April 2005


personal30 Apr 2005 11:17 pm

I attended the NMC 2004 conference that was at UBC last June. It was an incredible experience and everywhere I looked I saw the apple logo. I learnt that creativity = MAC. Contrast that with the CHI 2005 conference in Portland where very few MACs were visible.

I have MAC envy. There I said it. I wish I was one of those people standing in line to get the new Tiger OS X.

Thanks for the photos cybersoc. I envy you and other Mac users. Steve Jobs is a genius. Can non-Mac owners also join his cult?

personal30 Apr 2005 04:55 pm

After receiving way too many messages from a mailing list I was on (and this was with digest), I have filtered the messages directly into its folder bypassing my inbox. This type of information management is new to me. I am learning to have control over technology rather than having it dictate how I should live.

games29 Apr 2005 11:32 pm

Today at a Mobile Muse (Amusement Group) get together I met Florence Chee f2f. It was cool chatting to her because she had read my blog and I hers. I am definitely looking forward to seeing her presentation at digra 2005 in June. I wish it didn’t conflict with our Amusement digital dragon boat festival though.

life28 Apr 2005 11:04 am

I took this picture in the basement of our student union building. I think of it as the end of an era as the last payphones in the basement are being removed. One is all that remains. With people switching to mobiles, payphones are becoming obsolete.

ubicomp27 Apr 2005 11:06 am

WORKSHOP
Call for Participation

Space, Place and Experience in Human-Computer Interaction

Interact 2005
13th September 2005, Rome

As HCI research engages with the new interaction paradigms of mobile, pervasive and ambient computing, new challenges for user-centred interaction design arise. This one-day workshop will bring together a multidisciplinary group of practitioners in order to share experiences, explore foundations, and discuss an agenda for research in space, place and the experience of pervasive and ambient technology.

Issues of interest to the workshop include but are not limited to:

* Theories and conceptual frameworks for analysing space, place and the contextualisation of interaction with embedded systems
* Place, non-place and interaction spaces
* Methods, tools and techniques for the experience-centred design of emplaced technology
* Case studies in the design and use of ambient and pervasive technologies.

We encourage participation from a wide range of disciplines and practitioners including HCI, interaction design, architecture, product design, computer science, psychology, social sciences, cultural and media studies.

All participants are invited to submit a 2-4 page position paper. These will be refereed by a small committee and around 16 participants selected.

The day will be organized to include 10-minute presentations and discussions.

Please submit position papers (as a Word or PDF file) to peter.wright@cs.york.ac.uk by 30th May Participants will be notified by 10th June.

ubicomp26 Apr 2005 11:57 pm

I remember hearing about a windup radio by a British company that was really popular in Africa because it didn’t need electricity, one just wound it up for a set amount of time.

A Business Week online article discusses a windup device that will recharge your mobile for a short period of time. It is already successful in Africa.

life26 Apr 2005 11:44 pm

I am watching a webcam of the Airbus A380 being towed to the runway. It is a surreal feeling being able to watch a test flight. I wish I was there.

[update] The launch was successful!!!!!!!

culture26 Apr 2005 04:36 pm

14th EUROPEAN SEMINAR FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS IN CANADIAN STUDIES
Hosted by the University of Leeds & British Association for Canadian Studies 8 -11 September 2005 at York St John College

The University of Leeds is organising the 14th European Seminar for Graduate Students in Canadian Studies 2005, September 8-11. European students working on Master’s or PhD theses in Canadian Studies are invited to present their current research and to meet and exchange ideas with students from other countries.

The seminar, to be held in a small college in the heart of the beautiful city of York, will be organised in a series of eight workshops chaired by scholars and postgraduate students in the field of Canadian Studies. The seminar will start in the late afternoon of 8 September with a keynote address and will end in the late afternoon of 10 September. Workshops will alternate between open, i.e. those primarily designed to allow students to present their latest research, and themed, i.e. those designed to reflect on a special sub-theme which will also form part of the conference (see below)

Open Papers may be in any of the following areas:

Literature
Linguistics
Cultural Studies
Fine Arts/ Visual Arts
Environmental Studies
History
Geography
Politics
Sociology

ANY OTHER AREA OF CANADIAN STUDIES

Papers on the special conference sub-theme: Visualizing Violence

Canada and the impact of 9/11
Interethnic violence
Violence and the sacred
Violence in/and the media
Colonial/postcolonial manifestations of violence and counter-violence
Literary, cinematic and photographic representations of violence
Violence without/violence within: violence at home and in the workplace
Environmental violence (destruction in the name of development, urban blight, etc.);
Violence and the perception of Canada as a ’safe place’

ANY OTHER THEME ON VIOLENCE (relevant to Canadian Studies)

Contributions from all disciplines are welcome. Papers can be either in English or in French and should not exceed 20 minutes. Presentations will be followed by discussion.

How to apply: Anyone interested in participating should submit an abstract (300 words) indicating their topic of research or addressing any of the suggested themes, plus a short CV. Papers will be selected by the organising committee on the basis of the abstract. Invitations to participants will be sent out as soon as possible after the selection has been made.

Deadline for abstracts: 20 May 2005;
Official languages: English and French

Registration fee: 25 GBP (inc. accommodation and meals); Note maximum number of participants: 24

Travel expenses: These are the responsibility of the participants. Please apply for financial assistance to your university or to your national Association for Canadian Studies.

For information and submissions:
encssubmissions_at_leeds.ac.uk
ENCS conference,
c/o Prof. Graham Huggan
School of English,
University of Leeds
Woodhouse Lane,
Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK

personal24 Apr 2005 03:52 pm

Thanks to google for realising this was spam. I am not Wells Fargo customer, however I think it would be useful to give them the bank account numbers and passwords for my existing bank accounts :)
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If you choose to disregard this notification, your account might be restricted and you will not be able to:
• Access your account online
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Thank you for your prompt attention to this matter and for using Wells Fargo.

Brokerage accounts offered through Wells Fargo Investments, LLC (member SIPC), a non-bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company.
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Here is a website to report email fraud.
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culture24 Apr 2005 02:29 pm

CALL FOR PAPERS

International Conference on
CULTURAL ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY AND COMMUNICATION (CATaC’06)

28 June - 1 July 2006
University of Tartu, Estonia
http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/catac

Conference theme:
Neither Global Village nor Homogenizing Commodification:
Diverse Cultural, Ethnic, Gender and Economic Environments

The biennial CATaC conference series continues to provide an international forum for the presentation and discussion of current research on how diverse cultural attitudes shape the implementation and use of information and communication technologies (ICTs). The conference series brings together scholars from around the globe who provide diverse perspectives, both in terms of the specific culture(s) they highlight in their presentations and discussions, and in terms of the discipline(s) through which they approach the conference theme.

The 1990s’ hopes for an “electronic global village” have largely been shunted aside by the Internet’s explosive diffusion. This diffusion was well described by Marx - all that is solid melts into air - and was predicted by postmodernists. The diffusion of CMC technologies quickly led to many and diverse internets. A single “Internet”, whose identity and characteristics might be examined as a single unity, has not materialised. An initially culturally and gender homogenous Internet came more and more to resemble an urban metropolis. Along the way, in the commercialization of the Internet and the Web, “cultural diversity” gets watered down and exchanges strong diversity for a homogenous interchangeability. Such diversity thereby becomes commodified and serves a global capitalism that tends to foster cultural homogenization.

CATaC’06 continues our focus on the intersections of culture, technology, and communication, beginning with an emphasis on continued critique of the assumptions, categories, methodologies, and theories frequently used to analyse these. At the same time, CATaC’06 takes up our characteristic focus on ethics and justice in the design and deployment of CMC technologies. We particularly focus on developing countries facilitated by “on the ground” approaches in the work of NGOs, governmental agencies, etc., in ways that preserve and foster cultural identity and diversity. By simultaneously critiquing and perhaps complexifying our theories and assumptions, on the one hand, and featuring “best practices” approaches to CMC in development work, on the other hand, CATaC’06 aims towards a middle ground between a putative “global village” and homogenizing commodification. Such middle ground fosters cultural diversity, economic and social development, and more successful cross-cultural communication online.

Original full papers (especially those which connect theoretical frameworks with specific examples of cultural values, practices, etc.) and short papers (e.g. describing current research projects and preliminary results) are invited.

Topics of particular interest include but are not limited to:
- Culture isn’t ‘culture’ anymore
- The Internet isn’t the ‘Internet’ anymore
- Gender, culture, empowerment and CMC
- CMC and cultural diversity
- Internet research ethics
- Ethics and justice
- Cultural diversity and e-learning

Our conference themes provide a range of approaches to the questions raised.

SUBMISSIONS

All submissions will be peer reviewed by an international panel of scholars and researchers and accepted papers will appear in the conference proceedings. Submission of a paper implies that it has not been submitted or published elsewhere. At least one author of each accepted paper is expected to present the paper at the conference.

Full papers (10-20 formatted pages) - 13 February 2006
Short papers (3-5 formatted pages) - 20 February 2006
Workshop submissions - 20 February 2006
Notification of acceptance - mid March 2006
Final formatted papers - 29 March 2006

There will be the opportunity for selected papers from this 2006 conference to appear in special issues of journals. Papers in previous conferences have appeared in journals (Journal of Computer Mediated Communication, Electronic Journal of Communication/La Revue Electronique de Communication, AI and Society, Javnost- The Public, and New Media and Society) and a book (Culture, Technology, Communication: towards an Intercultural Global Village, 2001, edited by Charles Ess with Fay Sudweeks, SUNY Press, New York). You may purchase the conference proceedings from the 2002 and 2004 conference from www.it.murdoch.edu.au/catac.

CONFERENCE CO-CHAIRS AND CONTACTS
Dr Charles Ess
Distinguished Research Professor
Interdisciplinary Studies
Drury University
Springfield MO 65802 USA
catac@it.murdoch.edu.au
OR
Dr Fay Sudweeks
School of Information Technology
Murdoch University
Murdoch WA 6150 Australia
catac@it.murdoch.edu.au

PROGRAM CHAIR
Ao Univ Prof Dr Herbert Hrachovec, University of Vienna, Austria

CONFERENCE CO-VICE-CHAIRS
Pille Runnel, Tartu University, Estonia
Pille Vengerfeldt, Tartu University, Estonia

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