danburzo + information   18

Books: Bits vs. Atoms [Coding Horror]
"How do books suck? Let me count the ways:
* They are heavy.
* They take up too much space.
* They have to be printed.
* They have to be carried in inventory.
* They have to be shipped in trucks and planes.
* They aren't always available at a library.
* They may have to be purchased at a bookstore.
* They are difficult to find.
* They are difficult to search within.
* They can go out of print entirely.
* They are too expensive.
* They are not interactive.
* They cannot be updated for errors and addendums.
* They are often copyrighted."
books  ebooks  publishing  culture  reading  bibliophilia  things  information  typography  epub  design  design/editorial  digital-humanities 
5 weeks ago by danburzo
The disappearing virtual library - Opinion [Al Jazeera English]
"The shutdown of library.nu is creating a virtual showdown between would-be learners and the publishing industry."
internet  culture  books  knowledge  information  community  publishing  monopoly  intellectual-property  copyright  piracy  education  collaboration 
10 weeks ago by danburzo
A search engine for unknown future queries · rogre [Storify]
"Basically I've been bookmarking things all these years for future, unknown students. I've been building a search engine for queries that I had no idea would be coming my way."
information  archival  commonplace-book  folksonomy 
10 weeks ago by danburzo
The importance of being axonometric - interview [Domus]
"With digitalised data and processes making transmission of knowledge increasingly abstract and intangible, information design has become crucially urgent — Michael Stoll, a university teacher and collector, explains the principles and scale of this discipline."

"As information design doesn't have a structured theoretical background, how do you organise your material? Have you created your own personal taxonomy?
I tried to face this problem—the fact that information design doesn't have a valid taxonomy—with my diploma back in 1991. My idea was to invent a taxonomy that helped journalists and information graphic artists to communicate on the same level. A taxonomy cannot relate to the aspect of visualisation—pie charts, bar charts, explosion drawings—which could disappear from time to time, but rather to the information behind the visualisation. All visual means that try to explain something to you can be placed into one of three groups. The first group is based on numbers, statistics and relations between sizes (data graphics); the second group is made up of objects (group system graphics); and the third one consists of spatial data like maps (spatial graphics). As these fields often overlap, it's also important to consider the borders between information design and, for example, illustration. I always say that information graphics has a strong appeal in the way it can clear up stuff and convey knowledge. Compared to examples such as illustration, information graphics always seeks to increase the knowledge of the reader, like every design process."
information-design  type:interview  information-visualization  cartography  design  illustration  data  history  digital-humanities  information  storytelling  archive  reference 
11 weeks ago by danburzo
Archiveteam
"HISTORY IS OUR FUTURE. And we've been trashing our history. Archive Team is a loose collective of rogue archivists, programmers, writers and loudmouths dedicated to saving our digital heritage. Since 2009 this variant force of nature has caught wind of shutdowns, shutoffs, mergers, and plain old deletions - and done our best to save the history before it's lost forever. Along the way, we've gotten attention, resistance, press and discussion, but most importantly, we've gotten the message out: IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE THIS WAY.

This website is intended to be an offloading point and information depot for a number of archiving projects, all related to saving websites or data that is in danger of being lost. Besides serving as a hub for team-based pulling down and mirroring of data, this site will provide advice on managing your own data and rescuing it from the brink of destruction."
archive  backup  history  internet  reference  library  resources  preservation  long-now  geocities  documentary  information  _noteworthy  _projects 
february 2012 by danburzo
In Praise of Not Knowing [NYTimes]
"I hope kids are still finding some way, despite Google and Wikipedia, of not knowing things. Learning how to transform mere ignorance into mystery, simple not knowing into wonder, is a useful skill. Because it turns out that the most important things in this life — why the universe is here instead of not, what happens to us when we die, how the people we love really feel about us — are things we’re never going to know."
childhood  exploration  knowledge  curiosity  eccentricity  discovery  serendipity  mystery  information  google  wikipedia 
february 2012 by danburzo
Gluttony Goes Viral [Chronicle of Higher Education]
"And there's the key to understanding the often anesthetic effect of the Internet. Decadence doesn't demand great wealth: Decadence is a useful way to understand any situation in which an existing pleasure becomes cheap, and it takes the ingenuity of a Petronius to fight off the boredom. That is now the case with information—the small burst of satisfaction that comes from a refilled inbox or a new text, from connecting with friends, or sharing the meme of the day. Millions of us are now richer in these pleasures than our parents' generation could ever imagine. But our capacity for enjoyment is still finite: We've built up a tolerance to the pleasures of information, just as Trimalchio built up a tolerance to the pleasures of food. Those who experience our constant connectivity as dulling should be able to identify closely with his guests.

In the midst of this excess, a very few of us can be "accomplished voluptuaries." They are the ones most at home online, who experience no disquiet in blogging about life and talking about the Internet interchangeably. I also suspect that they are disproportionate among our own "arbiters of taste," the ones who ensure that the Internet can give us something new and enjoyable and forgettable every day: hungover owls, outrageous hipsters, creative Auto-Tuning, endlessly looping GIF's of Oprah unleashing bees on her studio audience, and on and on. But the talent of taking pleasure in excess, and inventing new pleasures out of excess, is still a rare one: For every Petronius, there are many more Trimalchios who end up bloated, exhausted, wearing a false face of enjoyment."
internet  information  information-overload  information-overconsumption  information-diet  technology  culture  gluttony  history  decadence  rome  hedonism  pleasure  addiction  media  petronius  satyricon  abundance 
february 2012 by danburzo
How the Internet Gets Inside Us [The New Yorker]
"The scale of the transformation is such that an ever-expanding literature has emerged to censure or celebrate it. A series of books explaining why books no longer matter is a paradox that Chesterton would have found implausible, yet there they are, and they come in the typical flavors: the eulogistic, the alarmed, the sober, and the gleeful. When the electric toaster was invented, there were, no doubt, books that said that the toaster would open up horizons for breakfast undreamed of in the days of burning bread over an open flame; books that told you that the toaster would bring an end to the days of creative breakfast, since our children, growing up with uniformly sliced bread, made to fit a single opening, would never know what a loaf of their own was like; and books that told you that sometimes the toaster would make breakfast better and sometimes it would make breakfast worse, and that the cost for finding this out would be the price of the book you’d just bought."

"Blair’s and Pettegree’s work on the relation between minds and machines, and the combination of delight and despair we find in their collisions, leads you to a broader thought: at any given moment, our most complicated machine will be taken as a model of human intelligence, and whatever media kids favor will be identified as the cause of our stupidity. When there were automatic looms, the mind was like an automatic loom; and, since young people in the loom period liked novels, it was the cheap novel that was degrading our minds. When there were telephone exchanges, the mind was like a telephone exchange, and, in the same period, since the nickelodeon reigned, moving pictures were making us dumb. When mainframe computers arrived and television was what kids liked, the mind was like a mainframe and television was the engine of our idiocy. Some machine is always showing us Mind; some entertainment derived from the machine is always showing us Non-Mind."
internet  technology  culture  information  attention  history  innovation  books  digital-humanities  nicholas-carr  sherry-turkle  clay-shirky  adam-gopnik  media  information-overload  information-diet  alarmism  solitude  _noteworthy 
february 2012 by danburzo
Lists: To-dos, Illustrated Inventories, Collected Thoughts, and Other Artists' Enumerations from the Collections of the Smithsonian Museum - Liza Kirwin [Amazon]
"From the weekly shopping list to the Ten Commandments, our lives are shaped by lists. Whether dashed off as a quick reminder, or carefully constructed as an inventory, this humble form of documentation provides insight into its maker's personal habits and decision-making processes. This is especially true for artists, whose day-to-day acts of living and art-making overlap and inform each other. Artists' lists shed uncover a host of unbeknownst motivations, attitudes, and opinions about their work and the work of others. Lists presents almost seventy artifacts, including "to do" lists, membership lists, lists of paintings sold, lists of books to read, lists of appointments made and met, lists of supplies to get, lists of places to see, and lists of people who are "in.""
amazon  books  lists  listmaking  taxonomy  information  papress  design  illustration  notes  notetaking  inventories  gtd  history  art  notebookism  _wishlist 
july 2011 by danburzo
Post by Alexis Madrigal [Google+]
I love this: people are figuring out how to best take advantage of new technologies.
google+  media  communication  social-media  storytelling  freemium  information 
july 2011 by danburzo
Project Cascade [NYTLabs]
"Cascade allows for precise analysis of the structures which underlie sharing activity on the web.

This first-of-its-kind tool links browsing behavior on a site to sharing activity to construct a detailed picture of how information propagates through the social media space. While initially applied to New York Times stories and information, the tool and its underlying logic may be applied to any publisher or brand interested in understanding how its messages are shared."
information-visualization  social-media  network-culture  information  twitter  sharing  news  processing  data  tools  journalism  mongodb  trends 
april 2011 by danburzo
Brian Dettmer -
"The richness and depth of the book is universally respected yet often undiscovered as the monopoly of the form and relevance of the information fades over time. The book's intended function has decreased and the form remains linear in a non-linear world. By altering physical forms of information and shifting preconceived functions, new and unexpected roles emerge. This is the area I currently operate in. Through meticulous excavation or concise alteration I edit or dissect communicative objects or systems such as books, maps, tapes and other media. The medium’s role transforms. Its content is re-contextualized and new meanings or interpretations emerge."
art  books  sculpture  postmodernism  physicality  information  alteration 
march 2011 by danburzo
Visual Complexity: Mapping Patterns of Information - Manuel Lima [Amazon.com]
"Our ability to generate information now far exceeds our capacity to understand it. Finding patterns and making meaningful connections inside complex data networks has emerged as one of the biggest challenges of the twenty-first century. In recent years, designers, researchers, and scientists have begun employing an innovative mix of colors, symbols, graphics, algorithms, and interactivity to clarify, and often beautify, the clutter. From representing networks of friends on Facebook to depicting interactions among proteins in a human cell, Visual Complexity presents one hundred of the most interesting examples of information-visualization by the field's leading practitioners."
visualization  information  data  patterns  meaning  networks  information-visualization  amazon  books  papress  information-design  _wishlist 
february 2011 by danburzo
Shirky: Ontology is Overrated -- Categories, Links, and Tags
"This piece is based on two talks I gave in the spring of 2005 -- one at the O'Reilly ETech conference in March, entitled "Ontology Is Overrated", and one at the IMCExpo in April entitled "Folksonomies & Tags: The rise of user-developed classification." The written version is a heavily edited concatenation of those two talks. "
ontology  tagging  categorization  organization  folksonomy  web  hypertext  information  library  knowledge  taxonomy  classification  dewey 
february 2011 by danburzo
Augmented (hyper)Reality: Domestic Robocop [Vimeo]
"The latter half of the 20th century saw the built environment merged with media space, and architecture taking on new roles related to branding, image and consumerism. Augmented reality may recontextualise the functions of consumerism and architecture, and change in the way in which we operate within it."
architecture  augmented-reality  consumerism  advertising  dystopia  information  ui  design/interface  concept  mediatype:video  vimeo 
february 2010 by danburzo

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