Destor on Ordering a Pizza Conservatively in Texas
Ramona: Hatred in a Lovely Church
Gallup: Obama 46, Romney 46
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Destor on Ordering a Pizza Conservatively in Texas Ramona: Hatred in a Lovely Church Gallup: Obama 46, Romney 46 |
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It did not occur to me that Safari was the problem. I read the instructions finally and moved back to FF. I usually use FF, but I was on Safari and logged in - and I was too lazy to recall my password/log-in ID
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It is not that there is anything particularly new about twitter - other than it is horribly popular and it has unified two areas of communication and grew them into a social networking platform. We can debate the merits of social networking, but that is secondary to my thesis. Twitter represents (key word - represents) an expansion or development of how we manage information. We are always generating more data. Much of the data can be classified as garbage. In many cases we generate data that we have no idea of how to handle it or what to do with it. There are many devices that generate numerical data that is not transmitted or is contained within closed systems. In response to the vast amounts of data we develop layers and abstractions and filters. Twitter, because of the length limit, is a layer that is reaching deeper into society at a faster rate than ever before. World chatter is now newsworthy. You can quickly and easily broadcast your situation to the world. The more people who experience and share (quickly) creates a ripple in the awareness of those who are receiving the broadcast. It is not real time, but it is getting closer. Text based transmission allows for the analysis of these streams of information better than audio and video (for now). The meta data component may be unavoidable - however it is executed in the future. Of course this concept is not for everyone as there are many issues with that amount of open information, fortunately the service is voluntary.
Layers
We already use a large number of layers for data. As technology has developed, the number of layer options has expanded, as has the speed of the data transmission. There is a sound argument that we should only communicate with the people we can stand in front of, and that used to be a real limitation. Now we can all draw our own lines in the sand as to the number of layers we use to manage our data transmission, but it is really a matter of scale, not right or wrong. Twitter is a "new" layer that is simplified, relatively instant, and can be used with a filter and an aggregator. You can access what you want while still observing trends. I follow only the people that I am interested in, because I do not need a lot of clutter. If I find more interesting people, I can use filters to follow and read when I feel like it. In essence, I control the throttle and the direction.
There is a lot of wisdom out there and the old adage of being who you surround yourself with still stands.
Meta Data
We have been encapsulating data for as long as we have been transmitting it on the internets. Our use of metadata is an important one. Twitter can/does act like a meta-data transmitter - it can encapsulate other data via a pointer at this stage. As our infrastructure and processing power increases we will be able to transmit "more" but user generated meta-data (text) will be an important aspect for sorting and aggregation. Text generation could be automated from audio and video content, voice commands, etc.
Humans like to share. I wish I had posted a picture of this u-haul that I watched get stuck on a telephone pole. I wish I had video. Just because.
Accessibility
Accessibility is something should not be overlooked. The simplicity of 140 characters frees people to share quickly. The easier it is to share lowers the thresh-hold for sharing and (clearly) increases the participation. Volume is not a merit in and of itself, but exposer is. In order for it to become useful, it has to be accessible for enough people that it is adopted. Text messaging is a perfect example. You can choose to not text message, but it reduces your access to a layer of data management. There is a time and place for many levels of communication, but accessibility is what drives adaptation (that generated a flashback to a movie of the same name - good flick). I think an appropriate use of a text message is the car honk outside somebody's house. I can transmit that I am outside and save the time and avoid broadcasting to the entire block I am too lazy to get out of the car. Twitter is accessible and so environments can enter a larger awareness through the act of sharing. In theory - you should only be listening if you desire to hear. Not just Ashton because he asked you to beat CNN with a wet noodle. I like to hear the musings of a number of close friends so they get to stay on my main feed. It rarely gets updated, but I enjoy it nonetheless. Talk with my siblings more because of it.
I rambled a lot about social accessibility, but another important element that is not yet exploited is the accessibility this could provide smart devices. There is a lot of numerical data that can be summarized. If there is a backbone of data transmission that is unified, then devices can issue summaries or layers of data for use by nearly anyone. What would want to broadcast publicly you ask? You can have encrypted and proprietary systems that use standardized communication devices. Again, not that Twitter is the Thing, but the concept of another layer of ubiquitous data transmission represents a step. Do I argue the merits of "more"? No, because I think you have to have filters.
Of course lots/all of this exists in one form or another. Will this mean something new will arise? That is my theory.
By Elizabeth Weingarten, ForeignPolicy.com, May 23, 2012
It was 2009 in Peshawar, Pakistan, and Mossarat Qadeem was sitting on the floor of a house with about a dozen young Pakistani men -- some of whom had nearly become suicide bombers. Qadeem's goal: to undo the destructive brainwashing of the al-Qaeda and Taliban teachers who trained them in extremism, in part by asking the students to narrate their life stories.
"We were handling one of the boys, and he just came, put his head here in my lap, and he started crying and weeping," Qadeem recalls. "I was taken aback. It is very unnatural in my country that a man that tall can just sit at your feet and put his head here. [The other men] were all crying with him, and I was looking at him, and thinking, ‘my God.'"
All in a day's work for Qadeem. She's the national coordinator of Aman-o-Nisa, a coalition of Pakistani women that convened in October 2011 to combat violent extremism in Pakistan at the grassroots level. [....]
The issue of sexual assaults on American Indian women has become one of the major sources of discord in the current debate between the White House and the House of Representatives over the latest reauthorization of the landmark Violence Against Women Act of 1994.
.......
“We should never have a woman come into the office saying, ‘I need to learn more about Plan B for when my daughter gets raped,’ ” said Charon Asetoyer, a women’s health advocate on the Yankton Sioux Reservation in South Dakota, referring to the morning-after pill. “That’s what’s so frightening — that it’s more expected than unexpected. It has become a norm for young women.”
The difficulties facing American Indian women who have been raped are myriad, and include a shortage of sexual assault kits at Indian Health Service hospitals, where there is also a lack of access to birth control and sexually transmitted disease testing. There are also too few nurses trained to perform rape examinations, which are generally necessary to bring cases to trial.
By Ismail Kahn, New York Times, May 23/24, 2012
PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A Pakistani doctor who helped the Central Intelligence Agency pin down Osama bin Laden's location under cover of a vaccination drive was convicted on Wednesday of treason and sentenced to 33 years in prison, a senior official in Pakistan said.
A tribal court here in northwestern Pakistan found the doctor, Shakil Afridi, guilty of acting against the state, said Mutahir Zeb Khan, the administrator for the Khyber tribal region [....]
By Sergei L. Loiko, Los Angeles Times, May 23, 2012
MOSCOW — Stiff new penalties aimed at opposition protesters were given preliminary approval Tuesday by Russian lawmakers loyal to President Vladimir Putin, the target of mass rallies and demonstrations before his March election victory.
The bill, which opposition parliament members termed draconian and protested by threatening to file out of a legislative session, calls for fines of up to $50,000 and up to 200 hours of community service for organizers of rallies and demonstrations that grow violent or exceed the approved number of participants.
The sanctions were approved on first reading by parliament's lower house, which is controlled by Putin's United Russia party. They mark a return by the Kremlin to a tough stance against critics after concessions during the recent election campaign [...]
Also see:
Russians back Putin, strong leadership
Washington Post, May 22, 2012
A Pew survey of 1,000 Russians found that President Vladimir Putin is well-liked by more than 70 percent of citizens, especially older adults.
Associated Press, May 21, 2012
HAVANA — It was all sunshine, smiles and celebratory speeches as officials marked the arrival of an undersea fiber-optic cable they promised would end Cuba's Internet isolation and boost web capacity 3,000-fold. Even a retired Fidel Castro had hailed the dawn of a new cyber-age on the island.
More than a year after the February 2011 ceremony on Siboney Beach in eastern Cuba, and 10 months after the system was supposed to have gone online, the government never mentions the cable anymore, and Internet here remains the slowest in the hemisphere. People talk quietly about embezzlement torpedoing the project and the arrest of more than a half-dozen senior telecom officials.
Perhaps most maddening, nobody has explained what happened to the much-ballyhooed $70 million project....
If you're on a pc, you can paste into notepad. Then copy the content from there, and past into dag.
Did you check toi see if the user was still plugged in?
Always start with the stupid question.
An excerpt from the Terms of Use of the Reader Blogs:
You agree not to use the Dagblog Reader Post Section to do any Bad Stuff. Bad Stuff shall mean to:
In that spirit, could we please work on this title, Senor Ness? It is kinda, um, violative of the Terms... Gracias. Mgmt
Twit. ;-)
Oh. And Twitter.
(Stop tittering.)
I am caught between a twit and a hard place. I have not figured out how to delete posts or edit the title.
It's like the Force. You just had to stare at it long enough and it just edits itself.
Now if you put up a new one, I can delete this vestigial thing.
Why lose the historical record of my fumbling.
Sorry about your Safari woes. The html tool does not always play well with Safari. I will add a warning now about that.
I'm going to leave this on the reader blogs for posterity and re-post as you (removing the reference to femail genitalia) for anyone who wants to discuss twitter rather dagblog's technical flaws and editorial restrictions.