Saturday, November 29, 2008
Actiview.com
The tutorial task for Friday was to enter one the virtual 3D worlds available on the Internet that looks like a console game. I found the graphics a bit like Morrowind on my XBOX. It is in fact more like a chat room were you are given an avatar (a caricature of a stereotypical tourist) that can move around and interact with the surroundings. You communicate with the other avatars via text typed in to the keyboard. Your chosen name is displayed above your avatar so that you can chat with people you meet and recognise them (and they you). Whilst I was on there were avatars being driven by players, or chatters I'm not sure, who were in America. Funnily enough though I tended to only talk to my class mates who were all well within talking distance in the real world. Admittedly I spent more time on my own just having a look around. There was a bit of deliberate product placement around, obviously paid advertising. If advertising in the real world meant I could ride a Sea-Do as I did in Actiview, I would have a completely different opinion on it. I'm not sure that I could get hooked on it but this experience certainly piqued my interest.
Friday, November 28, 2008
Anther Guest Lecturer
Today we had another guest lecturer, Brady, who discussed the social networking aspects in a bit more depth. I discovered there is a major difference between Facebook and Myspace. It's all to do with how much your profile is an honest and truthful representation of who you are as opposed to putting out an improved persona, more like what you wish you were. Myspace allows more creative descriptions of yourself than Facebook. We also watched a couple of videos. The first one was an interview with an American academic who shed some insight onto the history and the human side of networking (the interviewer however shed light on bad shirts and ridiculous shaving). The second was much more interesting in that it showed the naivety of people about the possible consequences of your digital footprint. The access to information to create a stolen identity is very, very obtainable. Employment prospects can also be hampered by your postings of less respectable photographs and event descriptions which was roundly castigated by some of the participants in the discussion.
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Tutorial Question for Search Engines
1. Who was the creator of the infamous "lovebug" computer virus?
Onel de Guzman, 24, a computer school student.
2. What is the world record for the largest watermelon?
The world's biggest watermelon weighs 122kg, and was grown by the Lloyd Bright
3. How did the Ebola virus get its name?
The Ebola river in Africa, that runs through Zaire and the Congo.
4. What country had the largest recorded earthquake?
Chile.
5. In computer memory/storage terms, how many kilobytes in a terabyte?
1073741824.
6. Who is the creator of email?
Ray Tomlinson.
7. What is the "storm worm", and how many computers are infected by it?
An email that offers a link and if you open it someone else can control your computer that has infected between 2 and 5 million.
8. If you wanted to contact the prime minister of Australia directly, what would be the most efficient way?
www.pm.gov.au/community_cabinet .
9. Which Brisbane-based punk band is Stephen Stockwell (Head of the School of Arts) a member of?
Black Assassins.
10. What does the term "Web 2.0" mean in your own words? What are some examples?
The Internet as a platform for tasks rather than just a flat page on which to publish. Some examples are BitTorrent, Napster, Wikipedia, Flickr and of course blogging.
Onel de Guzman, 24, a computer school student.
2. What is the world record for the largest watermelon?
The world's biggest watermelon weighs 122kg, and was grown by the Lloyd Bright
3. How did the Ebola virus get its name?
The Ebola river in Africa, that runs through Zaire and the Congo.
4. What country had the largest recorded earthquake?
Chile.
5. In computer memory/storage terms, how many kilobytes in a terabyte?
1073741824.
6. Who is the creator of email?
Ray Tomlinson.
7. What is the "storm worm", and how many computers are infected by it?
An email that offers a link and if you open it someone else can control your computer that has infected between 2 and 5 million.
8. If you wanted to contact the prime minister of Australia directly, what would be the most efficient way?
www.pm.gov.au/community_cabinet .
9. Which Brisbane-based punk band is Stephen Stockwell (Head of the School of Arts) a member of?
Black Assassins.
10. What does the term "Web 2.0" mean in your own words? What are some examples?
The Internet as a platform for tasks rather than just a flat page on which to publish. Some examples are BitTorrent, Napster, Wikipedia, Flickr and of course blogging.
Studying Cyberculture
Today's lecture was on how the studying and reporting on how people interact with each other over the Internet has evolved over the years. The main reason seemed to be that initially researchers were from other fields such as psychology. This would obviously mean that their involvement in cyberspace had been very limited, only using the information from a small snapshot with an outsiders point of view. As the technology became more widely accepted and used specific studies were undertaken in this field by people with more experience and a real interest. These studies are much more balanced and reliable. We also watched a couple of videos. The first one, Epic, was in the form of a history lesson from the future. It portrayed a time where big business had battled and/or merged amongst themselves for domination of information technology and popularity. The decrease in the possibility of any anonymity was a bit reminiscent of Orson Wells 1984 with big business replacing big brother. The second video was about the virtual world of Second Life. It was pretty amazing the commerce that happens on line. People in the real world are making real money from this. The reporter interviewed a virtual fashion designer who works ten hours a day designing clothes for the characters on line that are paid for just like real clothes. Another lady in Germany employs fifty people that digitally build houses that she sells online. There is also a man in Melbourne who invested $260- to build a stock exchange that he estimates is now worth $48000- in the real world. By far the strangest though is the man who runs the virtual sex industry. The online characters, or avatars as they're known, spend a fortune with him. This really makes me agree with a line from the story that some people on Second Life should get a first one.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Warriors of the Net
This was a great little film we watched that really gave me a better understanding of exactly how information is distributed physically through the Internet. The information packets were shown as something similar to trucks with their load being a piece of information. It showed the perils of the router and the firewall and almost personified the process a Little. The best part was that it was dumbed down enough for me to understand. It was a lot more entertaining too, especially after learning of the commercial rumblings involving Microsoft, IBM, Digital Research Inc. and Apple. I did learn however that the Internet refers to a network of networks, whereas the Web is like just one strand on this Internet. Cyberspace is a bit different again and was best described in the lecture notes as "the interconnection of reality and imagination"
The Computer Goes back A Long Way
Charles Babbage, born in 1791, invented a machine for working out and printing mathematical tables called the Difference Engine. Ada Augusta Byron the Countess of Lovelace was born in 1815. She the daughter of the famous poet, Lord Byron. After translating then reading an article about Babbage, she conceived of a device that had the ability to compose and play music, produce graphics and be used daily. She was also the first to conceive the idea of a computer program. Alan Turing was born in England in 1912 and wrote a groundbreaking paper, On Computable Numbers, whilst at university then later went on to contribute to the first working computer. This was called The Bombe and was used by the army to break the secret German 'Enigma' codes. By the 50's the first commercially made computers were available.
Wikipedia 2
My second topic on Wikipedia was the movie Barfly with Micky Rourke and Faye Dunaway. This is a semi autobiographical released in 1987 written by Charles Bukowski using the named Henry Chanaski for the character portraying himself. As with the previous topic I looked up, this one was accurate, factual and within the guidelines but I did find it to be rather short. There would be lots of things I could add if I wanted to. For example it nearly starred Sean Penn who was Bukowski's first pick, but Penn would only do it if Dennis Hopper directed it. Since Bukowski referred to Dennis as a " gold-chain-wearing Hollywood phony" whom he despised, this was never going to happen. In conclusion I would like to admit that there were definitely facts I was unaware of but were nowhere near as relevant to the movie itself as facts that weren't even touched upon. I mean really, who cares if punk band NOFX wrote a song called Green Corn that was inspired by the movie?
Wikipedia
Today's task was to look up two articles on Wikipedia to rate their accuracy and/or content. The first one I looked up was the Evolution engine made by Harley Davidson. After reading I found the article to be accurate, encompassing the relevant facts. As it is a factual topic there appears to be no bias, just facts. It follows the guidelines which are fairly generic except with one interesting exception-"The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is verifiability, not truth....".This is the actual wording on there site. If there was anything I could add to the information provided is probably that although the year the engine was superseded being 1999 is correct, it doesn't mention that both this and the following engine were produced and sold in different models simultaneously that year. The Evolution was sold in Softails whereas the newer Twin Cam was placed in the Tourers and Dynas.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
My Usage Of New Technologies
As I've already said in my first entry, I really don't utilise new technologies for communicating to their full extent. Mobile phones, emailing, and participating in a portal of poetry for both posting and reviewing are the three I use. With the mobile phone and email I only communicate with people I already know, however on the poetry website they are all strangers. Also the majority of the contributors I have noticed are from America. Even if I wanted to see them it would prove a rather costly exercise. The anonymity could allow me to be more harsh or critical than I would be in person but it doesn't work that way. All round the comments appear to be very supportive. That's probably why I have only posted three poems. If everyone is too scared to give constructive criticism, then what's the point? I tried to once, and I promise you not in a nasty way. All that happened was a privately sent message from the poet stating he had been writing poetry for twenty years and did not need to learn any new ways to express himself. I thought of replying he should try a new way called "well" but thought I don't need an argument and if someone has decided that they don't need to keep learning in a field they have a passion in, that's sad. I have only been using this portal for a few weeks but I don't think I'll continue. I mainly wanted to get some feedback on my work when I signed up and that includes critical feedback. My personal opinion on the privacy issue is to put out there only what you're willing to have for everyone and forever. It only takes a little bit of forethought. My biggest personal hurdle with the Internet is the lack of tactile, olfactory, audible and emotive involvement (although the latter can be beautifully portrayed if a good writer wishes to open up enough). Even over the phone you can hear a lie or a smile, on the net words are carefully checked before posting.
Guest Lecturer
Paul, the guest lecturer today, spoke using some specific terminology with quite alien words. However the concepts were easy to grasp and fascinating. I was captured by the ideas of youth subcultures mingling more than they used to. Being a mature age student I distinctly remember the solid boundaries of whichever group you were part of. The advancement in communication technologies appears to have played a major part in this phenomenon, hence the title of the lecture being "My Space Or Our Space". The dicussion boards that were made for specific groups on the internet have these set boundaries, but the personal ones such as "Facebook" and "Myspace" were given the metaphor of a blank canvas to reflect the individual rather than a subgroup. I also was made aware of companies profiling potential customers. It happened to me through "Amazon" and I hadn't noticed, let alone really thought about it. I also liked the terminology surrounding this, Broadcasting to Narrowcasting to Egocasting. Overall it was nice to get a few ideas on society and culture, especially as I am doing a psychology major.
Monday, November 24, 2008
New Communication Technologies
I have limited exposure to most modern technologies. Before today I didn't really know what a blog was (although I'm still not 100% sure). I do use a mobile phone but generally only for sending or receiving calls, and storing numbers. I pretty much never text a message, I don't have the patience and I refuse to abbreviate. I use emailing although not really to communicate new ideas, but to forward funny, cute or slightly disturbing emails that were forwarded to me. I use the Internet to purchase, bank and research for both my studies and my own personal edification. I have also posted poetry on Your Poetry but I am unaware as to whether or not this is classified as a blog.
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