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Jillian Swisher

Kinect desktop: Microsoft's sneak attack on the future of computing | Electricpig - 0 views

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    I really liked the idea from this week's reading that we should look to gaming for the future of interactive interfaces for social media. This article explains the ways that computing could be transforming in the future with motion sensing input devices like the Xbox Kinect. It's crazy to think that some of these things are possible!
Bonnie Thibodeau

Watching: iPad 3 concept in Kim's Picks @ TVKim - 0 views

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    This short clip shows some pretty wild concepts of where computer and touch screen technology may be going in the near future, including the magnets and holograms.
Mikenna Pierotti

Paul Conneally: Digital humanitarianism | Video on TED.com - 0 views

  • Haiti allowed us to glimpse into a future of what disaster response might look like in a hyper-connected world.” (Paul Conneally)
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    Paul Conneally describes the future of humanitarianism in a hyper-connected world. The idea of re-typing and transforming texts to tweets to websites and digital maps in disaster situations etc. seems like an act of uncreative writing--something that is, in a way, re-presenting information while at the same time creating a profound new piece of writing.
Martina Helfferich

Clive Thompson on the Future of Printed Books | Wired Magazine | Wired.com - 1 views

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    Interesting article from Wired magazine on the future of print books.
anonymous

A Future Full of Badges - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

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    More on badges in higher education.
Mikenna Pierotti

A Day Made of Glass 2: Same Day. Expanded Corning Vision. - YouTube - 0 views

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    This is the second version of a promotional video made by specialty glass and ceramics company Corning Inc. I interned there in 2008. Seems to fit with a lot of McLuhan's ideas of technology becoming an extension of our bodies. I think my fingers would get sore. Also, if this is the future, would buy stock in Windex...
Eric Wardell

Can History Be Open Source? Wikipedia and the Future of the Past - 0 views

  • possessive individualism
  • A historical work without owners and with multiple, anonymous authors is thus almost unimaginable in our professional culture
  • freedom
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • “avoid bias.”
  • Are Wikipedians good historians? As in the old tale of the blind men and the elephant, your assessment of Wikipedia as history depends a great deal on what part you touch. It also depends, as we shall see, on how you define “history.”
    • Eric Wardell
       
      A parable often used to describe the different interpretations of religion.
  • You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either commercially or noncommercially, provided … you add no other conditions whatsoever to those of this License.”
  • Wikipedia as History
  • online historical writing
  • Part of the problem is that such broad synthetic writing is not easily done collaboratively.
  • Yet what is most impressive is that Wikipedia has found unpaid volunteers to write surprisingly detailed and reliable portraits of relatively obscure historical figures—for example, 900 words on the Union general Romeyn B. Ayres.
  • whatever-centric,” they acknowledge in one of their many self-critical commentaries.
  • Wikipedia can act as a megaphone, amplifying the (sometimes incorrect) conventional wisdom.
  • great democratic triumph of Wikipedia—its demonstration that people are eager for free and accessible information resources.
  • Even Jimmy Wales, who has been more tolerant of “difficult people” than Sanger, complained about “an unfortunate tendency of disrespect for history as a professional discipline.”
  • Wikipedia's view of history is not only more anecdotal and colorful than professional history, it is also—again like much popular history—more factualist.
  • the problem of Wikipedian history is not that it disregards the facts but that it elevates them above everything else and spends too much time and energy (in the manner of many collectors) on organizing those facts into categories and lists.
  • also affect how scholarly work is produced, shared, and debated
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    This is an article that discusses the views of professional historians regarding wikipedia. I think it makes a number of interesting claims both regarding the management or historical data and wikipedia's role in promoting a particular historical paradigm.
Sandy Baldwin

BBC - Future - Technology - E-books banish being boring - 0 views

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    Apocalypse of mediocrity or community of readers as writers? And who decides what counts as boring?
Kwabena Opoku-Agyemang

Will Apple suit mean cheaper e-books? - 0 views

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    This article looks at how lowering e-book prices now could lead to less competition and consequently the danger of prices rising in the future.
Aaron Dawson

Top analyst: 'Apple will decline' - 0 views

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    At first I wasn't sure if this would relate to any of our discussions/readings/principles of design, but I think a lot of us in class are Mac users. A prophesy with any validity or not, it's something to think about for future investments.
Sandy Baldwin

Kindle and the future of reading : The New Yorker - 0 views

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    Nicholson Baker on the Kindle. Very smart but cranky and idiosyncratic.
Christine Schussler

Google's Virtual Light: The Digital Humanities as a Space for Cognitive Dissidence? | H... - 0 views

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    This short article begins the discussion of what role the Digital Humanities will play when Google comes out with glasses that have cameras built in that will enable "real-time geolocation, facial recognition software, the journaling and storing in the cache and third-party's servers of everywhere you go and see whilst wearing the glasses." He questions how we can use these gadgets to our benefit while still protecting human rights and freedom of speech.
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    I really like the black-and-white photo in this article that shows the group of people wearing 3D glasses--that's exactly the visual I had in my head while reading this article. It's kind of unsettling to think that that image could become an everyday reality in the not-so-distant future.
Mikenna Pierotti

Our Media, Ourselves: Are We Headed For A Matrix? : NPR - 0 views

  • And here we are, catching up to that vision of the future. Sales of physical books dropped 30 percent last year, while e-book sales more than doubled. Sales of DVDs fell during that same period, while online streaming rose. And in 2011, for the first time, digital music downloads overtook sales of CD
  • Nothing physical to establish that one person is different from another. It's a horror story in which humanity has abandoned all of what makes us human.
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    Interesting in terms of McLuhan and discussions last class.
Jessica Murphy

SOPA and PIPA: Threatening Innovation and Economic Growth - 1 views

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    Red Hat, the world's largest, most successful open source software company and one I'd like to work for in the very near future, submitted this blog post last month about SOPA and PIPA. It explains how such bills could devastate online collaboration, innovation, and the sharing of ideas and technology.
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