What is The Message? |
The affairs of the world are now dependent upon the highest information of which man is capable. The word information means pattern, not raw data. -Marshall McLuhan, Take Today: The Executive as Dropout
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Monday, December 27, 2004
The semantic blogging demonstrator shows how we can use semantic metadata to enhance the blogging experience. It also shows how we can apply the new technology to a concrete application domain, bibliography management. However, the demonstrator is not meant to be the final word on semantic blogging, it is more a proof of concept. There are many extensions that would be possible over the existing framework.Part of the idea for future expansion includes a "pop-up" ontology that helps users categorize items according to the local semantic vocabulary, and integration with an ontology linking capability that would allow tagging the entry to be searchable across multiple vocabularies. Many of the proposals for the semantic web require extensive volunteer effort in "mark up," that is, tagging pages with semantically-meaningful metadata according to some sort of ontology or common information schema. As one might expect, this is incredibly labour-intensive. However, a "Tower of Babel" problem quickly arises: The meaning of a particular tag is highly dependent on context, and forcing a common dictionary on people is impractical, if not downright impossible. But using a lightweight publishing mechanism such as the blogging infrastructure, with dynamically-attachable, contextually-sensitive dictionaries, possibly served up by a Google-like service, overcomes many of the practical problems and allows the semantic web to grow organically, just like the web we know and... err... love. If you (or your university) subscribe to Communications of the ACM, you can read Steve Cayzer's article about Semantic Blogging and Decentralized Knowledge Management in the December 2004 issue. Technorati-Trackforward Saturday, December 25, 2004
In writing McLuhan for Managers, coauthors Federman and de Kerckhove have mined McLuhan's body of work for the powerful, interesting and creative concepts we'd consider sustaining principles and the core of his method. They've been remarkably successful in defining and refining those aspects of McLuhan's genius that managers, facilitators or planners can most readily benefit from.Nicely put, if I do say so myself. One of the great implications of "the medium is the message," and the use of the McLuhan thinking tools, is that once we can perceive all of the effects of a given new medium - whatever it is we are about to inflict on our business or society as a whole - we have the opportunity to choose which of them to bring about, or cause. With McLuhan's notion of effects preceding causes in this way, we actually get to create the type of world we want, as opposed to leaving it to the whim and will of the medium itself. Once we, collectively as business managers, politicians, policy makers and educators, realize this power, both opportunity and responsibility are laid before us, waiting our initiative to pick them up and make our world as we want it. In business, we often speak of empowerment, but it, too, has become co-opted as the latest in business buzz-speak. Taking our opportunities and responsibilities based on clear perception is the real empowerment. It remains to be seen how many business leaders actually have the courage to see with clarity, and how many take refuge behind the fog of conventional rote-repetition of slogans. This, of course, is revolutionary stuff - that is, it challenges the conventional authority of business schools, business practice and apparently successful business people. It challenges the way we have managed for 100 years, and the very underpinnings of today's modern corporations. That is both its strength and its subversive danger. As I responded to one person during the McLuhan Festival, such perceptions comprise McLuhan thinking as a political project, of course, extending this thinking beyond business life and into all aspects of public policy. Technorati-Trackforward Wednesday, December 22, 2004
I spent about an hour trying to play back a disc I legitimately bought and went as far as installing and updating a 3rd party application to my system that would allow me to do so, and now I'm only being given a temporary license, where's my rights as a consumer? If this is how future DRM protected content will be distributed I have strong objections to the use of DRM, as this is a prime example of how to quickly alienate any prospective consumers. If a license is given and the content decrypted isn't it clear that I'm the rightful owner? Can't I decide for myself when and where I want to play this content back on? Obviously Artisan Home Entertainment Inc. has other ideas about that, ideas they should clearly communicate on the dvd cover, instead of simply omitting them to prevent people not buying this two-disk dvd set. Shame on you Artisan Home Entertainment Inc. and may this serve as a prime example of DRM at its worst. Technorati-Trackforward
The sand along the lip of the Balinese lagoon is a pristine white. Round the other side of the rainforest, the island in the centre of the tropical sea - a body of water about the size of four Olympic swimming pools - is set for the premiere of what will be a nightly stage show. The scale of the operation puts one in mind of Willy Wonka's chocolate factory, or a Martian colony, or other things that don't exist in real life. They have trucked in 30,000m cubed of soil and 500 plant species for their rainforest. The speakers which broadcast insect noises are shaped like rocks. And the building itself, it goes without saying, is extraordinary, the biggest inside of anything you will ever see. It makes your head spin. This place doesn't just have a climate. It has weather. As the place fills up, the extra moisture in the air condenses on the roof. It starts to rain a little bit. Technorati-Trackforward Monday, December 20, 2004
Now, project that cartoon ahead to your favourite legislature, courtroom or battlefield. Fascinating world we're living in, isn't it?
Sunday, December 19, 2004
Saturday, December 18, 2004
The shirt was conceived shortly after the release of The Passion Of The Christ and is offered as social commentary on the nature of antisemitism and the irony inherent within the historical persecution of Jewish people on the part of Christian people who obviously have lost sight of the fact that Jesus himself was a Jewish person. Ie., a Christian person who might refer to a Jewish person as a "kike" is oblivious to the fact that Jesus himself was also a "kike." I do not see how making this point harms the reputation of Teenage Millionaire [the maker of the "homeboy" teeshirt] and it is doubtful that a court will either.This is yet another example of legal beagles yapping at an otherwise unknown individual, group or company over alleged intellectual property infringements, thereby inducing a reversal: The unknown gets tremendous publicity that spurs sales and tarnishes the reputation of the organization claiming infringement (the claim usually being in error). Such is the effect of instantaneous communications - the ability to effect reversals in out-of-date legal constructs. Since attention is the most valuable asset under conditions of ubiquitous communication and pervasive proximity, the most important weapon in our arsenals is ignorance, literally the selective and critical ability to ignore. It's a tricky one, though - everytime we say, "Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain," we draw attention to that very man, who would otherwise have indeed been ignored, and wither away in anonymity. Or, in the words of the Orthodox Anarchist, "By the way, I hope you like negative press. Your little IP witchhunt will do more to tarnish the reputation of Teenage Millionaire than any parody ever will." Technorati-Trackforward Thursday, December 16, 2004
Why would the volunteers work so hard to get other people excited about these products? Another line of research suggests a possible answer. This school of thought would characterize word-of-mouth volunteers as operating not in a traditional money-in-exchange-for-effort ''monetary market,'' but rather in a ''social market.'' A social market is what we engage in when we ask our friends to help us load up the moving van in exchange for pizza. The research suggests that we are likely to get a better effort out of our friends under the social-market scenario than by offering the cash equivalent of the pizza. (A recent article in the journal Psychological Science finds that ''monetizing'' a gift, like the pizza, by announcing how much it is worth, effectively shifts the whole situation from social market to monetary market.) Under some circumstances, we will expend more effort for social rewards than we will for monetary rewards. This suggests that the agents may do more to spread word of mouth precisely because they are not being paid.Ironically, the NYT article is Buzz Marketing of sorts for a company that organizes such volunteers, BzzAgent. Free barbequed sausages, anyone? Technorati-Trackforward
The average citizen is always in Neanderthal mode. That is why we get such Neanderthalian politicians. The digital culture is the cognitive phase of electricity. Just as we took the muscular phase (heat, light and energy) for granted, we are taking this new phase for granted. Most people only worry about how their body works when they have a backache, or about their car when they have to bring it to the garage. And even then, they don't want to know. But there is hope. The transformation is happening just as surely and unconsciously as it did at the time of the council of Trent when wise people were trying to put an old order into a religion that was being rapidly undermined by a totally new conception of man. Today, we are literally run over by the globalized and connective condition of humankind without the slightest moment of doubt.From Neanderthal to the muscular phase of electricity to the Reformation to being run over by globalization. Whew! Go read the rest! Technorati-Trackforward Monday, December 13, 2004
claimed to have discovered this contraband in the bottom of a bottle of Ibuprofen, still three quarters full of its original contents. This bottle had been discovered in the depths of my bag by an employee of Covenant Security, a subcontractor of the TSA, while she was searching it for explosives. ... What they found in the bottom of that bottle was not an incidental discovery during the course of a mandated search for something else. They had dug deep and purposefully. This was no joint in the ashtray casually spotted by the officer while writing a speeding ticket. A closer analogy would be the joint discovered on the floorboards of your car after the officer removed its carpeting while writing a speeding ticket.The Kafkaesque details of Barlow's relatively brief incarceration, and the wall of supposed secrecy that is effectively denying him his right to a fair trial is worth reading, especially for anyone who still happens to believe in the dual principles of the rule of law, and the legal supremecy of a country's constitution. Barlow is fighting this case with the backing of "John Gilmore ... one of the co-founders of EFF and is, in addition, the peskiest and most obdurate defender of the Constitution I know." The stakes in this particular case are very high. As Barlow says: We're trying to set a precedent here and the government is determined to prevent one. Only through such solitary struggles as this one can we preserve the dreams of Jefferson and Madison through this period of panicked expediency. On September 11, 2001 I sent out a spam to my mailing list in which I warned that "the control freaks will be dining out on this day for the rest of our lives." Technorati-Trackforward Wednesday, December 08, 2004
Saturday, December 04, 2004
Friday, December 03, 2004
Although Bernardo chose a wrong methodological approach to explore the question he sought to answer, his conclusions are welcome relief to this reader. ... There was no evidence of direct effects of literacy on thinking, and differences between the formal and non-formal literates were such that they pointed to schooling rather than literacy effects. Different cognitive approaches to thinking skills are evident in communities with relatively high degrees of literacy integration, but only when applied to community activities and practices. When literate activities are carried out, not everyone who takes part in the activity has to be literate. It is not literacy acquisition itself that affects thought, but rather the degree to which literacy is integrated into the life of a community. That is, the effects are mediated by the individual's participation in the literate activities of the community. The effects of literacy seem to arise as a result of being a participant in the community activities that incorporate literacy skills.The results of this study actually support McLuhan's basic notion: The medium is the message. In this specific instance, it is the integration of literacy into the community environment, and the nature of the ensuing effects (messages) that reveals the nature and characteristics of literacy (as a medium) itself. Technorati-Trackforward Wednesday, December 01, 2004
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Semantic Blogging: Lightweight Knowledge Management Real Virtual Reality - Tropical Islands Resort... In Germany?! Museum of Media History - EPIC 2014 Orthodox Anarchist: What Would J.C. Do? de Kerckhove Interview: Communication in Evolution - Social and Technological Transformation The Beginning of the Reversal of the Reversal of America? Existential Technology - 2004 Leonardo Award for Excellence |