Site Watch, on RFID is an irregular column by Treanna Szelei of SFU that is part of digest a report on emerging trends in “human-technology interaction and e-lifestyles.” This column has good starting spots on RFID (Radio Frequency Indentification), arguably the most important embedded technology that people don’t know about. RFID has the potential to be a huge surveillance and privacy issue, but the tags are so small and unobtrusive that we don’t know they are there. Not knowing they are there, unlike active badges, means that we don’t worry about them potentially leaving us all wearing active tags that can be tracked.
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NRC: 3D Technologies
The 3D Visualization Technologies Research Group is part of the National Research Council Institute for Information Technology. They have developed laser scanners that can digitize spaces and objects. (See The Virtual Theater). They have also developed technologies for generating 3D spaces from images/paintings and technologies for searching 3D databases.
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Copernic: NRC Summarizing Tools
Copernic is a company that has licensed text summarization technology from the Institute for Information Technology at the National Research Council. They have agent and summarizer tools that can help searching the web and managing results. The Copernic Summarizer, in particular, looks like an interesting application of summarization for everyday use, including the ability to summarize web pages in real time. Neat!
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Gallery: Photo Albums for the Web
Gallery is a freeware web photo album package that allows you to manage your digital pictures. It seems well supported – has skins, does image downsizing, supports captions and so on. (This is courtesy of Ross Scaife.) Do you know of any others?
CBBAG Bookbinding
Paul Lisson pointed me to Canadian Bookbinders and Book Artists Guild (CBBAG, pronounced “cabbage”). They have a great site on bookbinding and book arts that includes online exhibits like Textual Relations. The amount of information on the site and all the activities of CBBAG (from aprons for sale to home courses) suggest an active community (and thorough web mistress.) I have not excuse now, but to take a course or buy the home video series.
HTML Art Context
In Look, See: July 04, 2004 – July 10, 2004 Archives, Chris Ashley was amused by my entry and attempted experiment. He notes that for him these works need to be understood in context,
My drawings, though, don’t stand alone. They exist within a context; anyone who has followed these for awhile will have a sense that:
1. the drawings have or respond to a subject, and are somewhat representational, but not always of tangible things;
2. the drawings also derive their meaning from the fact that they exist within a weblog where I have a daily deadline, one drawing (typically) is exhibited each day, and the weblog serves as a gallery and an archive, all public;
3. meaning is also inherent in the fact that the drawings (almost always) are in series, so that drawings are part of a body; and
4. I am really working up against the edge of the limitations of HTML tables, a very simple medium, so that even though I use the grid everday I am working against making an image that is just a set of blocks;
5. I use color like a painter, which is my background- I mix, tint, shade, and use it for structure, space, and composition.
While his works don’t stand alone, and that makes the site more than just a collection of HTML art, does that mean that the technique can’t be repurposed and used in other contexts? How tied is a technique to its original context? Does one have to follow the blog to appreciate a particular work? These parallel the questions we have in literary theory around the authority of the author and their control over their work. The web (and blogging) makes it that much easier for fragments to be taken out of context. I would go further and say that you can’t count on context on the web. I certainly missed the importance to Chris of the sequential evolution of his work working my way backward from the entry point.
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Blogger Burnout
Wired News: Bloggers Suffer Burnout is a story that StÈfan Sinclair pointed me to about how blogging can become drugery. The story describes the experience of blogs that took off to the point where authors felt the habit was too demanding.
For readers of this blog (all 5 of you) I want to assure you that I don’t expect to get burnt out.
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govcom.org: mapping debates
Govcom.org Foundation Amsterdam is a group that are developing ideas and software around the mapping of debates. They use the Web as evidence for mining and visualizing social issues. It is welcome to see socially interesting projects around data mining and visualization.
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Black Box Voting
Black Box Voting: Ballot – Tampering in the 21st Century is a site by Bev Harris and others on the issue of electronic voting. It includes PDFs of Harris’ book Black Box Voting. The site blogs stories and news on the issue.
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Visualization Examples
StÈfan Sinclair posted to a conference a good list of exemplary visualization projects:
Web browsing
OPTE (http://www.opte.org/)
Map.net (http://maps.map.net )
kartOO.com
anemone (http://acg.media.mit.edu/people/fry/anemone/)
Grokker.com
Reference and bibliographic visualization
Visual Thesaurus (http://www.visualthesaurus.com/online/ )
RefViz Galaxy & Matrix views (http://www.refviz.com/)
Document structure
XML Structure Navigator (http://sunfire.arts.ualberta.ca/%7Estefan/hcr/HyperPo/XMLStructure/?url=http%3A//www.tei-c.org/P5/Test/teilite.rng)
I think its time to start reflecting on the semiotics of visualization.