
Tuesday January 16, 2007
[ Telecommunications ]
Rich Presence
Years ago, at OMA we were looking at presence services. Now, a series of crude and ad-hoc solutions are taking form to enable rich presence. Solutions that enable contextual information create pathways to scaffolded intelligence as some AI experts have coined the trend. In an interview with IHT, a social information scientist describes the other side of the coin:
"I worry that people attribute too deep a meaning to raw
information," said Danah Boyd, who researches social media at the
University of Southern California in Los Angeles.
"An increased flow of information should not be confused with a deeper bond."
Boyd stressed that this also applied to other social media that
gather large amounts of personal information, like blogs or digital
photo accounts.
"The situation these technologies create is similar to what happens
with Angelina Jolie or another celebrity," Boyd said. "Just because I
know a lot about a person does not mean they will help me on a tough
day."
An added risk for the location-announcing services is that people
might find themselves unable to break away from following friends or
old lovers, Boyd added.
"The problem is that people really, really love stalking," Boyd
said. "When you have just ended a relationship, it is not necessarily
healthy to follow the exact location of your ex- lover minute-by-minute
on your phone."
2007-01-16 23:15:36.0 --
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[ Technology ]
iPhone and History
John Markoff, technology writer for IHT, reviews the business history behind iPhone and what might lie ahead. Markoff draws parallels between the challenges the early Mac faced with those iPhone might face now. He identifies expandability as one of those challenges. (I should note that Steve Jobs gives his defense of iPhone in the interview fragments accompanies in Markoff's article, one well-worth reading in full.)
2007-01-16 13:07:23.0 --
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