Alex Soojung-Kim Pang, Ph.D.

I study people, technology, and the worlds they make

Month: July 2004 (page 1 of 7)

When science and folk wisdom agree

It turns out that Kansas really is flatter than a pancake:

In this report, we apply basic scientific techniques to answer the question “Is Kansas as flat as a pancake?”

While driving across the American Midwest, it is common to hear travelers remark, “This state is as flat as a pancake.” To the authors, this adage seems to qualitatively capture some characteristic of a topographic geodetic survey 2. This obvious question “how flat is a pancake” spurned our analytical interest, and we set out to find the ‘flatness’ of both a pancake and one particular state: Kansas.

If you think soil scientists don’t know how to have a good time…

From a NASA press release:

SCIENTISTS’ SHOWDOWN WITH SOIL MOISTURE AT THE O.K. CORRAL

Tombstone, Ariz., is a dusty place known for Wyatt Earp’s famous 1881 “Shootout at the O.K. Corral.” This year, from August 2 to 27, it will be known as the place where scientists from NASA, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and other institutions gather and study soil moisture to improve weather forecasts and the ability to interpret satellite data.

Conference blogging

I think conference blogging is one of the greatest user-driven innovations in the blogosphere: they create records of events that are almost always ephemeral, usually have a limited audience, but can be extremely stimulating. Then I saw this piece on a recent Churchill Club meeting on blogging, which “condenses the essential content of any past and future social-software panels”:

“Welcome blah blah blah relationship capital blah blah blah social contracts blah blah blah media businesses blah blah blah identify the rabid fans of the iPod blah blah blah utility media blah blah blah this is the future of the Web blah blah blah RSS blah blah blah spam blah blah blah killer app blah blah blah business model blah blah blah advertising model blah blah blah Is this a product or a feature? blah blah blah… monetizing relationships blah blah blah a new dimension to the Web blah blah blah I met my wife on Match.com blah blah blah…. The entire Web is a social network blah blah blah Join me in thanking tonight’s moderators blah blah blah Goodnight.”

Read the whole thing. Brilliant!

When old technologies were… still old*

Nokia, Schmokia: Meet the Low-Tech Pokia

When he walks down the street trying out his nifty invention, Nicholas Roope looks just a little bit crazy.

He is, after all, talking into a heavy, black, old, Bakelite telephone handset, with a thick coiled cord leading into his pocket.

*Apologies to Carolyn Marvin

BookCrossing

Via Foe Romeo’s about me page, I stumbled upon BookCrossing, a Web site that’s a cross between Where’s George and a book club. The idea is that you

1) Read a good book (you already know how to do that)
2) Register it here (along with your journal comments), get a unique BCID (BookCrossing ID number), and label the book
3) Release it for someone else to read (give it to a friend, leave it on a park bench, donate it to charity, “forget” it in a coffee shop, etc.), and get notified by email each time someone comes here and records journal entries for that book.

The idea is to construct a category of itinerant books that move from reader to reader, to follow the interesting places those books go, and to see what conversations those “wild and free” books can stimulate. (Xeni Jardin talks about another category of sites that mix of auction, social software, and peer to peer in the latest Wired.)

An interesting idea, and a neat way to get rid of those extra copies of books that you liked at one time but aren’t doing anything but taking up space on your bookshelf.

New Yorker on the Web jihad

Lawrence Wright has a terrific article in the latest New Yorker on jihadi Web sites, and the role that the Internet is playing in radical Islam. A couple key grafs:

The Internet provides confused young Muslims in Europe with a virtual community. Those who cannot adapt to their new homes discover on the Internet a responsive and compassionate forum. “The Internet stands in for the idea of the ummah, the mythologized Muslim community,” Marc Sageman, the psychiatrist and former C.I.A. officer, said. “The Internet makes this ideal community concrete, because one can interact with it.” He compares this virtual ummah to romantic conceptions of nationhood, which inspire people not only to love their country but to die for it.

“The Internet is the key issue,” Gilles Kepel, a prominent Arabist and a professor at the Institut d’Études Politiques, in Paris, told me recently. “It erases the frontiers between the dar al-Islam and the dar al-Kufr. It allows the propagation of a universal norm, with an Internet Sharia and fatwa system.” Kepel was speaking of the Islamic legal code, which is administered by the clergy. Now one doesn’t have to be in Saudi Arabia or Egypt to live under the rule of Islamic law. “Anyone can seek a ruling from his favorite sheikh in Mecca,” Kepel said. “In the old days, one sought a fatwa from the sheikh who had the best knowledge. Now it is sought from the one with the best Web site.”

Dissed again

This morning my officemate brought in her daughter. This is the same little charmer who, a couple weeks ago, asked if she could “see some other people” after I tried to engage her in conversation.

This morning, she came in wearing a little backpack. Her mom said, “Why don’t you show Alex your backpack.”

She shook her head. “No, I don’t have much time.”

The invisible iPod

The beauty of invisible devices:

“The iPod is a pleasure to use because I never have to think about how to use it.” (Michael Feldstein, “A Thousand Affordances in Your Pocket“)

Of course, there are lots of kinds of invisibility- or perhaps more accurately, lots of ways to generate the effect (or illusion) or invisibility.

The great cosmic balance

Dahlia Lithwick perfectly balances out Wonkette. Celestial harmony is maintained….

Dismissed in Boston

…I keep thinking that one speaker at this convention needs to stand up at that podium tonight and say: “Ladies and Gentlemen. Abu Ghraib. Thank you. Goodnight.” Because shouldn’t this election ultimately be a referendum on the rule of law? Shouldn’t the only issue before us be whether or not there will be legal constraints on executive power?

Fascinating convention facts

According to Slate, “Wolf Blitzer’s high-tech earpiece mic… [is] the same kind Britney Spears uses in concert.” Who knew?

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