Eight Things About Me (A Meme)
Chuck tagged me a few days ago with the Eight Things meme; although I’m generally fairly anti-meme, I’ve been enjoying a bit of back and forth with Chuck in his blog and on del.icio.us, so figured I could add one more procrastination on a writing day. Apparently, I have to start with rules …
Rules:
1. We have to post these rules before we give you the facts.
2. Players start with eight random facts/habits about themselves.
3. People who are tagged write their own blog post about their eight things and include these rules.
4. At the end of your blog, you need to choose eight people to get tagged and list their names. Don’t forget to leave them a comment telling them they’re tagged and that they should read your blog.
Eight Facts about Me:
1. When I was in Primary School I won a Lego building competition; this is, without a doubt, my fondest memory of the first 7 years of education.
2. Apart from The Goonies, the film that rattled around my brain the most when I was a kid was called Explorers. I was fascinated how three boys could essentially make a spacecraft out of everyday junk (and a little piece of alien technology). In retrospect, this example of making something amazing from the bits and pieces others leave lying around resonates with some of the way I view the internet and participatory culture (and until I looked it up on IMDb to link to for this post, I hadn’t realised River Phoenix was one of the kids).
3. When I was twelve years old I joined Perth’s Doctor Who fan club, The West Lodge, which was my first proper immersion into fandom; I attend the local science-fiction convention in the following year (Swancon 14) but found the whole thing rather intimidating and didn’t get back to Swancon until seven years later when Neil Gaiman visited Perth as GoH in 1996.
4. I have re-read all six of Frank Herbert’s Dune books as a series at least twenty times since I was 14; I’ve been relatively unimpressed by the prequel novels in the past few years.
5. My sister and I both have PhDs and are the first members of our family to ever attend university at all. My sister is eighteen months younger, started her thesis a year after I did, but we both were officially given our PhDs at the same graduation ceremony.
6. Emily and I currently live less than 14 metres from Subiaco Oval, which is where Australian Rules Football attracts 40-45,000 people most weekends. Despite AFL being Australia’s national winter sport, I’ve never been to a Football game.
7. Until last Saturday I had never test-driven a car, having bought my only owned vehicle to date from my parents. On Saturday I test-drove a Prius which Emily and I are seriously considering buying despite the fact it will take us several years to pay it off.
8. In the proposal for my PhD thesis in 2000, the final chapter was supposed to look at the use of computer-generated imagery and special effects in nature documentaries as a case study of artificial culture where natural and technological meaning merged together. (It never got written because after that proposal both September 11 2001 and the Spider-Man films happened, and I used the latter to interrogate the cultural impact of the former.)
You’re It! I now tag the following people (hoping at least a few will play along): Jill Walker Rettberg (just getting used to writing that double barrel surname!), Christy Dena, David Silver, Nancy Baym (because fandom has a meme for a heart!), Mia Consalvo (who can sadly not follow the meme and call it ‘cheating‘), Jean Burgess, Kate Raynes-Goldie and Kevin Lim (who lives for these sort of connections!).
links for 2007-07-11
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WoW “gold farmers” spell their URLs in dead gnomes in World of Warcraft to circumvent a ban on in-game advertising!” [Via BBoing]
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“Nearly half of the pregnant teenagers in China’s financial hub, Shanghai, met their partners on the internet, state media said.” LOL!
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A new promotional video from William Gibson for ‘Spook Country’ includes a really interesting take on interacting with the blogging and forum communities at WilliamGibsonBooks.com.
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Lisa Nakamura looks at Sharon Agathon (Athena) in terms in terms of the Korean-Canadian racial identity, especially in terms of her relationship to/with/as technology. Provocative (if not 100% accurate).
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Penguin celebrates William Gibson’s new book with events in Second Life, including an appearance by Gibson himself (or his avatared self) … very meta for cyberspace!
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The ultimate geek generator … how didn’t think about being on the cover of Wired at some point? 😛
The Art(s) of Venice
On our honeymoon last month, Emily and I were lucky enough to be in Venice during the heart of the 2007 Venice Biennale, one of the world’s most exciting and long-running art festivals. We saw many amazing installations and exhibitions and had a fabulous time exploring all sorts of art, as well as taking some (I think) cool photos, but I’ve found it hard to find the time to add the titles, tags and metadata to a full Flickr set. However, I’ve finally finished labeling the photos, so I encourage you to take a wonder through our captured fragments of the 2007 Biennale.
There were a number of highlights (and I’ll write about one more in a future post), but I wanted to mention a few things that really stood out. I thought Patrick Mimran’s installations and photography were amazing. His main show was an ironic set of photographs called ‘New York Parkings’ which looks at New York Car Parks, but Mimran also had an installation in Venice where a number of the rubbish bins were covered in “No Art Inside” billboards! 🙂
Also outstanding was the Taiwanese ‘Atopia’ pavilion which combined an interesting take on manga and comic-book art with some neon installations created out of mechanical parts and ubiquitous objects to really create an interesting take on the life of everyday objects.
Wearing my academic hat, I have to say Sophie Calle’s ‘Take Care of Yourself’ exhibition in the French Pavilion was outstanding. Calle took an email she received from a lover ending the relationship and asked 107 women to interpret the email for her, with responses ranging from photographs and videos to responses from academics attacking grammar and psychoanalysts delving into the emailer’s inner psyche. I wish instead of having undergraduate lectures on multiple interpretations of a text we could just get students to immerse themselves in Calle’s work for an hour … I suspect they’d learn a lot more!
There were lots of other interesting exhibits, but one that really spoke to me (so much so I forgot to take any pictures) was the Aniwaniwa installation from New Zealand, which combined Maori dreaming with images of the 1900 hydroelectric dams to show the moment(s) when water became electricity!
Of course, there’s were one or two (!) other bits of art to be found in Florence and Italy, but for the rebellious amongst you, check out a glimpse of the healthy street-art scene from these two magnificent cities.
links for 2007-07-10
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“The Live Earth global pop concerts broke a record for an online entertainment show by generating more than 9 million internet streams, Microsoft web portal MSN said.”
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“Instead of offering radically new options for connecting, online dating merely reinforces traditional forms of intimacy, where “man still meets woman” according to explicit and implicit social criteria.”
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Interesting look at the history of political protests, including the changing face of activism in the era of social networks and smart mobs!
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“As Users and Brands Head to Startups, Giant in Space Starts to Seem Outdated” (Apparently, Second Life is getting a little passe!)
Five Second Films!
I confess, I’m addicted to short, sharp edits that are representative of whole films. The ‘Re-Enacted in 30 seconds with bunnies” series, but I think I’ve not found a new addiction … the 5 second film. So far, my absolute favourite is the 2001: A Space Odyssey re-cut:
But, I must admit, the Fargo effort is pretty funny, too:
What’s your favourite?
links for 2007-07-09
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” … data released by Facebook today shows that Facebook users are searching in large volume: 500 million Facebook searches were conducted in May alone.”
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Written Ashley Deal from the Education and Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence at Carnegie Mellon University. Confirms earlier work, cites some useful examples of podcasting in academia, not just recorded lectures …
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And Facebook’s average user gets older … Visitors aged 12-17 increased 150% over the last yea; Visitors 18-24 increased 38%; Visitors 25-34 increased 11% during that time – a huge number; Visitors 35+ increased 98%
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“More than one hundred Australians every hour are signing up to share their lives on Facebook.com, making the nation the fifth-highest ranking country using the social utility.”