Tech

Senchu!

Photographs, for me, are on a trajectory that’s essentially the opposite of petrol (or oil, depending on which crazy country you come from). When gas was cheap we would just drive around with our friends, and enjoy nothing more than the freedom. But then the price went up somewhat significantly (compared to 200, not so much compared to recently) and driving is more of a practical thing now, to get from A to B. With the advent of digital cameras photography is now the opposite. 

The old fashioned type of photography is what most people associate with photographers. Back when you had to pay for film, and it was a finite resource, the activity was all about using this film to be all it could be. Rather than sending it off to the army, though, you would just be very focused on the end result. Taking the photo had one aim: to create the best photo possible. 

The other, more modern type of photographer has been set free from this traditional use. Taking a photo is no longer about the photo.  It’s now more akin to  Jackson Pollock’s idea about art. Sometimes the art isn’t the end result, but the process; The act of gathering your friends together, getting them all close, and saying “three, two, one, CHEESE!” Or when you’re out with a friend at a concert and you two squish your faces together and point a camera back at yourself and grin like a drunken sailor that just visited the red light district. The social action is what is important. The resulting photograph is a nice thing to have, but it often get buried under the deluge of media that we create and consume nowadays. 

The phony smile plays a part in the transition too. There was a psych study which got subject to put pencils horizontaly between their teeth without letting it touch their lips. Another group held onto one end of the pencil with just their lips. Then they rated jokes. The ones who didn’t let the pencil touch their lips rated jokes as more funny. Why? because holding a pencil like this forces your face into a smile-of-sorts, which tells your brain that you’re happy. So the point of this long winded tangent is that the phony smiles in group photographs are also part of the fun. 

This whole social photography thing took me a while to figure out, I wasn’t much interested in the process, I’m more the old style; I just wanted to get a good photo.  So I would get frustrated thinking “Grumble, why am I getting pushed in with everyone, and having a cheesy fake smile that will turn out to be a crappy photo anyways.” But now I get it, and am more than happy to oblige. 

p.s. if you’re curious about how to tell if a smile is real to fake it’s all in the eyes. We have control over the muscles that make our lips move, but not that give us proper crows feet.

p.p.s. if you want to check out my old style photos just click on photo gallery up the top rightish.

Psychology
Social Media
Tech

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Twinkle Twinkle Little Neighbor

There’s a really interesting iPhone twitter application called Twinkle. It covers the usual bases of allowing you to update your status and receive status updates from your friends, but also it does one more thing; It displays tweets from people who are near you, not just your friends. I found out about this via Kottke, who wrote a short post about the random messages he would get from people in manhattan, and mentioned overhearing (over-reading?) people flirting semi-anonymously with each other via twitter messages. 

This is different to the internet where normally you read things which are organized by topic. Predictably, then, you’ll just read the things your interested in: like technology news, or how dreamy Obama is, and ignore the rest. You can often choose location based topics but most often it’s only based on the closest major city. Language is similar, but you don’t even realize that you’re selecting sites based on it, you don’t think “I’m going to read some english sites” like you would think “I’m going to check out the latest political news”.  But “[t]he Internet suggests a new map of the world, with borders redrawn along language lines.” (Virginia Heffernan wrote in an article for the NYTimes). I would argue that whilst language may form the countries in this new map, topics of interest would form the (slightly blurred) states (or provinces, or cantons…).  Twinkle, then, is like someone who comes in and redraws the map, as a circle around you.  

What is the effect of this metaphoric geographic reshuffling? You’ll get messages in your twitter stream that are entirely without context, some of the particularly random ones will remind you that it’s from someone who is only connected to you by their proximity. There’s not much else to think when you get a message like “@linzerschnitte i werds mit single malt angehen, und du?” These messages will be about things you don’t care about, about things you don’t believe in and in languages you don’t understand; Forcing you to engage with the space, people and concepts around you. The messages will break into the personal bubble that the iPod has helped to create.

It also allows for some interesting discoveries. I imagine if you use it for an extended period of time you’ll  start to notice updates from the same users and  start to learn about some them. By looking at what topics are coming up frequently you’ll get a pretty good idea about what people are talking about, and what news is popular or important.  And whilst there is a bias for people with similar points of views to live in similar areas, there will still be a much broader cross section of opinions than what you usually access by just talking to your friends

So twinkle redefines some aspects of the internet topography, is it really that big of a deal, should I be finding it as interesting as I do?

Social Psych
Uncategorized
iPhone

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Have you met my friend?

Introductions are one of those uncomfortable things that often make you have to think fast on your feet and come up with nice things to say about people. In the case of introducing a written piece I have the benefit of time, and an ability to edit. It follows, then, that I use the most excellent rhetoric I know to talk about my blog, which will be marvelous, stupendous, fascinating, witty, insightful, wide ranging and specialized. It will be so good that it makes you stop and think “I can’t believe I just read something so incredible” after each and every post.  Wow. Just writing that description almost made me want to subscribe to the RSS feed.

Now that I’m done lying I can start at the beginning, with my motives for creating a blog. The first is to practice my writing, which has always been one of my weak points.  The second, and strongest, is to learn something. I hope to use this blog to find interesting topics, research them, and report back you. In saying that I can’t promise that every post will be interesting to everyone, or even anyone. But I do have a few goals; Post at least once a week; Make any technical posts understandable to someone who doesn’t know anything about the field; Be as interesting as possible. Of course, this is a blog so it will have the requisite stories about my weekend and photographs of cats with ungrammatical statements. 

I would like to encourage as many of you as possible to comment. When it comes to user generated content there is a Pyramid. Generally about one percent of the population creates the content, ten percent interacts with it and the rest observe. For example, with Facebook one person might upload a photo, and then a few people will comment on it and many more people will look at the photo and read the comments. These comments add a tremendous amount of extra information, and context to the original content, and are as valuable and useful as the initial piece of content.

 

Self Referential
Social Media

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