Draculablog 2008 hiatus
The Draculablog won't run this year. No time to do justice to Stoker's novel in Web 2.0 style.
The Draculablog won't run this year. No time to do justice to Stoker's novel in Web 2.0 style.
"Third Life" is what Intel's CEO is calling his CES keynote this week. Not too much in common with our third life discussion last year. Instead it looks more like social networking plus virtual worlds, maybe with a dose of augmented reality, more likely anticipating faster wireless connections between devices.
It's time for a glance backwards at Infocult in 2007. We can use trackback pings (real ones) and comments (good stuff) to pick out themes which garnered the most attention.
Web 2.0, whatever we think of the term, is the leading business, be it one case study across several services or Controversies over Wikipedia (Citizendium and blogs, hoaxing Conservapedia). Twitter blossomed into a leading topic (first look, overview and reflections, fear of Twitter).
Second Life continues to get attention, especially from my brooding Third Life post (sequel coming in '08).
The fearsome internet is our signature theme, and has been since the start. Some examples: American parents' technology fears, fear of Twitter.
Mobile computing, ubicomp: I continue to place posts at Smartmobs. Some posts live here, for example grousing about the lameness of American wifi, especially in hotels.
elearning: the overwhelming majority of my blog work on this score is at NITLE's blog, of course. Here at Infocult we reserve some subtopics, such as the case of Blackboard as silo, or serving silage.
How does this match up with your sense of Infocult, as 2008 looms ahead?
I'll be in Seattle for this week, attending the 2007 Educause conference. I'd be delighted to meet any Infocult readers there.
Question: is anyone having problems reading this site via Google Reader? I've received some email describing odd problems, namely rendering HTML tags. Dan Dodge describes similar problems.
Could this be something stemming from an upgrade to either Typepad or GR?
Scott Leslie points us, via Twitter, to Antarctic Data Jam.
events where we invite you to make songs, images, videos or just plain noise from raw weather data from the Antarctic. During the day there is a workshop and in the evening a performance. If you prefer to work at home, just find any kind of Antarctic data (we have supplied some, see left) and if you create something with it, bring it along to the event. The best will find its way onto the Antarctic Data Jam CD which we will market later in the year.
I'm not sure where their polar radio project is, or how to play with their "Pure Data" device, but it looks keen. And I like that posthuman sound idea.
Meanwhile, the wiki has moved again. Here's the new URL: http://apps.nitle.org/wikifarm/research/index.php/Main/PolarMusic.
Comments here at Infocult are about to hit a milestone. As of today's today the number of comments stood at 1996. 2000 is only a few captchas away!
I'm giving a presentation online today through Educause's ELI. The topic: "Emerging Worlds: Transformative Technologies for Teaching and Learning."
I'm very excited about this. For one thing, the audience is very diverse in terms of campus populations, including staff and faculty, and from all sorts of (American) institutions. For another, I'm exploring a theme that's fascinating, the intersections between Web 2.0 and virtual worlds/gaming.
For anyone who has received Quechup spam with my Gmail address: please delete at once. Do not join. And consider my apology!
I was sent a Q. invite by a trusted friend nearly a week ago, before this thing went postal. Joined it, waited to see what happened. Nothing did, for a few days. Not atypical for the zillion Web 2.0 services out there. Then wham.
I'm galled at how many people it has hit, including several professional lists.
I'm definitely chilled at the prospect of any new social service, now. I joined GrandCentral last night, and kept staring at the Google name, which glowed with talismanic power for me.
All Web 2.0 storytelling posts here at Infocult have now been aggregated into a single blog department. There were a couple of posts there before, but now the total's nearly 20, since I've done the blog-archaeology.
Another topic for a Typepad page, perhaps.
Clay Shirky: Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations
Nick Montfort: Twisty Little Passages: An Approach to Interactive Fiction
Daniel J. Solove: The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet
David Weinberger: Everything Is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder
Recent Comments