Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Yes We Can (Obama's victory speech)


I want to share a part of history with anyone who believes in our new President-Elect. Here is Barack Obama's Grant Park victory speech in its entirety. It was a privilege to be in the middle of a defining moment in history.

Obama’s Grant Park victory speech as heard from the audience

Push button, get bacon

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Final Project Proposal (Jen and Aaron)



New Media Theory and Marshall McLuhan

Our remediation of Marshall McLuhan's New Media theory will be by representation of a hypothetical city that has been started by committed supporters of McLuhan's theory. The societal and physical system will be structured after the core values set forth by McLuhan such as the global village, hot and cold media, electronic media and ultimately the town motto of "the media is the massage". The benefits of living in such a society will be highlighted via a photo slideshow with both video clips and photos of various aspects of the city. The housing accommodations along with technology availability within both the urban and rural settings. Also technological innovations which are present throughout the city will be touched on along with their purpose and benefits to the residents.

Handing out tactile material to the audience, such as brochures, have garnered consideration and will be included if they contribute to the overall project's message. The purpose of our final project is to have viable model of a thriving city based on the foundational New Media theory of Marshall McLuhan. Our main considerations will be the city setup and internal structure of the living quarters. Also to focus on how educational, legislation, and community systems would be structured and how they would function. The presentation style will be similar to a development meeting of a potential addition to a city with a voiceover to again highlight the benefits of choosing to live there.

To create an example of such a society, different aspects of the assumed public must be examined. In the case of children and education, for instance, students at "McLuhan Elementary" would quickly learn the concepts of hieroglyphics and ideograms and electronic media at the same pace "outside" children would learn phonetics and the alphabet. In terms of hot and cold media, the citizens will not watch television (a "cold" media), but settle for watching cinematic sequences on their laptops ("hot" media). Radios and newsprint adorn the households. Citizens are enamored with lectures, and attend them daily, however seminars are disdained and physically do not exist.

Due to everyone in this hypothetical city following McLuhan's New Media theory, McLuhan's "Global Village" theory is upheld in a manner reflecting a self-induced paradox. It is also possible that by utilizing the mantra "the media is the massage," citizens are perpetually experimenting with their sources of media. For example, one person takes pictures of the newspaper headline story, and emails the news to a friend, who then prints out the email and creates a silkscreen of the print image and puts it onto a t-shirt that he gives his wife. His wife won't wear the shirt, instead she uses it in place of the American flag. This type of process is prominent within the city and helps to tie together the "global village".

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Final project outline

INFO 390 Final Project Proposal
Jen Hanson & Aaron Geiger

Purpose: To challenge the notion of a specific portion of McLuhan's theory as it translates into today's technological society.

Content Options:
*p.9
Indeed, it is only too typical that the "content" of any medium blinds us to the character of the medium.

*p.15
And it is only on those terms, standing aside from any structure or medium, that its pinciples and lines of force can be discerned. For any medium has the power of imposing its own assumption on the unwary. Prediction and control consist in avoiding this ubliminal state of Narcissus trance. But the greatest aid to this end is simply in knowing that the spell can occur immediately upon contact..

*p.17
...literate man is quite inclined to see others who cannot conform as somewhat pathetic. Especially the child, the cripple, the woman, and the colored person appear in a world of visual and typographic technology as victims of injustice.

*p.24
Specialist technologies detribalize. The nonspecialist electric technology retribalizes.

*p.26
However, backward countries that have experienced little permeation with our own mechanical and specialist culture are much better able to confront and to understand electric technology. Not only have backward and nonindustrial cultures no specialist habits to overcome in their encournter with electromagnetism, but they have still much of their traditional oral culture that has the total unified "field" character of our new electromagnetism. Our old industrialized areas, having eroded their oral tradiitons automatically, are in the position of having to rediscover them in order to cope with the electric age.

*p.38
The new magnetic or world city will be static and iconic or inclusive.

*p.46
To behold, use or perceive any extension of ourselves in technological form is necessarily to embrace it.

*p.46
Physiologically, man in the normal use of technology (or his variously extended body) is perpetually modified by it and in turn finds ever new ways of modifying his technology....The machine world reciprocates man's love by expediting his wishes and desires, namely, in providing him with wealth.

*p.49
In other words, the greatest school had been put out for human use before it has been thought out. Now, this is especially true of our media. They are put out long before they are thought out. In fact, their being put outside us tends to cancel the possibility of their being thought of at all.

*p.51
For the fate of implosion and interdependence is more terrible for Western man than the fate of explosion and independence for tribal man...On the other hand, since consciousness and awareness seem to be a human privilege, may it not be desirable to extend this condition to our hidden conflicts, both private and social?

*p.58
Under electric technology the entire business of man becomes learning and knowing.

*p.59
Perhaps there is a key to some of these problems in the Freudian idea that when we fail to translate some natural event or experience into conscious art we "repress" it.

*p. 64
The new media and technologies by which we amplify and extend ourselves constitute huge collective surgery carried out on the social body with complete disregard for antiseptics. If the operations are needed, the inevitability of infecting the whole system during the operation has to be considered.

*p.68
Electric technology is directly related to our central nervous systems, so it is ridiculous to talk of "what the public wants" played over its own nerves.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Batdog

Tribute to Jon Stone: Photoshop projects that people probably got fired for







This is in response to Jon Stone's fascination with photoshop mistakes. Just the other day I was looking the photoshopped image of Kim Jong-Il that was released by BBC News. He must have smelled the photoshop, because he instantly came over and was intrigued. Apparently Dictator Kim had a stroke, and there's a speculated succession crisis going on. Weird blurry photos have been popping up of the dictator at public events. The picture I posted has three photoshop flaws: the shadow on his legs, the line on the wall behind him disappeared, and his left shoe (on your right) has some color left over from whatever scene he was cut from.

The Craigslist clipping is from PD's blog (which stands for photoshop disasters). The remaining photos were pulled from Oddee.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Bolter response answers

From Glenn:

2. Is a viral campaign, such as the one used by The Dark Knight, a form of media?

I wasn't aware of the viral campaign by the Dark Knight, but in all of the viral campaigns that I have seen (such as the example with the combined cellular phones popping corn) are definitely forms of media. 1. They're communicating to the audience on many levels—visually, with audio, with suggested overtones, and by providing a "Wow!" factor that provokes thought.

A word about Bolter:

I read it, didn't digest it, and have nothing for those of you looking for my questions.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Saturday, November 1, 2008