Category: Culture

Kanye West’s DONDA wants to ‘pick up where Steve Jobs left off’

Kanye West’s DONDA collective will include apps developers Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

Kanye West: apps entrepreneur. Well, sort of. In a series of posts on Twitter, West has outlined plans for a new collective of creatives and developers called DONDA.

Read the complete story at The Guardian

Judith Bulter on “The Politics of the Street”

View video at OCA

Although some have argued that the politics of the street has been replaced by new media politics, it seems that the public sphere within which politics takes place is now defined by a specific mode of bodies interacting with media. Hannah Arendt once argued that there could be no exercise of freedom without the creation of a ‘space of appearance’ and even ‘a right to appear’. How do we understand those new forms of democratic insurgency that form alliances that are not in coalitional forms? Who is the embodied ‘we’ on the street transported through media, and yet in place and at risk?

Via Networked Performance

#thankyousteve

Twitter engineer Miguel Rios pays tribute to the man, the legend. Zoomed out you see the portrait of Steve Jobs. Zoom in, and you see public tweets tagged with #thankyousteve sent out over a four and a half hour period on the evening of October 5. Tweets are ordered by number of retweets, left to right and top to bottom.

From Flowing Data

Nobel laureates by country and prize

Nobel Prizes have been awarded every year since 1901. Where are all the winners from? Jon Bruner from Forbes puts it in a graphic. It’s a simple yet effective approach where dots represent a won award, and countries are sorted by number of prizes won.

Read the complete comment at Flowing Data.

FEATURE: Introducing ImagePlot Software: explore patterns in large image collections

Image: 883 Manga series from the scanlation site OneManga.com.
Total number of pages: 1,074,790

Lev Manovich and Jeremy Douglass, 2010.

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ImagePlot is a free software tool that visualizes collections of images and video of any size. (The largest set we tried so was: 1,074,790 one megabyte images).

DOWNLOAD IMAGEPLOT 0.9

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App shows a Korea without borders

A mobile application developer from the U.S. is working to create a way for people to see what Korea would be like without a border dividing it.

Using augmented reality, Mark Skwarek is developing an app for iPhones and Android phones that allows people to view the landscape of the DMZ with the border erased.

By going to the right spot, users can hold the phone up in front of themselves to see what Skwarek envisions the view of a united Korea would be like.

“I am certainly not claiming that this project will actually unite the country,” says Skwarek. “But I hope it will act as a vision of hope to the Koreans.”

Read the complete story at The Korea Herald

Feature: Research on Remix and Cultural Analytics, Part 3

Image: detail of video montage grid of “Hitler’s angry reaction to the iPad.” One of several remixes on Hitler’s Downfall. Larger images of this montage and others with proper explanation are included below.

Post-doctoral Research by Eduardo Navas

Key terms: Remix, Cultural Analytics, Memes, YouTube, Hitler Parodies, Film

As part of my post doctoral research for The Department of Information Science and Media Studies at the University of Bergen, Norway, I am using cultural analytics techniques to analyze YouTube video remixes. My research is done in collaboration with the Software Studies Lab at the University of California, San Diego. A big thank you to CRCA atCalit2 for providing a space for daily work during my stays in San Diego.

This is part 3 of a series of posts in which I introduce three case studies of YouTube video remixes. My first case study is the Charleston Style remixes. The second case study is Radiohead’s Lotus Flower remixes.

Read the complete article and view more remix videos at Software Studies.

New Yorker Creates Standalone App for Arts and Culture Events

Magazine publisher Condé Nast has added to its diverse portfolio of mobile app offerings with the release of Goings On for Android and iOS, a free, ad-supported app for browsing arts and culture events from the New Yorker’s weekly listings. In addition to event listings, reviews and useful maps, the app offers audio tours of stores, restaurants, neighborhoods and more by New Yorker authors.

This free app supplementing the magazine plays a similar role to Condé’sGQ Style Guide. The publisher isn’t just making magazine apps – it’s creating an ecosystem.

Read the complete article at Read Write Web.

A Supreme Double Standard: If Violent Video Games Are Free Speech, Why Aren’t Sexual Images?

The Supreme Court on Monday struck down a California ban on selling or renting violent video games to minors. The ruling was an important win for free speech, as the court said that violent video games, not matter how objectionable, are works of art in their own right. But the ruling also raised an intriguing question: Why does the court treat violent images and sexual images so differently?

Read the complete story: http://www.time.com/

New Media Helps Tourist Economies Rebound

In the US, the tourist industry routinely generates more than $10 billion a month in trade surplus and is consistently listed as one of the top five employers for more than half of the country’s 50 states.   In addition, the United Nations World Tourism Organization recognizes the growth of the tourist industry as a model for sustainable local economic development.  It goes without saying that the tourist economy plays a key role contributing to the development and upkeep of local infrastructure including parks, museums, stadiums, restaurants, and additional city spaces open to the public.

Read the complete story at TriplePundit