marsden_online: (globe)
It took tens of thousands of years for writing to emerge after humans spoke their first words. It took thousands more before the printing press and a few hundred again before the telegraph. Today a new medium of communication emerges every time somebody creates a new web application. A Flickr here, a Twitter there, and a new way of relating to others emerges. New types of conversation, argumentation, and collaboration are realized. Using examples from anthropological fieldwork in Papua New Guinea, YouTube, university classrooms, and “the future,” this presentation will demonstrate the profound yet often unnoticed ways in which media “mediate” our culture.

[Edit: Fuck it LiveJournal, why won't you embed the video?]

40min, which is why it has been sitting in my inbox for 2 months.

Two tabs

Dec. 2nd, 2010 10:40 am
marsden_online: (globe)
Mapperiffic visualisation of a day's Twitter traffic, via the Herald and SciBlogs (recommend watching on the Vimeo site in HD, w. scaling off)
[Edit - LJ doesn't want to accept the embedded version, you'll have to follow the link :( [/edit]

Mapping a Day in the Life of Twitter from Chris McDowall on Vimeo.


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Pumpkin Patch wins this year’s NZTE International Business Awards. Idealog has an interview with the CEO which contains this ponderable quote about "Made in New Zealand".
It’s worth noting that if Pumpkin Patch was manufactured in New Zealand we’d be a much smaller company and we’d employ a lot fewer New Zealanders.
marsden_online: (globe)
Who? Wikipedia:
... a Doctor of Animal Science and professor at Colorado State University, bestselling author, and consultant to the livestock industry in animal behavior. As a person with high-functioning autism, Grandin is also widely noted for her work in autism advocacy and is the inventor of the hug machine designed to calm hypersensitive persons.


http://www.adaptivepath.com/blog/2010/02/08/temple-grandin-at-ux-week-2009/ (You'll need an hour, or two half hours to spare - don't let that put you off. I've been waiting since the article was posted in February to have the right combination of time & brain.)

Or for a condensed version watch her talk at TED 2010
marsden_online: (Default)
OK, so I also got up late on this grey gray day, but here it is nearly 11am and I've just finished my morning reading. A couple of unrelated items just as quickies:
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Augmented reality turned up to 11


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Clay Shirkey rants about women

This comment about giving other people veto power over your actions is equally applicable for those of us who aren't women but nevertheless still have issues with putting ourselves forward :)
It’s tempting to imagine that women could be forceful and self-confident without being arrogant or jerky, but that’s a false hope, because it’s other people who get to decide when they think you’re a jerk, and trying to stay under that threshold means giving those people veto power over your actions. To put yourself forward as someone good enough to do interesting things is, by definition, to expose yourself to all kinds of negative judgments, and as far as I can tell, the fact that other people get to decide what they think of your behavior leaves only two strategies for not suffering from those judgments: not doing anything, or not caring about the reaction.
marsden_online: (Default)
For the bookophiles (what is the correct term?)


via the Iridesco Watercooler

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