06. March 2008 · Write a comment · Categories: Uncategorized · Tags: , ,

Today, in a conversation with a group of people planning a conference on writing in the digital age, we slipped into a conversation about classic rock. It was a tangent from the idea of “old” writing methods. I suggested “classic” and we were off. But then it turned into a more serious consideration of the ways in which nostalgia about old technology affects how we might approach teaching with new technologies.

We reflected for a few moments on typing but then moved on to other topics. But I got to thinking about how people tend to get attached to doing things a certain way. My grandmother used to tell a story about a great uncle of hers, who fought in the Civil War. He lamented the loss of the fire as a source of heat. He said he just couldn’t feel warm without a crackling fire in the fireplace. The new-fangled steam radiators just didn’t cut it. And it didn’t really matter whether radiators generated more heat or not. He perceived that they didn’t.

It’s an interesting parallel since from 1865 to the early 20th century, there was a huge amount of industrial and technological innovation. In that man’s lifetime, the world went from horses to cars, from wood fires to steam heat, from candles to electric lighting. And those changes involved huge social changes as a result. Likewise, in my lifetime, we’ve gone from 3 channels to nearly infinite, typewriters to cloud computing, telephones to Skype. If my grandparents stories began, “Back in my day, I had to walk to school uphill both ways . . .” my stories begin, “Back in my day, I used correction tape to erase, one letter at a time . . .” In both cases, the implication is that the modern era is easier and the stuff we had to do “back in our day” built character and made us better people (cf. Calvin and Hobbes).

We build romantic notions around the tools we used to use, the methods we used that developed around those tools and we have a hard time letting go. We think that the new ways replace those old ways, but that’s not necessarily true. They can build on the old ways or make the old ways more efficient. But it does mean we need to look critically at those ways of doing things and not hold onto them out of nostalgia.

Today’s post is a presentation I’m giving in just an hour and a half about social networking. I haven’t added all the cites yet, but this will update automatically. Enjoy!

Update: Here is a list of the sources for most of this material. All of these are interesting and present a variety of views about issues surrounding social networking sites–our fear of them, our unexamined embrace of them, their commercialization, and the good things they bring us.

04. March 2008 · Write a comment · Categories: Uncategorized · Tags: ,

Has it been a week since I’ve blogged? Yikes. Mr. Geeky was away last week, so I was single parenting and then over the weekend, I convinced the kids to help me clean up around the house. So there. I spent the rest of the time watching bad tv and gaming. It’s what I do when the brain is mush.

Anyway, to keep the kids entertained over the weekend, I decided to download some movies for us to watch. And let me just say, it was rather frustrating. Not completely frustrating. Just rather. As this Wired article points out, the movie industry is going the same way as the music industry did. They’re creating restrictive distribution methods that prevent people from doing what they used to do with the old media. Case in point. For me, the best way to download a movie would be through Amazon because that goes directly to my TiVo so I can watch it on the big screen. But Amazon’s collection didn’t include anything I had any desire to watch, so I switched to iTunes. For my family viewing purposes, iTunes had a better selection, but I can only download to my computer. I can’t shift the media to my TiVo. If I had AppleTV, I could, but I don’t. In the old media days (and I know most people are still living in those days), I would have rented a DVD (or VHS) and it would have been no problem. I could watch it on the big screen without thinking twice. I guess the only equivalent old media issue that was similar was the VHS/Beta wars. And yes, I remember them.

What we need is a digital version of the DVD player. It shouldn’t matter where you rent your digital movie from. You should be able to send it to the box and play it in your TV–or wherever. As it was, I hooked up my computer to the TV and we watched everything just fine, but it wasn’t ideal. David Pogue also points out these issues in a recent column. He discusses the most maddening of problems with movie downloads:

Then there is the 24-hour limit. Suppose you typically do not start a movie until 7:30 p.m., after dinner and the homework have been put away. If you do not have time to finish the movie in one sitting, you cannot resume at 7:30 tomorrow night; at that point, the download will have self-destructed.

Again, not an issue with rented DVDs. You keep the movie for 3 days usually (or if you’re like me, a week or two). You can watch it over and over if you want. Not so with the digital movie unless you do so within the 24-hour period. And most of us just aren’t going to do that.

As both authors point out, the movie industry is pissing off the very people who are willing to shell out money for their products. And some of those people are going to turn to BitTorrent instead of iTunes. It has a better selection, it’s cheaper, and you can do whatever you want with it. Come up with the legal version of this and you’ll make money.

The same kinds of issues can be found in the music industry, which I also had experience with over the weekend. Songs and artists aren’t available through every digital venue, although it seems to be better than the movie industry. Still, just as I might choose which music store I go to because it’s close or I like the owner, I should be able to choose my digital music store for the same reasons.

Sadly, I get the feeling that most of this is not going to come out in the consumers’ favor.