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This is a very geeky talk about something that’s not so geeky: feelings. In this TED talk, Jonathan Harris shows how he has tracked and graphed how people are feeling on the web.
(Via Sokanu)
06 Monday Dec 2010
Posted in Technology and Web, Videos
19 Friday Nov 2010
Posted in Technology and Web
20 Things I Learned About Browsers and the Web
An interactive Google book about how it all works. Extremely cool.
(Via Dan Patterson)
26 Tuesday Oct 2010
Posted in Technology and Web
Facebook News Feed Settings: Random or Not, Biggest Secrets Revealed
The Daily Beast took Facebook through some experiments. Turns out, Facebook pretty much sucks for new people.
The Daily Beast’s one-month experiment into Facebook’s news feed yielded the following discoveries:
* A bias against newcomers
* “Most Recent” doesn’t tell the whole story.
* Links are favored over status updates, and photos and videos trump links.
* “Stalking” your friends won’t get you noticed.
* Raise your visibility by getting people to comment.
* It’s hard to get the attention of “popular kids.”
(Via Kottke)
28 Tuesday Sep 2010
Posted in Books, Technology and Web
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Cognitive Surplus is written by the author Clay Shirky. He is also a teacher at New York University, where he teaches “New Media” at the Interactive Telecommunications Program. His previous book is called Here Comes Everybody where he tackled the subject of the power of the web for groups to organize. Shirky has also written for publications like The New York Times and Wired.
My first exposure to Clay Shirky was a talk he gave about the so called problem of information overload. In the talk he explained that the problem is not really information overload. We have had an over abundance of information for centuries. The problem, he said, is a filtering issue. He explains that since the cost of publishing on the web is zero, there’s no loss if you don’t filter for quality. In traditional publishing the costs are high thus the need to filter for quality before taking that risk. In this book he writes about this subject when he gets to the history of the printing press.
My first impulse to read this book was because I wanted to hear the good news first. What I mean by that is that it was either Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows or this one. For the last couple of months, there’s been this debate going on on how the web is doing x to us. Mostly negative. How it’s robbing our attention, our ability to concentrate, etc. Now that I read Cognitive Surplus, I wouldn’t say the it has an opposing view to The Shallows. Carr’s is about psychology and the web and Shirky’s is about sociology and the web. But one is definitely viewing the glass half empty, and the other is viewing the the glass half full. While Clay Shirky is definitely a techno optimist, don’t confuse him with a social media 2.0 guru enthusiast.
If I could sum up the book with one idea it would be this: “The stupidest possible creative act, is still a creative act.” This quote comes from the first chapter of the book we’re he discusses LOLCATS. Here Shirky is acknowledging that sure, there’s a lot of crap on the web, but it’s better than having nothing. And it’s not just about a content creator making something for an audience, but about creating something to share with a community. For that purpose, the quality is secondary.
The key idea in the book though is free time and television. Television is so embedded in our culture that we don’t realize how much time we actually spend on it. Shirky started looking at this because of the frequently asked question, “Were do people find the time.” The time has always been there since industrialization and the 40 hour work week. It’s that for the last 50 plus years or so, we have spent that free time passively staring at a light emitting box. The so called boob tube. Shirky’s conclusion is that the people who have opted to watch less television have made Wikipedia possible, as well as LOLCATS.
Through out the book Shirky also answers why we’re doing this for free and what motivates people to do it. The short answer: because we can. The opportunity is there. People just don’t want to be a passive consumer anymore. They also want to create and more importantly, to share with people. Now we can. He also writes about the impact and the potential that social media can have with civic service.
This is a big deal. It’s an interesting time to be in. We still watch a lot of television, but while we’re watching it, we look up info on IMDB from our smart phones. We listen to music, but look for what people are saying and we rate them. We are no longer just an audience, we are the people formerly known as the audience.
28 Friday May 2010
Posted in Technology and Web
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Author Nicholas Carr: The Web Shatters Focus, Rewires Brains | Magazine
The Wired article is an excerpt from Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains Here’s an excerpt from the excerpt:
What kind of brain is the Web giving us? That question will no doubt be the subject of a great deal of research in the years ahead. Already, though, there is much we know or can surmise—and the news is quite disturbing. Dozens of studies by psychologists, neurobiologists, and educators point to the same conclusion: When we go online, we enter an environment that promotes cursory reading, hurried and distracted thinking, and superficial learning. Even as the Internet grants us easy access to vast amounts of information, it is turning us into shallower thinkers, literally changing the structure of our brain.
The web is not making us smarter. It is not making us stupid. But it is most definitely making us think differently.
(Via Rough Type)
19 Wednesday May 2010
Posted in Technology and Web, Videos
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Web 3.0 from Kate Ray on Vimeo.
I’ve been hearing about the concept of the semantic web for a while, but I don’t think I have ever understood the whole gist of it. The basic idea is to find better ways to “manage information in way that matters to individuals”. The 14 minute video is a good introduction to the idea, but a lot of it seems like one those surreal Bing commercials. You know, like when the daughter mentions jeans and the mother says “Moms who wear jeans to match their teen’s jeans”. I hope it’s not like that.
(Via MF)
28 Wednesday Apr 2010
Posted in Music
Chinese netizens have more faith in Lady Gaga than God, if the latest Internet slang is a pointer to the way China’s youth is thinking.
The phrase “Oh my Lady Gaga” has replaced the now redundant “Oh my God” (omg) as a cute way to express shock, hilarity or emphasize a point.
Unavoidable pun and completely intended: Oh my Richard Simmons.
27 Tuesday Apr 2010
Posted in Technology and Web
The Geocities-izer makes your web page look like it was made in 1996 by a 13 year old. I love how mine came up. With an auto play midi file instrumental of Oasis Wonderwall and everything.
via Dailymeh
26 Monday Apr 2010
Posted in Technology and Web
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David Gelernter says that we should start taking the internet more seriously.
One symptom of current problems is the fundamental puzzle of the Internet. (Algebra and calculus have fundamental theorems; the Internet has a fundamental puzzle.) If this is the information age, what are we so well-informed about? What do our children know that our parents didn’t? (Yes they know how to work their computers, but that’s easy compared to — say — driving a car.) I’ll return to this puzzle.
via MF
10 Tuesday Nov 2009
Posted in Music, Technology and Web
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The Golden Age of Infinite Music
BBC News article by John Harris about how the web has broaden listeners tastes and choices.
I had a long chat about music with the 16-year-old son of a friend, and my mind boggled.
At virtually no cost, in precious little time and with zero embarrassment, he had become an expert on all kinds of artists, from English singer-songwriters like Nick Drake and John Martyn to such American indie-rock titans as Pavement and Dinosaur Jr.
Though only a sixth-former, he seemingly knew as much about most of these people as any music writer.
Like any rock-oriented youth, his appetite for music is endless, and so is the opportunity – whether illegally or not – to indulge it. He is a paid-up fan of bands it took me until I was 30 to even discover – and at this rate, by the time he hits his 20s, he’ll have reached the true musical outer limits.