Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Com 435 May Help with Job Search
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Post Grad Plans!
Saturday, November 7, 2009
Post grad plans?
Right now many of my friend are putting off the real world in aim of attending graduate school or law school. Without the proper GPA however, that can be a difficult task.
Government jobs are said to be where to go during our current economic status. They're monotonous, typically fairly secure, have a steady paycheck, relatively good benefits, and utterly suck. Who really wants to be the one responsible for individually knawing away at a corner-wrapping que of pissed off and often under-educated people frustrated at having to fill out a file seemingly worthless, monotonous paperwork for governemtn files? No thank you!
The Peace Corps. is a government based alternative option for the more selfless person. I've had several friend take up positions in the Peace Corps, one currently teaching English in Namibia.
So for the lost and discouraged, fret not, there are other rather unusual options out there for you, if you're willing to step outside youre comfort zone.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Feminism since the begining
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Human Communication
Post Graduation
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Why have an Avatar?
I've heard plenty of reasons why people chose to participate in these sorts of things but I'm not convinced they're all good reasons let alone ligitimate ones. I'm not surprised with the number of users considering all the weird trends in the past the revolve around the limits of human imagination. For example, there was Dungeons and Dragons that all the college nerds played in the 70s back when our parents were in college. Since then there have been a ridiculous amount of similar fads such as Magic the trading card game and others. Several friend of my more or less coerced me into a trial run of the virtual second life world. Skeptical, but open to being proven wrong, I tried to live my second life. Even after having experienced a taste of realm, the point still remains, its dumb.
I understand that it can be a very usefull tool especially in construction and design businesses but those who use it as a hobby should really do more. Seriously, stop. Think for a minute. When was the last time you had a few hours to yourself and you decided to spend it hiking alone or even with a (human) friend through the tranquill woods just listening to the sounds appreciating and taking in all the natural beauty surrounding you that you can only experience in person? Or the last time you found yourself paddling down a raging river of crashing writhing waves and gargling bubbling white foam and a face-numbing freezing spray of mountain snow melt? Have you ever found yourself sitting co-pilot to a friend who hands you the controls to a twin prop plane to fly yourself? Or experienced the magic of the ocean in its most beautiful perfect form, as you glide across the surface stuck in that slow motion sense of perfect reality where everything makes sense and nothing else matters?
None of these things can truely be done inside at a computer. I don't care what people say about virtual tours through ancient european castles, it doesn't do justice to experiencing the real thing.
Avatars as social networking tools is another of the reasons I've heard for participating. Well, save your receipt because that's bullshit. If you grew up around other humans then you should know that no computer as of now can come even remotely close to immitating real human interaction. Yeah sure, you hear what they're saying but it all comes rolling back to the same issue, the social cues. In fact, I would even go so far as to suggest that online character take away from one's personal interaction skills. They begin to forget to secognize the signs and gestures that say, "Yes, I like you, we should hang out again sometime," or, "No, you're uncomfortably bizzare and creep me out." For example, if you're out on a date with a girl and things are going well but you're not quite sure what she expects, there are moments in your interaction that directly tell you what the other is thinking. Sometimes there is a moment where you catch eye contact even just a glimpse where its almost awkward but deeply personal and both of you have that slight grin and you know for sure how she feels. Those moments cannot be replicated or even immitated with the best of today's technologies. So for the sake of whatever you hold valuable, get off the damn computer and go outside! Do something that makes you feel like you again. Go on a date. Go do something dangerous. Do something to make you feel alive and real!
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Pop Sci's Future Of... Communication
One of the main innovations discussed is the idea to implement ubiquitous technology imbedded into everyday objects, hook them up to the internet, and create output ports for people to interact. The example shown involved little computer rabbit shaped figures that could track your movements and behavior throughout an apartment and relay that information back to you. So for example, if you've misplaced your keys, you can simply ask the user friendly rabbit and it promtly solves the delemma with an accurate location of your keys. This idea, while functional, seems to me like an old idea implemented in new ways in which are extremely vulnerable to attack or exploitation with malicious intent. I would imagine that as is the case with any internet related technology, someone could hack into the network on which the rabbits operated and extract vital personal information such as the location of valuables. I can foresee the possiblity of this information even being sold to companies for advertising and consumer research.
The second technology I'll discuss is the tracking of one's mental computation. The same sort of thing is done with an MRI but this is done on a much lower scale. They have found a certain time of brain wave is emitted during brain function and they have discovered how to monitor the output. Similarly to an EKG, a device is attached to the user in the form of something similar to a headband to monitor the brain output in two categories of focus and meditation. Then a computer attaches a behavior to the output so that one can perform tasks through an avatar on screen. The tasks performed were simply but interesting such as levitation objects, moving them about the environment, and heating them to flash point.
The last technology covered in the episode was an animal-human translator. Scientists, veterinarians and animal behaviorists worked together to record certain identifiable growls, snarls, yelps and cries animals, specifically dogs, emit. Then the behaviorists interpreted the movements and noises to attach a meaning to each sound. After a while, enough data is collected and combined to create a fairly accurate database of general animal communication noises. Humans can now begin to easily understand the message a dog is trying to send and with the added output speaker, we can provide feedback to them in a more natural familiar language for them.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Parents on facebook
I understand how one would want to expand the reaches of the company because of the obvious monetary value it could rake in. But there was something about the exclusivity of being a member. It was one thing to open the boundaries to high school kids because of all the social networking opportunities university and high school kids have but it is entirely different to one day get a friend request from you parents. Or perhaps the kid down the hall from you gets a call from his pissed off parents telling him he can't go on spring break because they saw pictures of him drinking beer year last year as a freshman, on a school night, no less! So the ultimate question is one of privacy. I realize one can edit and customize privacy settings on facebook but for some parents, that rule doesn't apply. Parents most often ultimately have the control because even though they may be hundreds of miles away, most kids still heavily rely on parents especially for financial stability.
Another question arrises form the issue; are parents really adequately technology literate to utilize facebook properly and with discretion and good taste? Allow me to provide an example...
After major investors like Microsoft and google affiliates, things have changed. Major amounts of money are invested into advertising and listings and other network links that clutter up what the real point of the site is... to stay connected. Now there are more adverts for oldspice and local "adult friend" seeking websites than there is real information. It has become as much of a perverse dating site as it is a way of keeping in contact with friends and family. In a way, it seems as if the owners and operators have lost site of the original purpose.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Pop Sci's Future Of...
One particular program titled, "Pop Sci's Future Of..." accomplishes said tasks tastefully and with a humorous twist . Each episode examines how one important characteristic of human life will fundamentally change within our lifetimes. The show is hosted by a man named Baratunde Thurston although perhaps somewhat feminine, does well reinforcing the concepts described and demonstrating the new technologies expected to become every-day gadgets. As an author, comedian and writer Baratunde is anything but lacking on his credentials and resume.
Currently, Thurston serves as the web editor for The Onion, but also writes for The Huffington Post and his own website baratunde.com. He is also the co-founder of one of the top 10 black blogs, called Jack and Jill Politics. As for his other accomplishments, he has written three books, was nominated for the Bill Hicks Award for Thought Provoking Comedy, declared a Champion of the First Amendment by Iowa State University, and described by Barack Obama as "someone I need to know." Baratunde graduated Harvard University with a degree in Philosophy and spent eight years offering strategic advice to Fortune 100 companies on the future of communications and media.
Thurston interviews radical noncomformist scientists about their advancements, performs hands-on experiements, critiques the developments, and educates viewers how within a matter decades scientific breakthroughs will continue to shape nearly every aspect of every day life as our technologies evolve.
Granted that TV production, editing, and network coordination results in a significant delay, the show explores different advancements that are still relatively new, unique and have yet to hit consumer markets.