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Actiontainment for your Brain

digital_clip_society

After many years if waiting and technical development video is finally sweeping the Internets. It’s not just download little bits here and there, but massive streaming, downloading complete movies and ‘blogcasting’. We are used to get small video clips in our emails or watch important as well as ‘funny’ stuff via Websites like Crooks & Liars as well as YouTube.

The BlogCasting is a sort of Clip-O-Mania which has also grabbed the mainstream media’s attention: news shows include Internet clips as well as those many funny video shows. Videos of people torturing each other were cell phone videos, a lot of ‘funny’ stuff is from cheap camcorders. The video revolution is in full swing.

Since the medium is still part of the message those short clips will only ‘deepen’ the short attention deficit disorder of modern people. Since the introduction of mass media in form of TV and radio the speed and visual presentation of ‘content’ has increased. If you watch a newscast or report from the 1960’s you be surprised how slow and static it is. Today’s presentation hardly leaves any space for thinking. Everything is presented in ever faster image sequences, booming voices and action music. This is no longer just the stupid idea of edutainment, but actiontainment.

The faster, the more impressive and the shorter - the better.

digital_six_kids

A new generation of clones taking over the world!

Similar to the inability of many modern students to understand or write complex texts this will Clip-O-Mania will contribute to the ignorance of complexity. Contrary to popular believe I say that modern youngsters are NOT stupid, but they simply lack the training and challenges to train their brains to ’solve’ complex mental tasks as well to train patience.

As much as I like gaming myself almost ALL digital adventures only train a very limited set of challenges, which only get harder with every level but not more diversified or complex. The effects of hours of videogaming are very similar to brainwashing, because the same mental paths / messages are hammered deeper and deeper into the brain. Playing is meant to explore different approaches and experiment with different combinations. Videogames lack the variety - they present a very limited set of elements and solutions - under a huge pressure to proceed and win. Similar to the speedculture of actiontainment and videoclubs there is little time and mental space left to develop your own ideas and grow at your own pace.

Slowness has it’s own merits as well as patience and complexity.

orangeguru (11-27 3:20) | No Comments | Permalink
Mac Cube - a charming classic

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I liked the Mac cube concept. Overall our desktop machines are way too big. But I also think that laptops are not always the best ‘form factor’ either. I like to have my keyboard and monitor separate from the computer itself.

The iMac ‘lamp’ design and ‘PC-within-the-monitor’ designs are pretty practical as well - but your are stuck with fixed setup: you simply can’t replace the monitor or computer if it fails. You have the same problem with laptops.

digital_Apple_imac_G4

But since monitors will be the biggest feature of all PCs in the future all designs will end up being built around this component anyway. And laptops and notebooks are outselling good old desktops now for several years. So the one in one machine is the future.

orangeguru (11-27 3:10) | No Comments | Permalink
USB-Pedometer

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And another great USB gimmick. This one actually keep you fit - or at least helps you to walk a bit more …

The Pedometer tracks how many steps you have made. Via USB you connect the device with your computer and feed the data into a statistic and fitness website. Nice!

Motivation not included.

orangeguru (11-26 12:59) | No Comments | Permalink
Kitsch Tech

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At a certain advancement of technology - Kitsch will take over innovation and spoil everything.

orangeguru (11-23 6:21) | No Comments | Permalink
The Newspaper Boys are already gone, will Newspapers be next?

digital_newspaper_boys

Newspapers have a hard time in the digital age. The readership numbers are sinking while the Internet sucks away their audience. Will they die?

TV and Radio already were serious competitions - why didn’t these inventions kill off the Newspapers a long time ago? Because there was still some space left for newspapers to fill.

But the real killer of Newspaper is their own ignorance. They - like the Recording Industry - ignored all the predictions and than trends way too long. Instead of going with the changed market they tried to fight it.

Today the they are all online: New York Times, Telegraph, L.A. Times, International Herald Tribune and The Independent. Most of these online editions are brilliant - constantly experimenting with new ways to report and engage the readers - something that was long forgotten in the print editions.

But competing with the information overkill on the net is hard. Buying several international newspapers is cumbersome and sometimes hard to do. But on the web the they all compete just a mouse click away from each other.

I often prefer newspaper website over other news sites like from TV channels (like CNN or MSNBC - and even the BBC). Their reporting is often deeper, their writers provide smarter and better commentaries. I would only compare Keith Olbermann as the only TV journalist able to write and perform longer commentaries that can match most print essayists.

The Revolution of the Bloggers has shown that people want good writers on the net. But they also want interaction and community style feedback loops. If newspapers can find their way back to their audiences they should survive in the 21st century …

orangeguru (11-23 5:59) | 2 Comments | Permalink
Amazon’s Kindle - what a waste of money …

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The ‘electronic book’ was already dead when it was first proclaimed as the next big thing on CD-ROMs. But nobody bought those shiny edutainment books on CDs, no matter how annoyingly they stuffed down our throats. Remember when almost every magazine had a silver disc attached to it?

Then came the mainstream web and the browser - and once again the book was considered dead by tech pundits - the web was the new "electronic book". This didn’t stop companies like Apple, Sony and Palm to also sell their PDA’s as new "electronic books".

Everybody knows that reading a long text on screen sucks - even on very good screens. But Amazon.com has decided they do it all better. Their new "electronic book" reader is called "Kindle" (which is already a weak name) and it has WiFi, built in search, a weird keyboard and an extra nice screen, so we can read it in the bright sunlight.

digital_asus_eee_pc

Forget Kindle - buy an Asus Eee PC …

Amazon has rolled out a huge launch page on it’s site with many videos, reviews, celebrity endorsements and stuff you can already download via your Kindle.

But the user reviews are a disaster. Anyone reading the specs of this ‘contraption’ immediately sees that it is hardly state of the art. And it lacks basic PDF support among other things, battery lifetime is too short and the thing is simply bloody ugly. They should let Apple design a new one.

But for the most part it’s totally overpriced: $399 for a simple eBook reader? You can buy for less dollars any old decent Palm and get more value for your money. Or you buy a really cool and more useful Asus Eee PC for also $399. It’s bloody small, has a proper browser and office suite - and can also be used to view eBooks.

Of course for $399 you can buy many books and magazine  … without all the digital hassle and simply read without worrying about battery time and sunlight reflection on your display.

orangeguru (11-20 22:31) | No Comments | Permalink
More human Power to energize all our digital Gadgets!

digital_windup_charger

This is a great product: a small windup to recharge your cell without using any electricity plug. Since we hardly have enough exercise these days cranking up your gadgets could be a new fitness fad.

I would love to be a hand cranked geek!

But small electronics can also be charged by small solar panels like MySolidus.

orangeguru (11-17 21:40) | No Comments | Permalink
ESC from your digital lifestyle

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The Internet is Dante’s new inferno - a Hell Hole without escape. We will never be able to watch all videos on YouTube, click all Stumbles, dig all links on Digg and enjoy all the Billion image on Flickr … not to speak of terabytes of terabytes of links that haven’t been officially classified as cool.

So is your thirst for more only a hunger for entertainment, stimulation for your own thoughts or simply boredom?

Overall a dedicated surfer will encounter the same topics, meme and styles again and again. How many cute dogs will really touch you? How many times do you want to read that George Bush is a disaster? How many times do you want to see mad people filming themselves doing funny, but stupid things?

Are we all became pavlovian Dogs - reacting with the right reflexes? With a nice ‘Awwww’ for the nice doggy. With a ‘Buuuh’ for stupid politicians. With a ‘Cooooool, Dude!’ when people try to kill themselves in a entertaining way.

You are not what you click, you are what you do.

Do something real.

orangeguru (11-17 20:59) | No Comments | Permalink
shrtr + shrtr - shortcuts are the slow death of meaningful conversations and your inner world

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The Internet is all about communication. It’s first great breakthroughs were eMail, Chats and Newsgroups - places and mechanism for people to talk to each other, share stories and moments. The Web - with it’s rich multimedia mix of text, images, animations videos and loads of interaction came later.

The first Internet years were pure ‘Text’ - no fancy graphics, no weird interfaces, no flash movies. It was a writers paradise - and boy did people work that keyboard. That is why all those handy acronyms were invented in the first place - because they were used a lot and people got sick and tired of typing it all out. It was intended to speed up the conversation and develop some simple forms of ‘communication blocks and codes’ to ritualize reoccurring situations like ‘ROFL’ or ‘ttyl’.

eMail and chats were already different from formal letters and meeting in the office. But people tried to keep grammar, expression and context intact. It was fascinating to exchange loads of text & context in real time or almost instantly. eMail was like a speed drug for communication and brainstorming. Communication processes that often took days and weeks could be shortened to seconds, minutes or just a few hours. Brains were on fire.

This trend was pushed even further with the cell phone revolution and the invention of the web - which brought texting and web surfing to the masses. Further down the road broadband and multimedia transformed the pure ‘text-only’ online cosmos into a ‘disney-compatible consumer experience’.

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Happiness is more then just an emoticon …

Websurfers and companies alike tried to make it short and sweet. Online portals developed the art of content management and squeezing as much tiny headlines and articles on their homepages. Instant messaging and texting on cell phones was the next craze - conversations were chopped up into even smaller bits. The old text emoticons were immediately translated into graphical ones - and a flood of new acronyms and Internet ‘talk’ took over the world.

The use of acronyms and rituals become even deeper entrenched in Internet communication - and it swapped over into the mainstream. Suddenly you could see web URLs in advertising and Internet slang jumped into ‘meatspace’.

But it also ritualized the always on lifestyle and communication even further. Sending jokes, images, videos, URLs or short blurbs became a substitute for describing yourself, your emotions or what you had experienced in YOUR OWN WORDS. Instead of self expression we used ‘blocks of code’ or ‘canned emotions’ to reflect ourselves - but not EXPRESSING our own state of mind.

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I love your pixelation!

Instead of encouraging someone with a personal note - we send a picture of a cute doggy. Instead of saying how we feel about a sad moment with some nuances we send a sad emoticon. Instead of describing our vacation to our friends we send them a link of our Flickr gallery of snaps without context.

In all these cases we get shorter and shorter in our self expression. By breaking up complex situations or moments into simple symbols or unrelated bits we loose the complexity. The complexity of what has happened. The complexity of what we think and feel about it. And the complexity of different layers of self expression. Instead of many colour we mix ourselves with words, sentences, long expression - we use static rubberstamps of self expression. Easy and simple to use - but limited in their emotional and mental range - and shallow compared what really might be inside of you.

digital_shrtr_and_shrtr_myspace.jpg

When you are on MySpace Google will make sure you have no privacy … 

Especially the new world of social networking is ’shrtr’. Instead of messages you send ‘funny’ games or emoticons. Instead of telling a person you like them or you ignore them you ‘rate’ them by giving them stars or declaring them your friend. Symbolism over true friendly dedication or exchange. Instead of socializing we extend our social networks by inviting the highest ranking and rated members of the database. Instead of getting to know someone and exchanging personal stories we explore their personal links, lists of favorite websites and online galleries - plus we Google their names and see if something nasty comes up.

It is no longer about what you have to say and what you are - it’s all about the right links, ranking and cool ’statement blocks’ others can recognize as greatness. You link the right political articles on your blog or stumble, you know the funniest videos, one big celebrity is your friend on MySpace.

digital_shrtr_and_shrtr_friends

I have friends - therefore I am! 

The art and exploration of yourself through self expression and deep thoughts has been substituted by the cleverness of self linking and self promoting. The Google PageRank of your homepage, profile or profile has become a social indicator.

The art of making friends with your personality and what you have to say and stand for. Instead of exploring one’s own inner world and building it by thinking and expressing it - we only reflect only tiny aspects of our self via links, phrases and other people’s work like videos and images.

The modern phrase and lifestyle statement ‘express yourself’ - which can be seen in so many commercials and new age books - is a challenge. It is hard work and it is a personal and social effort to express yourself, to understand yourself, to think for yourself and define yourself.

A complex personality and emotional depth can only come from complex self expression. You are the builder of your self …

Dedicated to Judefa - who inspired me to write this.

orangeguru (11-14 20:23) | 2 Comments | Permalink
Apple’s Advertising Archetypes

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Hello I am a PC - and I am a Mac …

Apple has been playing the the same old tune: bad and unreliable PC - super cool and practical Mac. It’s just getting boring to repeat old flame wars again and again.

The more Apple insists on being cooler, younger and more reliable - the more it becomes a joke itself. We are now beyond coolness in your daily life’s - we simply want to work and are hardly excited about any new Geekery. Stuff has to work - and the PC’s simply work as well.

The iPod campaigns so far show how they can do it better: simply show the joy of using the product and it’s simplicity. Don’t even recognize the competition.

orangeguru (11-13 20:25) | No Comments | Permalink
How loud is loud enough for your iPod and MP3 player?

digital__big_headphones_Christophe_Gilbert_020

The Walkmen Generation had one big advantage over the iPoddies: their gadgets didn’t have an imposed sound barrier. The iPod has a clear loudness limit - which can be annoying while traveling in a loud environment.

But since everybody seems to be born with an iPod in their arse and earplugs instead of ears it’s a good thing. The Generation iPod will be mostly deaf by the age of 30. So less power to your headphones and earplugs might be a good thing.

And it might be nice to actually be able to get through to you - even when you have those super expensive Sennheiser plugs in your head. Total immersion in your own sound bubble is so unsocial you iPod zombie …

Artist: Christophe Gilbert

orangeguru (11-10 18:54) | No Comments | Permalink
USB Greenhouse - connect to nature with your computer

Computer Aided Gardening! No shit Sherlock. This thing comes complete with seeds, a program to monitor the growth, a watering reminder (very handy!) and bookmarks for further information to grow a digital green thumb.

I am wondering how many nerds use this to grow their own drugs with this? But it’s a great idea.

I am afraid the plant won’t be enough to offset the greenhouse gases your computer creates. But it’s a start to start your own CO2 emission program.

orangeguru (11-10 18:21) | No Comments | Permalink
A new Monster in da House - Samsung SyncMaster 226BW

digital_SyncMaster_226BW

There is no such thing as a big enough monitor. So I upgraded from a 19" to 22" monitor. This Samsung beast is excellent: great contrast, brilliant colours and brightness like a sunbed. I only wish it was a little bit bigger …

orangeguru (11-09 16:29) | No Comments | Permalink
Celebrity Gadgets

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So far the U2 iPod was pretty unique for some time. But now more and more Celebs discover the tech market for merchandise deals.

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The J. Lo USB-Stick … sooooo coooool!

Can’t wait to see stuff like the Nokia Paris Hilton edition - silvery cell phone with gems and glitter. Sometimes celebrity endorsement is simply more then stupid.

And I hardly trust Madame J. Lo to give good support for my USB-Stick if it’s broken …

orangeguru (11-07 20:00) | 2 Comments | Permalink
That old funky hard drive

digital_harddisk_old_ad

Yeah, the good old digital stoneage, when a bit of memory cost you an arm, a leg and your grandmother’s pension. Good thing that electronics getting cheaper and cheaper. Who would have thought to have 10.000 songs in your pocket - and being able to walk … those old drives were HUGE!

Thanks to Edosan for sending me that ad.

orangeguru (11-05 18:08) | No Comments | Permalink
Generation iPod: Deaf People?

digital_headphones_in_white

More and more deaf young people? Wired Magazine is spelling out the obvious - once again. I still can remember the same warnings when the first Walkmans hit the street and everybody went earphoned. Actually the worst thing that could happen to your ears is Techno Music and raves. Never been to any party that is really louder: base kicks so intense that they make your clothes wobble. So most modern digital devices have a loudness barrier anyway - they are not as loud as old walkmans or normal Hi-Fi equipment.

orangeguru (11-03 19:15) | No Comments | Permalink
Put that record on!

digital_record-player

Will kids in twenty years know what a record (player) was? On the other side: can any of you handle a gramophone or a roman wax notepad?

Furthermore I don’t mind missing audio CDs as well. Stupid media - it can break, rot and scratch over time as well. Just give me pure digital memory.

orangeguru (11-02 14:40) | 6 Comments | Permalink
eMail Revolution

digital_tube_mail

Can anyone still remember life before email? Most companies and private citizens didn’t use eMail before 1995 - so the revolution is hardly 10 years old for many people. (I got my first email address 1991)

You remember the pain of snail mail? Typing or printing your letter on paper, stuffing it into an envelope, finding the right stamp and post it into a letterbox right on time for next day delivery?

Old school mail sucked - although spam is taking the fun out of instant electronic delivery as well.

orangeguru (11-02 14:35) | No Comments | Permalink
Bernie’s Better Beginner’s Guide to Photography

digital_small_digicam

Bernie’s Better Beginner’s Guide to Photography is exactly what it says - and not a bad one! Highly recommended if you want to know a bit more about making good snaps and buying the right camera. Although his tutorial focuses on SLR cameras, most stuff applies also to small snappers like the one above.

orangeguru (11-01 18:47) | No Comments | Permalink
My Credit Card needs a restart

digital_secure-card_2

The next generation of Credit Cards could include a small keyboard to enter your PIN for transaction - which means it has it’s own communication and computing power ‘on board’. Great!

Anything with a computer can crash, have communication problems and can be hacked.

‘Excuse me, I need to reboot my credit card - it just crashed.’

What a Nightmare!

Thanks Edosan for sending this one.

orangeguru (10-31 15:19) | No Comments | Permalink
Bluetooth - another failed technology on my computer

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Ah, the promise was so neat: a wireless technology for small gadgets. You simply connect your cell phone, headsets, coffee machines or vibrates with each other. Super easy and super simple. Yeah, right …

Reality check please!

Several years after the introduction of Bluetooth this technology suffers from the same stupid mistakes and problems almost all gadgets do: compatibility issues. Often Bluetooth devices from the same vendors won’t talk to each other.

And the bitch is that with wireless devices you never can ’see’ if they properly connect with each other. So searching for the real problem is hard - even for experts.

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Even Bluetooth 2.0 didn’t fix the problem - it just made it worse.

I am a big wireless fan myself, but my Bluetooth headset, my Bluetooth mouse, my Bluetooth enables cell phone and my Bluetooth keyboard hate each other. Only one device at a times please.

So once again we have to update drivers, check compatibility before buying and spend hours making gadgets talk to each other.

Thank you so much Bluetooth people - please accept my thanks in form of a real hard kick in your wireless butts.

orangeguru (10-30 17:55) | No Comments | Permalink
Your Backup on DVD - do you really think it will last forever?

digital_dvd_rohling

I always find it highly amusing when friends and client proudly show me their backup. After a solid decade of data loss most people finally understand the bare necessity of making backups. But still they are not ’safe’. DVDs themselves are a terrible backup media: they easily scratch, bright sunlight is bad for them and sometimes the data can’t be read in all DVD drives. Most of all they won’t last forever: manufacturer promise sometimes ten year or more. But try to complain about data loss in ten years to TDK or Sony. You must have done something wrong Sir!

And who knows if we will have DVD drives in ten years anyway? The floppy disk died a slow death, but I guess DVDs and CD-Drives will change and disappear much faster. Hopefully not your data.

The best protection: make backups on different media’s! I have my most important data on DVD discs, an external portable hard drive, an USB stick and on a secure server on the web. Overkill? Not really if your work means something to you. Most of all: backups onto web machines or online services can be done every night when you sleep.

orangeguru (10-30 17:32) | No Comments | Permalink
Pixelgirl’s ultimate Wallpaper Collection

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digital_desktops_pixelgirl_bear

I am usually not into desktop images and other computer gimmickry - but it was a great pleasure to explore this huge gallery of illustrations of many talented young designers.

orangeguru (10-30 17:24) | No Comments | Permalink
Modern Talking

modern_sunbed_ergoline

modern_talking_motofone modern_talking_car

What do these three items have in common?

They talk!

Sunbeds, that cell phone and new cars all have voices that explain stuff to you. And usually in a adorable and caring female voice. It’s like mother explaining you a technical gimmick and you get a boner while listening.

I find this very irritating. A machine goddess talking to me, with no way of proper interaction nor dialogue. It’s all so empty and often beside the point.

orangeguru (10-29 18:58) | No Comments | Permalink
Oh my! Remote controlled dancing and yodelling Lederhosen!

digital_lederhosen_with_knackwurst_remote_control

Watch the video …

That’s more I can take for one weekend. Modern consumerism doesn’t know any limits and insults my cultural sensitivity all the time!

Ouch! This means war … or I order some here.

orangeguru (10-27 19:31) | 4 Comments | Permalink



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