WeBlog
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Tickr = Photos + Flickr + Dipity
With this great mash-up of Flickr and Dipity, you can check out some of Peter Durand's photos from China. (See bikes, telephone booths, manhole covers, and food, of course!)
Labels: China, ethnography, mash-up, photography
>> READ FULL ARTICLE
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
Digital Anthropology's Web 2.0
As graphic facilitators, the tools that allow us to synthesize ideas into images--whether static or dynamic--are expanding exponentially.
In this video thought piece hosted on YouTube, Kansas State Anthropology professor Michael Welsch uses the simple, cheap digital tools at hand to weave an engaging narrative of the birth of Web 2.0.[ via Jarrell McAlister ]
dedicated to exploring and extending the possibilities of digital
ethnography.
at Kansas State University to examine the impacts of digital technology
on human interaction.
Labels: ethnography, Web 2.0
>> READ FULL ARTICLE
Monday, January 01, 2007
The Future Perfect Sense
Recently, my family downshifted from living in a city neighborhood behind two national sports team stadiums (oh, the fireworks--they never ceased!) to living in a little house on a 23-acre farm in rural Tennessee.
Now, I find myself walking and listening again in a way that had been degraded by the rhythm of taxi-airport-work-airport-taxi-home. This morning as I walked along a muddy gravel road, instead of the dull thuds of a souped up Lincoln Navigator thumping Hip Hop beats, I heard what turned out to be two teenage boys galloping up the ridge on horseback.
Jan Chip is an extreme observer. As Principal Researcher in the Mobile HCI Group at Nokia Research, Jan divides his time between running user studies and developing new applications, services and products. As he writes, "If I do my job right, you'll be using the product 3 to 15 years from now."
(Read Jan's essay Why We Carry Mobile Phones).
His blog, Future Perfect, is inspired by the traveling research required by his day job, but Jan admits, "The material that you see on this site is what I do in my spare time - the stuff that inspires or challenges me, helps me understand how the future might turn out."
Labels: ethnography, technology




