willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

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Emergent cyberculture Contexts for the digital humanities

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Page 1: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Emergent cyberculture

Contexts for the digital humanities

Page 2: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Plan of talk

1. Web 2.0 + 3.02. Mobile devices3. Gaming and

virtual worlds

(after Schmelling, http://www.mcsweeneys.net/2008/7/30schmelling.html)

Page 3: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Pervasive themes

• Huge forces: movements, commercial projects, new forms

• Interplay of closed and open • Storytelling• Current academic crisis

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Principles of Forecasting (2001) (http://www.forecastingprinciples.com/methodolog

ytree.html)

Apprehending the futures

Page 5: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Principles of Forecasting (2001)

(http://www.forecastingprinciples.com/methodologytree.html)

Apprehending the futures

Page 6: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Gaming futures: prediction markets

•Web game•Free•Social•Wisdom of crowds

Facebook participation size proposition;http://markets.nitle.org/

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PilotExample proposition:

By what year will the majority of institutions provide a repository service for sharing scholarship and research?

• End of 2010 - 2011 academic year • End of 2009 - 2010 academic year • End of 2008 - 2009 academic year

Page 8: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

I. Web 2.0

(Web 2.0 Bullshit Generator, http://emptybottle.org/bullshit/)

Page 9: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

“As of December 2008, 11% of online American adults said they used a service like Twitter or another service…” (Pew Internet and American Life)

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comScore MediaMetrix (August 2008)

• Blogs: 77.7 million unique visitors in the US…

• Total internet audience 188.9 million

eMarketer (May 2008) o 94.1 million US blog readers

in 2007 (50% of Internet users) o 22.6 million US bloggers in

2007 (12%) (David Sifry,September 2008

http://technorati.com/blogging/state-of-the-blogosphere/)

Universal McCann (March 2008)

• 184 million WW have started a blog | 26.4 US

• 346 million WW read blogs | 60.3 US

• 77% of active Internet users read blogs

Page 12: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

• How influential are blogs in the world?

World Information Access 2008 Reporthttp://www.wiareport.org/index.php/56/blogger-arrests

Page 13: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

(first stat, Flickr blog, November 2008http://blog.flickr.net/en/2008/11/03/3-billion/;Second stat, Flickr CC search page, March 2009,http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/ )

Social images are large• 3 billion+ photos in

Flickr• 4,230,432 -

32,170,657 shareable

Page 14: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

• LinkedIn: 30 million users claimed

http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/14/as-the-economy-sours-linkedins-popularity-grows/

Page 15: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

(eMarketer, March 2009; Scott Sigler, 2008)

Page 16: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

(Le Monde, January 14 2008)

Page 17: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

“There are currently 2,807,974 articles in the English Wikipedia.” (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Size_of_Wikipedia , March 2009)

Page 18: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

• A new economic system?• Yale University Press, 2006

Page 19: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

What is Web 2.0?

Past the hype:•A design architecture•An information ideology•A style•Just one imbricated layer

Page 20: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

The term’s history: Tim O’Reilly, 2005

• Expands “social software”

• Draws on Web history

Page 21: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Open content and/or services and/or standards…

(Pepysblog, 2003-)

Page 22: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

…leading to networked conversations

(Pepysblog, 2003-)

Page 23: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

O’Reilly: Web 2.0 is a platform for development

• Open APIs• Access to data• “Mashup”

(AccessCeramics project, Lewis and Clark College)

• Programming staff• Perceived recognition

Page 24: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 2.0 components, movements• Collaborative writing platforms: the wiki way

Page 25: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

-Viégas, Wattenberg, Dave (Historyflow, IBM, 2004)

Wikis are (often) textually productive

Page 26: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 2.0 components, movements• collaborative writing platforms: the

blogosphere

(Radio Open Source blog/podcast)

Page 27: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Podcasting, since 2004 Neologisms:

• godcasting• nanocasting• podfading• podsafe• podspamming• podvertising• porncasting

(Berkeley Groks; Missing Link podcast,

Southwestern University)

Page 28: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 2.0 influences rich media: video

(Gootube? Suetube?)

Page 29: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Videoblogging(vlog? vog?)

(Ask a Ninja; Rocketboom; Howard Rheingold)

Page 30: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

• Facebook continues to roar• The quiet war with Google• Also LinkedIn, Cyworld, etc.

(Comscore image, via http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/01/22/facebook-now-nearly-twice-the-size-of-myspace-worldwide/)

Social object: the person

Page 31: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social objects of all sorts

(Kenyan crisis-Google Maps mashup, Ushahidi http://www.ushahidi.com/ 2008)

Page 32: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social organization of information, new forms: folksonomy

• Search• Retrieval• Self-

awareness

http://del.icio.us/

for DoctorNemo

Page 33: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Community surfacing

• Ontology

• Concepts • Collaborative research

Page 34: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Keeping up

NITLE interest and program cloud, 2008

Page 35: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Keeping up

PennTags, http://tags.library.upenn.edu/

Page 36: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Extrapolating principles: Ton Zylstra on the social object:

“In general you could say that both Flickr and del.icio.us work in a triangle: person, picture/ bookmark, and tag(s). Or more abstract a person, an object of sociality, and some descriptor...”

(Zylstra in Second Life, 2007)

Page 37: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

“…In every triangle there always needs to be a person and an object of sociality. The third point of the triangle is free to define[,] as it were.”

-http://www.zylstra.org, 2006(emphases added)

Page 38: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

More emergents• Web Office

– Productivity tools in the social Web

– Zoho, Google

• Web OS– How much of

the desktop can migrate to the Web?

Page 39: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

(“Online Communities”, XKCD, April 2007 )…

For academia, this can seem a bit overwhelming

Page 40: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

(“Online Communities”, XKCD, April 2007 )

Already out of date

For academia, this can seem a bit overwhelming

Page 41: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Flickr and storytelling

• “Tell a story in 5 frames” group

“Gender Miscommunication”, Nightingai1e, 2006

Web 2.0 storytelling

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“Gender Miscommunication” (Nightingai1e, 2006)

Page 46: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social photo stories

Or remix social media into narratives

Example: "Farm to Food", Eli the Bearded (2008)

• Library of Congress collections

Page 47: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social photo stories

Page 48: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social photo stories

Page 49: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social photo stories

Flickr, Tell A Story in Five Frames group (http://www.flickr.com/groups/visualstory/)

Example: "Food to Farm", Eli the Bearded (2008)

Page 50: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social photo stories

Example: "Food to Farm", Eli the Bearded (2008)

Page 51: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social photo stories

Pedagogies:• Remix• Archive work• Social

presentation• Visual

literacy

(http://www.flickr.com/groups/visualstory/discuss/72157603786255599/;http://www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress/ )

Page 52: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social workshopping

In the Tell a story in 5 frames group, 'Alone With The Sand' , moliere1331 (2005)

Page 53: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Pedagogies and publications

Teaching with Web 2.0: it’s not all new - Web 1.0, internet pedagogies• Hypertext• Web audience• Discussion fora • Collaborative document authoring• Groupware

Page 54: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Teaching with Web 2.0: it’s not all new

Earlier pedagogies• Journaling• Media literacy

Page 55: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Teaching with Web 2.0: principles

http://smarthistory.blogspot.com/

Distributed conversation

Collaborative writing

Object-oriented discussion

Connectivism (G. Siemens, 2004)

Page 56: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Social object pedagogies

• Prompts• Discussion

object• Compositio

n materials

Page 57: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Teaching with Web 2.0: “net.gen”:“Fully half of all teens and 57 percent of

teens who use the Internet could be considered Content Creators, according to a survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.”

http://www.pewtrusts.com/pdf/PIP_Teens_1105.pdf

Page 58: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

“[S]tudents… write words on paper, yes— but… also compose words and images and create audio files on Web logs (blogs), in word processors, with video editors and Web editors and in e-mail and on presentation software and in instant messaging and on listservs and on bulletin boards—and no doubt in whatever genre will emerge in the next ten minutes.

Note that no one is making anyone do any of this writing.”

Kathleen Blake Yancey, "Made Not Only in Words: Composition in a New Key." CCC 56.2 (2004):297-328.Emphasis added.

Page 59: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

More social object pedagogies

• Annotate details

• Remix (“Make it mine”)

Jason Mittell, Middlebury College, spring 2008

(http://justtv.wordpress.com/2008/04/22/teaching-technology-remix-video/)

Page 60: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Wiki pedagogies

• Collective research

• Group writing• Document

editing• Information

literacy• Discussion• Knowledge

accretion(Romantic Audiences project

Bowdoin College, 2005-present

• Discussion• Knowledge

accretion

Page 61: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Edublogging for yearsSelected, documented

practices:• Publish syllabus• Publish student

papers• Discussion• Journaling• Project blogs• Public scholarship

• Creative writing• Distributed seminars• Campus organizations• Prospective students• Library collections• Alumni relations• Project management• Liveblogging

Page 62: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

New forms of scholarly communication

CommentPress implementation, Institute for the Future of the BooksMcKenzie Wark, Eugene Lang College

Page 63: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Still more bookblogging

Siva Vaidhyanathan, University of Virginia

Page 64: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Podcasts and teaching: profcasting

• Duke: “Classroom recording”

• Example: Bryn Mawr College, Michelle Francl, chemistry

Scholarly presseshttp://www.journalofamericanhistory.org/podcast/

Page 65: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Student program podcasting on campus

• War News Radio (Swarthmore College)

•PEPI courses (University of British Columbia, department of Land and Food Resources)

Page 66: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Podcasts and research• Public intellectual

– Out of the Past– Engines of Our

Ingenuity – In Our Time– University

Channel– The Missing Link

Page 67: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Academic open archives for social media

Freesound archive

•DIY copyright•Social networking values•University of Pompeu Fabra (Barcelona)

(http://freesound.iua.upf.edu/)

Page 68: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

• Peak or ubiquity?http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/14/the-death-of-web-20/

Page 69: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

What is “Web 3.0”?

Several models are in play:

• The 3-d Web• The Semantic Web• Web on mobile

devices• The social Web

(http://weblogs.elearning.ubc.ca/googlescholar/archives/046534.html )

Page 70: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 3.0?

• Web 3D, virtual world as browser

(Second Life scene;Sony, Home, from Wired)

Page 71: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

II. Web 3.0?

Missie Wadlandis game, http://www.wadlandis.nl/

Google Earth-Keyhole DB-2d: KML-3d: Sketchup-reach-Geotagging

photos, videos

• Web 3D, Google world as browser

Page 72: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 3D pedagogies• Virtual worlds• Teambuilding

…but not much Web content, yet

Arts Metaverse;Second Life,

Page 73: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 3.0?• The Semantic Web

“Ultimately, Reuters' news is the raw material for analysis and application by investors and downstream news organizations. Adding metadata to make that job of analysis easier for those building additional value on top of your product is a really interesting way to view the publishing opportunity…”

Page 74: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

“… If you don't think of what you produce as the "final product" but rather as a step in an information pipeline, what do you do differently to add value for downstream consumers? In Reuters' case, [CEO] Devin thinks you add hooks to make your information more programmable.”

Tim O’Reilly, February 2008http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/02/reuters-ceo-sees-semantic-web.html

Page 75: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Semantic tool in play: ClearForest Gnosis, FF plugin

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http://sws.clearforest.com/ examples from Wikipedia VLE, SakaiProject pages

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Android: CrunchnetiPhone: swruler9284

• Web 3D: the mobile Web

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The Social Graph, as Sir Tim sees it

“I called this graph the Semantic Web, but maybe it should have been Giant Global Graph! Any worse than WWWW? ;-)...

So, if only we could express these relationships, such as my social graph, in a way that is above the level of documents, then we would get re-use. That's just what the graph does for us. We have the technology -- it is Semantic Web technology, starting with RDF OWL and SPARQL…”

-CSAIL post, November 2007http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/215

Page 79: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

• Synthesis: Google's CEO's vision

[Eric Schmidt]: Web 3.0 would ultimately be seen as applications that are pieced together [and that share] a number of characteristics: the applications are relatively small; the data is in the cloud; the applications can run on any device - PC or mobile phone; the applications are very fast and they're very customizable...”

Page 80: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

Web 3.0?

[Eric Schmidt]: … and furthermore the applications are distributed essentially virally, literally by social networks, by email. You won't go to the store and purchase them. ... That's a very different application model than we've ever seen in computing...

Transcribed by Nicholas Carr, August 2007http://www.roughtype.com/archives/2007/08/what_is_web_30.php

Page 81: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

CriticismWhat do you mean, 3.0?

Reactions to question, “What do you think of the term, ‘Web 3.0’?”, from NITLE events in 2008:

•Faculty member: “AIEEE! no más!”•Instructional technologist: “My brain is exploding!”

Page 82: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

CriticismDeal with 2.0, already

“Gartner analysts are avoiding the temptation to give a new label to the latest technologies such as virtual worlds and the semantic Web, saying they’re not providing the same kind of fundamental change as blogs, wikis and social networking tools...”

November 2007, http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/092107-gartner-web-20.html

Page 83: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

CriticismDeal with 2.0, already

“…It’s not going to be another era like Web 2.0,” Phifer said. “However, there will be some very interesting innovative things coming out. If you’re in love with numbering schemes, maybe it’s Web 2.1.””

November 2007, http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/092107-gartner-web-20.html

Page 84: Willamette digital humanities seminar 2009, part 1

(presentation continued in part 2)