An
information technology pioneer, Tomlin began posting event information
about Fiesta to the online bulletin boards of America in 1990. Four
years later she brought the world's largest ballooning event to
an international audience year-round by publishing the first Fiesta
Home Page on the World Wide Web.
Her
adventure continued on January 7th, 1995 when KRQE (Channel 13)
encouraged her to approach Balloon Fiesta to emphasize the importance
of promoting this event on the Internet. She did, volunteering both
time and energy to produce the site and find an Internet service
provider to host it. KAIBF officials then named Tomlin Content Coordinator
and her company, Westward Connections,
the Official Online Communications organization.
Because
web developer tools were so limited at that time, Tomlin had to
encode by hand, one page at a time. This labor-intensive work required
16 hours a day, seven days a week for the whole month of April to
prepare for Fiesta Web content.
Yet
these hours paid off; 1995 was a benchmark year: On May 20th, Balloon
Fiesta launched its first official presence on the World Wide Web.
Response from the Internet community was overwhelmingly positive.
As a result, Fiesta officials realized that a permanent presence
would be needed for imparting future information; thus the aibf.org
domain name was registered on May 29th.
"
If I thought 1996 was professionally exciting, I was even more excited
by the Web events unfolding in 1997, Tomlin concedes. "During
Fall Internet World '97, our Web Site was featured on the Times
Square Video Wall and at the Roxy on Broadway. Then more
amazing things happened," she adds.
"KODAK,
Balloon Fiesta's title sponsor, introduced a digital camera line
for professional photographers and sent out a team to shoot live
scenes for same-day viewing. These appeared within minutes after
the actual photos were taken. And over 600,000 people visited the
Balloon Fiesta Web Site Gallery during the nine-day period."
"In
1998," Tomlin continues, "KAIBF implemented balloonfiesta.com
and opened its online store: ballooonfiestastuff.com."
During
the 1999 season, nearly 4,000,000 Web visitors retrieved event documents
or images and ordered products online. Balloon Fiesta Monday became
the highest traffic day for the year with almost 200,000 fans stopping
at the sites. The year 2000 was especially significant for teachers
and children. An EDU section was designed to disseminate historical
and educational resources to educators and their students. From
there, anyone can research the extensive ballooning chronology database,
starting with ancient China and moving into the 21st century.
"From
April 2000 through April 2001, a total of 35 million online tourists
visited the Balloon Fiesta Web Site," Tomlin acknowledges.
"The highest traffic months were July, August, September, and
- of course - October. This is what I call the height of Balloon
Fiesta Web Tourist Season."
With
all the above creative computer activity, any observer would assume
that technology was Barb Tomlin's life. Not so. She is, in fact
another kind of diva, a contralto-country-western vocalist. I'm
not exactly a diva," she says, "because I don't sing opera
or even musical comedy, but popular ballads - the ones from the
heart - like Killing Me Softly With His Song. These I love
to perform."
Tomlin
sings from her heart in a pure, compelling voice. Local audiences
can listen to her live at the Radisson as part of Friday nights'
Karaoke. And this year she
(with her husband Gary) cut their first CD. It's a long distance
from performing vocalist to computer guru, but Barb Tomlin does
it all in grand style. "I absolutely love what I do,"
she concludes.
Epilogue
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