Celebrating the county’s dot-coms
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Scott Bass didn’t even want to come. The online
editor of Surfmag.com, Bass had received a call that his Web site had
made it to the finals of the inaugural Orange County eWards.
Thursday’s event, billed as an Academy Awards-style ceremony, honored
the best in the county’s Internet world.
“There are lots of awards on the Internet,” Bass said, mingling with
fellow dot-commers at the Orange County Museum of Art. “It’s ‘come to my
site and grab a badge.”’
But clutching his eWard -- a glass sculpture made up of a colorful “e”
and a clear base, Bass said he didn’t regret having taken the time.
“I couldn’t be happier,” he said, his flip-flops and casual shirt
right in line with the “Dot Com Finery” attire requested on the
invitation. “I’m thrilled to death.”
Fellow eWard winner Shere’e Clock Cormier, the president of
Mymission.org, said she knew exactly what she’d do with her statuette.
“I think I might sleep with it tonight,” she said, laughing. “And then
I’ll put it next to my Barbie phone on my night stand so that I can look
at it.”
Some of the 200-plus attendees certainly tried their best to
cyber-dress -- a couple of turtlenecks and T-shirts dotted an otherwise
suit and tie crowd.
Behavior wasn’t quite up to Oscar standards (did the failing sound
system or some snags on the PowerPoint presentations cause the upheaval?)
and presenters repeatedly had to calm down the chatty audience.
But with phrases such as “and the nominees are” and “and the winner
is,” the organizers tried to lend some glamour to the affair. (Mind you,
the Oscars have dropped the politically incorrect “winner” phrase for
“and the Oscar goes to.”)
Wine, cocktails and assorted cookies kept guests entertained during
the hourlong awards ceremony.
When the statuettes had changed hands, Graham Mabon, one of 10 judges
who rated more than 150 Web sites, said he’d been surprised by one or two
winners. While design aesthetics, content, technical innovation,
functionality and interactivity all played a role in selecting the best,
Mabon added that a Web site’s ability to provide solutions for visitors
had an advantage over creativity.
Lisa Rubenstein, a Corona del Mar Web site developer who planned the
awards ceremony, said despite some minor problems, she was pleased with
the result.
“It was a first-year event,” she said, adding there would surely be a
second one next year. “It turned out pretty well.”
And Joy Hart, who scooped up two eWards for her work on Mazdausa.com,
summed it all up in her acceptance speech.
“I know you are all going to challenge us,” she said, receiving the
Best of Show eWard. “Let’s just keep participating and raise the bar
every year.”
BOX:
Orange County eWards 2000
https://www.riechesbaird.com
Business-to-business service
https://www.1221oceanavenue.com Business-to-consumer service
https://www.gateway.com
Business-to-business e-commerce
https://www.Mazdausa.com
Business-to-consumer e-commerce and best of show
https://www.stemcellselection.com
Education/training
https://www.mymission.org
Nonprofit/association
https://www.alisogolf.com
Travel
https://www.flyweight.com
Lifestyle
https://www.surfermag.com
Online publication
Proceeds from the event will benefit Goodwill Industries of Orange
County (https://www.ocgoodwill.org) and Another Byte
(https://www.recycles.org/byte). Both organizations recycle older
computers for organizations and individuals in need.
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