Showing posts with label internet culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label internet culture. Show all posts

Monday, 5 December 2022

Sage of Quay - Skin In The Game




WoW - This is seminal internet dialogue, mediated by microphone and more.

It doesn't start to get sizzling until halfway, or as we like to say, why are we allowed to question orthodox history Churchill yet not Hitler?

Wednesday, 2 February 2022

Reclaim The Streets - 25th September 2021/Southampton






As Outlined in Jerk Jam at Palmerston park, Southampton's Reclaim The Streets day was for all the family.

I noticed that some of those street paving art ideas couldn't resist a little 'it's not woke, it's awaken' efforts above.

Don't forget to check if you had the good, the 50/50 or the bad juice at howbad.info if you or your loved ones, were duped into getting juiced. Most Maxine injury takes a few years to strike if there was no immediate injury in the days and weeks following injection(s)

You might want to consider an HIV test too.



More information here, although it can't suggest the obvious correlation.

Saturday, 3 December 2016

Smells Like Teen Spirit Cooking - Big Data on #PizzaGate



#PizzaGate is the fastest and longest rising user-generated news topic on the internet. The corporate media are obliged to protect the politically powerful child abuse and trafficking networks in the US because like the UK Parliament and British media they are compromised and blackmailed too.

I salute the citizens of the United States for using the information researchers like I and many others published over the years to shame the British, who turned their back on the children. The sheer quantity of information and quality of videos being produced is unsurpassed in the history of the internet. It's a great day for people who care, and we can finally let go of those who have no business having opinions on anything other than their cat or food pics published on Instagram or Facebook.


Saturday, 19 July 2008

Radiohead

There's a reasonable amount of evidence to assume I'm a data junky and full-on information whore. I can often hold a conversation and listen to another one at the same time and I guess this habit arose from not getting enough information from just the one.

It's not the first time of late that I've been rebuked by friends for reading RSS feeds on my mobile in nightclubs while chatting and listening to the music and only last weekend in Mexico I popped out of a nightclub to pick up my Macbook Air and do a little light blogging from a club that wasn't quite distracting me enough. I'm like that when the mood takes me.


It's not really a good thing I guess because I only know my way round Beijing, through my electric bike. If it was just down to taxi passenger experience my geography wouldn't exist as taxi rides were invented for digesting RSS on a mobile phone - It took me months to even find my way home or to the office without assistance. Traffic jams come second to data and once I'm sucked in I rarely look up again.


Google Mobile Reader
is possibly the most powerful digital-fix-teat. It's way more data intensive than Twitter although considerably less contextual because I don't know most of the posters. Knowing the people who create content is the highest context for receiving it. It sounds obvious but isn't if you're thinking of taking up blogging.


Anyhow, one of the drawbacks of this is that I often come across stuff on-the-move that I want to come back to and without de.licio.us or Google Shared Items or starred items or whatever reminder 'du jour' I'm playing with, I sometimes fail and that's why I'm a bit late in reposting this amazing video by James Houston who entered the Radiohead Nude track remix invitation. You can read about it all over here but the pudding is below. (He's looking for work now he's graduated, in either London or San Francisco - I'd snap him up if I were a digital agency)


Big Ideas (don't get any) from James Houston on Vimeo.


Then there's Robert's Visualisation for Radiohead's music video competion that is also completely brilliant.


Weird Fishes: Arpeggi from flight404 on Vimeo.

Which all leads nicely on to Iain's post about why Radiohead are way ahead of the pack when it comes to embracing Web 2.0 which is a term that some dislike but I don't because I do think that if you're using or thinking of the internet in much the same way as you did ten years ago it's possible you've missed out on a conceptual leap that is having a profound impact on the way that people can get involved with brands or communities. Here's Iain's video presentation and I've finally just discovered that his blog name comes from a reference to the A Team (Team Awesome?)

Sunday, 4 May 2008

Clay Shirky

Unfortunately Blip.tv is a website that is banned in China. But I've just had a chance to see the Clay Shirky video and it's worth a post if only to share.