Archive for the ‘ Links ’ Category

Cyborg Subjects

See Cyborg Subjects, a new journal in cybercultural studies.

Critical Media Lab at U Waterloo


The (CML) is a cross-disciplinary, research-creation initiative developed in the English Department at the University of Waterloo. The CML fosters the creation of new media projects that explore the impact of technology on society and the human condition.

via | Mission.

Lexipedia – “Where words have meaning”

Spatial visualization, again. Lexipedia allows users to visualize conceptual networks created with loosely associated expressions and words. The website’s slogan, “where words have meaning,” illustrates how meaning is seen as weaving through relations between signs and their location in a given network of signification rather than ontologically.

bienvenue :: Lexipedia – Where words have meaning.

There are many other interactive tools and softwares for typographic conceptual networks: Thinkmap (a visual Thesaurus) and Doodle Buzz, among others. The snapshot below shows the kind of results one might expect from using Doodle Buzz. In the conceptors’ own account, Doodle Buzz is a new way to approach information, a “quiet chaos” way. The entropy of the information age is indeed more Doodlian than Googlian in many respects and the web has very little to do with linearity. Doodle Buzz is McLuhan’s CounterBlast on steroids, a fascinating hyperbrowser.

The Page 99 Test: Jimena Canales’ “A Tenth of a Second”

The “Page 99 Test” is  attributed to an invitation by Ford Madox Ford to judge a book by reading its page 99. Marshal Zeringue’s blog is dedicated to testing pages 99 and offers interesting analyses, often from the authors themselves. The test is an interesting mix of randomness and consistency, but above all it might just help us standing still in an era where navigation inside electronic versions of books is more and more efficient and where page numbers are threatened by CTRL-Fs. A picture worth 1000 words? Page 99 of Jimena Canales’ book on the perception and nature of time was… a photograph ! Take more than a tenth of a second to read her own reading of the page:

The Page 99 Test: Jimena Canales’ “A Tenth of a Second”.

Cornell University Library Making of America Collection

The Cornell University Library Making of America Collection is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the antebellum period through reconstruction. The collection is particularly strong in the subject areas of education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology. This site provides access to 267 monograph volumes and over 100,000 journal articles with 19th century imprints. The project represents a major collaborative endeavor in preservation and electronic access to historical texts.

via Cornell University Library Making of America Collection.

The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet | Magazine

Stangely, what I particularly like about this news, is the new ways in which we can present stats, without using the same old graphs!

“Sure, we’ll always have Web pages. We still have postcards and telegrams, don’t we? But the center of interactive media — increasingly, the center of gravity of all media — is moving to a post-HTML environment,” we promised nearly a decade and half ago.”

The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet | Magazine.

Digital culture/Mobile communication – IT University of Copenhagen

The Digital Culture and Mobile Communication Group has well founded insight into the social, political and cultural dynamics of mediated technology. We focus on study of digital culture, digital media, mediated interpersonal communication and the way we use a variety of digital media in our everyday lives for social, practical and expressive purposes. Mobile communication and online media, in both national and international contexts, addressing the interplay of local and global phenomena is one of the key research areas.

via Projects « Digital culture/Mobile communication.

ANTHEM: Actor-Network Theory — Heidegger Meeting

The ANTHEM blog is the public face of ANTHEM, the “Actor-Network Theory — Heidegger Meeting,” a gathering of human and nonhuman actors that are interested in both actor-network theory and the work of Martin Heidegger, as well as the relationship and controversies between the two. Our primary focus is the question of technology. We are interested not only in the philosophy of technology but also in the empirical issues pertaining to the social study of technology.

We are intrigued by Graham Harman’s object-oriented philosophy as a possible bridge between actor-network-theory and Heideggerian phenomenology. We are also interested in other related areas such as postphenomenology, science and technology studies (STS), economic sociology and organisation theory.

ANTHEM started out as an informal weekly reading group of research students in the Information Systems and Innovation Group of the Department of Management at the London School of Economics and Political Science on 20 November 2006. Its founding members were Peter Erdélyi and Aleksi Aaltonen, who were later joined by Ofer Engel and Wifak Houij Gueddana to form the ANTHEM steering committee. ANTHEM also operates a Google Group which has enabled researchers from other parts of the world to participate in the discussions. Readings so far have mainly alternated between key texts of Bruno Latour and Martin Heidegger. The sessions are recorded and also posted on this site, with the aim of encouraging debate along the phenomenology-ANT axis.

via About « ANTHEM.

Les réseaux sociaux représentent-ils une innovation de rupture ?

Un survol rapide des réflexions sur la question, sur le blog de personnel de Cécil Dijoux, consultant français en technologies de l’info :

Une question qui revient sans cesse : les réseaux sociaux et nouveaux outils collaboratifs sont-ils des innovations incrémentales ou révolutionnaires ? L’épatant Serge Soudoplatoff (merci Jon Husband pour le lien !) a son idée et je vous invite à regarder cette présentation aux ERNEST de Normale Sup’.

Soudoplatoff rejoint ici d’autres personnes qui ont profondément réfléchi au sujet et sont eux aussi convaincus, que ce soit au niveau de la société civile, de l’entreprise ou encore de l’économie qu’il s’agit d’innovations de rupture.

Selon Clay Shirky, ces outils suppriment le cout de la transaction (définit par Ronald Coase). L’effort pour créer un groupe et monter une activité collaborative est devenu négligeable. En cela, il s’agit selon Shirky d’une authentique menace pour les organisations qui, comme il le dit si bien feront tout pour conserver le problème dont elles sont la solution

Pour Andrew McAfee, ces outils brisent les silos dans l’organisation, font advenir l’innovation et sont le moyen idéal pour la mise en oeuvre de méthodes de management alternatives (Douglas McGregor, Chris Argyris), méthodes qui ont fait leurs preuves dans de nombreuses entreprises (WL Gore, Whole Foods Market, …).

via Les réseaux sociaux représentent-ils une innovation de rupture ? « #hypertextual.

Waywiser: online database of Harvard’s Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments

Waywiser can aid your research by giving you the opportunity to create and manage your own study collections of instruments. To take advantage of this feature, simply Sign on and follow the instructions. NOTE: You don’t need to sign on to be granted access to Waywiser! You are free to browse and search the online database without creating your own collections.

via Harvard University – Department of History of Science.