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Laurie A.

SXSW 2011: The internet is over - 0 views

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    This article discusses SXSW-Interactive, the technology portion of the festival. This is the festival where Twitter was first launched in 2007. Theme so far: the blurring of real life and online life is happening. Other topics discussed: web 3.0, asymmetry of privacy, biomimicry (designing technology to mimic nature), work/life balance. Clay Shirky also gave a presentation on social media and revolution: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2011/mar/12/sxsw-2011-clay-shirky-social-media
Laurie A.

SXSW 2011: The Year of the Librarian - 1 views

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    SXSW-i 2011 "didn't feel blindly focused on discovering the killer app. Tech didn't feel like an end unto itself -- rather, it was about processing data with a purpose; data for a greater good." Librarians were a big part of the conversation at this year's festival
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    I saw this too and was really excited. I caught a story on WNYC yesterday about the importance of curating content, which I'll find and post to the group.
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    I think there's a special topics course on curation of information/data in the fall!
Sheryl Christensen

SXSW: The Internet is over - 0 views

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    "The boundary between 'real life' and 'online' has disappeared"
Laurie A.

Google to Launch Major New Social Network Called Circles, Possibly Today (Updated) - 0 views

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    Note: this is a rumor, but it's interesting if this service will be lauched: "With Circles, I believe that Google will attempt to accomplish something critics from the blogosphere, academia, SXSW 2010 keynoter danah boyd, privacy watchdogs and others have all called on the social networking world to do: to allow our online communication to respect the same boundaries that our offline social lives do."
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    nothing has been announced yet. it is interesting that google is so visited and has so many users, but has yet to effectively incorporate social networking... i.e. buzz and wave had huge hyped, but it quickly burned away.
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

William Powers, Author of Hamlet's BlackBerry - 0 views

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    This book was mentioned in the NYT article on SXSW that I just posted. Instead of arguing whether technology makes us dumber or smarter, the author provides insight on how we can better adopt technology into our lives, which involves periods of disconnectedness.
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    Thanks for sharing this, this is very useful for my term project. Making tools work for us, rather than ever feeling the other way is key.
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