This page is about "Digitial Future"

49Media.com Podcast

I'm too stoked.  Chris Ritke was kind enough to ask me for an interview for his podcasts.  I had too much fun and it's now on the 49Media.com.

Please visit 49Media for the complete post.  Here is a link to the mp3 file.

"Chris speaks with Markus Sandy about Spinflow.org, video blogging, vlogifying people and organizations, Podcast Hotel, Spincasting, videoblogging street teams, Blogher & a Spinflow sponsored west coast vlogger meetup, SpinXpress and more."

Chris was also so kind as to put the podcast on the Internet Archive.  Thanks Chris.

No Hart Feelings

I would not want to be John Hart today.  He is experiencing the darker side of group collaboration.  It has been quite something to watch.  Basically, it went down like this as far as I can tell from quickly going over all the relevant emails and blogs (please let me know if I got it wrong in any way - times may be a little off due to timezone issues in messages):

Continue reading "No Hart Feelings" »

Individual-i

I support individual rights I just found this banner in the sidebar of a site that Raymond had mentioned in a recent post to the Yahoo Videoblogging Group.  Interesting site.

Today, the rights of individuals are being eroded: by government, by corporations, by society itself. This icon — the Individual-i — represents the rights of the individual...

I like this alternate image too:

C-SPAN: DIGITAL FUTURE

Not sure what happened to the Live C-SPAN broadcast.  It seems that it was prempted by some vote and an announcement by some "lacky to a lacky" as Zatoichi would say.  In any event, the video is now available online.

Addendum: the lacky-sub-lacky was Karen Hughes.

C-SPAN: DIGITAL FUTURE - Digital Publishing

Edward L. Ayers, dean of the College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Virginia will be speaking live on C-SPAN today from the LOC at 3:30 PST.  Here is description from the C-SPAN site:

Ayers is the author (with Anne S. Rubin) of "The Valley of the Shadow: Two Communities in the American Civil War" on CD-ROM. Among the questions Ayers will address are the implications for the creation and distribution of knowledge in today's digital environment.

You can email in questions.

Lawrence Lessig on C-SPAN

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
The Digital Future
 
THURSDAY ON C-SPAN AT 6:30PM ET

Lawrence Lessig, professor of law at Stanford Law School and founder of the Stanford Center for Internet and Society Lessig is the author of "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace" and an expert on the issues of copyright and "copyleft." He is the inventor of the revolutionary concept and application Creative Commons, which invites the right to use material under specific conditions.

QUESTIONS TO MR. LESSIG
THURSDAY ON C-SPAN AT 6:30PM ET

Does anyone want to set up a back channel for this and send in email?

David Levy on C-SPAN

David Levy, a UW Information School professor and the author of  "Scrolling Forward" will be speaking live on C-SPAN today from the LOC at 3:30 PST.  Here is description from the C-SPAN site:

Monday, February 14 at 6:30pm ET - David M. Levy, professor at the Information School of the University of Washington Levy is the author of "Scrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in the Digital Age," and he will discuss the shift of the experience of reading from the fixed page to movable electrons and the effect that has had on language.

You can email in questions. Here are some links to bone up for the event.  Ramana Rao's Information Flow blog has an interesting review (see quote below).  He was a fellow researcher at Xerox PARC.  An article index entry can be found here and the Seattle Times has an in-depth review here.

Starting from a simple definition of documents as "talking things," Levy explains how they act as our social delegates, in particular, speaking for us in social settings. This broad perspective offers insights into how documents participate in the functioning of culture, and consequently, what might or might not happen across technology shifts.

Sounds interesting. More on this after the broadcast ...