I’m proud of the work and grateful to the good doctor for taking some time to talk with me about compliance in healthcare IT, e-health, Dossia and what changes we might expect to IT healthcare policy under Obama.
I’m still catching up from the whirlwind of the past 36 hours. In that time, I’ve seen an editorial conference come off without a hitch, enjoyed some recognition for multimedia conference coverage, learned from hours of company meetings, mixed and mingled with hundreds of coworkers in front of 10′ screens, talked about blogging with Brian Madden and helped moderate a social media session with Chris Brogan, Colin Steele, Mark Fontecchio and a room full of bright, engaged tech reporters, editors, IT marketers and publishers. I plan to write more about that last later.
That alone made it a significant and looong day.
Add in the inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States and I’m only now feeling like I’m sidling to the edge of rushing slipstream of events in my personal and professional life, to say nothing of the larger changes on a global level. The new WhiteHouse.gov captures some of that zeitgeist, with its radically improved design and features — not to mention a new robots.txt file, as Jason Kottke pointed out yesterday.
I was fortunate to be able to watch the swearing in and the speech itself on a projected screen with the rest of my division. I’ll always be grateful that those resources were made available and that I was able to share that moment with my colleagues, along with the world’s Tweets about the #inauguration streaming along on the screen of my iPhone.
Aretha Franklin gave us a rendering of My Country Tis of Thee for the ages.
The quartet Yo-Yo Ma , Itzhak Perlman , Anthony McGill and Gabriela Montero performed an exquisite classical composition arranged by John Williams.
And then for a twenty one minutes, we enjoyed the extraordinary spectacle of shared collective excitement, hope and sustained eloquence.
(I was amused to hear that Barack had to retake the oath today after that hiccup at the beginning with Chief Justice Roberts.)
I’m still sifting through many other remarkable moments from the day and evening. Now that the celebrations have ended, the real work begins.
Tired as I am, I’m buoyed by the renewed sense of possibility I felt in the office, online and in the airwaves. My to-do list grows ever longer, both at home and at my editor’s desk. Even so, I feel a sense of hope, of optimism and of gratitude for being alive at this moment.
“When inspiration calls, you don’t send it to voicemail.” – will.i.am
I introduced someone to will.i.am’s landmark song and video this morning. I’m proud to have been the one to share that campaign anthem and reflect on its significance in the election of our next president.
I shared the song and video because I heard will.i.am talk about what inspired him to compose the song and create the video on NPR’s Weekend Edition this morning. I nearly had an NPR ‘driveway moment’ but kept moving through the streets of Cambridge, as I had to return my Zipcar. will.i.am heard the speech Barack Obama made after he won 36% of the vote in the 2008 NH Presidential Primary and decided to do what he knew how to do to support Obama: put the candidate’s words to music, cut a video and get it distributed.
Wikipedia has a comprehensive encyclopedia entry for Yes We Can, which includes the estimate that the video (below) has a ‘combined web total of more than 26 million viewings.’
Andres Useche also recorded “Si Se Puede Cambiar” (Yes we can change), which I’ve also embedded below:
Regardless of your ideological beliefs, this viral video demonstrated the power of eloquent rhetoric, stirring composition and, of course, the Internet.
According to NPR, will.i.am will join “countless other musicians in Washington, D.C., in an HBO-sponsored inauguration concert at the Lincoln Memorial. Each artist will perform songs related to the theme “We Are One.” The concert will be broadcast or streamed live online at 2 PM EST.
I had the great pleasure of seeing my Top 15 Twitter Acronyms post go live over at the Touchbase blog this morning.
That post was a long time coming. That I finally contributed to the Web’s best microsharing blog is due in no small part to @pistachio‘s perseverance, kindness and a gentle nudge at last Friday’s Pink Slip Party.
@pistachio gestures to #pinkslipparty on Twitter @betahouse
Thanks to all for the great feedback — and the retweets!
@NoOneYouKnow & @digiphile rock the hurricane pants
I’ve met dozens of great folks from Twitter over the years. When I cycled over to Peet’s Coffee in Harvard Square for a tweetup last year in the driving rain, I found that I wasn’t the only ‘tweep’ that liked to be visible in foul weather. Adam Zand, aka @NoOneYouKnow, brought even more color to the gathering. I don’t have many favorite pictures of myself, for whatever reason. This one was a happy exception.
Emerging technology has the power to make democracy stronger or weaker. Understanding where, when, and how is the hard part. Subscribe to Civic Texts to get insights about how technologies are changing our democracy in your inbox.