Showing posts with label Self-Negotiated (b). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Self-Negotiated (b). Show all posts

Thursday, 5 August 2010

MADA MSN3 Critical Evaluation

8th August 2010

This Self-Negotiated unit has provided an in-depth learning experience for me to engage in a thorough research and to focus on those topics of my choice, and it has also allowed me to reflect on the MADA as a whole as it reaches the end of my first year. In this evaluation, I would like to focus on three things:
1) General overview of my experiences,
2) Issues and challenges which have I have become aware of, both theoretical and technical, and 
3) How those issues have provided me with ideas and insights further develop myself.

The unit started with various issues that were unexpected, and often I was unclear to where this project was going, for how far it would go. I was unable to focus on the unit at an early stage as work from my other units had affected the amount of time I could devote. Time management also became problematic towards the end of the unit due to my professional commitment, which resulted as inconsistency in approach to my research and production. I found it difficult to follow my timescale originally proposed in my learning agreement, and this is one of the prominent elements which reflect in the stage I am at in my project.

There are several issues that have come up during the process of research and production, both technical and theoretical. Various concerns started to form as I began my research, showing technical challenges to the project, however, it should be noted that these obstacles resulted in clarifying how I could approach and manage my work scheme as a whole, and schedules for analysis and evaluation was carried out accordingly. Although I have managed to put together a prototype to show the fundamental ideas and highlighted development potentials, two weeks of delay in research on visual presentation which resulted in delaying of production, has left me with small amount of time to reach the final result in time for the twentieth anniversary of the German unification, on 3 October, 2010.

One of the challenges I faced was a technical issue, which involved locating search engines that enabled me to filter and apply the criteria I felt essential. This was made possible only after I had a tutorial with Dr. Phil Archer, a lecturer at NUCA, who also provided me with an enormous amount of skills and knowledge on coding – another crucial tool for the structural basis of my project. Arranging for a tutorial involved discussing it with several lecturers before I could pinpoint what I needed to, and organizational communication was a contributing factor of delay. Coding with Pure Data and Autoitscript, of which I had no understanding of, has contributed greatly towards learning about the digital culture. I feel this was possible due to the nature of this unit, allowing me to endeavor on a project with specialized practices, including an investigation of digital and online methods of data collection; tagging digital mapping and visualization; and publicly accommodated photographic images and how photographers relate to and define their works of images.

My original intention proposed in my learning agreement, to “display an image of the Berlin Wall composed of series of smaller photographs, uploaded online” to represent individuals and their perceptions, is yet completed. Although there are artists and scholars who have connected descriptive text or phrases to photographs online or via their databases (Whitelaw, 2010; Harris, & Kamvar, 2006), I have not been able to directly display the link between perceptions and images. Research on Berliners’ emotions and perceptions were carried out accordingly, although through the process I have realized Flash nor Premiere were fit for use in this project, and introduced programs such as Autoitscript and Pure Data for control and manipulation of images collected online through Flickr Hive Mind. I have not been able to locate the venue or format for means of presentation, but this will become relevant when the project is nearer its completion. Technical challenges, such as representing the ratio of photographs true to its original, appearances of image: time, size, quantity, opacity, overall display of images, and accuracy of individually tagged images – which also raises theoretical questions to definitions of collected images (Pink, 2005) – still remain.

The concept of this project, to visualise Berliners’ perceptions and/or emotions, also raised new set of dilemmas. Through the research process, I have identified and connected the issue of psychosocial divide within Germany with more generally spoken digital divide. This acknowledges the gap of accessibility to the internet within citizens of East and West German states, as well as their cultures which involve possessing digital photography equipments, uploading the photographic images online for the wider public to view, or otherwise. Therefore concepts based on digital technology will, to varying extent, reflecting a stronger Western influence of perceptions – potentially neglecting view and values of citizens in the new Eastern states of Germany, and possibly projecting Western bias.

On reflection, I am confident to claim that the original intent of this project, to visualize Berliners’ perceptions, has partially reached its goal. Through research it became clear that it is technologically possible, with remaining challenges, and has established that values or personal narratives can be connected to photographic images via the web.

This project has also helped me refocus on my areas of expertise, as well as developing, in photojournalism and sociopolitical science. Social phenomena and trends are influenced by historical and cultural environment, and the dialectic characteristics of Berlin, becoming two opposing forces under the influence of the Cold War rivals, and the psychological and cultural effects which are still evident in the unified city today. Based on my previous research on Berliners’ and perceptions on unification, I was able to develop my understanding of visual representation, as well as its current trend of narrative online. Within the culture strengthened by individual initiatives such as blogging, and mass-scale and bottom-up management seen in collective editing and tagging and engaging in them myself, I have gained further understanding of internet and how it influences people’s lives and values. Cultural divide between those with access to internet in comparison to those without, could be applied to former East and West German citizens, and opened up a further scope in researching their interactions online. This will enhance current understandings of the so-called “Wall in the head” or Mauer im Kopf – a term often used to emphasise the divide of individual perceptions and values in two halves of Germany – alongside social and psychological researches carried out to this day.

References: 
Harris, J. & Kamvar, S. (2006) An exploration of human emotion, in six movements. [Online]
http://www.wefeelfine.org/ [04/08/2010]
Pink, D. (2005) Folksonomy. [Online]
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/11/magazine/11ideas1-21.html?_r=1 [04/08/2010]
Vander Wal, T. (2010) Understanding the Cost of We Can't Find Anything. [Online] http://www.personalinfocloud.com/folksonomy/ [04/08/2010]
Whitelaw, M. (2010) CommonsExplorer. [Online] http://visiblearchive.blogspot.com/ [01/08/2010]

MNS3 Presentation


Wednesday, 4 August 2010

Google Insights for "Berlin Wall" Search


Google Insights for Search* picks up quantitative data from the internet with given filter and search terms. The chart above is the search result from: terms berlin wall, berliner mauer; Worldwide, 2004 - present; covering categories: Arts & Humanities, Entertainment, Local, Society, News & Current Events, Reference. Two trends emerge here for the English term "berlin wall": showing a peak in November 2009, 20th anniversary of the Wall being breached which accumulated global interest; as well as repeating global pattern, where every May sees the highest buzz of the year. In contrast, "berliner mauer" (German for the Berlin Wall) sees more an evened out trend, with an increase, over the anniversary.

*The Search analyses a portion of worldwide Google web searches from all Google domains to compute the number of searches that have been done for the terms that you've entered, relative to the total number of searches done on Google over time. You can choose to see data for select Google properties, including Web search, Images, Product search and News search (certain properties aren't currently available in all countries/territories).

On the results page, you'll see:
a graph with the search volume, indicating interest over time (GMT) for your terms, plotted on a scale from 0 to 100; the totals are indicated next to bars by the search terms (read more about how we scale and normalise the data)
a breakdown of how the categories are classified
lists of the top searches and top rising searches
a world heat map graphically displaying the search volume index with defined regions, cities and metros
Keep in mind that Insights for Search uses data aggregated over millions of users without personally identifiable information and is powered by computer algorithms. In addition, it only displays results for search terms that receive a significant amount of traffic and enforces minimum thresholds for inclusion in the tool.


Google Insights for Search (2010) Web Search Interest: berlin wall, berliner mauer. [Online] 

Folksonomy

What was once claimed "a new approach to [online] categorization" (Pink, 2005), might help my project. Tagging by users, for example on Flickr, allows searches to retrieve a particular categories of photos. Although some say people are not categorizing information, but "throwing words out there for their own use", the system produces a self-organized classification of digital material online. Whilst other people can examine and label your photos, and "is idiosyncratic rather than systematic" which sacrifices "perfection" to lower the barrier to entry.
"Officials from the Guggenheim, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and a half-dozen other establishments are taking a folksonomic approach to their online collections by allowing patrons to supplement the specialized lexicon of curators". (Pink, 2005)
Pink, D.H. (2005) Folksonomy. [Online] http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/11/magazine/11ideas1-21.html?_r=3 [04/08/2010]

Unification not Complete

"German unification is not complete", Angela Merkel admitted shortly before the 20th anniversary of the Wall's opening (SMD, 2009). Many in Germany still feels "the economic, social and psychological divisions once demarcated by the Wall" and "the country had yet to fulfil promises made when East and West reunited in 1990", claimed CNN (2009).

She has also said that Germany faced "a challenge the likes of which it has not seen since reunification," a reference to the immense costs of raising the social and economic standards in the former East to the levels equivalent to western regions (Dempsey, 2009). 

"In the new (former East German) states we also have far greater structural unemployment than is the case in the old federal republic", claimed the German chancellor, and reunification a "political and economic success for the people in all parts of Germany" even though it has "not yet been achieved in all areas"   (DPA, 2010)

Interior Minister, Thomas de Maiziere, who had been a state secretary for West Germany - and his cousin Lothar de Maiziere was East Germany’s only freely elected premier - argued, "we objectively had too little time, we were driven people". West Germans had taken a "paternalistic stance towards the East — along the lines of 'we know what’s right for our sisters and brothers in the East'", stated de Maiziere, although "in truth, we did not know" (DPA, 2010)

These reports confirm the mentality in Germany, that after 20 years since the Wall was breached and €1.3 trillion (SMD, 2009) later, the social and psychological divide is still evident. 

CNN (2009) Berlin celebrates night that changed world. [Online] 
http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/11/09/berlin.wall.anniversary/index.html [04/08/2010]
Dempsey, J. (2009) Merkel Says Worst Still Ahead in Germany. [Online] http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/11/business/global/11debt.html?_r=1 [04/08/2010]
DPA (2010) 20 years on, German reunification still not complete: Merkel. [Online] http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/article487380.ece [04/08/2010]
SMD (2009) 20 Years On Berlin Celebrates the Day the Wall Fell. [Online] http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,660134,00.html [04/08/2010]

The Visible Archive


Whitelaw and Hinton began working for a "show everything" interface for the State Library of New South Wales, Australia, then developed the idea for the Flickr Commons (Whitelaw, 2010). He has also worked on A1 Explorer, another interface where key phrases are linked to archived photographs.

This is an idea to connect the uploaded photographs in my project with words, from photo description of the images or blogs, to link images and text which may include preceptions.


Whitelaw, M. (2010) CommonsExplorer. [Online] http://visiblearchive.blogspot.com/ [01/08/2010]

Monday, 2 August 2010

tutorial with Phil

22 July 2010

discussed ways of:
a) collecting photographic data online, and
b) coding, to visualise/control the collected images.

Online image data collection
WIG 
Searches Google under a set criterion and keywords, downloads the images and then saves in a folder. Free version (WIG Light) or €20 for a version with no limits to the amount of images to download. It can also translate search phrase into other languages [WIG, 2010].


Another website introduced to me was Fiveprime and its Flickr Hive Mind. Hive Mind is a "data mining tool" which allows users to sort photographic images from Flickr, that includes searching images with licenses that allow non-commercial and commercial use [Siemers, 2010].

In order to collect recently uploaded images, Autoitscript was used to refresh the Hive Mind page every 5 minutes, with the phrase "berlin wall" in the tag search box and searching under "recent". The new photos, provided they have been some photos uploaded since the previous Autoitscript search, will now be downloaded into a folder.  

Image display/presentation
To manipulate/control the presentation of images, we have used Pure Data. This controls:
  •  how the photos appear and disappear - controlling the image size to first appear small and then enlarge, pause for 2 seconds, and then reduce to nothing again,
  •  to which positions (there are 3 positions in this prototype window) to display the images in,
  •  and select a random image from the 50 recent photos that have been downloaded by Autoitscript.




Elements to consider, or to refine, are:
  • length of time each image is displayed, and between each photo to appear in one of the windows, 
  • what the size of the window is to be (for the prototype, it is only large enough to display 3 photos),
  • how the images appear and disappear: speed, size, opacity, and quantity of images.

Autoitscript (2010) http://www.autoitscript.com/autoit3/index.shtml [02/08/2010]
IEM [2010] Pure Data. [Online] http://puredata.info/ [02/08/2010]
Siemers, N. [2010] Flickr Hive Mind. [Online] http://fiveprime.org/ [02/08/2010]
WIG [2010] WebImageGrab version 7.5. [Online]
http://www.sas21.de/apps/webimagegrab/ [02/08/2010]

Sunday, 1 August 2010

Graft

The Graft website has a visual which gives the impression that the world is alive, organic, and made of numerous small individual dots.

Graft [2010] http://www.graftlab.com/ [01/07/2010]

Microsoft Live Labs Pivot

Microsoft Silverlight, launched to compete with Flash, visualises data in the form of tables, combining similar images on the internet (Bedwell, 2010). Another tool to visualise images based on data, and keywords.


Bedwell, H. (2010) Microsoft Pivot. [Online] http://www.contentandmotion.co.uk/social-media-pr-blog/infographic-visualisation-tools/ [01/08/2010]

visualising text into structures



This is possibly for later stages to develop my project, linking words/ideas/values together with another, with photographs - and the possibilities of visualising text too.

Gambette, P. (2009) Visualising a Text with a Tree Cloud. [Online]

visualising text into structures



This is possibly for later stages to develop my project, linking words/ideas/values together with another, with photographs - and the possibilities of visualising text too.

Gambette, P. (2009) Visualising a Text with a Tree Cloud. [Online]

more visualising tools

Ideas of visualisation, some that can link concepts or text-based information to images, and with Flickr images, which could contribute towards my project.

Collects Flickr uploaded images, and visualises
Flickrtime [2010] The Moment. [Online]
http://www.hottoast.org/convexstyle/flickrtime/ [01/08/2010]

Articles, linked with photographs
Newsmap (2010) [Online] http://newsmap.jp/ [01/08/2010]

Various functions, to track activities on websites and searches
Crazy Egg (2010) What does Crazy Egg do? [Online] https://www.crazyegg.com/overview
[01/08/2010]


http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/08/02/data-visualization-modern-approaches/ [01/08/2010]
http://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2009/06/50-great-examples-of-data-visualization/ [01/08/2010]
http://hootsuite.com/ [01/08/2010]
http://www.twitscoop.com/ [01/08/2010]

why and how of visualisation

Methodological visualisation of data, illustrated by Joel Laumans, offering ideas about patterns of display and presentation.

Laumans, J. [2010] An Introduction to Visualising Data. [Online]

http://piksels.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/visualizingdata.pdf [01/08/2010]

Wednesday, 28 July 2010

The Forgiveness Engine



The Forgiveness Engine is a place to make amends. Tell us what you're sorry for or what you're ready to forgive. Your story will be anonymous, but you'll have to log in so we can let people know you've apologized for something or forgiven something—but we'll never say what for. Then other users can match up stories of apology and forgiveness that resonate with them, so three strangers will make a new story together that means something different to everyone. The Forgiveness Engine is based on the idea that online, like in real life, we're not all "friends" and there should be a place online for our bad relationships, as well as our good. [The Forgiveness Engine, 2010]
Websites providing users connections to another, sometimes anonymously, establishing kinds of relation unique to online culture. Individual lifestyles and perceptions could possibly be influenced, as well as their identity, and how they react to social variables.

The Forgiveness Engine [2010] About. [Online]
http://www.theforgivenessengine.com/about [28/07/2010]
The Forgiveness Engine [2010] Coming Soon. [Online]
http://www.theforgivenessengine.com/match [28/07/2010]

Foursquare, Gowalla and Google Latitude

[Gowalla and Foursquare] pioneered the then-uncharted territory of location-based social networking. On Foursquare, a user "checks in" to locations (as pinpointed via satellite) to invite along friends, leave tips glued to GPS coordinates (like ordering advice at restaurants), and compete for digital rewards in the form of badges, or titles like "mayor" (for the user who checks in the most at a venue). Similarly, Gowalla asked users to check in places in order to collect digital goodies, akin to virtual geocaching." (Snow, 2010) 

"When we set out to build Gowalla, we simply wanted to use collectibles and a lightweight game to reward users for exploring the world around them." (Williams, in Snow, 2010).

"Google Latitude broadcasts your location from your mobile phone, letting your friends know where you are and allowing you to keep tabs on them. Latitude shares your current location with your friends by using Google Maps’ My Location feature. Like the iPhone’s built-in geo tools, My Location uses the signals from nearby cellphone towers to plot your whereabouts." (Gilbertson, 2009)

Social networking sites give new ways for its users to interact with one another. Geotagging, which is potentially useful for my project, has been seen as a new privacy concern. People's ideas over privacy has also changed over time, and many don't perceive it as a problem, too. 

Gilbertson, S. (2009) Google Latitude Broadcasts Your Location. [Online] http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/02/google-latitude/ [28/07/2010]
Snow, S. (2010) Foursquare vs. Gowalla: Inside the Check-In Wars. [Online] http://www.fastcompany.com/article/foursquare-vs-gowalla-who-will-rule-the-check-in-at-sxsw [28/07/2010]

Gundotra, V. (2009) See where your friends are with Google Latitude. [Online] 
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/02/see-where-your-friends-are-with-google.html [28/07/2010]
Kiss, J. (2010) Battling it out on the streets: Gowalla v Foursquare. [Online] 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/pda/2010/mar/24/digital-media-startups [28/07/2010]

Gowalla



Users "check-in" to locations, which can be monitored by their online friends. Geotagging and similar ideas can connect individuals in ways unseen before social networking sites boomed, but raises ethical concerns also.

Gowalla [2010] http://gowalla.com/ [28/07/2010]

IS Parade




"Twitter visualisations come in many forms, but IS Parade is arguably the most inventive yet", notes Kiss (2010), where participants can start a visual parade on screen based on their Twitter ID or keyword.
"You can set up your own real-time parade by getting friends to tweet the same keyword, and then setting up a parade to follow it. Not the most fuctional Twitter tool yet, but it does draw you in. All done by a Japanese agency to promote Sharp's new IS series Android netbook/smartphone." (Kiss, 2010)
A visualisation of tweets filtered through keywords. The image above is that of "berlin wall", showing result after a search.

Kiss, J. (2010) IS Parade: Turn your Twitter stream into a people parade. [Online] http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/pda/2010/jul/28/twitter-isparade [28/07/2010]

IS Parade [2010] About. [Online]
http://isparade.jp/ [28/07/2010]

Foursquare

"Foursquare shows a random grid of 50 pictures of users who most-recently checked in at that location — no matter what their privacy settings. When a new check-in occurs, the site includes that person’s photo somewhere in the grid." (Singel, 2010)
"Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and Bebo have all come before it, but Foursquare promises something new. After a decade of false dawns for the industry, it leads the way in a wave of new "geolocative" social networking tools. Unofficially, at least, 2010 has been labelled by many within the technology world as the "year of location". In addition to offering the communal connectivity of Twitter and Facebook, Foursquare also uses your smartphone's global positioning system (GPS) to broadcast your precise location to your "friends" and, should you so wish, to the wider world. Users are encouraged to "check in" on their phone whenever they arrive at a point of interest – a shop, a cafe, a museum, a nightclub, an office – so that fellow users know where they are. A great way supposedly to see if any of your friends are around and about. Glance down at your phone and – as I did with Louise – see the names of all the other users around you within a mile or so and, crucially, exactly where they are and which fellow users they are with. (I was drawn to Louise because she was in a cluster of Foursquare users – albeit still rare, even somewhere such as London – and she was the user allowing a stranger such as myself access to the most personal information – photograph, full name, Twitter feed etc.) Visit somewhere a lot and you can even vie with other users to become its virtual "mayor". If you feel so inclined, you can also leave a tip or review in the digital ether – "hey, order the bacon burger, it's great!" – so others following can benefit from your experience." (Hickman, 2010)
A tool which creates buzz in cyber culture (in this instance, by providing the users location publically) can be a threat, partly to do with uninformed users. The image below is a visualisation of Gowalla and Foursquare, illustrating user experiences also.


Singel, R. (2010) White Hat Uses Foursquare Privacy Hole to Capture 875K Check-Ins. [Online] 
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/06/foursquare-privacy/ [28/07/2010]
Hickman, L. (2010) How I became a Foursquare Cyberstalker. [Online] http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/jul/23/foursquare [28/07/2010]

Kiss, J. (2010) Foursquare: One million users and an imminent deal... [Online]

Sunday, 25 July 2010

"Just wing it and chat with someone new"

Chat with your travel companions in other rows, join chat rooms, or just wing it and chat with someone new.  Go ahead, you know you want to. (Virgin America, 2010)
Another tool which provides its users new interpersonal connections, as well as to the internet, that could also affect individual behaviour. The incident reported in the article below, where the airline claims it was used to improve passenger experience, shows that some people feel more comfortable voicing their opinion through this tool, than to speak face to face. This seat-to-seat idea is based on that fact.

Barbara S. Peterson
12/07/2010
New York Times Business
On a flight from Newark to the West Coast not long ago, Jeff Jarvis, author of the book “What Would Google Do?” fell into a conversation with a fellow passenger familiar with his work. But it was not a face-to-face chat. Rather, it started as an exchange of Twitter posts at the boarding gate.
When the plane landed, Mr. Jarvis recalled, the conversation resumed. “It was as if someone had recognized you and come up to say, ‘hello,’ on the flight.” He said it reminded him of the days when passengers could socialize in airborne lounges, “except now it’s happening digitally.”
The mobile phone and laptop are not just tools to stay in touch with the office or home anymore. As Mr. Jarvis can attest, a growing number of frequent fliers are using their mobile devices to create an informal travelers’ community in airports and aloft.
Airlines and social media providers are scrambling to catch up. Airlines are beefing up their presence on networking channels, and travelers’ groups like FlyerTalk.com have created new applications that allow members to find one another while on the road. Business travelers can use these services to share cabs to the airport, swap advice or locate colleagues in the same city. As Mr. Jarvis puts it, “finding a like-minded person to travel with lessens the chance of getting stuck next to some talkative bozo” on a long flight.
Increasing availability of Wi-Fi at airports and on planes has made the travel networking possible. A survey of 84 of the world’s largest airports by the Airports Council International earlier this year found that 96 percent offered Wi-Fi connections, and 73 percent had connections throughout their terminals. About 45 percent offer the service free; the rest charge an average of about $8 an hour.
More than 10 airlines in North America, including American, Delta and Southwest, are wiring their planes for Internet access, and major foreign airlines like Lufthansa are introducing new technology that will let customers connect on transoceanic flights. In-flight calls are still forbidden on most flights, although several airlines, including Emirates, have been testing calling on shorter trips.
As many as 1,200 commercial airliners in the United States will have Wi-Fi capability by the end of the year, according to Chris Babb, senior product manager of in-flight entertainment for Delta Air Lines. “It’s a much different world than it was a year ago,” he said, noting that on a recent flight he exchanged e-mail messages with several colleagues who were in the air at the same time.
And Virgin America, which has wired its entire 28-plane fleet for the Internet, said about half of its passengers brought their laptops with them and 17 to 20 percent were online at any given time. On longer flights, about a third of passengers go online. Like airports, most airlines charge a fee for the service, usually ranging from $5 to $13.
Some airline passengers may mourn the loss of their last remaining refuge from e-mail intrusions. But the benefits of staying connected became clear several months ago during the eruption of the Icelandic volcano that grounded thousands of European flights. Facebook and Twitter set up sites for stranded travelers, who swapped ideas and offered rides to ferry terminals, and Twitter had its own thread. Based on anecdotal reports, the sites helped in getting information out quickly.
For those with time at an airport, FlyerTalk.com has an “itineraries” feature that allows travelers to post their coming flights in the hope that other “flier talkers,” as they call themselves, may be heading the same way.
Lufthansa said it consulted with FlyerTalk members in developing its own product to help customers tap into social networking from any location. The application works on iPhones and this fall will be available on BlackBerrys. A built-in GPS allows users to find fellow fliers who might be nearby. It also has a taxi-sharing feature that travelers can activate upon landing.
Users must already be members of the airlines’ loyalty program, and Lufthansa said it had added privacy controls for those who preferred to travel incognito. FlyerTalk’s president, Gary Leff, said that while some members had welcomed the service, others were skeptical. “Some of us just like to keep to ourselves” on the road, he said.
For those who want to connect, few airlines can match Virgin America for mingling opportunities. In addition to its Internet service, it offers seat-to-seat messaging via its seatback video screens. It has also teamed up with match.com to create a party atmosphere on specific flights (reportedly at least one couple who met this way became engaged). But there is also the potential for spurned advances and hurt feelings.
“Seat-to-seat chatting could lead to a negative form of social networking,” said Jeanne Martinet, a social commentator who writes the missmingle.com blog. “What if someone spots another passenger doing something annoying?” she asked. In the past, that person might have simply suffered in silence. Now, Ms. Martinet said, “It would be tempting to message them, ‘Can’t you get your big feet out of the aisle?’ ”
Porter Gale, Virgin’s vice president of marketing, said there were safeguards against abuse and that a passenger could simply turn off the messaging function. And she said that offering Wi-Fi access had benefits for the airline, like the ability to resolve a customer’s problem before a flight lands.
A passenger once sent an e-mail message to the airline from his seat, saying that he was not pleased with the sandwich he had just eaten, she said. A customer service representative on the ground sent a message back to the plane, and shortly thereafter, she said, the passenger was served an acceptable substitute.
This can work against the airline, too, as Virgin discovered when a New York-bound flight was diverted and some passengers sent out messages venting their annoyance with the delay. (Peterson, 2010)

Peterson, B.S. (2010) Social Networking Takes Flight. [Online]
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/business/13social.html [23/07/2010]

Virgin America (2010) What's on Board. [Online] 

Sunday, 18 July 2010

Web Trend Map



extract from Web Trend Map

1 The Stream of Information represents the entirety of articles and data being publishing online.

2. Individuals actively filter the portion of the stream of information passing in front of them. Acting as Micro-Curators, they selectively publish (to services like Twitter, Facebook, etc) the links they consider having highest value.

3. Webtrendmap.com users create Micro-Aggregates of link publishers by choosing highly selective subsets to place on their Web Trend Maps. These maps become representative of subsets of online communities. The maps are also public facing (unlike most RSS readers) and provide a visual summary of links and trends within that community subset. Both the map creator and passive viewers gain insight into the community.

4. Webtrendmap.com collects, summarizes and publishes all of the trending links on individual maps onto a Macro-Aggregate represented as Top Trending Links.

The filtration process facilitated by Web Trend Map (All Information > Micro-Curation > Micro-Aggregation > Macro-Aggregation) means the data rising to the top is "always high quality" [Web Trend Map, 2010].

Web Trend Map [2010] Timely, trending links curated and filtered by an engaged and active community. [Online] http://webtrendmap.com/about/ [18/07/2010]
iA Inc. (2009) What it is. [Online] http://www.flickr.com/photos/formforce/3409362834/sizes/o/ [18/07/2010]