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Jeremy Price's Library tagged web2.0   View Popular

24 Dec 09

if:book: when we get what we want

  • We don't think about this very much, but this newfound ability to instantly satisfy our desires is actually a very strange development. So much of human development is a process of learning to deal with desires that are delayed or vexed; so much of the history of the book is a narrative of scarceness. In terms of the market, there was more demand than supply. The move to the digital has changed all that: the supply of a piece of digital content is, for most intents and purposes, infinite, and we find ourselves in a position where supply far exceeds demand. It isn't just books where this is the case: it might be said that all electronic reading is in this position. If you have an even marginal amount of curiosity, there's no end of content that could, given the time, be interesting.
  • it becomes very hard for us to know how to value content
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23 Nov 09

Location Is The Missing Link Between Social Networks And The Real World

  • social networking, while great in many respects, does not fulfill a fundamental human desire: To be in the actual presence of other people.
23 Aug 09

Rick Perlstein -- Birthers, Health Care Hecklers and the Rise of Right-Wing Rage - washingtonpost.com

  • The orchestration of incivility happens, too, and it is evil. Liberal power of all sorts induces an organic and crazy-making panic in a considerable number of Americans, while people with no particular susceptibility to existential terror -- powerful elites -- find reason to stoke and exploit that fear. And even the most ideologically fair-minded national media will always be agents of cosmopolitanism: something provincials fear as an outside elite intent on forcing different values down their throats.
  • If 1963 were 2009, the woman who assaulted Adlai Stevenson would be getting time on cable news to explain herself. That, not the paranoia itself, makes our present moment uniquely disturbing.
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Rick Perlstein -- Birthers, Health Care Hecklers and the Rise of Right-Wing Rage - washingtonpost.com

  • So the birthers, the anti-tax tea-partiers, the town hall hecklers -- these are "either" the genuine grass roots or evil conspirators staging scenes for YouTube? The quiver on the lips of the man pushing the wheelchair, the crazed risk of carrying a pistol around a president -- too heartfelt to be an act. The lockstep strangeness of the mad lies on the protesters' signs -- too uniform to be spontaneous. They are both. If you don't understand that any moment of genuine political change always produces both, you can't understand America, where the crazy tree blooms in every moment of liberal ascendancy, and where elites exploit the crazy for their own narrow interests.
  • The instigation is always the familiar litany: expansion of the commonweal to empower new communities, accommodation to internationalism, the heightened influence of cosmopolitans and the persecution complex of conservatives who can't stand losing an argument.
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21 Aug 09

apophenia: some thoughts on technophilia

  • All too often, our conversations center on the need to get technology into the hands of learners, as though the gaps that we're seeing can be explained away by issues of access. Push comes to shove, most of us know that there are problems with this model, but in a world filled with dichotomous rhetoric, it's easy to get into the habit of being the proselytizer in the face of fear-mongering.
  • How people embrace technology has less to do with the technology itself than with the social setting in which they are embedded.
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19 Aug 09

Why I Don’t Use Twitter

A Manifesto I believe in Twitter. I believe people want to use it and that it is useful to them. I'm less sure ...

feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/_AsI7ckPX50/?title=Why I Don’t Use Twitter - Preview

twitter technology communication web2.0 information overload

11 Jul 09

Joho the Blog » Internet freedom, but not equality

  • During the 2006-2007 school year, her conversations with high-school students began showing a trend of white, upper-class and college-bound teens migrating to Facebook–much like the crowd in the conference hall has. Meanwhile, less-educated and non-white teens were on MySpace. Ms. boyd noted that old-style class arrogance was also in view; the Facebook kids were quicker to use condescending language toward the MySpace kids.


    “What we’re seeing is a modern incarnation of white flight,” Ms. boyd said. “It should scare the hell out of us.”

04 Jul 09

Death of the blogosphere | Marginal Utility | PopMatters

  • What was revolutionary about blogging then is merely that it allowed those traditional networks to metastasize in front of the jealous outsiders who, with their own unacknowledged blogs, feel even more bereft. They perpetuate for those outsiders the idea that the world is somehow rigged, and help them continue to fail to see that part of “merit” is the ability to push your meritorious work among the people who can bring it wider repute.
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