December 10, 2009
Posted: 957 GMT

Paris, France - Covering what is probably one of the most wired events in the world, it's hard to deliver any surprises that haven't already been blogged, tweeted, emailed, Facebooked or simply reported to death within seconds of occurring.

At LeWeb, a major Internet conference in Paris, most delegates come armed to the teeth with laptops, phones, cameras and other gadgetry to broadcast their experiences in "real time" (this year's online buzz word).

According to organizers, more than 3,000 devices were connected to the conference's mega-fast broadband during the opening day of the session, while thousands more users logged on to a Web site streaming the main events.

And as if that wasn't enough, no less than 25,000 tweets relating to LeWeb were posted via Twitter, chronicling everything from major company announcements down to punch-ups with taxi drivers on the street outside.

So, it was with pleasure that - despite being hopelessly underequipped with a misfiring computer, a two-year-old BlackBerry, an even older camera and a cantankerous dictaphone - I managed to create genuine surprise with something as simple as a pen and paper.

Interviewing one delegate, Swiss blogger Marcel Bernet, I resorted to abandoning my ailing technology and noting down his comments in shorthand - a compulsory skill for journalists trained in Britain that comes in handy when all else fails.

A gratifyingly impressed Bernet, who confessed that he had learned to write "steno" himself before eschewing such retro means of reporting, leapt into action, filmed the event and - inevitably - posted it on YouTube.

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Filed under: Internet


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June 27, 2008
Posted: 1700 GMT

LONDON, England - As double acts go, it's a fairly unusual pairing: The freedom-fighting elder statesman and the scandal-hit songstress.

But there's no escaping the fact that Nelson Mandela shares top billing at his own 90th birthday party with Amy Winehouse.

Amy Winehouse was one of the star acts of Mandela's birthday show.
Amy Winehouse was one of the star acts of Mandela's birthday show.

For each admirer who rushed into London's Hyde Park on Friday to join Mandela for a star-studded tribute to his life, there was another simply there to see if the raven-haired singer would make it.

"We're not really here for Nelson Mandela at all, truth be told," said Venetia Moore, who was among the first to lay down their tablecloth and soak up the pre-gig picnic atmosphere.

"Amy Winehouse is the one we're going to enjoy most."

While an appearance by Mandela - rarely in the spotlight since bowing out of public life five years ago - is undoubtedly a crowd pleaser, Winehouse, who has spent the past few days recovering from lung complications linked to a dissolute lifestyle, is just as big a draw.

"We're here to celebrate with South Africa's greatest man and we're proud to be with him here today," says Mojaji Mogale, who hails from Soweto but now lives in the UK.

"But I'm looking forward to Amy - you've got to respect her for standing up despite the condition she's in."

There is, of course, very little to compare the two.

Mandela's 27 years in prison for resisting South Africa's apartheid regime dwarf Winehouse's own brushes with the law - tabloid-fodder incidents relating to a lifestyle that makes Mandela's moderate regimen look positively monastic.

There were minor parallels as both took to the stage. Just as Mandela initially appeared unsteady and perhaps incapable of addressing his audience, so did Winehouse.  Yet both rose to the occasion and delivered a performance that packed punch.

Winehouse, despite her considerable talent, may not however enjoy such a reception if she defies her expectations to celebrate her 90th birthday.

And though she led the concert's final performance, by the end of the evening it was clear who the real star of the show was.

Said audience member Alicia Oduya: "Before I came I was distracted by the playlist, I didn't really focus on what the concert was about. But it was very moving - I'm so honored to have been in the presence of such a great man."

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Filed under: Nelson Mandela


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