domingo, 17 de enero de 2010

video social media revolutions

para ver el lugar de los medios

Generalidades y definiciones generales

Volumen
http://alt1040.com/2009/09/si-imprimieramos-todo-internet

estadisticas reales
http://www.worldometers.info/es/

Entrevista a manuel castells
http://pbongiovanni.blogspot.com/2009/09/entrevista-manuel-castells-en-el.html

la era del petabyte
THE END OF THEORY
Will the Data Deluge Makes the Scientific Method Obsolete?
By Chris Anderson



Sixty years ago, digital computers made information readable. Twenty years ago, the Internet made it reachable. Ten years ago, the first search engine crawlers made it a single database. Now Google and like-minded companies are sifting through the most measured age in history, treating this massive corpus as a laboratory of the human condition. They are the children of the Petabyte Age.

The Petabyte Age is different because more is different. Kilobytes were stored on floppy disks. Megabytes were stored on hard disks. Terabytes were stored in disk arrays. Petabytes are stored in the cloud. As we moved along that progression, we went from the folder analogy to the file cabinet analogy to the library analogy to — well, at petabytes we ran out of organizational analogies.

At the petabyte scale, information is not a matter of simple three- and four-dimensional taxonomy and order but of dimensionally agnostic statistics. It calls for an entirely different approach, one that requires us to lose the tether of data as something that can be visualized in its totality. It forces us to view data mathematically first and establish a context for it later. For instance, Google conquered the advertising world with nothing more than applied mathematics. It didn't pretend to know anything about the culture and conventions of advertising — it just assumed that better data, with better analytical tools, would win the day. And Google was right.

Google's founding philosophy is that we don't know why this page is better than that one: If the statistics of incoming links say it is, that's good enough. No semantic or causal analysis is required. That's why Google can translate languages without actually "knowing" them (given equal corpus data, Google can translate Klingon into Farsi as easily as it can translate French into German). And why it can match ads to content without any knowledge or assumptions about the ads or the content

Lectura
Introduccion sobre la singularidad de nuestro tiempo que corresponde al inicio de la segunda edad contemporánea
que busquen definición, criterios y características.

economia

economia conversacional

Educacion

Nick Carr

Cierta superficialidad en el conocimiento. El precio que hay que pagar.

I think the price we pay for having easy access to so much information usually quick access to so much information is is we sacrifice some of the depth of our of our engagement with that information. So the kind of jumping hopping from bit to bit to bit clicking on links takes the place of what used to be a more er contemplative I I think approach to thinking about one thing. Er whether its one piece of information or the argument or the narrative of a book erm it becomes much harder I think when you're bombarded by information and other stimuli as you are all the time on the web to sit down and really focus on one particular thing. Erm an' so we g' we gain kind of a breadth of engagement with information but the cost is I think a certain superficiality in our relationship to that information.

La distracción
Nick The human brain like any animal brain is attuned to distraction. In a sense it wants to be distracted - it wants to see what's going on in its surroundings so you know its not - it doesn't miss some source of food or isn't attacked by you know a tiger or something. Erm and if you look at the way the internet bombards us with stimuli not only hyperlinks and different pages of information but alerts you know from face book updates to twitter alerts to er you know incoming email and even our phones going off all the time - it creates in in a sense an environment of information that plays to our desire to or our need to be distracted. And so it becomes very difficult to keep a focus on anything when you know five different things are happening at once on your screen or or you know between your screen and your smart phone and so forth an' and its just its just all sorts of environmental stimuli that come through you know this this information medium an' keep us pretty much permanently distracted when we're online.

sábado, 16 de enero de 2010

El proceso cooperativo

Empezar con el ejemplo de Digital Revolution




leadbeer. Dos conceptciones de la web

Charles 02.09.22 I think right from the beginning there are kind of two competing views about the web, ah, playing out, which still play out now. One is that the web is this home for collaboration, for sharing, for allowing information to be free, for
02.09.35 people being able to create things together in open platforms and sharing ideas and that's imbedded in the kind of geek/hippy culture of the Homebrew Computer Club, right at the start of all this in the 1970's. And then there's another, which is the kind of Bill Gates/Microsoft corporate view, which is wait a minute, how do you pay the mortgage? You know, you're sharing all this stuff for free, but who's putting the groceries on the table? Someone needs to pay for this stuff. And
02.10.03 that is still not really a question we've worked out, because even now, the newest creations of the web, the most glittering, Twitter, no one knows how it's going to make money - it's fantastic to do, but how do you actually make money out of it? And so this is this huge dilemma, that we've got this way of creating stuff, collaborative and open, which isn't really viable economically in
02.10.25 some ways and we're still trying to work out how we might make our livings out of it. And that's the way that we now live, in this world where we're caught between these two forces.
(tomado de lead beater)


Gina Bianchinni. Las redes sociales se están usando para el ocio pero la gente está aprendiendo a usarlas socialmente.


So fundamentally, again, social technologies are reflective of human nature, whether it's, you know, connecting you to the people that you know, or connecting you to people around the things that you care about. And when you look at it in that context, everything that people are doing in terms of learning how to connect with other people online, is towards a common goal. So whether that common goal is sharing news articles for fun, or, you know, entertaining themselves by listening to amazing music in the context of a artist fan site, or an artist website, or a MySpace page or a Facebook fan page. All of those skills can actually be used for anything, so we have-, we have a Ning network, the Pickens Plan, which is er here in the United States T. Boone Pickens, who was a-, has been a big oil entrepreneur over the years, is passionate about wind energy. Over 200,000 organisers across 91% of the congressional districts in the United States have come together in a social activism network and changed the course of wind energy policy in the United States. The same exact foundation, the same exact technology is being used for people to express themselves around their tricked-out cars and DUB pages, which is a social network name for people who love to trick out their cars. So as people are actually learning how to use social technologies..
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/digitalrevolution/2009/11/rushes-sequences-gina-bianchin.shtml

Example: 2003 SARS crisis
An ideal example of the benefits of collaboration lies
in the 2003 Sudden Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
crisis. In March of that year, the World Health
Organization (WHO) launched a global effort to uncover
the source of SARS. The WHO asked 11 research
laboratories around the world to work together to locate
the virus. To facilitate the process, the WHO launched
a web site where it posted electron microscope images
of viruses, analyses and test results. This innovative
“collaborative multi-centre research project” was
overwhelmingly successful, allowing scientists to pinpoint
the source of SARS within a month. Yet, no single
country could lay claim to making this life-saving
discovery. Success came from an intensive, global
collaborative effort that set the tone for future complex
global challenges of this type.2

Digital Revolution

Serie para 2010 BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/digitalrevolution/virtualrevolution.shtml

digital revolution is a four part series for BBC Two about how the web is changing the world. Due in 2010, it's in production now, and we're offering a range of ways to interact with the programme team and the content we produce. get involved

Contenido: revolción digital
Forma de llevarla a cabo: a partir de procedimientos digitales

1. el nombre se eligio en twiter
2. Se pueden ir viendo las entrevistas y descargándolas

These rushes sequences are part of our promise to release content from most of our interviews and some general footage, all under a permissive licence for you to embed or download and re-edit.

And please do comment here with your thoughts on what Charles says. This interview will be edited into our programme; all insights will be helpful.

citas

todos los textos introductorios de multitudes inteligentes

actividades

que se cumplio que no
http://www.oei.es/revistactsi/numero1/trejo.htm


investigacion sobre periodimo ciudadano
o mY news
http://www.periodismociudadano.com/2009/04/08/estandares-de-periodismo-ciudadano-en-el-huffington-post/

domingo, 10 de enero de 2010

Trabajos colaborativos, ejemplos y resultados

As we know from arXiv.org, the 20th century model of publishing is inadequate to the kind of sharing possible today. As we know from Wikipedia, post-hoc peer review can support astonishing creations of shared value. As we know from the search for Mersenne Primes, whole branches of mathematical exploration are now best taken on by groups. As we know from Open Source efforts like Linux, collaboration between loosely joined parties can work at scales and over timeframes previously unimagined. As we know from NASA clickworkers, groups of amateurs can sometimes replace single experts. As we know from Patients Like Me, patient involvement accelerates medical research.

ejemplos colaborativos

arXiv.org publicacion colaborativa
wikipedia edicion, correccion colaborativa
Mersenne Primes GIMPS, "Gran búsqueda de números primos de Mersenne por Internet
open sourse
Nasa clickworkeres http://www.infoastro.com/200102/18clic.html Trabajo de amateurs
Patients Like Me

Bibliografia

NIcholas Carr. The Big Switch: Rewiring the World, from Edison to Google

Pardo Kuklinski, HugoGeekonomía: un radar para producir en el postdigitalismo. 2009 Universidad de Barcelona. Disponible en http://www.publicacions.ub.es/ver_indice.asp?archivo=07307.pdf


Jenkins, Henry
Confronting the Challenges
of Participatory Culture:
Media Education for the
21st Century
Chicago, IllinoisThe MacArthur Foundation

Did you know

Nuevos trabajos



http://www.virtualsecretaria.com.ar/

Video en español The New Mediators

Mediaciones necesarias en la sociedad de la información



lista de temas

Definiciones básicas
tic
Diferentes tipos de tecnologìas

sociedad del conocimiento

algunos números

Conceptos claves
Pierre Bourdieu
jacobson
Habermas
Un módulo teórico

Procesos de producción y consumo
El proceso coperativo -Multitudes inteligentes-We Think de Leadbeater
Procesos económicos: de Pareto a la larga cola. la escasés (tne shok of inclusion
Procesos politicos: la política en la web. el nuevo periodismo. O my news. The huffington post
Procesos laborales: nuevos trabajos


Educación:
Competencias, e-competencias Cobo (ver slideshare)
Mediaciones (ver video y explorar el concepto)
Nativos digitales

Recreos
Literatura e internet (la novela de barcelona)
noticias
tim burton
moma
aldo sessa