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Presentation Zen: Making presentations in the TED style
Lots of great links and pointers to explore in this post by Garr Reynolds who blogs "on issues related to professional presentation design." As the title indicates, this entry is about "the TED style," and includes "the TED commandments" as well as links to examples of great presentations.
Lifehacker - How to Filter and Manage Your Online Social Life - Social Networks
The title is self-explanatory.
Archives & Museum Informatics: Museums and the Web 2009 (MW2009): Speakers
"MW2009 features speakers from around the world, presenting their latest work and research findings. Proposals have been peer-reviewed by an international Program Committee in a very competitive process. Selected authors should consult the Information for Authors."
Curators in Context - Main
Curators in Context dot CA is "art curators talk about curating." Page links to individual presentations. (Text and audio)
Flong - Interactive Art by Golan Levin and Collaborators
Portal page for Golan Levin, Pittsburgh artist & educator at Carnegie Mellon University. Runs Studio for Creative Inquiry.
Cybercinema Homepage
"An Interactive Site Devoted to the History of Computers and Artificial Intelligence in Film"
"Create Your Own Magnetic Prototype" (adaptive path » blog » Alexa Andrzejewski »)
File this under "great idea!" Get printable magnetic sheets, print out your design elements, and move them around on a magnetic whiteboard.
LIFE photo archive hosted by Google
Google has put the LIFE photo archive online: "Search millions of photographs from the LIFE photo archive, stretching from the 1750s to today. Most were never published and are now available for the first time through the joint work of LIFE and Google."
Creative Providence - Frontpage
Portal page for "Creative Providence," billed as "a cultural plan for the City" by Providence Mayor David N. Cicilline. Good looking site, friendly UI, easy to navigate. Could/ should be a model for other cities (wish we'd build something like this for Cultural Capital Victoria...).
Note: somewhat mind-blowing - the City of Providence has its own Department of Art, Culture + Tourism... Wow, I guess they take this stuff seriously!
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The cultural plan will explore the current strengths, weaknesses, challenges, and opportunities for the City's arts, creative, and cultural sector. The focus will be on stimulating economic development, strengthening the creative economy, education, civic engagement, and enhancing the quality of life in the City of Providence. It will better position the City to realize its full potential as a creative center and to deliver on its promise of innovation and change.
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Providence's cultural planning process and the creation of the plan will be a collaborative effort led by two consulting firms: Craig Dreeszen, a nationally recognized cultural planner, and the staff from Providence-based think tank, New Commons. Dr. Dreeszen will guide the steering committee and produce the formal cultural plan. Robert Leaver, of New Commons, will design and facilitate the public forums - including a conference, online website, and an operating network to guide the development of the plan.
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New breed of 'net newsers' shape US media habits, says Pew report | Media | guardian.co.uk
Jemima Kiss writes about the recent Pew report that describes how "well-educated, technically-savvy young web users are shaping the media habits of the US, with one in 20 Americans saying they do not watch TV on a typical day and a sharp decline in newspaper readership, according to new research."
Interesting findings on education levels and TV-watching *and* interest (lack thereof) in science and technology, too.
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A new generation of well-educated, technically-savvy young web users are shaping the media habits of the US, with one in 20 Americans saying they do not watch TV on a typical day and a sharp decline in newspaper readership, according to new research.
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"net newsers" - web users under 35 who read more political blogs than watch national news coverage, rely heavily on web-based news during the day and have a strong interest in technology and technology news.
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PDF: The Entrepreneurial Advantage of World Cities
31-page PDF (still to read), "The Entrepreneurial Advantage of World Cities," subtitled "Evidence from Global Entrepreneurship Monitor Data."
From the abstract:
QUOTE
Recent discussions in the Economic Geography literature increasingly focus on creative cities and the importance of creativity for achieving economic growth. Considering the increased attention on urban areas it is not surprising that the regional dimension of entrepreneurship is a subject of great interest. We set out a framework encompassing the individual process between entrepreneurial perceptions and entrepreneurial activity and demonstrate how the urban environment can have an impact on this process.
UNQUOTE
Digital Urban: Welcome to MapTube from CASA: A Place to Put Maps
"The main principle of MapTube is that shared maps can be overlayed to compare data visually. For example, to see a map of the London Underground overlayed on top of a map of population you simply go to the search page and enter the keywords "tube" and "population". Then click on the two relevant maps to add them."
This has potential for some really fine-grained mapping, specific to local place.
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The main principle of MapTube is that shared maps can be overlayed to compare data visually. For example, to see a map of the London Underground overlayed on top of a map of population you simply go to the search page and enter the keywords "tube" and "population". Then click on the two relevant maps to add them.
In this way any combination of data can be quickly and easily visually compared. The maps are created using our free of charge software - GMap Creator, a new version launches this week allowing any ESRI .SHP file or Formatted .CSV to be converted and used on MapTube. -
create a mood map of the credit crunch
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"Waste not; Making the most of our sewage" 2007-waste-not.pdf (application/pdf Object)
one-page PDF, "Waste not; Making the most of our sewage"
White paper - distributed influence: quantifying the impact of social media « Technobabble 2.0
"...white paper outlining the thoughts and views of several key stakeholders who met late last year to discuss the issue of measuring online influence."
" Half of Canadians Watch TV on PC" Mediacaster Magazine - 4/25/2008
- article on the results of a Rogers Communications sponsored survey, with last year/this year data, on Canadian online habits: how satisfied we are, what we're using the internet for, etc. Nothing much about local news, but the Ipsos-Reid survey people probably didn't ask that question (Q: "How much time do you spend online finding things out about your local community?" A: "Uh, probably about 80 hours...?" <jk>) (Or how about this question: "How much time do you spend 'conversing' with others about local issues?"...)
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Canadians are moving from simple email exchanges or instant messaging programs to richer Web applications like online video.
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Survey results commissioned by Rogers Cable Communications Inc. show that Canadians are embracing the power of the Internet, spending more time using the Internet for day-to-day tasks like paying bills and entertainment.
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» Six map apps that put Portland on the mapping map - Silicon Florist
- description of six unusual mapping applications ("Portland is map happy"), several by Matt King ("Map King"?):
1. Platial
2. Unthirsty
3. KnitMap
4. SocialMap
5. Mapdango
6. WeoGeo
Meanwhile, the comments board is filling up with even more! (Like expressomap.com ...wow!)
Videos (and slides) of keynotes available - The Mobile City » Blog Archive »
Michiel de Lange posted keynotes and slides online from the recent Mobile City conference.
Placemaking « Stephen Rees’s blog
Stephen Rees blogs Jan Gehl's talk at the Gateway Theatre, Richmond February 28, 2008. Found via Gordon Price ("Pricetags"), otherwise I would have missed this excellent summary (and a great comments thread, too). Coincidentally, I also watched Andres Duany's very engaging talk, "On the Edge," from January 16/08 on the SFU "City Program" site (video here: http://www.sfu.ca/city/city_pgm_video014.htm). It's a bit disconcerting to think that but for a fluke, I could have missed both these items. I don't remember seeing Gehl's lecture announced, and I didn't see any media follow-ups anywhere else. Duany's lecture I knew about, but missed that a video of same was available. Well, better late than never, I guess...
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When Professor Gehl first graduated, architects were big and arrogant and people were small and insignificant. Modernists thought streets were bad. They designed towers in the grass. Most schools of architecture didn’t talk about people – and many still don’t. They were led astray by Art: it looks good in a magazine but people won’t use it. That was forty years ago, and then after studying it for a long time people started asking him how it should be done, so he started a consulting firm eight years ago: they call themselves “urban quality consultants”.
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During the car invasion of the 1950s planners and politicians panicked. They thought that the purpose of life is to have more cars. Cities were designed for cars and parking.
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