Saturday, 29 October 2011

"Things Don't Have To Change The World To Be Important"


The above quotation is one from Steve Jobs, former creative genius behind Apple. When attempting to delve into this week’s topic, I thought what better a starting point than Steve Jobs, he is known for revolutionizing the technologies we have today, after all.

So what exactly is the Internet of things? To be honest with you, I still am not entirely sure. We are surrounded by technologies in our everyday lives that communicate with one another, and with us; and we are okay with this, until we are asked to explain the phenomenon. Which is a lot harder than it looks! Steve Jobs, in one excerpt I read on his vision of what’s to come with technology in the future said, “We're going to be able to ask our computers to monitor things for us, and when certain conditions happen, are triggered, the computers will take certain actions and inform us after the fact.” It’s an interesting concept that every ‘thing’ around us will speak to one another and to us as well.

The ability of RFID tags to transmit information from one technology to another is something will change the way that we experience the world, and that it experiences us! The only issue that I can see with this new technology is people’s privacy: with RFID technology we lose a massive sense of privacy as our actions are consistently being reported back to a greater ‘thing’ that is then processing that information and reporting it to another ‘thing’. It’s all quite mind boggling really!

After delving into the Internet of things this week, I am excited to watch this technological revolution occur around me, and I hope you are too!

Saturday, 22 October 2011

We Love Apple, We Love Apple Not. We Love Apple, We Love Apple Not.

Warning: Do not take offence to this blog if you are an Android fan. At the end of the day, I just love Apple.

What do we want? iOS 5 software. When do we want it? Well, soon. And if Apple don’t act fast they’ll be losing their beloved brand-loyal customer base, and Android will be taking the cake, and eating it too.
The Apple- Android competition has been a long and heated debate with consumers seeing pro’s and con’s in both brands. Forget about the other competing brands, at the end of the day it all comes down to who has faster, simpler, more aesthetically pleasing software and technology between Apple and Android.

To be honest, I never considered anything but Apple once the iPhone was on the market. I’m the kind of person marketers probably hate. Once I like a brand, that’s it for me. Apple swept me off my feet at just the age of 8 when my family bought their first Macintosh computer. And ever since then, it’s been smooth sailing. But what do we really look for when choosing between these brands? We all say it’s the technology, but I think it’s more to do with the design and aesthetics. I mean, who doesn’t love the slim line design and clean, cut of an iPhone?
Ted described Apple as a closed ecosystem, and Android as a free and open platform. This is an interesting point to consider, but for me Google has always been a way of searching the Internet, and Apple a tangible product to run Google on.  
All competition is healthy, but it will be interesting to see whether one of the original creators of mobile phone technology such as Nokia or Siemen are hiding in the background for a reason, to come out with an even better version of both Apple and Android systems. Well, one can dream.

Social networking sites may just be the sharpest tool in the shed.


Facebook stalking. We can all admit to doing it. And those of us who deny it, well, we all know you do. Does this scenario sound a little too familiar: You’ve just heard one of your friends has had a fight with their boyfriend, you don’t want to be the friend who calls and asks if any life-changing events have just happened to the person, nor do you want to be kept out of the loop if there’s news to be told. What do you do? You jump on Facebook, of course. The way you see it, any worth news can be found on your newsfeed. Well, it seems that when the news is escalated from a friend dumping her man to a village going up in flames, Facebook and Twitter are the go-to tool for the majority of events, worldwide.

Morozov describes Social networking sites a “tool” for which individuals communicate globally. They allow images, locations, documents and information to be exchanged globally. Their worth is so great infact, that not only are they being used as evidence in a courtroom, but there are subjects taught on them at universities. Mahfouz’ clip on Youtube is a prime example to the extent to which we should be thankful of the Internet and it’s capabilities to let us see the truth, not just what the media outlets want us to read.
Social networking sites were not the reason that political backlash and protest events ever occurred, but they have most definitely provided an outlet for news and information to be exchanged during these occurences.
I can’t completely agree with Morozov when he calls social networking sites a “tool”. And if they were, they’d have to be one of the sharpest in the shed.

Thursday, 22 September 2011

A LEAKED STORY IN THE HAND IS WORTH TWO IN THE BUSH.

"The truth will always win."
Powerful words, by an even more powerful man- who has the ability to access thousands of secret documents illegally, in order to educate the public of what the big guys are keeping from us.

In a bid to further my knowledge on the story behind the Wikileaks phenonenom, I typed the words 'wikileaks' and 'julian assange' into two seperate browser searches and was absolutely bombarded with results. A total of 21 million on the creator of Wikileaks, and 125 million on the site itself, all within 0.22 seconds. By entering the Wikileaks official site, every Tom, Dick and Harry have access to thousands of videos and documents deemed "private" or "secret"by large-scale commercial media organizations. The main issue here seems to be how the information is obtained by Assange and his co-workers.

Nobody likes a hacker. The thought of somebody being able to access my bank details and usernames/ passwords without being in the same room (or country) as me sends shivers down my spine. There is absolutely nothing ethical about hacking- it removes peoples privacy and is simply illegal. However, when the hacking is done for the greater good of society, that's when things get tricky. There is nothing okay with how Wikileaks hackers obtain their information, but after viewing the military shooting video in class this week I say hack away Assange, hack away.

"JOURNALISM IS A ROUGH DRAFT OF HISTORY"- BUT: HAS JOURNALISM BECOME HISTORY?


Citizen journalism allows every member of society to share opinion, report news and provide information and stories for others. But the debate still lies as to whether this freedom is a threat, or a godsend. Long gone are the days where a fully qualified, professional journalist reports to us breaking news every night at 6pm. Well, the journalists are still there every night on our television screens at 6, the audience however are elsewhere. We are logged on to our online library of information where amateur journalists keep us up to date, minute-by-minute of breaking news.

With citizen journalism, we are each entitled to share images, video and stories online, and have it be read. The problem, however, lies in the credibility of the information we are being provided.



When it comes to sourcing news and information, most of us are simply seeking convenience; hence citizen journalism is a convenient way of reading the news (anywhere, at anytime). The struggle lies when traditional forms of media such as newspaper and magazines are unable to keep up to date with the ever- evolving media consumption patterns of their audiences, and hence lose out to the more contemporary forms of media such as Twitter and Facebook.

Before we go jumping on the next blog we see that’s claiming to report us the truth, we should probably take a step back and remember who the originals tend to do it best. After all, isn’t that why we are at university?

Saturday, 17 September 2011

IT’S A JUNGLE OUT THERE: THE REALITY OF THE ONLINE LIBRARY


I still remember being in 7th grade, and receiving an assessment task for Science. The task was to choose an animal, and find as much information as I could on the chosen animal, presenting it on a large piece of cardboard, with pictures included. So, I went home that afternoon and trawled through the hundreds of Encycolpedia Brittanica and Reader’s Digest books on our bookcase. Some books, dating back to when my parents were teenagers; our home study was an archive for every year since 1973. In fact, every assessment in junior high school was completed by sourcing information from books, because that was how information was sourced five years ago.

Today, however- every single piece of information we may ever need to access can be found by loading the Google homepage. Individuals in our society would prefer to download an application allowing them free access to hundreds of books on their phones rather than actually visiting a book store to purchase a book. For the past two years that I have been at university, I have not touched a single book for information for an assessment- all of it has been online. Is it that we are too lazy to get up and find the information ourselves? The convenience of e-books seems to be making it difficult to choose a bookstore over Amazon.com.

It’s sad to think that professional writers will soon be selling themselves short, offering their books on iBooks for $1.99. But then again, we created this mess didn’t we?

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

CONVERGENCE ALL DAY LET'S US WORK, BROADCAST AND PLAY

Convergence culture is the new black. And everyone's doing it. Differing forms of media used to be reached using different channels, consuming our hours day after day. But nowadays, I just pick up my iPhone and I can do pretty much everything...

It's scary how much that just sounded like a marketing pitch for Apple. But that's what I've become: a walking, talking iPhone promoter- only without the perks of a sales job. And it seems that everyone around me has too. If you don't have an iPhone, I'll show you all the reasons you should invest in one. If you do have an iPhone, our conversation will probably consist of comparing apps, updating twitter, checking in to our location and checking the next week's weather together.

It's strange to think that 5 years ago all we could do with a phone was text, call and play snake. In relation to our media use, Jenkins states This circulation of media content—across different media systems, competing media economies, and national borders—depends heavily on consumers’ active participation.” We are going to see convergence becoming more and more predominant in our lives in the following years, not just we like it- because soon we'll need it. We are to become addicts to the drug that is mixed media, (the sum of all forms of media combined) and without our dear little friend convergence, we may just have to lift a finger in order to find out what's going on in the world.


Jenkins, H. (2006). 'Worship at the altar of convergence: A new paradigm for understanding media change'. In H. Jenkins, Convergence culture: Where old and new media collide (pp 1-24). New York: New York University Press. [URL:http://www.nyupress.org/webchapters/0814742815intro.pdf]