Sock Puppets
Labels: participatory culture, youtube rhetoric
A blog about digital rhetoric that asks the burning questions about electronic bureaucracy and institutional subversion on the Internet.
Labels: participatory culture, youtube rhetoric
Labels: government websites, science
So here I sit, an American, with money ready to spend, living in an age of hyper-fast digital communication, and I cannot get anybody to sell me all the services I want. I want to see the Patriots and the Bills every Sunday (I know: why would anyone WANT to see the Bills this year). I want my Texas Longhorns on Saturdays. I want to see the Yankees and/or Red Sox every night. I want to see The Simpsons every Sunday and The Office every Thursday.
DirectTV will get me NFL and MLB if I pay for the premium subscription packages. But it will not let me see any local channels or network feeds. I am not making this up. They blame the FCC. I don't really understand.
DishNetwork will get me local network channels, but it does not carry either the NFL or MLB packages.
And Comcast would get me the baseball and the local, but not the football. Well, that's if they could ever find my house.
Why won't these companies take my money?
Vaidhyanathan calls upon his fellow sports fans to elect an administration in 2008 that takes "media regulation" more seriously in a nice example of electronic rhetoric.Labels: blogging, interactivity, participatory culture, sports
Labels: global villages, Google, participatory culture
Labels: game politics, interactive narrative, interactivity, print media, serious games
Labels: information aesthetics, Iraq war, powerpoint politics
Labels: elections, youtube rhetoric
Labels: computer animation, information aesthetics, Iraq war

Labels: game politics, Harvard, hoaxes
Labels: government websites, White House
Labels: congressional legislation, serious games
Labels: auditory culture, copyright, hoaxes
Yesterday, I attended the dress rehearsal of Janáček's heart-wrenching opera about infanticide, Jenůfa. It was interesting to see the role that laptop computers also played in the front of the orchestra as the players prepared for sound, lighting, and supertitles to be coordinated from mobile stations.Labels: auditory culture, ubiquitous computing
Labels: afghanistan, game politics, military
Labels: digital parenting, feminism, social networking
Labels: hoaxes, justice system
Labels: religion, ubiquitous computing
Labels: digital archives, France, virtual worlds
Although he's known as a Google-critic or as he says "not a Googlist," Jeanneney also admitted to relying on the search engine, like most academics, as Berkeley researcher Diane Harley has shown. He was not aware, however, that the BNF had a prominently displayed Google search interface on its web page, even during the time of his tenure, according to the Internet Archive. (See above.) He also said that there was a certain "ambivalence" created by the heroic narrative of the "birth of Google," although he believed that the limits of their idealism could be clearly seen just in schemes to alter page ranking to suit the highest bidder. Like Ted Nelson, earlier this week at the ACM Hypertext Conference, he also pointed to Google's mortality, and the fact that it was a "fragile giant." He even expresses some perverse gratitude toward the company, because he claimed that it encouraged Europe to mobilize.Labels: digital archives, France, Google
Labels: digital parenting, France, participatory culture
Labels: art, auditory culture
Labels: digital archives, Microsoft, print media, UK
Labels: global villages, public diplomacy, UK, youtube rhetoric
Labels: art, print media
Labels: computer animation, UK
Labels: Iraq war, powerpoint politics
Labels: conferences, information aesthetics, interactivity
Labels: conferences, interactive narrative, interactivity
Labels: conferences, generators, participatory culture, professional associations, wikis
Labels: auditory culture, global villages, interactivity, UK, urbanism
Labels: blogging, personal life
Labels: congressional legislation, feminism, photoshop
Labels: digital archives, e-mail etiquette
Labels: global villages, government websites, human rights
Labels: distance learning, Harvard, higher education, UC Irvine
Labels: book reviews, information theory
Labels: book reviews, information theory, web 2.0
Labels: consumerism, Google, participatory culture, social marketing
Labels: auditory culture, big media, copyright
Labels: auditory culture, justice system, youtube rhetoric