Week 10 Reading

The reading by Lev Manovich quoted the editors of the Mediamatic  Journal as saying that “A growing nuber of organizations are embarking on ambitious projects .  Everything is being collected: culture, astroids, DNA patterns , credit records, telephone conversations; it doesn’t matter.”  The reading suggests that the World Wide Web is a way in which we store millions of data and we link it to other data – “therefore every website is a type of database.”  In the lecture Adrianshowed us a site called the faces of Facebook on which somebody had collated every single user of Facebook’s display picture and collated them in order that the person joined.  If you click on the photograph you are taken to that persons profile – thus it is a massive data base where information about the sixth of the world’s population is stored and accessible to all.

Unlecture: Week 8

One of my questions I had from the readings was whether or not a network had a centre and could we create our own network centres.  This question was answered in the unlecture (no a network does not have a centre).  My next question however is whether or not a network has a boundary.  Does it have a limit beyond which it can no longer be expanded, where it can no longer grow.  Is there a point where the network will link but into itself, becoming a loop?

Wet and Cold

The joy of owning a horse!  When you drive out to meet friends for lunch and you look into the paddock only to realise that your pony has ripped all the straps on its rug, so you have to go  and chase it around the paddock in your good clothes to get it off.  This then makes you late and smell like horse.  Then driving home it starts to poor down with rain and the temperature drops 5 degrees so you have to quickly go home, get changed and get a different rug to put on your horse, you then chase it around the paddock again getting muddy and wet.  Oh dear.

Rainbow Lorikeet

A girl just sat down opposite me on the train with a rainbow lorikeet.  It climbs all over her and occasionally it screeches and new people on the carriage turn around to see that yes there is in-fact a bird on the train.  Most of the time it sits on her shoulder staring out the window.  She did come prepared though, and every now and then would pull out a wipe to clean up after the bird.  They rode the entire line with me and then got off at Flinders Street Station.  I though surely she will now put it in something, but no she just walked off with the bird on her hand.  People she passed had to do a double take to just make sure that yes there is in-fact a girl walking through Flinders Street Station with a bird on her hand.

Please Stop.

Sitting on the train, with a carriage full of grade nine students all the way into the city is not fun.  They are loud, physical and crowed the doors when you try to get on an off; it’s hard to imagine that I was ever like that.  Worse however is that I am sitting next to their teacher (me next to the window and her in the aisle) who has her back on me and is practically leaning on me!  She is yelling at the kids to stop talking so loud and sit up straight after which she goes back to noisily recounting her weekend activities.

Week 7 Unlecture: It is out of their control

The way that people are raised, the experiences that we have, and the different places we come from affect the way in which we interpret films, books and art. Although the artist, author or director may have a particular way that they want something to be interpreted they cannot make 100% sure that this will be the case.  If they could do so it would almost serve the same roll as propaganda, brainwashing people to conform to a certain belief, making everybody the same.  THANK GOD for being unique., thank God we have the freedom to interpret films, books and art – if everybody had the same opinion and experience then the world would not be a very exciting place

Great Expectations

With all these iphones and smart phones that everybody has it is hard not to be connected.  In fact the expectation is that we are always reachable.  If we get a text message people generally expect a speedy response.  Even Facebook messages, emails, snapchats – thanks to the internet and the fact you can carry it in your pocket virtually every form of communication becomes instantaneous and frequent.  People do not expect to wait a couple of days or even hours for a response, the expectation is that it can almost be immediate.

Books (literature) becoming vintage!

Can you imagine a world of cafes and vintage stores who sell books!  Where people have prized collections of novels and collect the now ‘vintage’ book.  One day people will collect books like they collect vinyl.  Where having a bookshelf full of books will be like having a record player and a pile of records.  Granted the lecture this week was not highlighting that this was coming any time soon, the technology of e-readers is not yet good enough to compel people to ditch the books.  I think that people still like the feel of books, still like being able to turn the page and be able to highlight and write on the page.   So although maybe one day books maybe classified as ‘vintage’ I think that day is a long way away.

A World of Communication

We live in a world where people are constantly connected to one and other.  It’s a world where  you can pull out your phone and in seconds have caught up on the latest news on Facebook and twitter.  Its great that nowadays people can be half way around the world and yet Skype can bring them into your living room.  It’s a world where answering your phone mid-conversation is not considered overly rude.

However in the process of being forever connected perhaps we are becoming more and more isolated, losing touch with a world that was once physical and becoming virtual.  Conversations are stored in our internet history, people ‘like’ what you say and do by clicking a button and the label of ‘friend’ is given to people you may not have even spoken to.

Week 5 Reading: Books Vs. Film

The reading (Books without pages novels without endings) led me to look at the debate of book Vs. film.  Both are a form by which people can receive/be told a story and in my opinion one is not better than the other.  I think perhaps a film is  a more relaxed way to receive a story, we are given what the characters look and sound like, along with setting and environment.  Books on the other hand, are defiantly a longer and personal way or receiving a story.  Readers are left to imagine everything that a film will show you thus allowing for more hypertext.

The reading uses the same example which I am also going to use – that of my favourite novel Pride and Prejudice.  For me the film or adaptation from book to screen which I like most is directed by Joe Wright, staring Keira Knightley.  For me it captures the characters of Mr and Mrs Bennet the way that I had always pictured they would be, however like many films based on Austen novels it lacks her wit and insight into human behaviour.  I think that it will always be hard for a film to convey these things about Austen without using a narrator however this would not reflect the subtle ways in which Austen includes ‘her own voice’ in her writings.  In terms of book to film adaptations once you have seen the film it is hard to go back and read the book without hearing the voices and seeing the faces that are used in the film, something that I take as a negative impact that film has had on books.