Skip to main content

Posts

The Extended Human

Says Marshall McLuhan: "All media are extensions of some human faculty– psychic or physical." With this, the co-creator of 1967's experimental book on the philosophy of communication, The Medium is the Massage , provides some interesting food for thought. On the following two pages he makes claims about objects and the human body parts from which they extend. The wheel from the foot, the book from the eye, clothing from the skin. And this is a pretty compelling concept: The wheel is like an exo-foot, a re-imagining of the foot that preforms nearly the same function but is many times and in many ways more efficient. Written text provides us vision of people and worlds we cannot see with our eyes alone. Clothing... well, you get the point. I could not have seen Spike Jonze's Her  at a more appropriate time. First of all: excellent film. The movie's about a guy that falls in love with a computer. But the best part is that almost no-one thinks that's ...
Recent posts

Conversation and the Internet

In real life, our days are often driven by conversation. Communication is how human people get things done. It is a call and response, a discussion that flows freely from its participants, taking its own form and building upon itself, steering in expected or unexpected directions.  Conversation has been defined in the following ways: Dictionary.com  Informal interchange of thoughts, information, etc. by spoken words This definition requires that conversation be spoken. MerriamWebster.com an informal talk involving two people or a small group of people; the act of talking in an informal way something that is similar to a spoken conversation This definition specifies that the number of a conversation’s participants must be limited somehow. It also, interestingly, includes the second definition, “something that is is similar to a spoken conversation” that is vague enough to include the internet. Wikipedia.com Conversation is a form of interactive, s...

The Internet: Dizzy Knowledge Pathways

Is the internet distracting and dizzying? According to David Weinberger, it is. (He says it with affection, though.) And, I agree. It is. With the advent of high-speed connection, wifi, and tabs (tabs!), the amount of discipline and self-policing required to actually, like, get shit done is staggering at best.  But it's also the most fluid, unrestricted means of accessing information or conducting research. Using search engines to find articles or websites or blogs, to answer a question (or, at least, to approach an answer to a question) is fantastically easy. From those articles or websites or blogs, you can often find one or several hyperlinked articles with relevant or related information, turning what could look like a linear pathway of information into a twisting, amorphous tree of information, with many pathways leading up and outward, like reaching branches. This model of an information network is daunting and enormous. The pathways are infinite, and the information ...

Manifest Knowledge Reformation

A friend of mine recently revealed to me a bit of the wisdom by which he leads his life: "If you're the smartest person in the room," he says, as the saying goes, "you're in the wrong room." The dated phrase may be gathering dust or suffering from arthritic joint pain, but I abide it. I find that surrounding myself with brilliant people presents me with the daily challenge of keeping up, meeting their knowledge, approaching their understanding. Being in the company of smart people makes me want to be smart enough to earn their company, and that motivates me to exercise my brain often and well.  In his book  Too Big To Know  (Perseus, 2011), technologist and author David Weinberger demands a recalculation of this useful maxim. The network, or the internet, he claims, is changing knowledge. By changing the way we access and interact with knowledge (relocating information from books, libraries, and our physical brains to networked webpages), the internet has ...

Falling in Digital Love

Does real life interaction outweigh online interaction? If so, then by how much? How can we quantify the growth of a relationship, the growth of a love, in either case, and then compare the data? Is real life interaction really more significant than online interaction? I'm not really sure. Technology has had a profound effect on the way humans communicate, and an equally drastic effect on the way we communicate privately. Email, Myspace and Facebook messaging/chat, PMs and DMs, text or SMS messaging, (dare I mention AOL Instant Messenger or, if you'll indulge me, SnapChat?) have all changed the way that we think about intimate communication. Conversations can last for seconds or for days. A story from my own experience: When I was in high school, I went to a bakery/café with one of my friends, and her friend. Let's call them Eliza and Beth, respectively. I was meeting Beth for the first time that evening, and wanted to get to know her more and spend time with her i...

First Kiss

If you've had access to the internet any time within this past week, it's likely that you came into contact with this film:   Directed by LA-based filmmaker Tatia Pilieva, "First Kiss" is an intimate short film that offers a real view of the rarely-seen first kiss between two people. This provocative video has received an impressive amount of attention, garnering over 36 million views within the first three days of it being posted to youtube.  I first came across the video via a Facebook post that linked this article  at Gizmodo.com , an article with which I can totally get down. This film is beautiful. It shows human beings in a moment of vulnerability and giddy discomfort and follows their transition to a moment of confidence and joy, using a kiss as a catalyst. A kiss does that . A kiss does all of that.  This article  from Jezebel.com (as well as a choice few of my Facebook friends) has beef with this video, lamenting the fact that th...

Love of Wisdom

To save you the trouble of watching the really-not-so-great-in-terms-of-quality youtube video , I'll just quote Will Smith's 2005 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Award speech here: "The key to life is running and reading....W hen... you’re out there and you’re running, there’s a little person that talks to you and that little person says, “Oh, I’m tired, my lung’s about to pop, oh, I’m so hurt, I’m so tired, there’s no way I could possibly continue,” and you wanna quit. ...If you learn how to defeat that person when you’re running, you will learn how to not quit when things get hard in your life. ...The reason that reading is so important: there have been millions and billions and billions and gazillions of people that have lived before all of us. There’s no new problem you could have (with your parents, with school, with a bully, with anything), there’s no problem you could have that someone hasn’t already solved and wrote about... in a book.” I have a dis...

Here Comes Everybody

Clay Shirky, the author of Here Comes Everybody , writes, "When we change the way we communicate, we change society." This is the legend on the map. The cypher.  As I'm sitting in a library, I see form influenced by function. Book shelves are lined so that people may pass between them, scanning titles and call numbers. Each shelf has a long, rectangular space in which many books can be placed. Each book is a rectangle folded around flat, rectangular pages. The form or shape of each of these structured objects is a direct result of its function. Things are shaped the way they are because of the task they preform. Chairs must have a surface that keeps our butts off the ground, and their shape falls victim to that aspect of their function.  This opposite true of communication. The form of our communication shapes the function. For instance: a book is a medium of communication. The form of it, the pages and spine, lead to its function as shelf matter. (That's not ...