are Icebreakers

By the time you read this, I will be in Croatia. I am on the airplane now and I can’t remember an International flight being so bumpy. I tried listening to several books I’d downloaded, but I don’t have patience for them. I tried reading a play a friend wrote. I can’t concentrate on that either. I need to get my mind in a happy place because I feel trapped.

I am thinking about a cyclist I stopped on the street the other day because I couldn’t believe the contraption he had mounted on his helmet. I have been around gadgets my whole career so nothing should phase me, but this caught my eye. As far as I’m concerned, this had a big wow factor.

I saw the cyclist going West on E. 61st and Second Avenue. Lucky for me, he had to stop for a red light.

I didn’t hesitate. I went right up to him, “Hi, what is that on your helmet? At first I think I startled him because he hesitated. Then he realized I was being sincere, so he pulled his bike closer to the curb so I could get a better look.

I knew it was a camera, but it was so sexy looking I needed a better look. The cyclist told me it was a video camera made by Hero2 and sold on Amazon.  I took a picture of the him wearing the unit and then I found a close up of it on the Internet, so I could show you the intricacies. Seeing someone using a video camera is not that unusual, but seeing it mounted that way was very intriguing.

Without much coaxing, he told me he tapes his bike routes so that he can share them with other cyclists looking for interesting paths. As we know from Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram, sharing on the Internet is very trendy, especially for people with hobbies. They get a real charge out of sharing their discoveries. It is very important that cyclist know scenic, yet safe roads. Manhattan is a tough course.  These videos are for all interested parties.

I guess that is why my new young friend was offering his expertise. He told me he had other video cameras before but this one was the lightest and easiest to use. “It is very important that I don’t feel off balance when I ride. The whole idea is not to be aware that it is sitting on my helmet,” he explained.

When he finally drove off toward Third Avenue, I thought to myself that gadgets are a great conversation piece. I just met a stranger and we instantly bonded over a common interest. How beautiful is that?