This Could Be You

I have another bike story. The other day I told you about my friend Neal Weinstock who was in horrible bike accident in Brooklyn, NY. He survived because he was wearing a helmet.

Now I have a bike story from Apachie Junction, Arizona. This is my beautiful friend Edie Cutrell who was riding her bike with her husband Spence. They are both 72 and very athletic.

One slip and Edie fell over the handle bars on her bike landing flat on her face–all her teeth knocked out. Thank goodness she was wearing a helmet. She is bruised and swollen but lived to tell the story.

To all my DigiDame friends. Wear a helmet !!

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I Am In Bed, Where Are You?

I told Eliot the other day never to tell anyone where I write my DigiDame posts from. Now I am about to spill my guts out. I am still in bed, reading stories from about 20 different newspapers, magazines, websites, blog posts, and broadcast services. I am doing this all on my iPhone.

Yes, I own an iPad but I find it too heavy to hold when I am still flat on my back. I will use the iPad when I am ready to sit up and officially admit I am working. As long as I am lying down, I still feel relaxed and at ease.

Right now I am writing this post on my iPhone. I can’t write this way all the time because some of my posts require more research and funky layouts. Most of the time, I wake up and start reading the many periodicals I rely on everyday. Then I start my writing. I don’t know why some people find it amazing that I can write and read on the iPhone. Many people do it. I even have a friend who reads novels on both Android and iOS smartphones.

Mobile technology has allowed me to play and work hard. Tonight we are expecting around 50-plus people for a 4th of July party in our condo in South Beach, Fl. Desserts, wine and champagne. In the old days, I would have been frantically thinking about how to squeeze all of my responsibilities into the day before the guests arrive?

Today, I take my smartphone with me everywhere. I handle things on the fly.

Read this story from AllThingsD that gives you a deeper report into the lifestyle of the upwardly mobile.

Mobile Technology Frees Workers to Work Any 20 Hours a Day They Choose – Ina Fried – Mobile – AllThingsD

http://allthingsd.com/20120702/mobile-technology-frees-workers-to-work-any-20-hours-a-day-they-choose/?mod=ATD_iphone

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Become A YouTube Star

I will be your sponsor. I will be your publicist. Just let me know what your idea is and if you want to do it.

It may seem like it is late in the game for you to become famous but there is still a huge chance to become a big Hollywood star either on the screen or behind it (creator, writer, producer, director). You can be the next Jay Leno, Joan Rivers, Larry King, or even Steven Spielberg.

I am serious.

YouTube announced that it is looking for original content because they want to have their own programming channels. It already started in many fields of entertainment, fashion, beauty, health, fitness, publishing, business, politics, sports, comedy, food, home design and yes, seniors. YouTube, owned by Google, is dedicating hundreds of millions of dollars to draw big talent like Madonna and Deepak Chopra to be the producers of each channel.

This news doesn’t mean that all of the billion plus worldwide users of YouTube are not going to continue to post their own videos. In fact, 60 hours of new videos are uploaded to YouTube every minute. Three quarters of them come from outside the United States. With that in mind, YouTube realized it is sitting on the potential to be another CBS, NBC, ABC, HGTV, or Food Network. Let’s face it, corporations, TV shows, movie production companies, music videos, already use YouTube as a distribution vehicle.

Here are two stories that explain what YouTube is going to do:

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/story/2011-10-29/youtube-original-programming/50997002/1

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2395548,00.asp

Seniors (50-plus) are starting to post videos more than ever before. To give you an idea of what is on YouTube now in the senior market, I have included some of the most humorous videos you have ever seen. If this doesn’t make you have a hearty laugh, nothing will.

Billie Jean Dancing Senior Citizens

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIsLsDXXJUE&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Facebook for Seniors

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7w5xGGfrAoo&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Seniors Using Medical Marijuana

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWzs6ajRYLM&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Safe Sex for Seniors

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Pfa07ijUCE&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Okay, now that I have given you some creative ideas. let me hear from you. Here is a chance to reinvent yourself. We have seen and heard it all. Let it all hang out. You can be as serious or as funny as you want. I can be your gateway to Hollywood

Happy 62nd Birthday Arianna Huffington

Arianna Huffington

Arianna turns 62 on July 15th. I am getting a head start on this story.

I am pretty sure that everyone who reads DigiDame knows who Arianna Huffington is. If you don’t, I encourage you to read on to get inspired and learn some very important life lessons:

1. You can be relevant in the digital world or any world when you are a senior citizen.

2. A woman changed the media landscape by creating a blog that combined original content with collaboration and aggregation. Huffington Post attracts more readers than the New York Times. (According to UK Telegraph story below, the Huffington Post became the most visited English-language news source in the world, outranking even America’s so-called “Gray Lady”, The New York Times, attacting 60 million unique monthly visitors. It recently won the coveted Pulitzer prize for journalism and has attracted more than 155 million comments since it started.)

3. You can be single and still be invited to parties for couples only.

Last week I was feeling sorry for myself and our client because I had to be the PR representative for Westinghouse Digital at a trade show. I had a head cold, my nose was running, my eyes were drooping and I probably looked 100 years old. When I went to the ladies room to wash my hands, I looked into the mirror and saw young, perky PR gals to my left and right. I wanted to run into the streets screaming “Who stole my youth?” Somehow, I managed to get more press appointments and more editorial coverage for our client than any of those stunning, skinny, trendy, sexy numbers did for theirs.

No question, my competition is far better to look at, but I am going to keep on pretending that I am Arianna Huffington. If she can do it, so can I (and you can too)!

Please read the following story. It talks a lot about the economy, the future of journalism, and the pace of one red hot mama.

How Arianna Huffington has breathed new life into the media – Telegraph

Think Twice Before Buying A Smart TV

This may be self serving but I think it is good advice. My client Rey Roque, Senior VP, Westinghouse Digital warns the American consumer that when they are buying a TV they should be concerned about the size of the screen and the picture quality, not the bells and whistles of internal Internet content. Everyone who bought a Smart TV just a few years ago are now finding themselves with outdated equipment. There is just too much technology being introduced every year to get stuck. You are better off with external smart boxes such as a ROKU.

Any questions? Just ask. I have a lot of expert advisors.

The Faces Behind The Names

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I attended a tech convention last week where I met up with a number of tech journalists when I was stationed at my client’s exhibit, Westinghouse TV’s. I thought it might be fun for you to see the faces of some of the people whose stories you read all the time.

John R. Quain, New York Times, chatting with Rey Roque, Senior VP, Westinghouse

Roy Furchgott, New York Times

Dennis Wunderlin, The Giz Wiz, and Dick De Bartolo, Mad Magazine

Tobey Grumet, Details Magazine and iVillage

Jim Willcox (on left), Consumer Reports

Gary Shapiro (right), CEO of the Consumer Electronics Show

Barry Myers of gdgt (right)

Steve Smith, TWICE Magazine

Internet + Death

When I was in the taxi riding home from JFK airport two weeks ago, after our trip to Croatia, I received this text from the superintendent of my NYC coop: “Your neighbor in 10A passed.”

I was stunned on several accounts.

First, I never understood that expression. Passed? I am not trying to be funny, but passed what? An exam? Broke wind? Passed a stone? I just asked Eliot if he agreed with the expression “passed” before writing this post. He got annoyed with me and in a tone that only a 100-year marriage could produce (remember, we work together 24/7), he sighed, “What do you think it means? Passed. Like in passed on. Like no longer living. Like on to the afterlife.” It seemed to make sense during his explanation, but I don’t like it.

Secondly, I was stunned to receive a text. That seems to be the way I am receiving death notices these days. Cut and dry. No need for small talk. “Virginia passed.” Now don’t say that this is “just New Yorkers.” Many people in my coop know each other well because we are always at each other’s throat over some issue.

Virginia was another story. My quiet neighbor who I’ve seen maybe 10 times in the last 20 years even though we lived side-by-side, seemed happy and healthy when we met at the trash chute a month ago. She was around my age and single. I was on my way to work when she opened the door to throw out her garbage. This was our usual encounter. Virginia had been sick a few years back and looked frail for quite some time. In the last year or two she seemed active and carefree. I also confirmed this with our doormen. They know things like that.

I tried to talk to our super Salim face-to-face, but he was too busy in the morning before I left for work and off the premises when I came home at night. So the texting continued. “What happened?” I texted.  He texted back, “Her nephew called me to say that he couldn’t reach her. When he came to the building a few hours later, we both went into her apartment together. We found her in bed, gone.”

When I met up with Salim days later, he told me that in the 20 years he has been working in the building this marked the eighth body he’s discovered — several found in bath tubs, on the floor, or slumped in a chair.

The third thing that stunned me was the notice the police posted on Virginia’s door. Until an autopsy is performed and a death is determined, no one is allowed to enter the apartment. The seal on the door cannot be broken. Salim promised to text me the findings. Other neighbors asked me to text them what I’ve learned.

Texting has replaced hanging out the window, screaming your neighbor’s name.

By the way, we argue by text as well but we use CAPS. “SCREW YOU!!”

I wanted to tell you this story after reading Jenna Wortham’s New York Times piece about “Death Online.” Jenna has been reporting on digital news for years. She is well-respected and adored.

NYTimes: Digital Diary: Talking About Death Online

Posting about a personal loss online makes people — both the poster and the readers — uncomfortable. Why does the social Web seem limited to a few emotions? http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/29/digital-diary-talking-about-death-online/

Rest In Peace Virginia

The Next Big Thing In TV—–4K

You will be hearing a lot about a new improvement in TV viewing called 4K, so I wanted you to know about it first. It is a long way off, but tech writers will be devoting a lot of their stories to it. That is what they always do when a new improvement has been announced. I didn’t want to leave you in the dark, so I am giving you a simple explanation of 4K and links to other stories if you want to explore.

The reason why it is called 4K, is because it is four times the resolution of the current HD – high definition – now.  Current HD maxes out at 1080 lines or a 1080p picture.  4K HD is 4096 lines, or 4096p.  Kind of like the regular display in the 1st generation iPad vs. the Retina Display in the new iPad – more pixels, higher picture quality. 4K originated in movie theaters.

Toshiba promises to ship a unit in the first quarter of 2013.  Westinghouse showed a 4K TV at CE Week.

That is all you need to know for now. Impress your kids and friends when you casually mention 4K to them. Trust me, they will suddenly have a new respect for like never before.

Toshiba’s 4K TV

http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-20116433-1/toshibas-$12000-55-inch-4k-3d-tv-dazzling/

Sony is releasing a 4K projector

http://www.slashgear.com/sony-unveils-worlds-first-4k-home-cinema-projector-31231097/

Ars Technica describes 4K.

http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2012/06/4k-tvs-are-coming-but-they-face-an-uphill-battle-in-the-home/

Happy Fifth Anniversary iPhone

We miss you Steve.

It has been five years since the iPhone was first introduced. I have included a link to CNET, one of the best tech blogs in the world, that shows Steve Jobs first introducing the iPhone at an Apple press conference. Witness history in the making. It gives me chills. I think I love my iPhone more than a lot of other things. Call me shameless.

http://news.cnet.com/8300-5_3-0.html?keyword=fifth+anniversary

 

 

Silent Retreat

A friend of mine, Barbara Hearne, moved from Miami to Ashland, NC because she wanted the adventure of building a new home and to experience the woods and mountains. She loves it!

During a recent conversation she told me she decided to “unplug” for a certain period of time and actually go silent for a week. That means no verbal or tech communications. Just complete silence. I was fascinated. I asked her to tell me all about it.

This is her story, her words.

If I had to describe my life in 2012 it would be “un-plugged.”

The previous three years were filled with packing, moving, selling, renting, designing and building my new home in the mountains.  Preparing the land and then building took years. I loved every minute.

My only question is how houses were built before email, texts, cell phones, internet, digital images and virtual 3D models.   I fell asleep at my keyboard many many nights because of  endless questions, answers and decisions made.

When the house was almost complete, I attended my first “Silent Retreat” with over 300 people.  Ahhhhh, a week of not speaking, “silent sitting”, hiking on my own and spending nights quiet in a little cabin.  I actually had to buy a watch since no tech items were allowed.  I noticed a few high end cars outside of some cabins — Porsche, Mercedes, Lexus. The luxury we came for was having no chatter, no input and lots of rest.  I’ve learned to value this quiet time.  Once a friend commented that I am a “true” introvert.  Inspiration bubbles up when I make time for silence.

Since that retreat I’ve given myself permission to be outdoors in nature more and less on the computer.  I love digging in the dirt, watching things grow, feeling the breeze and observing the creatures do their thing.  My partner recently bought me the new iPad,  but I must admit it’s his truck filled with mulch, stone and trees to be planted that excites me most. 

I know that silence is not dependent on being un-plugged. Maybe this is how I’m finding my balance or maybe it’s about getting older and wanting to feel life from the inside out.  Most importantly, I’ve learned to listen to what I need and I give myself permission to have it.  A wise teacher once said it best, “Life is but a whisper, be silent, listen.”