Where the NET is going…

Every once in awhile I like to just sift through the grist that is being processed on the great wide interweb and take a gander at trends and events that feel like they are going to be important building blocks in the near future.





To this I add a first level of links that allow further exploration of what this technology is about and what it is linked to:


http://www.technologyreview.com/web/24645/page1/


So we have a new way to manipulate data that allows a different insight to emerge from massive amounts of information.





The television series CSI and its geographical offshoots have always pushed technological advances with their fancy computer graphics, image enhancing and hand or voice controlled computer displays. Now we see the next steps. One truism that has prevailed from the early days of computer use is that the greater the capacity of the system the larger and more sophisticated projects than can then be undertaken. There’s a problem in the programming industry with its much larger programs and applications where the coder/developer can no longer hold the whole picture in their mind. These two tools alone have implications for that entire paradigm.





The charge into Cyberspace has been blunted by technology that is not up to the word and idea visions of William Gibson et al nor the movie maker’s spin ala the Matrix.


Technological advancements are accelerating and convergence is a growing force. My smartphone is the end result of this convergence. The former incarnation required a large physical box connected to a wire based network, a camera, a video camera, a library, a typewriter, an entire postal system, a boombox, a tape recorder, a bookstore, a video store plus many, many more separate systems and infrastructures.





A lazy Sunday that has brought some new insights to my daily ruminations. To sum up I wish to drag you a bit sideways into my mind space and I offer as a final tidbit this piece:


http://spiffy.ci.uiuc.edu/~kline/Stuff/internet-rant.html/


WordPress 3.0


Resource map by Sallie Goetsch (src), via WordPress Asylum.


Absolutely painless upgrade to WP3 here on ND2.0. The only chip in the pile was learning that our venerable–by our standards–theme is not compliant with some of WP3′s added functionalities. The only ones I’ve identified are the extra widget areas, and, the menu builder.


WP3′s new features bring some power user capabilities to the masses. Although, in noting this greater power, it is only afforded to those who can grok the basics of how WordPress works under the hood. For example, custom post types provides a way of breaking out content from the either/or of Post/Page, but, it’s most beneficial application involves situating those custom “types” within dedicated Divisions within a layout, using their loop.


Closer to our wheelhouse here is the revamped taxonomy function, that could be deployed to classify tagged texts. WP3 also integrates WordPress Multi-User; although ND2, multi-user as it is, is also minimalist in approach.


The WordPress 3.0 feature set was finalized a long time ago. The one addition I would eventually like to see is easy play list podcasting. The kludgy workarounds which use plug-ins are hit-or-miss–mostly miss.



Feature guide via Sixrevisions

Smashing Magazine’s Highlights of WP3

Taxonomies explained at 1stwebdesigner.


Getting To Know You


When I meet a new participant, I immediately become interested in who they are; what they do; what are their interests; what are their publications; where are their internet tracks; what are their affiliations.


Often the forensics involved in uncovering this data is easy to accomplish. Given an email or wide use of a particular handle, a real name falls into place, and the traces and locations are quickly unfolded.


On the other hand, when neither email or handle lead to a real name, then the forensics often become formidable. There are give-aways, because the next step is use distinctive phrases and the brute text search capability of google.


This always works when the internet tracks are text-based and prolix. This doesn’t work when people don’t leave “text” tracks.


***


I prefer people do not compartmentalize their various aspects, when they’re willing to speak of the data but not say where it resides. Especially this is so when I find it “hidden” in plain sight.


This subject has come up at various times on the ND email list, in the back-channel, and even about this blog. This concern for how their own data is to be distributed, for me, is always in the context of my experience with rare people who are masters of concealment and most people who don’t understand what this mastery actually entails.


creatures of the house

the boundary between inside and outside is sometimes hard to determine. where is inside the house and where outside? i say the boundary lies at the flyscreen. insects not welcome past here. but insects and arachnids and other creatures do not abide by my rules occasionally. most people merely get out the killing apparatus of one form or another, when creatures cannot undertsand or will not acknowledge boundary-setting, but one of the abiding philosophies of eldon could be summed up in the prosaic aphorism, live and let live.

this rule is not adhered to in several specific instances. in the case of biting or sucking creatures on my person, or one potentially biting/sucking creature anywhere near me or my animal charges. i refer to mosquitos in my immediate hearing, ants biting my person, leeches anywhere on my person or any animal charge, and fleas in our immediate habitat. you will note the absence of spiders, snakes, and flies. actually i will swat a fly in the house if it keeps drawing attention to itself. a bee can sting me if i am careless enough to catch it on my arm or hand – but generally they do not bother me, even if i am cutting stalks in their vicinity.

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Fox


Eldon asked, “hedgehog or fox?”. Fox.


Good example—and everyday for me is per force an ‘example’—occurred in the comments here to Downward Causation. Exposed to a quasi-foundational assertion, I wondered if it were wholly true. Meanwhile, I’m already digging to find if the assertion is actually controversial.


By the way, back in 1996, when I created my first personal web site, the Berlin quote was on offer. The original concept is given by Archilochus,


The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.



As a puer-intuitive, (per the Analytic Psychology,) I might benefit from more single-mindedness. However, it is a core bias of mine that I am skeptical, an anti-foundationalist, and a domain savvy relativist. Foxy.


How to Behave On Internet Forums


Internet: Useful Tips:
How To Behave On An Internet Forum

Looking for payoffs or looking to pay?

The here and now of the original underlies the concept of its authenticity, and on the latter in turn is founded the idea of a tradition which has passed object down as the same, identical thing to the present day. The whole sphere of authenticity eludes technological-and of course not only technological-reproduction. But whereas the authentic work retains its full authority in the face of a reproduction made by hand, which it brands a forgery, this is not the case with techno- logical reproduction. The reason is twofold. First, technological repro- duction is more independent of the original than is manual reproduction. For example, in photography it can bring out aspects of the original that are accessible only to the lens (which is adjustable and can easily change viewpoint) but not to the human eye; or it can use certain processes, such as enlargement or slow motion, to record images which escape natural optics altogether. This is the first reason. Second, technological reproduc- tion can place the copy of the original in situations which the original it- self cannot attain. Above ali, it enables the original to meet the recipient halfway, whether in the form of a photograph or in that a gramophone record. The cathedral leaves its site to be received in the studio of an art lover; the choral work performed in an auditorium or in the open air is enjoyed in a private room.

These changed circumstances may leave the artwork’s other properties untouched, but they certainly devalue the here and now of the artwork. And although this can apply not only to art but (say) to a landscape moving past the spectator in a film., in the work of art this process touches on a highly sensitive core, more vulnerable than that of any natural object. That core is its authenticity. The authenticity of a thing is the quintessence of all that is transmissible in it from its origin on, ranging from its physical duration to the historical testimony relating to it. Since the historical testimony is founded on the physical duration, the former, too, is jeopardized by reproduction, in which the physical duration plays no part. And what is really jeopardized when the historical testimony is affected is the authority of the object, the weight it derives from tradition. One might focus these aspects of the artwork in the concept of the aura, and go on to say: what withers in the age of the technological reproducibility of the work of art is the latter’s aura. This process is symptomatic; its significance extends far beyond the realm of art. It might be stated as a general formula that the technology of reproduction detaches the reproduced object from the sphere of tradition. By replicating the work many times over, it substitutes a mass existence for a unique existence. And in lJermitting the reproduction to reach the recipient in his or her own situation, it actualizes that which is reproduced. These two processes lead to a massive upheaval in the domain of objects handed down from the past-a shattering of tradition which is the reverse side of the present crisis and renewal of humanity. Both processes are intimately related to the mass movements of our day. (Walter Benjamin, from The Age of Art In Its Technological Reproduction; His essay begins with the following quote: The true is what he can; the false is what he wants. -MADAME DE DURAS!


I don’t check into my Facebook page everyday. I rarely check into my MySpace musician page. Never do i drop into my LinkedIn. I rarely look at my Twitter feed. If I could experience some payoff due to twittering, I’d twitter.

Something like 50% of my time ‘in email’ is spent deleting spam from my 14 year old original email account. The four email discussion groups dearest to my heart have each in their different ways become mostly inactive. One other list I monitor has seen its traffic slow down 90%.

I read one forum–the Pedal Steel Guitar Forum–regularly. I drop into Brainstorms every now and then. I check out my various blog feed readers regularly too. I pay for the privilege of not being active on Ken Wilber’s Integral+Life.

My cell phone is a good way to communicate with me, yet I can count my phone correspondents on one hand.

I have three personal blogs and participate here. On my own blogs I post in flurries and back-date posts.

***

Although I long for the intellectual, soulful, creative, jockeying and collaboration which issue from people engaging each other via various internet modalities, what has transpired over the past two years is, as I view it, a substantial compression and truncation of the–as it were–”conversation.”

A good friend posed a philosophical question to me via my Facebook in-box. However, it made a reference to something somebody had mentioned to them. When I asked what else this third party had said, because I needed more information, I was told, “That’s all they said.” In any event, my Facebook in-box is not the way to ask me a question of any sort.

People pass tweets to me. I’m waiting for a tweet that isn’t a kernal, husk, glib pointer toward some hidden aperçu.

***

Recently, having re-read almost all of Ivan Illich, and bits of Adorno and Benjamin, I got to thinking about the illusion of autonomy in the context of net life. This fits into my developing, albeit inchoate, consideration of the semantic web, cloud applications–what is termed Web 3.0. It is is especially interesting to read how information is to be fit to user predilection in real time.

Is this the result of machine heuristics being maneuvered so as to intervene in my own?

From the recently rendered About Page to ND2.0.

Are we not somewhat in the context-free zone of the territories given by the post-post-modern free play of industrial solipsism and its committed end of histories?

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