Saturday, 6 March 2010

Do they get it?

The internet and web (cloud) based applications, services and new devices are ushering in an exciting and incredible future for all of us, and no one can precisely predict how it will play out. Very soon all content will be able to be easily sourced through your TV, computers and a myriad of portable devices.

Resistance in Australia is plain to see by the antics of Telstra et al, and the media oligopoly who have been complicit with successive governments to hold back the tide of change and stifle opportunity and freedom to protect their profits. Just one example of resistance to change is the music industry resisting new distribution channels and their failure to adapt to change, now they have lost control. Their mediums are irrelevant, DVD, CD's etc are declining and electronic channels are controlled by new world models like iTunes.

Books and newspapers are quickly going the same way. Movies and television left the building long ago but at least that industry is playing catch-up, too little too late and I think many of the institutions and conglomerates of in that industry today will disappear. What most fail to realise is consumers will always embrace the channel that provides the greatest convenience.

Do old school, old money conservatives just not get it? Established corporations seem to view the web and all its emerging technologies through their limited perception of the past? Will they be the dinosaurs that flee the new business models and huddle together against the cold wind of change and die in venomous denial? Or will they slowly traverse the typical human response to change shock, denial, blame, self blame, uncertainty and hopefully through that slump upward into problem solving and adaptation.

This is not a generational thing entirely, there are plenty of people in the Y and X categories who while the technology is omnipresent for them, they have no vision of what opportunities it presents, and perhaps, nor do they care. For everyone is it too little too late?
One fascinating piece I know of is "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace" a paper on government regulation on the rapidly growing internet. It was written by John Perry Barlow, a founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and published online February 8, 1996 from Davos, Switzerland. Although primarily targeted to government at the time it has great relevance to todays business institutions. Some notable quotes are:

"Cyberspace consists of transactions, relationships, and thought itself, arrayed like a standing wave in the web of our communications. Ours is a world that is both everywhere and nowhere, but it is not where bodies live"

"You are terrified of your own children, since they are natives in a world where you will always be immigrants. Because you fear them, you entrust your bureaucracies with the parental responsibilities you are too cowardly to confront yourselves."

See the full text *here*

Another interesting article can be found here "Challenging the old media business models"

Walking in Sydney on a Saturday

Looking west from Five Dock across Hen and Chicken Bay you can see the prominent landmark of the Bushells Head Office Concord. The factory was used for tea production from 1958 and later instant coffee making, now I believe only coffee continues to be produced at the Concord Factory.
Nikon D300, Tokina 11-16 f2.8 @ ISO 200, 11mm f8, 1/320 sec
Click on photo for larger image view
Nikon D300, Tokina 11-16 f2.8 @ ISO 200, 11mm f8, 1/400 sec
Click on photo for larger image view
Some puffy thing I found interesting while on our walk.

Nikon D300, Nikkor 35mm f2 @ ISO 200, 35mm f8, 1/250 sec
Click on photo for larger image view
Grass . . . . . . . . . .
Nikon D300, Nikkor 35mm f2 @ ISO 200, 35mm f2, 1/1600 sec
Click on photo for larger image view

Wednesday, 3 March 2010

Birthday

Its my birthday, thanks to everyone for their best wishes and this beautiful card from Jacqui and Eladio. Happy birthday to my lovely daughter Jacqueline too as hers is on the same day. The events below happened in our birth years. Do you know which year and for whom they correspond?
  • The Summer Olympics are held in Melbourne, Australia.
  • The worlds first personal computer, the Commodore PET, is demonstrated at the Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago USA.
  • The Hungarian Revolution starts.
  • Portugal's traditional naming conventions change such that children's surnames can come from either the mother or the father, not just from the father.
  • Television broadcasting commences in Australia.
  • Star Wars opens in cinemas.
  • The hard disk drive is invented by an IBM team led by Reynold B. Johnson.
  • The first Apple II computers go on sale
  • Elvis Presley dies.

Nikon D300, Nikkor 35mm f2 @ ISO 450, 35mm f2, 1/60 sec
Click on photo for larger image view

Tuesday, 2 March 2010

Interesting Old Roof


Nikon D300, Nikkor 70-200mm f2.8 @ ISO 200, 82mm f16, 1/40 sec
Click on photo for larger image view

Monday, 1 March 2010

HDR Photography Re Post

High dynamic range photography is a technique that gets greater dynamic range of luminances between the lightest and darkest areas of an image than standard digital photography techniques. The wider dynamic range allows HDR images to more accurately represent the wide range of intensity levels found in real scenes as seen with the human eye. See Link for more info . . .

Nikon D300, Tokina 11-16 f2.8 @ ISO 200, 11mm f22, HDR
Click on photo for larger image view

Saturday, 27 February 2010

The Web 2.0 revolution


Throwing Sheep in the Boardroom (Authors: Matthew Fraser and Soumitra Dutta) could be subtitled everything you wanted to know about social media but didn't have the time ask. It examines how online social networking is transforming business. “throwing sheep” is a term the authors coin describing what people do on websites to get one another’s attention. For example “poking” someone online, an example of the Gen Y world of virtual social interaction.

Its seems like a useful introduction to the online reality of Web 2.0 powered social networking from the perspective of the authors who seem to have a theoretical understanding of economics, business and organisational behaviour. Social networking has exploded and blossomed into a significant cultural force. The underlying argument of this book is that the "Web 2.0 revolution represents a powerful rupture in established forms of social organisation” The authors contend that the Internet is fuelling changes in society’s social order, values and institutions. The book begins by outlining the social scientific understanding of interpersonal interactions, dividing them into three categories personal, organisational, and consumer. It also examines how social networks break down traditional, centralised, top down power structures, diffusing influence to the edges, including people from all occupations. I'm still reading (listening) to this book so here is a some paraphrasing form an online book review:

"The bulk of “Throwing Sheep” is devoted to a comprehensive account of the ways in which social networking affects everything from interpersonal communication to political activism, following the author’s thematic structure of identity (personal interactions), status (the organisational), and power (communal or civic activity). The conclusion of “Throwing Sheep” doesn’t offer much in the way of proscriptive recommendations, but rather a reprise of its key theme of social networking’s empowering promises. The authors do acknowledge some pitfalls or, as they describe it, the dark side of the Web 2.0 revolution, noting, “Never before have our identities been so exposed to danger.” Yet they trust that humanity’s inherent benevolence, integrity, and morality will prevail, and social networking’s benefits will outweigh the hazards that have already infiltrated social sites.

Key Concepts

• The Web 2.0 revolution, epitomised by social networking sites, represents what the authors call an “eruption” in established forms of social organisation, ushering in an era of increased self-awareness and self-reliance.

• For businesses, Web 2.0 social networks facilitate communication within the organisation and between company and customer.

• Within the enterprise, social networking knocks down departmental silos and corporate walls, all barriers to communication within the organisation.

• Used strategically, Web 2.0 social sites can allow business leaders greater control over their company’s brand, image, and reputation.

• Fundamentally, online social networking isn’t merely a method of communication or a by product of a changing society; it’s an instrument of change."


Throwing Sheep In the Boardroom: How Online Social Networking Will Transform Your Life, Work and World (Unabridged) Click the button to see the audiobook on iTunes or you can buy the old media version in any bookshop :-)