2004-09-29

Destabilizing Networks paper

By jerome @ 12:24 [ Media & Interaction theory ]
Kathleen M. Carley, Ju-Sung Lee, David Krackhardt of the Carnegie Mellon University published a paper about Destabilizing Networks (PDF-76,1kb). (academic study funded by the millitary...)

via vosi|stumbleupon

2004-06-01

Réseau: les pionniers...

By peka @ 13:53 [ Media & Interaction theory ]
petit survol de l'histoire du réseau Internet et de ceux qui l'ont conceptualisé ou qui ont fortement influencé son évolution.

ici.

et comment il peut potentiellement se développer à l'avenir. une série d'articles par le W3C.

2004-04-06

Information Interaction Design: A Unified Field Theory of Design

By A---B @ 19:30 [ Media & Interaction theory ]
Nathan Shedroff vous propose de lire ou télécharger son article Information Interaction Design: A Unified Field Theory of Design, repris dans un chapitre du livre Information Design edité par Bob Jacobson et publié par les MIT Press.


text / artificial intelligence / turring -- living stuff

By jerome @ 12:04 [ Media & Interaction theory ]
un vieil article (20 février 2004) de la bbc...
article text / porn / ai
la prophétie s'est elle accomplie?

TURING TEST
British scientist Alan Turing (1912-54) said if humans could be duped by computers into thinking they were talking to humans, the machines could be called 'intelligent'


2003-11-25

how did you phone?

By jerome @ 17:41 [ Media & Interaction theory ]
really strange... i'm a spacemaker-light touch-gazer... and you?

2003-11-19

txt rules your life, believe me...

By jerome @ 19:56 [ Media & Interaction theory ]
Txt means goodbye to 'hello'

A report written for msn.co.uk after they commissioned a survey to look for "globespeak", says that words like "hello" and "goodbye" are being replaced by e-mail and text messaging slang.

The author of a dictionary of slang and lexicographer, Jonathon Green said: "It wouldn't surprise me if, in 50 years, there was no longer a need for 'hello' and 'goodbye' in general or certainly in electronic communication." MSN marketing director, Tracy Blacher, said: "What is interesting is the speed that language is being modified by the adoption of new technology."


Hello is replaced most commonly with "hey", and goodbye with "laters".

see also...
IBM report: email on mobile phone
jargon
comments about the bbc's article
http://www.girardin.org/fabien/blog/archives/000066.html
http://www.girardin.org/fabien/blog/archives/000156.html
http://www.betablog.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi?__mode=view&entry_id=237

2003-11-06

bots

By jerome @ 13:08 [ Media & Interaction theory ]