Feb 19
tengrrlUncategorized
Not an overly exciting day, but I did make a lovely Monte Cristo in the toaster oven and installed the new pink toilet seat (not at the same time). Surely that is enough for one day. Okay, I did more than that. I watched Poirot on TV and worked on IRC tutorials for logging in and partipating in the Math Summit:
Feb 19
tengrrlUncategorized
Blogged Out of a Job—another exploration of the horrors that people get into when they communicate online. “The poll [conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management] also found that 59 percent of employees believe employers should be allowed to discipline or terminate workers who post confidential or proprietary information concerning the employer, while 23 percent of employees would support a fellow worker who criticizes or jokes about employers, co-workers, supervisors, customers or clients.”
What intrigues me about this piece is that you’d think it’s the blogging that is the new problem that causes these downfalls into poor business behavior. How are any of the circumstances in the article different from missent e-mails that divulge too much information, leaking information to someone who ought not have it, or any of the dozens of other communication faux pas that are out there in the business world. It’s hardly the blog that’s to blame. It’s the failure to understand audience, purpose, and business behavior.
Feb 19
tengrrlUncategorized
Here I Am Taking My Own Picture – New York Times: “The era of cheap, lightweight digital cameras — in cellphones, in computers, in hip pockets, even on key chains — has meant that people who did not consider themselves photography buffs as recently as five years ago are filling ever-larger hard drives with thousands of images from their lives.”
I’d like to see a more sophisticated analysis of this trend. To what extent is it the technology and how much of it is immediacy and availability? More bothersome to me is this commentary:
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“In a funny way I don’t see this as photography anymore,” said Fred Ritchin, an associate professor in the photography and imaging department at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. “It’s communication. It’s all an extension of cellphones, texting and e-mailing.”
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The implicit statement there is that images weren’t/aren’t communication. Especially in a School of the Arts, that is such a perposterous statement. There are no messages in visual images?!! Please.