Brewed Fresh Daily

Anotated links from a Cleveland area obsessive coffee drinker, avid quotation collector, voracious internet content consumer, amatuer social network analyzer, and armchair economic developer. Recently referred to as a "web activist".

2/02/2005

 

I need to vent

Inside Business list Thomas Mulready as one of the Power 100 again this year and refers to Cool Cleveland as "a low-tech weekly email". You have no idea how much this offends me. Cool Cleveland is built every week using open source collaborative web tools and distributed using the best platform we can find. I've customized the open source software we're using for our events, and done some fairly cool mods for the next event we sell tickets for. So while the email you get in your inbox appears to be "low tech", Cool Cleveland is one of the most sophisticated publishers around. Did I mention the collaborative software? Thomas isn't the editor, that's Tisha Nemeth-Loomis' job. Thomas is the creator and curator of Cool Cleveland. There's a whole bunch of people involved in it, thats get listed at the bottom of the newsletter every week. So watch who you're callin' low tech.

2/01/2005

 

The Daniel Thompson Poet Stone Fund

Got this email and thought I'd pass it along:
Dear Brewed Fresh Daily, Can you help us out with this notice regarding the Daniel Thompson Poet Stone Fund. Maybe you could add it to your daily. If you knew Daniel then I am sure it is a done deal. Maybe we'll see you there.
Join us on Saturday, February 12th, 2005, at 7:30 p.m., at algebra t-house in Cleveland's Little Italy for an evening of poetry, polemics, and performance to benefit "The Daniel Thompson Poet Stone Fund." This absolutely free event is being held to raise donations for a tombstone in Lakeview Cemetery for Cuyahoga County�s late, great poet laureate, Daniel Thompson, who passed away in May, 2004. The evening will feature scheduled readers and performers as well as an open mic session. Alegebra t-house is located at 2136 Murray Hill Road in Little Italy. Checks should be made out to "The Daniel Thompson Poet Stone Fund" and sent to: Mac's Backs Paperbacks 1820 Coventry Cleveland Heights, Ohio 44118 To participate or for more information, contact Mark Hopkins at 216-231-7894 or by e-mail at safhop216@aol.com
Indeed. It is a done deal. I didn't "know" Daniel, only through hearing him on WCSB back in the 80's. I'm grateful that BFD readers are entrusting me with spreading the word on their events. I hope more people go out and be apart of the things I post here. Who knows, I might even be there...
 

Mixin' It Up With JumpStart

Laura Hummer dropped me an email requesting I post JumpStart's upcoming event for BFD readers:
Venture expert John O. Huston, founding member of The Ohio TechAngel Fund LLC is our key note and will be on hand to share his wealth of knowledge. Individuals from JumpStart's portfolio companies (Ayalogic, Day Day Ltd., Embrace Pet Insurance, PreEmptive Solutions, and Stanton Advanced Ceramics) will also be present to share their entrepreneurial experiences of how they took their idea and turned it into a reality... Come and meet serial and aspiring entrepreneurs, supporters of entrepreneurship, community leaders, business leaders, deal makers, and investors at Northeast Ohio's premier networking event. Make new contacts and connections while enjoying an assortment of drinks and hors d'oeuvres while listening to the cool blues rhythms of Cleveland's own - The Bar Flies.

 

Hungarian Coffee

I'm 50% Eastern European and this explains a lot:
"Since the 1500's, coffee drinking in Hungary was a community event. A large number of people could enjoy cups of coffee brewed over an open fire in a large kettle of boiling water. Coffee beans were freshly roasted, ground and mixed with salt and a whole raw egg, including the shell. This mixture was then placed in the boiling water and briskly stirred. The protein in the egg caused the coffee to foam and then cold water was added to reduce the foaming. No filters were needed then or now, as the grounds, egg bits and shell pieces settle to the bottom of the kettle. Coffee was then drawn off the top and collected into smaller kettles for serving..."
I seem to recall one of my friends who came from Hungary describe this, but I appreciate INeedCoffee.com for reminding me of it and my ancestry.
 

Cheaper creativity

Jeff Hess clicked through to Jay Yoo's blog, and in turn, read the Wired article His reaction:
"The question I have is, what makes Pink think that foreigners can't do creative cheaper? The notion that they can't is ludicrous. In the 20th century we struggled with the idea of a global village. In the 21st century it's going to be a global hut. The only thing that matters now is simply this: can you deliver the desired product more cheaply than your competitor. The key word there is, of course, desired. Nothing else matters."
Maybe one of our economic development expert bloggers (Don Iannone and Ed Morrison) or authors (Jim Gilmore) are working on what comes next after the creative class is old and the experience economy has come and gone. It would be nice to get ahead of the curve instead of playing follow the leader...

1/31/2005

 

Otis White: A better class of landlord

From the current issue of Civic Strategies:
"What's the first sign of trouble in older suburban cities? Often it's when aging neighborhoods sprout 'for rent' signs. It's not hard to picture what could go wrong: As houses go from homeowners to renters, they fall into disrepair, tenants come and go (often with dire consequences for the school system), crime escalates, and neighborhoods deteriorate. This can happen almost overnight as elderly homeowners die and their children sell mom and dad's unfashionable duplex or aging bungalow at estate-sale prices. Absentee landlords sometimes buy up a number of these places and rent them to successively poorer families until the houses are uninhabitable and the landlord walks away. Is there anything a city can do about this? Some older suburbs near Cleveland are trying a number of strategies. The most common: aggressive inspections (Garfield Heights plans to inspect every rental house every three years, looking for unsafe and unsightly conditions), programs to encourage renters to give homeownership a try and efforts to educate the landlords themselves. For instance, South Euclid requires that landlords take a one-day training course on maintenance and crime prevention when their rental permits are renewed. 'We have a standard here in our community,' said South Euclid's mayor, 'and you have to reach that standard.' Shaker Heights is trying a little more carrot and a little less stick. It's looking for a company to run background checks on prospective renters at discount rates. Its hope: By making the background checks cheap, small-time landlords will use them to weed out troublemaker tenants. 'Anything we can do to help them be a better landlord helps us as a city,' said one city official. Another carrot: Shaker Heights wants to give the city's seal of approval to landlords who meet high maintenance standards and help promote these places to prospective renters. The name of this program: 'Certified Shaker.'"

 

David Byrne @ The Akron Art Museum

Jeff Stacklin sent this out last week in CrainsCleveland.com Editor's Choice email blast:
The Akron Art Museum is pleased to present David Byrne, best known as a musician with the Talking Heads, for an art talk titled, �I ? PowerPoint.� The lecture will take place in the auditorium of the new main branch of the Akron-Summit Country Public Library. David Byrne has made visual art for more than 25 years. Trained as an artist, his latest medium is a bit unusual�PowerPoint. According to Byrne, �It started off as a joke (this software is a symbol of corporate salesmanship�or lack thereof), but then the work took on a life of its own as I realized I could create pieces that were moving, despite the limitations of the �medium�.� He will discuss his use of this unusual art form during the talk.
He must have known I'd want to attend. Thanks, Jeff! Anyone out there a member of the Akron Art Museum? I'd like to be able to get tickets the first week they become available. My contact info is there on the left, and I'd be happy to discuss terms.

1/30/2005

 

We are fragile creatures

Wendy Johnson, the former Medical Director of the Cleveland Department of Public Health, posts a heart wrenchning update about her work in Mozambique:
Last week I was flagged down while driving past what looked like a broken down machibombo (small bus). The bus had been emptied and the passengers gathered around it, spilling into the road. The only white man in the crowd approached us and explained that there�d been an accident, the bus had hit a young boy, he was unconscious but still alive. I got out and before I could walk 10 feet, a couple of guys were half carrying-half dragging the limp child to my car. We opened the back, I tried to make a flat surface big enough for him to lie down, and we raced off to the nearest hospital, about an hour�s drive away. Once I had time to assess him, my heart sank. He had a pulse and was breathing, but he was completely unresponsive and his pupils were fixed and constricted. There was no flicker of life left in his motionless eyes, only his hands twitched occasionally with involuntary posturing. Outwardly, he had a small laceration on the right side of his scalp, but otherwise looked completely unscathed. We are fragile creatures...

 

Two by Yoo

Check out these two posts by KOYONO's Jay Yoo:
This is another great example of what cities can do to attract the Creative Class. Let's face it folks, outsourcing at every level is a reality. As the cost of communicating overseas via the web (i.e. VoIP) goes to practically zero, experts are predicting that outsourcing to Asia at every level (blue AND white collar) will grow leaps and bounds. The only thing to do is to create new markets, business models and industries. More evidence that we will need to exercise more of our Right Brain in creating a new future instead of daydreaming about the good old days.
His comment on being right brained comes from the previous post:
Wow! I got goose bumbs when I read this. Teaching/encouraging Creativity (Right Brain Stuff) as an important and necessary leadership quality has been something I have been pitching to the Cleveland Social Capital machine for quite some time. The cool thing is that we are all born with a Right Brain. The fact that it is not equally developed, encouraged and accepted (vs. logic, left brain stuff) is ironic.
Please visit Jay's blog and leave him your comments. That's what I'm going to do right now.
 

Cleveland's low wage job numbers

Reading this post by Bill Callahan, I'm not really sure what to excerpt for you here. You're better served by clicking on the title of this post and reading the whole thing.
 

Napping in Open Space

I woke up from a nap to read this post on the Open Space listserv from Jack Ricchiuto
: "In napping, we allow dreamtime to unfold - in the aboriginal sense of dreamtime. For me, opening space the bigger the space opened, the bigger dreams become possible. Whether it's literal or figurative napping, I am committed to opening my heart to a space large enough for all the dreams of the community now working and playing in the space we've created. Lately, visualizing and breathing an open heart space has been most effective."

1/29/2005

 

Metro Joe

Tonight was the first night that Metro Joe Ohio City was opening. They're in the space formerly occupied by Cafe Noir. MJOC is selling Equal Exchange, is smoke-free and has free WiFi. Fridays and Saturdays they're open until midnight, and the rest of the week 'til 11PM. What more could you ask for?

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