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March 11th, 2010geek, social movements, the future is coming, wack
“The internet is like this new human experience. At first everybody is going to like it, but there will be a fundamental change in the human condition. One day we’re all going to wake up and realise that we’re all just servants. It’s captured us.”
- Josh Harris, Protagonist of We Live In Public (Ondi Timoner’s Sundance winning doco)
Josh Harris, most remarkable for his online video and streaming businesses / experiments did some ground breaking and odd things in the late nineties, just before the bubble burst.
Here is a list of just a few of them featured in the film:
- Founding Jupiter research (brought by Forrester Research in 2008 well after Josh floated, sold and then moved on to begin his next project)
- Founding Pseudo.com an internet tv station (1993)
- Creating an alter ego called Luvvy, the clown who would happily come out at networking events
- Filming and streaming footage of 100 ordinary Americans and artists who were living in a wild and sanity challenging bunker in 1999. (totally nothing like Big Brother)
- Filming and streaming his own relationship from home
- Becoming an apple farmer
Josh is extreme, visionary, in many ways successful and decidedly strange. His success came from a ballsy approach so there is no surprise that his high flying take on things meant he would suffer badly in the dot-com crash. Josh always spent his personal profits on the next big idea and he loved to live it up wildly. Audiences will probably think he’s a jerk, but they will certainly find him interesting. I’m glad people like him exist, because extreme thinking and doing is just so damn interesting. For me, this film is a net-nuts must because it explores an era at its most insane and because it is totally wild and annoyingly fun. Thank you Trimoner!
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September 2nd, 2009event, geek, information architecture, inspiration, speeches
UX Australia’s Keynote – Alex Wright, Information Architect nytimes.com
A fly by history of information management. Beginning with how tribal cultures created categorical systems for understanding the world around them, through to the use of symbols, the first written word and the evolution of hypertext, a connected web and just who inspired Google’s pagerank.
“Tim would have launched the web in 1984, if he didn’t crash his hard drive… just goes to show you should back up your work. It took him 5 years to re-write it.”Interesting tid-bits:
- Folk Taxonomy is not the same as a folksonomy.
The former is the anthropological study of the classification / naming conventions by cultures for understanding the relationships between things such as animals and plants. The latter is when people collaboratively tag stuff on computers. - Jewelery was used as an information system by using symbols to indicate social standing and the wearers relationship to others in the community. The use of this system came about when people began living in larger groups than 5 – 15 or so. This occurred during the time Alex describes as the Ice Age Information Explosion, around 30-40,000 years ago.
- The first forms of handwriting we know of emerged around 5000 BC on Bullae, by the Sumerians. (Now the south of Iraq)
- Charles Cutter wrote an essay in 1883 imagining the library of 1983 called “The Buffalo Public Library in 1983” in which he predicted the library would have desks equiped with keyboards and little bits of wire connecting them to a catalog that would call up and display books for the user to read.
- Paul Otlet was the creator of the universal decimal system. He had imagined a sort of paper internet, where not only would a catalog asist people to find a book, but it revealed the content of the book and its relationship to other books as well as the history of the document’s use, who has read, refereneced etc. His work took place in 1934, much of it was lost to to World War 2. A video on his 1934 vision of an internet is below… truely amazing.
- Check out the memex, a large microfilm desk which is considered one of the conceptual precursors to the web from Vannevar Bush’s essay As We May Think (1945)
- Eugene Garfield inventor of the Science Citation Index, which is a system for acknowledging the weight of links between various documents in the footnotes. It is considered that his work heavily influenced the founders of google and their page rank system.
- Doug Englebart, inventor of the mouse also author of an eassy called Augmenting Human Intelect. In 1968 he delivered a presentation often refered to as “The Mother of All Demos.” This demo was the first to demonstrate the mouse, copy and paste, creation of files, folders, links, video conferencing and email etc.
Some of Alex’s references:
Glut, Alex Wright
- Mastering Information Throughout the Ages
- http://www.alexwright.org/glut/Women, Fire and Dangerous Things, George Lakoff
- What categories reveal about the mind.Everything is Miscellaneous, David Weinberger
- The Power of the New Digital Disorder
- http://www.everythingismiscellaneous.com/Facetag
- Working prototype of a semantic collaborative tagging tool
- http://www.facetag.org/Some references I found:
Alex speaking at Google Masterclass
- The Web That Wasn’t: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=72nfrhXroo8&NR=1Wikipedia’s Timeline of Hypertext Technology
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_hypertext_technology - Folk Taxonomy is not the same as a folksonomy.
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August 25th, 2009geek, inspiration, journalism, news media, online communities, the future is coming
So, as I become hopelessly addicted to podcasts, I have a desperate urge for the fix of sharing them with others. So, as promised to a few friends, here is a list of what I’ve been captured by recently, with more lists to come as I go.
Oh, and please send your suggestions – I’m always on the look out.
On The Media
Website | iTunes
For one hour a week, the show tries to lift the veil from the process of “making media,” especially news media, because it’s through that lens that we literally see the world and the world sees us. | Published: Monday’s EST time, WNYC, USAThe Moth
Website | iTunes
Open mic unscripted story telling. Usually 15 – 20 minutes, amazingly well told personal stories. | Published: Tuesday’s EST time, Non-for-profit, New YorkFuture Tense
Website | iTunes
Exploring the social, cultural, political and economic fault lines arising from rapid change. | Aired: Thursday 8.30am repeated Friday 12.30am | Published: Thursday’s, Radio National, ABCMedia Talk USA
Website | iTunes
Jeff Jarvis and a regular panel of media commentators analyse the latest developments in the US media and tech worlds. | Published: Monthly, The GuardianThis American Life
Website | iTunes
This American Life exploring a different theme, every week by telling the stories of everyday people. | Published: Monday’s EST, Chicago Public Radio -
Oh my goodness… I won tickets to webDU. There was a twitter competition promote the event. All I had to do was tweet why I wanted free tickets and shazzam!
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May 6th, 2009geek, inspiration, user experience, visualization
Seriously interesting web page and a great piece of advertising creative. I want to go back just for fun. http://sprint.com/now
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March 4th, 2009geek, the future is coming, user experience
How delighted was I hear my T-Shirt has shipped?
Well heaps, coz when I read this email it was from a real person and it made me laugh. I think I have a crush on Jason Yelland, because he’s so smart to see that the user experience is about personality.
Here is his grandma in the T-shirt I brought.
True user experience engagement genius.
—–Original Message—–
Dear Mel, thankyou for your purchase. Your new T-shirt package has now started its excellent adventure towards you. It will travel via truck, plane and possibly camel until it arrives on your doorstep ready for you to wear at your local lamington bake sale next weekend. Remember that $10 of your money has gone directly to the artist who created the design, which they will most likely spend on beer, plastic novelty telephones filled with candy, and of course lamingtons. $1 from each t-shirt also goes towards buying my wonderful parents a present for putting up with their house looking like an exploded t-shirt factory.
Your T-shirt has many uses, we recommend wearing it.
You may experience a number of side effects from wearing decibel clothing:
- extreme comfort
- constant cravings to skip work and go to the beach
- improved appearance
- heightened desire to consume lamingtons.
- tingling knee caps
- sudden urges to bush jump
- an increase in the number of pissed idiots coming up to you and telling you they like your t shirt
- you may also find riding in shopping trolleys more enjoyable whenwearing our products.
- Don’t forget to check the site for fresh designs each week.Cheers.
jason yelland – decibel clothing co.
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March 2nd, 2008geek
Hot. I love a good uter ref on the street. Makes me want to go out and add some nerdy reference to the world.
















