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Is it viable? I’ll try a few to check it out. It’s a kind of ajax enabled live feed of one’s tweet feeds and and all the other big name aggregators of all kinds of media, so Flickr images and YouTube videos can be located using a handy search bar on the left, dragged into your ‘story’ and all you have to do is publish. But where do you insert your own writing? It’s just a collection of references. It’s handy don’t get me wrong but, really, even medium web savvy people can do this.

And all the info is routed through storify. All I’ve done above is paste a link to some javascript that links to storify.

It’s interesting though. I’ll explore more…

Have you received an email from a techie recently that looks like this?

“Had a hard time getting the X installed but is working fine now. Will be back in 10 minutes. Happy to hear responses then.”

Dropped your ‘I’? Here, let me get that for you.

There is a trend in techie communication where people are dropping the pronoun , ‘I’  ( They are also using plus and minus signs to indicate agreement  ++ , but that’s the subject of another blog post.)

I first noticed this trend in a friend of mine who is an early adopter of many things online. I was confused at first, it seemed that he – who I consider to be a very responsible worker – was abdicating responsibility for his words. I wondered if the pressure of delivering such consistently good work had gotten to him. But then I noticed it springing up in other email lists. This act of dropping the ‘I’ was attractive to many people suddenly, maybe because they noticed other people doing it, and it really annoyed me!

Then I watched a CBC documentary about how and why people lie. One computer program had been developed by someone at MIT to scan people’s emails to determine if they were truthful or not. It turns out people who lie drop their pronouns in personal correspondence! They are not taking responsibility for their words and it shows.

The same program explained micro-expressions – a phenomenon where the human face will express for a fraction of a second the true emotion someone is feeling, even if they are able to maintain a false expression the majority of the time. They showed a series of micro-expressions and I was able to guess them each time. So maybe I’m just acutely perceptive to sincerity cues?

And in closing, some imperative statements from This Blogger:

LIfe is short. Let’s stand behind our words. And if that’s too much of a burden, let us speak and write less.

Dawn

Well I’ve never trusted cell phones, and people who try to get a hold of me using my cell number quickly realize I never recharge it and and I almost never take it out. It’s a resource of last resort – something I bought when I first moved to Toronto and needed a phone number, that modern stamp of legitimacy before I even had a permanent home.

LG 150

So when I did occasionally use my  $50 LG 150 (the cheapest I could get ) – and my head felt warm from the cell phone – I was not surprised. What did surprise me was how even the most tech-suspicious people I knew eventually embraced constant cell phone use (getting rid of their very expensive landlines) and chided me for my non-conformance. Well now LG 150 has ‘voluntarily’ recalled this line of phones that according to Health Canada are emitting too much radiation:

Testing by Industry Canada has revealed that the LG 150 does not meet the radiofrequency exposure limits established by the federal government, i.e. Safety Code 6, and referenced in the regulations of the Radiocommunications Act. An independent accredited certification body has revoked the certification for the LG 150 model and thus it is no longer eligible to be manufactured, imported and sold in Canada. Consequently, Industry Canada has removed the LG 150 from its Radio Equipment List.

Health Canada is of the opinion, based on the review of test results and its assessment of current science, that the past and current use of the LG 150 should not pose immediate or long-term health concerns. While test results exceeded the exposure limits of Safety Code 6, they were well below the threshold at which harmful health effects might occur. Nevertheless, Health Canada supports the recall and encourages all consumers to return LG 150 mobile phones to their service providers for a no-cost replacement.

It sure would be nice to know more about the test results and by how much they exceeded ‘the exposure limits of Safety Code 6′.  So Virgin Mobile tells me I’ll be getting a free Samsung replacement. Which I will continue to use for 5 minutes every three months. If you read the comment section below this article on the recall you’ll see my concerns are shared by other people. It’s just common sense to ask – how safe are these things – and so far we haven’t heard any official replies.

by Alan on Wed 28 Jan 2009 12:42 AM EST | Permanent Link
The LG150′s seem to be the lower, if not the lowest priced and graded cell that LG has to offer (through Telus anyway), how can I be so sure that the next grade, the LG860 doesn’t have the same excessive exposure? I feel as if my health is at risk by continuing to use this products that cause tissue damage!

Wendy Mesley at CBC recendly did some investigation into the risks of cell phone use for children and this parenting site has further discussions on the issue. Health Canada is not taking a precautionary approach to cell phone use in Canada. The precautionary approach to cell phone use recommended by Ronald Herberman, director of the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute is cited in both this Scientific American blog entry and this UK Observer article“We shouldn’t wait for a definitive study to come out, but err on the side of being safe rather than sorry later,” said Dr Herberman in the UK Observer article continuing,

“I am convinced that there are sufficient data to warrant issuing an advisory to share some precautionary advice on cell phone use.”

His warning came even though no major academic study has yet found any evidence that exposure to mobile phone signals affects brain function and the US Food and Drug Administration has said that, if there is a risk, it is probably very small.

Dr Heberman, however, said there was a “growing body of literature” which linked long-term mobile phone use with adverse health effects, including cancer.

Of course officially some departments in Canadian government still don’t admit there is much risk to human health from from asbestos or nanotechnology, that’s why sunscreen and lipstick that contain nanoparticles carry no warning labels in Canada (although that might be changing in Febrruary 2009) .

This other UK Observer article parallels the dangers between asbestos and nanoparticles, both (at times) highly profitable industries for Canada:

Professor Anthony Seaton, from the University of Aberdeen, said that titanium oxide was harmless in its ordinary form, but had been shown to have a toxic effect on cells in its very fine, nanoparticle form.

He did not predict however that the technology’s effects on health would be severe.

“If you burn toast you are producing nanoparticles. I produce them regularly,” he said.

But Brendan Barber, the TUC general secretary, said the danger to workers of breathing in particles and fibres was a real concern.

“Asbestos is still killing people 100 years on,” he said. “We must learn from this tragedy and ensure that a regulated nanotechnology industry can make products that are useful and innovative but safe to workers and consumers.”

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Read the section15.ca original story here

I seem to have landed in the middle of some exciting, new (to me) theories around online news and network theory.

Last week while in Montreal I met Claude G. Théoret who is part of Exvisu which offers “Strategic Network Intelligence”. What is that? They make maps of conversations occurring on the web, noting the number of links between blogs and reoccurring terms. That’s what I understand at this preliminary phase. They are offering their services to companies and politicians who want to know what the hot button issues among the people they need to please, as well why kind of language is being used to talk about issues. The outcome of this research aims to be similar to what pollsters claim to do. I imagine using both techniques together will produce the most fruitful results.

Claude lent me his copy of Linked by Albert-László Barabási – a well written explanation of how network theory developed and how it is being used by the ‘new cartographers’.

And today I came upon a Dutch site – Issuenetwork.org – that offers tools and information about issue networking on the web. I was particularly interested in this 2004 paper on the way news devlivery will be (is being) transformed by the evolution of network technology and particularly this section “six arguments against news“, a provocative sub heading in my circles, but is meant to cricise mainstream news delivery techniques.

Another article on the same site, The News about Networks 2: Making Issues into Rights - introduces a 2004 workshop where the aim is to get media activists using the Issue Crawler tools  (which in their aims seem similar to the tools used by Exvisu) being developed at the de Balie Center for Culture and Politics, Amsterdam.

Much of the workshop will revolve around using the Issue Crawler, server-side software, developed with OneWorld International (London), Aguidel (Paris) and Recognos (Cluj-Napoca) that locates, analyses and visualises networks on the Web. We also will make use of novel techniques to monitor and analyse the news through Google News and RSS readers. Textual, semantic and other data analyses may be undertaken.

They questions the were asking at the conference were:

  • What are my networks? What is my relative standing within these networks?
  • Which types of organisations, agendas and terms dominate these networks?
  • Do the organisations in these networks recognise each other’s work and issues?
  • Which parts of the networks hold together if one takes out funders? Do they hold together if one takes out other agenda-setters, be it (big) media or intergovernmental organisations?

Many people I know who reads online are as annoyed as I am by websites that paginate their content. We all know this decision is usually motivated by a desire to create more pageviews for advertisers rather than by any regard for the reading pleasure of their public. Salon.com has done it since early on and I often find myself leaving the article rather than clicking to continue or if i do really like the story I will simply hit the print button to real the whole story sans images and ads.

But you don’t have to take the word of a web developer with 9 years of experience, instead recognize that if people are going to the trouble to create browser plugins that recombine these pages into one there is a market for single page articles. Here is a great lifehacker article on the subject. Also check out the revealing opinions in the comment section below.

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The impact of the Internet is that it’s pulling the froth of commentary and debate off the top of first-generation news gathering, leaving newspapers with only a first-generation role for themselves, which is not enough for them to sustain readers, and so they’re losing young readers. By and large, excusing the fact that there are some first-generation journalists going out and acquiring new information directly for the Web, the vast majority of the Internet is reaction and debate and commentary — some of it brilliant. But I don’t run into a lot of Internet reporters at council meetings and in courthouses.

David Simon interviewed in Salon.com

Alan Rusbridger reports on a conversation between facebook, flickr, Slate creator and NY Times and MSN editors. A divide in understanding still exists:

A distinguished magazine editor finally broke through the cosy bonding by denying that we could all have “both/ and”. It was “either/or.” We couldn’t run away from the fact that there wasn’t yet a credible economic model for old media owners to be dabbling around with the new kids on the block. So choices had to be made.

Yes, well. Safer to talk about the “soft” issues of community and blogging. A blogging entrepreneur drew a useful distinction between old mainstream media (MSM) which had attention deficit disorder and the best bloggers, who were obsessive compulsive. Newspapers started out on stories or campaigns and then got bored. Bloggers never got bored of their own subjects.

Read: Davos 07: ADD vs OCD : The future of newspapers is a bit like climate change: there are now far fewer ‘old-media’ deniers.