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Bill Genereux

Does "Internet Famous" Mean Famous? | Jonathan Coulton | Big Think - 0 views

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    Jonathan Coulton thinks being" Internet Famous" is the best of both worlds with loyal fans online, but relative anonymity in real life. If you're not familiar with Coulton's music, Code Monkey is a good place to start: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYodWEKCuGg
Roland O'Daniel

KIDO'Z - Safe,easy and fun internet for kids - 0 views

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    Let kids start surfing the net before they can start reading using KIDO'Z Kid's Web Environment is the safe, easy and fun way for young kids to surf their favorite sites, watch videos, play games, send emails, create and communicate without knowing how to read and write!
Mike Wesch

YouTube - S4TISF4CTION's Channel - 0 views

  • S4TISF4CTION Joined: October 08, 2006 Last Sign In: 1 year ago Videos Watched: 714 Subscribers: 451 Channel Views: 27,503 YayGoTeam. Name: Sexy Age: 16 I used to be MirokuFanGirlBut for some reason I was banned=.=So I shall be a good girl as best I can.i pwn Miroku.
Mike Wesch

YouTube - boxxybabee's Channel - 0 views

  • #1 - Most Subscribed (This Month)
  • Joined: January 08, 2009 Last Sign In: 1 week ago Videos Watched: 513 Subscribers: 29,112 Channel Views: 911,022
Mike Wesch

YouTube - Reclaim Your Mind - 0 views

  • Catalysts to say what has never been said, to see what has never been seen. To draw, paint, sing, sculpt, dance and act what has never before been done. To push the envelope of creativity and language. And whats really important is, I call it, the felt presence of direct experience. Which is a fancy term which just simply means we have to stop consuming our culture. We have to create culture. Don't watch TV, don't read magazines, don't even listen to NPR. Create your own roadshow. The nexus of space and time, where you are now, is the most immediate sector of your universe. And if you're worrying about Michael Jackson or Bill Clinton or somebody else, you are disempowered. You are giving it all away to icons. Icons which are maintained by an electronic media, so that you want to dress like X or have lips like Y. This is shit-brained this kind of thinking. That is all cultural diversion. And what is real is you and your friends, your associations, your highs, your orgasms, your hopes, your plans, and your fears. And we are told no. We're unimportant, we're peripheral, get a degree, get a job, get a this, get a that, and then you're a player. You don't even want to play in that game. You want to reclaim your mind and get it out of the hands of the cultural engineers who want to turn you into a half-baked moron consuming all this trash that's being manufactured out of the bones of a dying world. Where is that at?"
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    just the audio of McKenna - no music
Mike Wesch

YouTube - The YouTube Song - 0 views

  • Do you have a big huge butt?Well lets see you shake it like a dirty slut!a million horny guys are watching you on YouTubebut really they're just staring at your huge boobs!
Mike Wesch

mobiles, human rights, and anonymity - 0 views

  • So that got me wondering: is there a mobile equivalent of Tor? For those of you who aren't familiar with it, TOR is a software project that helps Internet users remain anonymous. Running the TOR software on your computer causes your online communications to bounce through a random series of relay servers around the world. That way, there's no easy way for authorities to track you or observe who's visiting banned websites. For example, let's say you're in Beijing and you publish a blog the authorities don't like. If you just used your PC as usual and logged into your publishing platform directly, they could follow your activities and track you down. With Tor, you hop-scotch around: your PC might connect to a server in Oslo, then Buenos Aires, then Miami, then Tokyo, then Greece before it finally connects to your blogging platform. Each time you did this, it would be a different series of servers. That way, it's really difficult for authorities to trace your steps.
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    Mobile Phones, Human Rights and Anonymity I've been playing around with my new Nokia N95 for the last couple of weeks and quite amazed with its ability to stream live video from the phone to the Internet. Like last weekend when I streamed from the Smithsonian Kite Festival; for around 30 minutes I gave a tour of the festivities and took questions from users as they watched the stream over the Internet. I've also spent some time talking it up with colleagues at NPR, brainstorming the possibilities of what would happen if reporters used these phones - or if their sources did. The example that keeps coming to mind regarding the latter scenario is the rioting in Tibet. While some video has leaked out, it's been limited and often delayed. Imagine if the protestors were able to webcast their protests - and the ensuing crackdowns - live over their phones using China's GSM network? The video would stream live and get crossposted via tools like YouTube, Seesmic and Twitter, spreading the content around so it can't be snuffed. But that raises an obvious question - how long could protestors or dissidents get away with such activities before getting caught? If you were running software on your phone to send live video over a 3G network, like I've been doing on my N95, you'd think it wouldn't take too much effort on the part of the mobile provider and/or government to figure out which phone was sending the signal and its precise location. So that got me wondering: is there a mobile equivalent of Tor? For those of you who aren't familiar with it, TOR is a software project that helps Internet users remain anonymous. Running the TOR software on your computer causes your online communications to bounce through a random series of relay servers around the world. That way, there's no easy way for authorities to track you or observe who's visiting banned websites. For example, let's say you're in Beijing and you publish a blog the authorities don't like. If you just used your PC as
anonymous

How to Become a Business ACE: And avoid getting shot down! - 0 views

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    If you want to test the true character of a person, see how they respond to adversity. Watch how they handle the pressure of a lost sale, an angry client, or a difficult boss. What do they say? How do they act? What is their emotional state? Do they freeze up and get angry, or do they buckle down and increase their focus and commitment?
Mike Wesch

The YouTube Election | Newsweek Politics: Campaign 2008 | Newsweek.com - 0 views

  • "After that, I think the assumption was that this was going to be a gotcha medium," says Steve Grove, YouTube's news and politics editor.
  • When the election ended, all YouTube videos mentioning Senator Obama had received a total of 1.9 billion views compared with Sen. John McCain's, which got 1.1 billion views.
  • Obama's YouTube channel alone were watched the equivalent of 14.5 million hours, with McCain's channel racking up about 488,152 hours
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • A Pew Research Center report titled "Internet and Campaign 2008" found that 39 percent of voters watched campaign-related video online during the election cycle.
  • "Celeb," which compared Obama to Britney Spears and Paris Hilton.
  • But Paris Hilton's response video quickly changed the tone of that discussion.
  • hire an Emmy-winning CNN producer to shape what the camp would post.
  • They even had camp manager David Plouffe—who likely took a page from Rick Davis's playbook—give strategy briefings by chatting into a webcam in his office and occasionally referring to a slide.
Bill Genereux

Hitler, as "Downfall producer" orders a DMCA takedown on Vimeo - 0 views

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    The "Hitler as..." parodies are becoming cliche, but this is one to watch if you are interested in Copyright/Fair Use. Contains course language.
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    Includes a stinging rebuke of YouTube's takedown policies.
ensydeout

Study: 99% of Video is Still Seen on TV - 2 views

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    Statistics on TV consumption and internet video watching.
Nadia Arancio

Catfish - 1 views

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    Don't know if this documentary film gained much visibility in the US, it certainly didn't in Europe. But it's brilliant and very interesting, so if you haven't watch it yet you definitely should!
Mike Wesch

Augmented Reality Devices: See the Online World While Walking the Real One - 1 views

  • Vuzix CEO Paul Travers said, “The Wrap 920AV will not just change the portable video industry, but how consumers view and interact with information. From watching a Civil War video reproduction battle reenactment on the actual battleground to walking through the streets of New York City with an animated virtual tour guide, the possibilities are endless.” Available in Spring 2009, you can check out the device in action at CES, Sands Expo Convention Center Booth #73810.
  • Watch this short video to see how AR is going to transform the way we learn. From AR books with interactive images and characters, to museums and learning centers with additional virtual layers of information, learning will be an experience that we can interact with and enjoy.
  • Wikitude AR Travel Guide
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