Archive for May, 2008

31
May

Response to We Are the Web

For several reasons, I think this clip is wrong.

Marshall McLuhan’s "the medium is the message" was primarily concerned with the form of the medium, not the form of the content. In other words, it’s the method of transmission that matters, not what you’re trying to say.

the form of a medium imbeds itself in the message, creating a symbiotic relationship by which the medium influences how the message is perceived, creating subtle change over time

However, immediately after introducing this idea, the author of the video tells us that the form of the medium–in this case the Internet–is irrelevant. That it’s nothing more than a special case of some other medium. 

The author is saying that the Internet displays no unique or distinctive properties that are a result of the synergy of it’s parts. However that claim is contradictory to McLuhan’s concept.

Even if the individual parts of the Internet were indeed just as the author described them, the fact that they are connected still changes the form of the medium.

So it still means that the form of the Internet is unique and would therefore matter. As far as I know, there’s no such thing as a Gutenberg Press merged with a Kinetoscope connected to another by a Telegraph. So

Secondly, the idea that the Internet only allows "non-participatory reception of information" simply because it uses pictures and words is just false. The author himself has created a participatory forum for the discussion of his idea which he has formulated to counter someone else’s. There are thousands of individual posts on his page regarding the video and I’m commenting about it on my very own blog.

Finally, what the author has done is to fundamentally misunderstand Marshall McLuhan’s idea by confusing the form of the content with the form of the medium.

In doing so, the author has decided that there are two worlds–the real one and the Internet one–and that the Internet world is clearly inferior to the real one because all it does is "simulate" participation that happens in the real world.

What the author fails to understand is that it’s not at all about simulating participation. It’s about symbolic communication.

When we insert a smiley face like this :) in an instant message, we’re not trying to recreate a human head any more than we’re trying to recreate Jesus or God when we put a crucifix on a wall. These things are symbols intended to communicate an idea or a collection of ideas.

The difference in the emoticon and a picture of the Mona Lisa is the resolution that the respective medium permits in the expression of the symbol.

In other words, if all you have is a piece of paper and a pencil, your symbol is going to look much different than if you have a block of wood and a chisel. So the form of the medium is in fact what matters.

I think a fairly strong argument could be made that emoticons represent one of several emergent new languages created by the form of the Internet. 

All of this has made me think about a new model for how electronic communications work. I’m currently working on something that might help to bring some clarity to these ideas, even if it’s just for me.

30
May

Friday night Culture Jamming: Chad Vader sings Chocolate Rain

This may be one of the funniest versions of phenonemous musician Tay Zonday’s Chocolate Rain that’s ever been made.

If you don’t know who Tay Zonday is, in some ways its perfectly understandable. No one actually knows who Tay Zonday is. In other ways though, you may consider selling the rock that you’re living under for a house with an Internet connection. 

Tay Zonday’s original version has received nearly 23 million views over the past year on YouTube, which would technically put it in the company of singles like Elton John’s "Candle in the Wind," "We Are the World," Queen’s "Another One Bites the Dust" and The Beatles’ "Hey Jude."

23
May

Friday Night Culture "jamming": Da shatner Funk

19
May

The Open Source Economy

This is a great talk from the TED Conference. Yochai Benkler, a thought-leader on networks and collaboration  talks about how the Internet is laying the groundwork for the next phase of human organization.

In many ways it seems like we’re coming full circle to a pre-industrial age sensibility by doing things that we like to do as opposed to doing things that we must. Basically we’re contributing to the commons as individuals strictly for the love of the activity and the community and not strictly in pursuit of profit. We’re even beginning to trade goods and services directly without currency as an intermediary.

17
May

Friday night Culture jam: Floetry / Say Yes

Heard this a few weeks ago on Pandora.

16
May

The Long View

In 1995 Netscape was on the rise having created the first commercially viable Web browser. For the first time regular people could use the Internet. They didn’t know why they wanted to use it, but they could.

That browser combined with the earlier acquiescence of the technocrats from the National Science Foundation who managed the Internet backbone and the technonerds who were it’s primary users to commercial communications made it possible for the Internet to take the path that it has.

Continue reading ‘The Long View’

03
May

Foundations: We are the Web.

Well if this Web site isn’t about restaurants, what is is it about?

The video below is part of what this blog is about.

I believe that we are in the process of turning the network that we so dearly use to obtain information into the actual computer.

We don’t know where the revolution is going to end, but we can be sure of one thing. It has begun.

Each day we create new content for the machine. Each day we give the machine the intimate details of our lives in order to connect with other people and organize the mundane tasks or our daily routines.

The Internet will help us reorganize our lives both at the macro and the micro level. And we’re going to examine how. Ready?

03
May

OSBA Endorses early alert provider

Ohio School Boards Association announced the endorsement of Westerville-based Leader company’s early alert system, Leader Alert. Leader Alert is a unified warning system designed to notify users across multiple platforms of safety or security incidents.

03
May

Another one bites the dust. Max and Erma’s acquired by Pittsburgh firm.

Okay, I swear this isn’t going to be a restaurant blog, but apparently some heretofore solid Columbus institutions are struggling and being eaten up by companies outside of the area.

In the same week that Wendy’s was acquired by a firm in Atlanta, Max and Erma’s is being acquired by a company in Pittsburgh–G&R Acquisition Inc for 10.2 million dollars. The deal will take the company private and leave in place the existing management.

The only thing I’ll say about Max and Erma’s is that its one of those places where you always want to go until you get there and see the menu.




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