Category Archives: tech

SanFran Music Tech

Registered for [tag]Brian Zisk’s[/tag] [tag]SanFran MusicTech Summit[/tag] and booked my plane tickets. I’m feeling a wee bit superstitious, Virgin America had amazing non-stop rates, at exactly the times and days I needed. And I snagged a seat with extra legroom both ways. (Especially good since, in addition to being as old and arthritic as a hound-dog, this is a redeye so as to get me back to DC in time for another event.

Sure, the weather could cause problems and SFO isn’t exactly known for on-time departures, but I’m not worried about that part. I’ve made the best effort I can to honor all of my commitments, that weather stuff is out of my hands and I’m not going to fret about it.

I'm blaming Tom Cruise for all of this

The machines aren’t going to gain dominion over humanity in a big spasm of violence. There will be no bloody uprising, no prolonged battles. The machines are going to rise to power by fucking with us until they’ve broken us into tiny fragments of sanity held together by gossamery slivers of delusion that we love technology. Once the machines are in charge, they’ll fix themselves, right? We won’t have to expend time and energy and money replacing them or calling to have them repaired. That might be an upside.

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EveryBlock

Track all of the news on your block with EveryBlock. I’m fascinated, but I’m not sure why, since I don’t live in any of the cities it’s currently available (New York, Chicago and San Francisco).

It’s probably more thorough than your average local/neighborhood/city listservs, but I’m sure it lacks the snarky commentary, seething subtext borne of grudges nursed since childhood, petty jealousies and rivalries, and, of course, recycling-bin related psychoses. (That doesn’t happen in my neighborhood, of course).

These are the types of information you can currently retrieve on [tag]EveryBlock[/tag]:

  • Building permits
  • Business reviews
  • Crimes
  • Liquor licenses
  • Lost and found
  • Missed connections
  • News articles
  • Photos
  • Public housing listings
  • Restaurant inspections
  • Zoning agenda item
  • via [tag]Laughing Squid[/tag]

    The Library of Congress Pilot Project on the Photographic Commons

    Since I seem to be posting a lot about flickr these days, I thought I’d make a plug for The Commons:

    Back in June of 2007, we began our first collaboration with a civic institution to facilitate giving people a voice in describing the content of a publicly-held photography collection.

    The key goals of this pilot project are to firstly give you a taste of the hidden treasures in the huge Library of Congress collection, and secondly to how your input of a tag or two can make the collection even richer.

    This project has actually been evolving for a long time. I used to hear a lot of negative opinions from independent researchers about the Library of Congress in general and specific doubts about whether the [tag]Prints and Photographs Online Catalog[/tag] would ever reach it’s full potential. It always seemed to me that what these individuals were really saying was, “this is going to be a lot of hard work and I want other people to do it for me and then let me use the results for free in the public domain.” Plus, none of them seemed to have a definition of full potential that was particularly broad in scope.

    Although I am at times vocal in my critique of [tag]Wikipedia[/tag] and other communally produced information sources, I don’t see them as the end of civilization nor as the end for the need for experts, scientists or researchers. On the other hand, I don’t see them as the harbingers of a utopian tomorrow free of class and oppression and inequalities in access to information.

    This particular Library of Congress undertaking was already envisioned as a highly sophisticated project when I first began following it’s development while I was in graduate school over ten years ago. Obviously, technologies like [tag]flickr[/tag] and concepts like [tag]folksonomic tagging[/tag] have radically altered the intellectual landscape for archivists of image collections and I believe those alterations will pose many challenges, but the results promise to be spectacular.