The WWW may be 15 today. Or it may not be.
Anyone for cake, anyway?
Adventures in Digital Humanities and digital cultural heritage. Plus some musings on academia.
Wednesday, 30 April 2008
Photoshop Disasters
I'm really enjoying http://photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com/
Have you seen a truly awful piece of Photoshop work? Clumsy manipulation, senseless comping, lazy cloning and thoughtless retouching are our bread and butter. And yes, deep down, we love Photoshop.
If it is commercial and awful then please let us know!
Tuesday, 29 April 2008
Right Hand on Green
Ted Nelson, and the WWW moving on
Interesting blog post about a recent Ted Nelson (he who coined the term "hypertext", amongst other things) lecture at Oxford Uni:
(If you are unfamiliar with the whole Xanadu saga, its worth checking out this Wired piece from a few years ago).
Xanadu and Nelson are perfect and unworldly. The web is imperfect and worldly... [link]
(If you are unfamiliar with the whole Xanadu saga, its worth checking out this Wired piece from a few years ago).
Tuesday, 22 April 2008
Normal Service Shall Resume Shortly
...the book is submitted, and already in production. We're already designing the front cover, which is always fun. Before I go onto (or back to) other things, here's some interesting factoids about digital images:
- There are more than 14 million digital images uploaded to Facebook every day [source]
- The most common tag used on Flickr is "me" [source]
- The phrase "picture element" has been used to describe the individual points in a bitmap since 1927, and this wasnt shortened to pixel until 1965, using the popular abbreviation "pix" used by hollywood gossip columnists [source]
- Images could be sent over telegraph in 1843 - only three or four years after the discovery of "photography" itself. There is a hidden history of electronic, and digital images, which stretches back as far as the invention of the film camera. But you'll have to buy the book to read up on that one.
Wednesday, 16 April 2008
Amazon
I've been treating myself to lots of goodies to help with finishing up the book (which means buying things online when I meet targets, and waiting for the postman each morning with a look of glee on my face). Interesting background story (including video) to the opening of the new Amazon distribution center in Wales - and the beeb has provided some good behind the scenes pics of the distribution centre, which just shows the scale of such operations.
Other online retailers are available, natch. [link]
ps - I think the Ark of the Covenant may be hidden in a crate in there, somewhere....
Other online retailers are available, natch. [link]
ps - I think the Ark of the Covenant may be hidden in a crate in there, somewhere....
Wednesday, 9 April 2008
Did I Mention
... I finished a draft of the book! all 103,616 words of it. Then promptly went up to Scotland for a few days r+r. Good to see some snow and some real scenery.
Now I'm knee deep in formatting, before I send it to the publishers at the end of the month. It seems that for the bibliography, when citing online references, they want the date of original publication online, the date last updated, and the date I accessed it. *sigh*. The formatting guidelines are a few years old, from back when the web was spangly and new-ish and proper academics didnt really quote from online resources.
I have over 500 online references to check.... back down the salt (silicon?) mines, one last time....
Now I'm knee deep in formatting, before I send it to the publishers at the end of the month. It seems that for the bibliography, when citing online references, they want the date of original publication online, the date last updated, and the date I accessed it. *sigh*. The formatting guidelines are a few years old, from back when the web was spangly and new-ish and proper academics didnt really quote from online resources.
I have over 500 online references to check.... back down the salt (silicon?) mines, one last time....
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