Jaime creates using many mediums...acrylic, fabric, photographs, paper, polymer clay and glass. She is inspired by many artists, but her personal favorites are Marc Chagall, Pia Fries, local artist Terry Turrell, photographer Anton Corbin and most importantly her husband Michael.
Saturday, February 28, 2009
Jaime's Art
Jaime creates using many mediums...acrylic, fabric, photographs, paper, polymer clay and glass. She is inspired by many artists, but her personal favorites are Marc Chagall, Pia Fries, local artist Terry Turrell, photographer Anton Corbin and most importantly her husband Michael.
Why Embrace Technology?
Erin Pierce discovered this video clip, one of the participants of the Cafe Brainstorm. It answers the basic question with facts and figures. Why embrace technology? The video is called “Did you know” and it is about the progression of information technology, researched by Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod, and Jeff Bronman.
Erin is an innovate web developer and designer in the Seattle area.
Visit Erin's Website
Friday, February 27, 2009
My favorite films...

Movies say a lot about people and their personality. If I had to pick ten movies to take with me when I go... these would be it.
1) Dances With Wolves
2) Raiders of the Lost Ark
3) Three Colors Trilogy (Blue, White, Red)
4) Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
5) Lost in Translation
6) Amelie
7) Sideways
8) Memento
9) Almost Famous
10 The Party (1968)
Honorable Mentions: Jurassic Park, Ghost World, The President's Analyst, Wings of Desire
Thursday, February 26, 2009
On the Air - Foster's Cafe Radio @ Pandora
Hope all is going well!
-Michael & jaime Foster
www.boojazz.com
Listen to Boo's Jazz and Foster's Cafe Music on Pandora by clicking here!
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
The Five or Six Cafe Brainstorm Questions

As we now hit the final stretch of the event this Friday at 2pm at Mosiac Coffeehouse, I have prepared five or six start off questions to get the ball rolling. If there is time, we will take questions from the audience (if we have any) and answer those.
THE FIVE OR SIX WEB 3.0 QUESTIONS
1) What in your mind is Web 3.0 and what projects are you currently developing that you feel would qualify as a gateway to the new web.
2) How will the Nintendo Wii interface (as well as the portable iPhone) change the way we browse the web?
3) There seems to be a tug-of-war between creatives and technicians when it comes to the web. What can be done to help cooperation between the left and right brains to meet in the middle and being the steps to the creation of Web 3.0?
4) In 1996, Nicholas Negroponte speculated that it may be difficult for human beings to justify spending money on ones and zeros (bits of data). Chris Anderson Editor of Wired recently speculated that one of the secrets to finance in the future will be to give web content away for free. With the exception of the adult industry, most still find little value in buying web content. What is the future of buying content on the web, if there is any, and how will Web 3.0 change the way we look at the value of online information.
5) Too much information, the web has become over-saturated with content, much of it spam, mis-information, and gossip. What will be the checks and balances of Web 3.0, and will the organic qualities of the web have the ability to influence third world countries and oppressed nations?
6) What is the future of blogging on the web and is there a way to make the blog content more memorable, thus making the information easier to retain?
Looking for Jefferson's Moose: The State of Cyberspace
In 1787, Thomas Jefferson put a stuffed American moose in the lobby of his Paris residence. As the U.S. minister to France, Jefferson displayed the moose to powerfully symbolize the enormous possibilities of America.
The new world of the Internet has equally vast possibilities and, like North America in Jefferson's day, its landscape remains largely unexplored.
In his new book, In Search of Jefferson's Moose: Notes on the State of Cyberspace, David Post draws remarkable and entertaining parallels between the Internet and the natural and intellectual landscape that Thomas Jefferson explored, documented, and shaped.
Creatively drawing on Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia, Post describes how the Internet functions technically and applies Jefferson's views on natural history, law, and governance to the unfolding complexities of cyberspace.
Jefferson's Moose is a book for both fans of Thomas Jefferson and for fans of the Internet, each of whom should know more about the other topic.
The Brainstorm Questions
As we now hit the final stretch of the event this Friday at 2pm at Mosiac Coffeehouse, I have prepared five or six start off questions to get the ball rolling. If there is time, we will take questions from the audience (if we have any) and answer those.THE FIVE OR SIX WEB 3.0 QUESTIONS
1) What in your mind is Web 3.0 and what projects are you currently developing that you feel would qualify as a gateway to the new web.
2) How will the Nintendo Wii interface (as well as the portable iPhone) change the way we browse the web?
3) There seems to be a tug-of-war between creatives and technicians when it comes to the web. What can be done to help cooperation between the left and right brains to meet in the middle and being the steps to the creation of Web 3.0?
4) In 1996, Nicholas Negroponte speculated that it may be difficult for human beings to justify spending money on ones and zeros (bits of data). Chris Anderson Editor of Wired recently speculated that one of the secrets to finance in the future will be to give web content away for free. With the exception of the adult industry, most still find little value in buying web content. What is the future of buying content on the web, if there is any, and how will Web 3.0 change the way we look at the value of online information.
5) Too much information, the web has become over-saturated with content, much of it spam, mis-information, and gossip. What will be the checks and balances of Web 3.0, and will the organic qualities of the web have the ability to influence third world countries and oppressed nations?
6) What is the future of blogging on the web and is there a way to make the blog content more memorable, thus making the information easier to retain?
Monday, February 23, 2009
I gotta ART SHOW: Friday, February 27th at 6pm

OPEN ARTS' ~ OPEN HOUSE.
WHERE: at the studio
6300 Seaview Ave NW
Seattle, WA 98107 US
(Across the street from Ray's Boathouse in Ballard)
When: Friday, February 27, 6:00PM
OPEN ART along w/ Co-Tenant RADIANT BLOOMS are having our Inogoration to Ballard & Art Community. I'll have a bunch of paintings there.
ALL ARE WELCOME!
Art, Music, Food & Drink. Enjoy!
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Better Ways to Live...
Top Ten Ways To Be Green:
1. Unplug
2. Use less water
3. Switch to Florescent light bulbs
4. Choose products with less packaging
5. Buy local and organic foods
6. Drive less
7. Plant a tree
8. Recycle more ( http://earth911.com/ )
9. Switch to green power (via your local utility company)
10. Spread the word and direct friends to http://www.lime.com/livethechange
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Cafe Brainstorm: Biznik Event Poster

This is the official poster for the Biznik event I'm hosting in two weeks. I was working on this illustration, didn't really know what I was going to do with it... and it just happened to be perfect for this event. Enjoy!
How is this digital experience changing consumers and communities?
- Social networking applications and sophisticated mobile devices are combining elements of the real and virtual worlds, and delivering an augmented experience of reality.
How is this digital experience changing consumers and communities? - World Economic Forum
Growing Up Online: A Frontline PBS Special


This is a must watch for anyone working in the internet.
"FRONTLINE takes viewers inside the private worlds that kids are creating online, raising important questions about how the Internet is transforming the experience of adolescence. At school, teachers are trying to figure out how to reach a generation that no longer reads books or newspapers. Fear of online predators has led teachers and parents to focus primarily on keeping kids safe online. But many young people think these fears are misplaced. Online media has also intensified the social dimensions of adolescence as teens create and play with identities on sites like MySpace and Facebook and encounter intense peer pressure in a variety of virtual worlds. Parents are confused about how to respond to the increasingly private worlds inhabited by their children, lacking an understanding of both the creative potential and the genuine risks of this new dimension of our cultural environment."
Watch Growing Up Online On PBS
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Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Monday, February 9, 2009
Four paintings on ebay for RAINN - Bidding ends Friday
Visit RAINN.
Bid on "The Last"
Bid on "Toronto Will Just Not Let You Recover"
Bid on "Superconnected"
Bid on "I'm Really Not That Anxious"
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Sunday, February 8, 2009
Video from the Biznik Wine & Cheese Event at Gasworks Gallery
Just me having fun with my handheld camera.
Gasworks Gallery on Saturday February 7th, 2009. From flip flops to high heels, put on your most festive threads and join Matt, Dan, Lara and Giannina at Gasworks Gallery and Matt's private art studio, for the "Festive Wine and Cheese Network Party"!
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Introduction to Web 3.0
-----------------------------
Sex. That's what it's all about. This was what I was told, back around 2000, during in the initial days of my graphic design career, which I found myself quickly rising in the ranks of due to my knowledge of the web and my belief it could be more than just weird porn and "Party of Five" fan-sites. A year out of college and I was tossed the position of art director for an up-and-coming firm in the farmlands on the edge of Chicago, in a wood-paneled musty room packed with an unreasonable staff indifferent to the effects of second-hand smoke. It was there my job depended on an overweight burnt out salesman that frequently compared his life to Schindler's List and metaphorically referred to his job as an elephant which constantly shit on his head. He claimed in the end there was no real marketing strategies or branding. No, it all came down to a human being's need to have sex. And believe me, this was the last person I wanted to lecture me about human sexuality. The man had about as much sex appeal as a sock puppet. I never liked that guy, and I know he hated me for my lack to turn around design projects in less than five minutes.
However, it did illustrate a point that for many of us that endured the son-of-a-Bush years realized, even well-intended individuals can be in positions of power and dead wrong about a great many things, completely aware they are doing harm. (I do not want to single out George Bush. Let's face it, there have been piles of individuals responsible for the recent calamities stemming from misguided American policies.) And the repercussions of bad leadership is not a new concept, think of the millions of people that have perished in wars due to ignorance, arrogance, and in some cases the need to get laid. (Ask Helen of Troy.)
But let's pull back the reins here, this isn't a mean-spirited blog you're about to read. Really. We're going to scrape off the elephant poop from the bottom of our shoes and look to the future, because despite what the news leads you to believe, we're on the verge of a bright new world, and the impact the internet will eventually have on the human race. Of course it would help if we knew where the human race was going, and for that we look to the skies and the search for little green men.
Somewhere around 1950, the world-renowned physicist Enrico Fermi speculated on why we haven't heard from aliens, zipping around in shiny spaceships and spitting out television signals from their lame alien talk shows. After years of speculation and brainstorming, the answers to Fermi's "where the hell are they" paradox come down to a couple of solutions: First, life is difficult to start and to evolve to an intelligent and technologically advanced stage and perhaps we're either the only one in the galaxy or simply too far away from one another to make contact. Then there's the more pessimistic view, where advanced civilizations quickly destroy themselves. Another theory revolves around the idea that the aliens have arrived and are far too advanced for us to recognize them. But in my mind, the most disturbing one goes along the lines of civilizations destroying themselves; in which a society implodes into creatures of luxury, plugged into virtual utopian worlds free of fear and pain. Maybe they'll still have sex.
What makes Fermi's speculations so intriguing is the simple fact that they illustrated the possible futures of our own civilizations. Where is this going you ask? I thought this was about the future of the internet? Hang on for a moment, and let's hyper-link to the world of quantitative finance.
Despite what you may think, the quants are not a group of little green men. There are a group that works with green in terms of currency. They crunch numbers like bowls of Cherrios. Mathematical whizzes that found their calling in the world of business. There is even a high-profile magazine in the quant-world known as "Wilmott." Don't have a subscription? That's because Wilmott subscriptions cost the it's-too-ridiculous-of-an-amount-to-even-be-considered a-joke... of over $500 a year. (Quants do live up to their name, they sure know how to rake in the dough.) After about a year or so of observing the quant world from afar and reading tons of Wilmott's free postings on their website, I've come to make a qualified (or quantified) generalization about them. Like most businessmen, they love free markets. it doesn't matter if the goods or services are of good quality, moral standing, or better society as a whole. One article even boasted that if the public wants fifteen Police Academy movies, there should be no qualms to simply provide mindless entertainment to the masses. Restriction free supply and demand, that's the only rule. That's the golden rule.
On the other end of this notion are Harvard professors like Cass Sunstein and Richard Thaler, whom feel that theoretically there is no such thing as free choice. They even wrote a book about it. In their view, everyone that presents a choice is a "choice architect" and unintentionally or intentionally favors one selection over the other in the presentation of a choice. Since human beings tend to make bad choices, it is critical those presenting the options act as "parental libertarians" and make the best decisions for society the easiest or most accessible for others to choose, as it is our responsibility to make the world a better place for the generations to come after us.
Both sides have serious flaws, but after the economic stress endured throughout the first decade of the 21st century, the case for keeping markets completely free of regulation has soften considerably, even with the likes of longtime fed chairman and economic genius Alan Greenspan. (Remember, before the collapse he warned us the housing market was in fact "frothy" which has now made me extremely wary of the major catastrophe awaiting to pounce from my morning espresso). Both the quants and the parental libertarians do agree on a couple of facts, most notably the idea that people tend to choose the easiest path because life is hard and we prefer to be lazy and besides, isn't the definition of scholar Greek for leisure? Hence, by definition the more leisure the better off we would be. Unfortunately if the quants are completely correct and it is our God given right to choose whatever our hearts desire, and we tend to always choose the quickest and easiest path, then we are all destined to become those previously predicted creatures of extreme luxury, plugged into that virtual utopian world.
I don't buy it. It would mean our civilization is simply a destructive fluke of nature that we eventually need to neutralize, and in time return to more streamlined life-forms that do not philosophize, create abstractions, watch Battlestar Galactica, and ponder our existence. It means the critics are right, and the hundreds millions of dollars spent on the atom-smasher at Fermilab (named after our alien seeking pal Enrico) in Batavia, Illinois is truly a fool's errand not worthy of pursuit. Religion, God, everything you know other than eating, sleeping, and reproducing is a distortion that turns mankind into a destructive earth killing virus in which the only solution is to make everyone retarded enough to stop being problematic to one another. True story, Stephen Hawking began to speculate on this during an AOL discussion about the future. In the video, once Stephen began to rank that the only way people would survive would be to genetically modify future generations to be less aggressive, the video awkwardly faded out. Yeah, even Steven thinks it's going to be about giving the public "dumb-down pills" to keep us at bay. This could have been our destiny, the massive dumbing down of humanity, has it not been for one invention that although still in its infancy, democratized information and has provided a generation with new possibilities and opportunities not seen since farming, industrialization, hairspray and sliced bread.
Yep, the internet.
It may seem redundant to write about the future of the internet. But wait, we are still just beginning to understand its impact on our lives. We are already seeing a dramatic shift in how we see the world, how we navigate through it with GPS devices, how we access knowledge, make better decisions, and relate to one another, even find our soul-mates. Once we integrate fiber optics into our networks, we will be able to introduce a new visual platform in which the internet will operate. As an artist and a visual communicator, I am completed intrigued by where this new technology is headed. And as a businessman, I want to know the answers to Negroponte's dilemma as discussed in his 1995 book "Being Digital." Simply put, how are we going to make money from those little ones and zeros?
It is my hope that this blog will be able to provide those answers, starting with the basics. First, let's look into the ways in which human beings process and retain information. Then we will explore the psychological aspects of personality and character development. After we figure ourselves out, we'll look into the effects of mass media and modern art over perceptions in the last century. We'll finally arrive at the present day, grab this big messy pile of information we know about the web, throw it around, beat it up, knead it, and see if we can make a pizza out of it, or something that makes a little more sense. And overall, this discussion is about the internet, about the victory of the pursuit of knowledge over the desire to be a couch potato. In fact, if the round-about hyper-linked way we came to this point bothers you, then we seriously have to chat. In the future, we will be able to make connections to a seemingly random variety of topics that will bring about new ways of defining our world and being to solve the problems we have with it. Hyper-linking is so Web 2.0. By the time Web 4.0 rolls around we'll have the ability to conduct hyper-meaning. More on that later.
The future isn't just going to be just about sex. Think hyper-sex with instant access to 100 positions on your iPhone complete with demonstrations and sexy music to accompany them with. Of course how will we sift through these oodles of choices? Parental libertarianism isn't going to be just a theory, it will be a structure in which companies will make tons of money filtering the gobs of information we'll be dealing with. The user will become their own choice architect. The future is about knowledge. And if knowledge is power then the internet has just tapped into the atomic equivalent of that power. Human beings will always be subject to their animal instincts, we'll need to eat, sleep, love and so forth. And these are all great things that define us. But for now, with this new information vomiting tool we've created, let's assume that our de-evolution to the ways of the monkey have been postponed for a long, long time.
Besides, I bet if you were to ask the good people at Fermilab if the highly complex and relentless search for the Higgs Boson (aka God Particle) was really just another way to express their primal need for nookie, they'd probably toss you into the atom-smasher.
Next up, we'll talk a lot about you, the world on a theory of strings, fate vs. destiny, sports-themed parking lots, and why things get better with age. Basically a lot like an episode of "Lost." Oh yeah, we'll chat about the internet, too.
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Wednesday, February 4, 2009
The Next Digital Experience
- Social networking applications and sophisticated mobile devices are combining elements of the real and virtual worlds, and delivering an augmented experience of reality.
How is this digital experience changing consumers and communities? - World Economic Forum
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
From The Offical Google Blog.... Google Learns to Crawl Flash
Google learns to crawl Flash
Google has been developing a new algorithm for indexing textual content in Flash files of all kinds, from Flash menus, buttons and banners, to self-contained Flash websites. Recently, we've improved the performance of this Flash indexing algorithm by integrating Adobe's Flash Player technology.
In the past, web designers faced challenges if they chose to develop a site in Flash because the content they included was not indexable by search engines. They needed to make extra effort to ensure that their content was also presented in another way that search engines could find.
Now that we've launched our Flash indexing algorithm, web designers can expect improved visibility of their published Flash content, and you can expect to see better search results and snippets. There's more info on the Webmaster Central blog
Read More From the Google Blog Here...



















