Category Archives: Digital Culture

Poetry in the Digital Age: Update & Fine Linkage

Written by Tammy Oler. Filed under Digital Culture, Innovation and Ideas, Meta Zeitgeist, Nerd Stuff. Tagged , , , , . No comments.
Image courtesy of Nussbox (http://www.flickr.com/photos/nussbox/4684653305/)

Earlier this month, we published two posts on poetry in the digital age: the first focused on technological challenges and opportunities for poetry, and the second focused on how to approach the publishing model.  The response was huge: Publishers Weekly posted a call for action … Read More

Interviews with Smart People: Frank Speiser, Co-Founder of Social Flow

Written by Freyja Gallagher. Filed under Digital Culture, Global Problem Solving, Innovation and Ideas, Interviews with Smart People, Nerd Stuff. Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , . No comments.
frankedit

“Technological evolution will make it easier to listen and harder to hide, and will make it possible to isolate people based on what they believe. If we allow ourselves to be broken down into factions and played off one another, then that’s what we’ll get.

On the flip side, technology makes it easier to distribute your thoughts and ideas. It’s a lot harder to stop you from reaching 1,000 people now than it was just 15 years ago. The cost of acquiring an audience of hundreds of thousands of people is pretty much the opportunity cost of your time. We can find ways to co-operate now that have not been possible in the course of human history until now. Hopefully the more capable of us choose to go that route.

I predict that eventually we’ll have a P2P barter system, a competing set of social currencies, and new derivatives based on social receptivity. It might take a while, but that’s coming. We’ll probably also pick up a whole new set of jerks that attempt to abuse all of the above. That’s just life.”

The Cost of Poetry in the Digital Age

Written by Tammy Oler. Filed under Digital Culture, Innovation and Ideas. Tagged , , , , , . 2 Comments.
Jonathan Farmer

Yesterday we posted the first in a two-part discussion about poetry in the digital age.  In that post, I explored some of the technological issues related to poetry.  In today’s guest blog, Jonathan Farmer, founder and poetry editor for At Length magazine, discusses the challenging … Read More

Poetry in the Digital Age

Written by Tammy Oler. Filed under Digital Culture, Innovation and Ideas. Tagged , , , , , . 1 Comment.
Excerpt of Source Code from "The Blue Word" by Laura Christina Dunn (http://atlengthmag.com/poetry/the-blue-word/)

An ongoing project of Zeigeist is to identify innovation gaps, places where technology falls short or doesn’t address problems at all. We place a premium on real-world issues, but we want to make sure that we address artistic and aesthetic ones, too. So we’re dedicating … Read More

The Future of the Human/Machine Interface: A Zeitgeist Panel Discussion

Written by Tammy Oler. Filed under Digital Culture, Events, Innovation and Ideas, Nerd Stuff. Tagged , , , , , . 1 Comment.
Retro Future Interface

We’ve got a panel discussion! The Future of the Human/Machine Interface Tuesday, October 19th, 7-9 pm Hive at 55, 55 Broad Street, 13F, NY NY 10004 RSVP here. Panelists: Irwin Chen, Jill Nussbaum, Dan Paluska, Ian Spalter For many decades, we thought our future would … Read More

Innovation Gaps: Healthcare and the No-Fly List

Written by Freyja Gallagher. Filed under Digital Culture, Global Problem Solving, Innovation and Ideas, Meta Zeitgeist. No comments.
iphone-ibgstar-case-strip

Earlier this week, Sanofi-Aventis announced the impending arrival of the IBGStar, a nifty little device that plugs in to an iPhone  and will allow diabetics to upload information from their blood glucose tests (a pinprick blood test that many diabetics must perform daily) to an … Read More

The Death of the Author (Long Live the Commenter!)

Written by Freyja Gallagher. Filed under Digital Culture, Meta Zeitgeist, Nerd Stuff. Tagged , , , , . No comments.
Screen shot 2010-08-31 at 8.17.52 AM

The barriers to authorship are lower than ever — anyone can expound at length for free on any number of public platforms, and if you’re not the long-winded sort, microblogging pushes word-count pressure in the opposite direction. What I am finding very interesting at the … Read More

LEDs are the New Sequins: Fashion, Crafting, and Wearable Technology

Written by Tammy Oler. Filed under Digital Culture, Innovation and Ideas, Nerd Stuff, Pop Culture. Tagged , . 1 Comment.
Turn Signal Jacket, by Leah @ Lillypond (http://lilypond.media.mit.edu/projects/8-turn-signal-jacket)

I’ve recently become fascinated by the evolving world of wearable technology (sometimes called soft circuits or just wearables). Clothing and accessories that incorporate electronics and advanced technologies are something that belonged to SciFi movies and TV programs I was obsessed with as a kid, so … Read More

The Social Network: Will You Unfriend Mark Zuckerberg after Seeing this Movie?

Written by Tammy Oler. Filed under Digital Culture, Pop Culture. Tagged , , , , , , . No comments.

If you’ve been to the movies in the past few weeks, chances are good that you’ve seen this trailer for The Social Network, the upcoming film about the very fraught beginnings of Facebook, penned by Aaron Sorkin and directed by David Fincher. The Social Network … Read More

Agile Comedy, Momofuku Ko, and Making Amazing Things Happen

Written by Freyja Gallagher. Filed under Digital Culture, Innovation and Ideas, Nerd Stuff. No comments.
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A recent New Yorker piece on the actor Steve Carell (subscription required) is actually a fascinating behind-the-scenes look at how the process of creating funny movies has shifted from sequential and scripted to highly improvisational and highly iterative.  The old way — writing a movie, casting it, … Read More