my name is tommy
Tommy Penner
Fine Internet Connossieur for Vimeo
Detroit native, Brooklyn transplant

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I miss you too, mom!
I’m taking a social media class, and we have been assigned to blog at least twice a week with “significant” posts on the class’s private social network. I’ll be reposting my articles (with some edits) here on Tumblr for all to see.

So I’ll be the first to admit that, yes, I’m a bit of a loser being 23 and still living at home with my parents. But taking 21 credit hours and keeping up two part-time jobs, one could understand that I am never at home. Literally, during the week I see my sisters and parents for the hour or so before they go to bed at night, and maybe in the first few minutes of the day before I leave for school.


This morning I woke up, dropped my youngest sister to school, came back home, and did my morning routine of preparing for today’s classes. As I was leaving the house, my mom was on Skype talking to our family in the Philippines. When she discovered it was me leaving for class for the day, she came to the door and gave me a little hug, and said, “I miss you Tom!”

Oh dear, that just about broke my heart.

The kicker was when I get into my car, and 89x Morning is on. At the time they were talking about boyfriends being too attached to their mothers. I got a little laugh out of that, what are the odds that my mom would tell me she misses me, and they’re talking about sons being too attached to their mothers. It was kind of like hearing the perfect song on the radio for a certain situation.

I don’t think I’m especially close to my mother, no more so than some of my other friends. I don’t tell her every secret, but I keep her well informed about what’s going on in my life. But I think that feeling, even though I don’t miss her all the time, just adds up over time. Family’s important, and that will never change with me.

  10:12 am  |   September 30 2009   |  2 notes   |  Comments
  tagged: article 

Social Media and Disasters

I’m taking a social media class, and we have been assigned to blog at least twice a week with “significant” posts on the class’s private social network. I’ll be reposting my articles (with some edits) here on Tumblr for all to see.
Also: admittedly this article was quite hastily written.
One thing that I find absolutely fascinating about technology is how people are using it on a daily basis to broadcast their lives. On a more possibly morbid side, what I find even more fascinating is how people use the same social technologies during a disaster.

I got to thinking about this on September 11th this past Friday. Back in 2001, there was no Facebook, Twitter, or MySpace. And really, digital cameras were a luxury because they were so expensive. The majority of Americans received news of the terrorist attacks from mainstream media, including any stories about the everyday people going through the horror in Lower Manhattan. There were no people tweeting their experience.

Fast forward a little over seven years to January 2009. A commercial plane crash lands into the Hudson River along the west side of Manhattan shortly after take-off from JFK. I distinctly remember being on Tumblr that day when someone I follow posted a picture of the plane in the water, with people on the wings, all wearing their floatation devices. When it comes to internet stories like that, I tend to take it with a hefty dose of skepticism, but then other pictures began showing up on my dashboard from other New York people.

I turned on my TV and flipped to CNN. They were talking about the upcoming inauguration of Barack Obama. I went back to my web browser and checked CNN.com, and there was also nothing regarding a plane crash. 10 minutes passed before I saw any mainstream media source mention anything about the plane crash.

I found it highly interesting that Twitter, Flickr, and bloggers all got the scoop before the mainstream media did. It makes sense, after all a blogger has no editors to check his or her story.

So thinking about that plane crash makes me wonder what September 11th would’ve been like if we had today’s social media back then. I can only imagine it being even more of a frenzy and more disturbing than what actually happened that day. People would be making snap predictions of who or what group was responsible; I remember early that day everyone was convinced that Sadaam Hussein and Iraq was responsible for the attack. The wild accusations flew around quickly before we heard the name Osama bin Laden from any official channel.

I think that to a certain extent the instant communication of today would just help to spread fear, uncertainty, and doubt at a higher rate of speed than ever before in human history. Indeed, breaking news comes from Twitter first than from CNN. But is this what news of the future will be like? Will people trust the mass of people tweeting what is happening as opposed to a certified journalistic source?

I guess it all depends. 2012 isn’t that far away, I wonder how many people will tweet until the world ends.

  10:00 am  |   September 15 2009   |  Comments
  tagged: facebook tumblr twitter social media article 

#kanye #douchebag

I’m taking a social media class, and we have been assigned to blog at least twice a week with “significant” posts on the class’s private social network. I’ll be reposting my articles (with some edits) here on Tumblr for all to see.
My dad and I had to run a few errands late last night, and I didn’t get home until 10 or 10:30. I was away from the internet for awhile, a rarity, but when I sat down to my Facebook and Tumblr, two words dominated the feeds: “Kanye” and “douchebag”.

I had forgotten the MTV Video Music Awards were on tonight, frankly I didn’t care, and I thought no one else cared either. But when I saw all these feeds pouring in declaring Kanye West a douchebag, I called my girlfriend, who I knew was watching the VMAs. She explained to me that when Taylor Swift was accepting her award, Kanye comes on stage and says that Beyonce had a much better music video. It was quite the classy move, making everyone watching dislike Kanye just that much more.

This set off everyone, and people began tweeting or updating their statuses to express their feelings. A strange ripple effect then occurred, with a second wave of people like me asking, via Facebook or Twitter, what happened to get everyone agitated in the first place. The third wave of statuses then were simply asking everyone to stop talking about the Kanye incident altogether.

The interesting thing was that this all occurred probably within 15 minutes or so.

It’s a prime example of viral news on the internet, even though it’s just celebrity slime. Last week’s Presidential address to Congress is another example of the same type of thing. President Obama’s speech on healthcare was interrupted by Representative Joe Wilson yelling, “You lie!”. This act brought people around the Nation to try and visit his website, which went down from the sudden burst in traffic, and went as far as to have many people donate money to his campaign opponent in the upcoming election. And again, people tweeted and updated their statuses to reflect their opinion.

Viral media spreads faster than ever now. Within an hour of both Kanye and Mr. Wilson’s outbursts, parodies had already been made. The speed of the internet just never ceases to amaze me.

And did you see what Lady Gaga had on?

  4:23 pm  |   September 14 2009   |  1 note   |  Comments
  tagged: kanye douchebag vma twitter joe wilson obama article 

Bob Barker on WWE, you didn’t know?

I’m taking a social media class, and we have been assigned to blog at least twice a week with “significant” posts on the class’s private social network. I’ll be reposting my articles (with some edits) here on Tumblr for all to see.
So I’d like to think I’m relatively up to date with these kind of random, obscure, and awesome entertainment oddities. I’d also like to think that much of the time I’m slightly ahead of the curve when it comes to finding news like this before the mainstream media catches on. So it was a major surprise this morning when I was watching Fox 2 News and discovered that beloved game show star Bob Barker was guest host on WWE Raw on Monday night. The even more surprising thing mentioned was that his guest appearance was announced on Twitter.

Wait, what? Announced on Twitter? Now I’ll be the first to admit that I’m not at all a huge Twitter user. If you were to view my Twitter updates, they would all be forwards from my Tumblr posts and my Facebook statuses. But generally random news from Twitter, like the great Gmail outage last week, will bleed over into Tumblr and Facebook from other users. That’s fine. But Bob Barker on WWE? I’m very surprised no one in my social circles, online and real-life, caught this one.

But a few weeks ago, one of my staple podcasts This Week In Tech (TWiT) covered a similar story. That week the panel talked about how this Yahoo page, titled OMG!, receives millions of pageviews a month, and actually twice the hits that TMZ does. The panelists had never heard of the site before, and neither have I. The reason being that Yahoo OMG! isn’t targeted towards users like myself and the panelists of TWiT. I suppose the same thing goes for Bob Barker appearing on WWE. I don’t see much overlap between technical internet users and WWE fans.

It’s what I call the “publification” of the web, the movement of internet content away from the technical users who built the internet, and more towards what mainstream media is like today, with entertainment sites and more “general” media. For better or for worse; I could go without celebrity gossip on my internet.

  6:45 pm  |   September 9 2009   |  Comments
  tagged: bob barker omg twit twitter wwe article 

A Brief Story of Recent History (Abridged)
I’m taking a social media class, and we have been assigned to blog at least twice a week with “significant” posts on the class’s private social network, hosted on ning.com. I’ll be reposting my articles (with some edits) here on Tumblr for all to see.

My name is Tommy.

Now that the hard part is out of the way, let me tell you about myself. I am currently 23 years old and born in Detroit, live in St. Clair Shores (“the SCS”), and work at a video game retailer that many people stop at. I’m also working at the school’s eLearning office, where I generally am awesome. I’m half-Filipino, half-American/German/Russian/Prussian/Polish/etc. but usually just default to the possibly-racist label of general “Asian”, which I’m moderately comfortable with.

When I’m not being awesome at school or work, I’m out being awesome just hanging out with friends getting into debates over ninjas vs. pirates or sharks vs. cats, traveling across state borders, and listening to rock music. As much as all that sounds awesome, in actuality I’m probably reading or reblogging posts on my Tumblr, or playing Team Fortress 2 with real-life friends online.

I originally started at this school in Fall 2004 after graduating high school. Back then, and up until spring ‘07, I was enrolled in the mechanical engineering program. Late-06 into early-07 I realized how much I wasn’t into engineering at all, and I discovered (re-discovered?) a kind of passion I have for video. In December ‘07 I began classes at Specs Howard School of Broadcast Arts, graduating from the TV/video broadcast program the following August. I returned here in January ‘08, enrolling in the Media Communication program, bringing me to today, with the lovely people all around.

Since then, and even before then, I had a certain interest in video, and the literal explosion of video sharing services online, and mainstream media’s response and attempt at integrating new media into their programming has absolutely piqued my interest. In an interesting turn of events involving podcasters and beer (more on that in the future), I discovered the video sharing site Vimeoand its great community of videographers. Coincidentally (or not), I also found out that Vimeo was owned by a parent company that owns CollegeHumor.com, which I loved visiting back in the ol’ high school days. In 2007, a Vimeo meetup in Brooklyn led me to meeting many great people, even having some CH guys serve me beer (thanks fellas!)

Many videographers on the site continue to inspire me, although I’m a little shy with posting work of my own. The little work I’ve done I’m proud of, and from what I hear from friends, it’s not bad.

I spent a month this past summer in the Philippines, meeting family I’ve never met before, and experiencing another culture, and indeed another world. I’m still going through the 3,000 pictures my family took, along with the hours of video as well. Eventually I’d like to do something with all that. The experiences there were worth more than money, and helped to ground me as to how lucky we are in our Country, and how lucky I am to be able to experience all that.

Although it still perplexes me how I could readily get Wi-Fi in the Philippines, yet none in Alabama.

I stand today on the edge of what I call my Death March to Graduation™. The DMG™ this semester is 21 credit hours of class, in addition to my aforementioned on-campus and register-jockey jobs. But with the majority of my classes being involved in my field, I feel little anxiety, and even excited for those classes. I get to play with the internet and video cameras, come on, how awesome is that?

And as for anything related to this class, my writing style is random, sporadic, and very very sarcastic. So yeah, suck it (don’t).

  10:02 pm  |   August 31 2009   |  2 notes   |  Comments
  tagged: article for school school introduction 

Facebook Rant: Why they’ll never charge (and why people are dumb)

Originally posted as a Facebook note entitled: “Why Facebook will never charge (aka you’re all stupid)”

Recently, I’ve seen a number of friends join the “Don’t charge for Facebook” groups. First off, you’re all idiots, and that’s okay, I still love you. I actually did join one of these groups, only to post a very similar rant on their forum, but my post was either lost or deleted. Meh.

Facebook will never charge you to use their site. It is far from their best interest to do so. See those completely unrelated boxes on the right side? Those are ads. Advertising pays for Facebook, the same way it pays for 90% of the content on the internet, all of your network and non-premium tv, your magazines, your (dying) newspapers, and your morning radio shows. Essentially, all of the media around you.

So we’ve established ads pay for Facebook. Duh. But wouldn’t charging a fee for an ad-free Facebook make more money than what the ads bring in? Not necessarily. While on the surface it’s a good idea, there are a number of things outside of money that would adversely effect the site. Facebook is a community, and charging users segregates the community. Not only that, paid users usually demand more than an ad-free experience, and if paid users were given preferential treatment, that would only serve to segregate the community more (aka “free” users asking why they’re not getting some killer feature in the “paid” version, etc.)

That paid model works in certain circumstances, such as Flickr or Vimeo, but on a site where people are to connect on a level playing field, again it just segregates the larger community.

Going back to advertising - it’s in Facebook’s greater interest to get as many users possible to sign up. More users = more eyeballs glaring at the advertising. With more eyeballs looking at the advertising, Facebook can then go to their advertisers and tell them that there are x number of people in this demographic, more than the competition (who is more Twitter now than Myspace), and charge the advertisers more money. Essentially, more eyeballs = more money.

Which makes me laugh when I see all these “Facebook will begin charging their users” groups popping up, because really what you’re doing is creating more attention around something, creating more page views, and more eyeballs on the advertising. In a kind of screwy ass-backward way, the “No Paid Facebook” groups are keeping Facebook from going the paid route, but the issue is that it’s not an issue in the first place.

And that bring up my biggest pet peeve - all the “I hate the new Facebook” groups that inevitably occur when Facebook makes a change. If you really, really dislike the way it is, leave. The complete irony in using a service to talk down upon it boggles me a bit. No one is forcing you to stay on Facebook. By not only staying on Facebook to complain about it, you’re actually giving them page views, your eyeballs, and money to complain.

The more activity you have on Facebook, the more you ensure it’s survival. A few years ago, LiveJournal made a change in their Terms of Service that its users did not like, and the community there came up with a site-wide day where no one was to post. That day, traffic on the site spiked as thousands of users posted, “I’m not going to post for 24 hours.”

The point of my rant? Complain more. It amuses me and keeps the site running.

  2:06 am  |   March 19 2009   |  7 notes   |  Comments
  tagged: article 

The Cruiser is dead. Long live the Compass!

(note: originally posted on Facebook with tagged friends, since I had alot of friends asking about it.)

Yes, my beloved PT Cruiser is dead. That poor old vehicle has transported me across the midwest, Chicago to New York, Toronto to Alabama. Needless to say, I’ve had many many memories in the old girl, from friends to lovers. Killing the Cruiser is like killing a part of me - I’ve been driving her for the better part of 7 years, up until last Sunday. I’d like to say that she went down in a blaze of glory, but that’s not the case.

My sister was in the blind spot of a merging car on 696 eastbound just before the 94 interchange. She swerved out of the way, but lost control of the Cruiser, spinning out of control, and going up the grass embankment. Overall she didn’t hit anything with the body of the Cruiser, however she caught the edge of a concrete barrier, hitting it with the front left and rear left wheels. This flattened and severely dented the rear left wheel, and flattened the tire as well.

The mortal damage, however, comes from the rack-and-pinion steering being destroyed from the front left wheel impact, breaking the tie rods, and puncturing the transmission. With the steering rack destroyed (one super-expensive repair job) and the transmission also destroyed (another super-expensive job) the insurance company declared the old girl a loss, as the repairs cost more than the book value of the vehicle.

This was all last Monday, the first day of my Spring Break.

Wednesday and Thursday I sadly emptied out the Cruiser, removing all the buttons I had attached to the headliner, and the junk that sat in the back of the car (including a George Foreman Grille that had been in there for nearly a year.) What got me most was when I realized that the dead Cruiser sat behind the Chrysler bump shop, only a few hundred feet from where I first saw her, as a 14/15 year old about 9 years ago.

It’s sad, and I’ll miss the poor girl like I miss old friends that I haven’t seen in a long time… except I’ll never see the Cruiser again.

Compass?
My dad has been working with Chrysler for over 30 years now, and has had money invested in the company for the greater part of that time. However, with the uncertainty of who/what will be owning the company in the next few years (or even six months), my dad was offered to either collect his investment in one lump sum, or in payments over the next few months/years.Again, due to the uncertainty, my dad decided on the lump sum.

His plan was to either buy my mom a new vehicle, passing her current van down to my sister, or buy a car for my sisters, sometime in the next few months.

Well, this screwed up his timetable and the overall plans. We dropped by the Chrysler/Jeep dealership on Thursday, and we picked out a mew white Jeep Compass. Even though my dad suggested picking up another PT Cruiser, I said no… you can’t replace the Cruiser like that.

So the Jeep Compass is the closest thing to a Cruiser without getting a Cruiser, in my opinion. We pick up the new car on Monday.

One thing, though, is that I don’t really feel deserving of <i>another</i> car for me. In reality the Cruiser, and the Compass, are “family” cars that my sisters and I are to share, but for quite a few years, I was the only other driver in the family besides my parents, more or less making the family Cruiser my own for that time.

I still feel undeserving of a new car, and I feel like maybe this entire entry is just one long White Whine. While friends of mine are having much bigger difficulties… I don’t know.

Nevertheless, I’m gonna miss the Cruiser. So many good memories made in that car, and made possible by that car. The Cruiser is dead. Long live the Compass!

  2:48 am  |   March 16 2009   |  Comments
  tagged: article 

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