Friday, March 30, 2012

Disappearing Blogrolls

I just had to carefully reconstruct my blogrolls from scratch as all of the blogs in them had mysteriously disappeared after happily residing there for over a month. I am using blogger and hope nobody else is having the same trouble.

Life and Baseball: Rebirth

More personal, less baseball, more life.  Plus a video of me dancing in Africa.  These are the changes that have been requested for the blog, and at the very least is a cool video of me dancing.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Presentation on Here Comes Everybody

This book packed a lot of information in, so it was hard to boil it down to a small, bite-sized amount. If you haven't gotten a chance to read the book or you don't want to read through this summary, I would recommend reading the italicized headings of each chapter because that will give you a good idea of his points. 

The underlying assumption/claim that is necessary for Shirky's whole argument is that humans are social. “Human beings are social creatures- not occasionally or by accident but always. Sociability is one of our core capabilities and it show up in almost every aspect of our lives as both cause and effect. Society in not just the product of its individual members; it is also the product of its constituent groups.” The other assumption is that group formation is a natural thing for humans.

Until recently, group formation has been limited by institutional contradiction: "in a way, every institution lives in a kind of contradiction: it exists to take advantage of group effort, but some of its resources are drained away by directing that effort." Now, new social tools like email, facebook, and flikr (among many many others) are drastically altering the way groups form and what they are capable of doing once they are collected. These new social tools allow for "simple sharint to anchor the creation of new groups." New tools reshape group complexity so that it is no longer a barrier. "The tools are simply a way of channeling existing motivation."

Tools don't change absolute difficulty, they change relative difficulty. Collaborative production (like Wikipedia) has always been harder than simple sharing, and it has been increasingly difficult as the number of people in the group grow (See diagram on pg 27). New technology doesn't create the desire to collaborate, but it makes it easy enough that is isn't hindered by the cost/ time it previously took.  Think in terms of a group of friends who wanted to go out on a Friday. Before email and facebook, they would have all had to call back and forth to each other to arrange an event. The more people involved, the more complex and time consuming the process would have been. Now, a group email or, even simpler, a facebook message or group can be created where everyone can collaborate simultaneously.

These collaborative actions further enables collective action as in the story of the lost SideKick (Chapter 1) or the Catholic Church scandal (Chapter 6). Not only do these new social tool enable more collective sharing, production, and action, they allow the speed of communication and action within groups to accelerate exponentially. Although Shirky wrote his book before they occurred, this is highly suggestive of the recent Arab Spring protests that were in many ways made possible (on an effective scale) by new internet tools for social interaction.

These new tool aggregate skills, interests, and talents in valuable groupings that are almost impossible to create in the old fashioned institutional way. Shirky gives the example in Chapter 9 of a conference that was created when "Tim O'Reilly, the publisher and coference organizer, founded the conference FOO Camp (Friends of O' Reilly). This conference starts from the invite list- gather a hundred interesting people- and lest them work out the schedule and content of the conference (on a wiki, of course)." This exemplifies how the new social tools allow groups to form by first aggregating interests and then forming boundaries and functions of the group, rather than the other way around.

As publishing becomes incredibly easy and inexpensive (often free), it is shifted into the hands of the average person, and is no longer filtered through professionals. The line between personal communication and publishing is blurred. However, this means there will be a great deal of mis-information and failure in the information system in addition to the increasing amounts of correct and successful information. 

Monday, March 26, 2012

Aha!

I finally found the link I originally tried to share with all of you a few weeks ago: Facebook Social Plugins.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Class, I will be focusing on this article.

http://journalism.indiana.edu/resources/erniepyle/wartime-columns/digging-and-grousing/

Short, 2 minute read if you have the opportunity.

Best,

Mike Venetti

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Matt's blog - again

I don't know what happened, but I just went through the list and realized I'm not on here anymore! So, here's the link to my page.

http://barsouthpuck.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

For you my beloved classmates

Hello my smart, beautiful/handsome/genderambigioustermforlooks, witty, clever, creative classmates,
I've written a splendid new post about epic battles and women stabbing Richard III look-alikes in the head with tent stakes. As always there's  a lovely little poll at the end. It's so nice. Why don't you look at it and comment, eh?
-Hannah (Ezra)

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Nellie Bly

Good evening bloggers,


Carla and I will be sharing our presentation with all of you tomorrow on the fabulous Nellie Bly. Here are the excerpts that we've selected for discussion:

Ten Days in a Mad-House
- Chapter I : A Delicate Mission
- Chapter XV: Incidents of Asylum Life
- Chapter XVI : The Last Good-Bye
Around the World in Seventy-Two Days
- Chapter I: A Proposal to Girdle the Earth
- Chapter III: Southampton to Jules Verne's
- Chapter XVI: Across the Continent


Some of the chapters are a little lengthy but if you could read at least one from each book that would really help us out during discussion.


Here are two links to blogs which we thought could be Nelly Bly's modern blogging counterparts: 
This blog is written by women and it discusses social justice and equal rights with a strong emphasis on changing people's attitudes and raising awareness of issues.

My Life's a Trip
Is a blog written by a mainstream journalist who uses a plain, direct, style of writing as well as multimedia to chronicle her travels. 




See you all in class tomorrow!


Monday, March 5, 2012

Good evenin', bloggers and blogettes - just put up a new post on how Ocean's 11 and Pokemon, and petty theft were able to come together for an exciting culmination of prepubescent debauchery known as The Charizard Heist, in my series, Awkward Tales of Childhood.  Enjoy my shame!

Satirical Blogs

Examples of satirical blogs from Yalabe and Laura's presentation about Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal."

Think Spin and the Magick Sandwich are two everyday blogs that have satirical undertones to the writing. As we'll discuss in our presentation today, satire is a very useful writing style for constructively criticizing social phenomena.