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January 19, 2007 by Jim Parker in blogging, future, media, technology
Dear Fred,
In response to Widget Removal - Please Vote:
First off, I’ve been a big fan of yours for over a year now. In that time, I have read every post you’ve made, I have linked at least a couple of times from my blog, and I have made several comments (some perhaps naïve). I read you not because you are worth millions, nor because, necessarily, that other people link to you. Rather, I read you because your writing is good, your perspective is fresh, your insight is intelligent, and you mostly march to the beat of your own drum. So I have an aspiration just like the tramp in Think and Grow Rich: I plan to do business with you one day (today is not that day, though).
Additionally, I am a web application developer by trade.
Given the above self-perceived notion of my authority, I consider myself an expert consumer of your blog and have a good understanding of the technical issues that you face with your widgets.
So here are my thoughts.
You are an influential blogger who desires to express yourself with the best of breed that web services companies have to offer via widgets. You are aggregating your presence on the world wide web into a single easily reachable and easily consumable web site. Anybody in the world who wants to understand who you are has free access to more information than I have of my own best friend. This you achieve with the help of all the wonderful widgets.
In my opinion, this has incredible cultural significance. You are helping to usher in a world where people are no longer afraid to share their personal details – a world where transparency is the norm instead of just the occasional pleasant surprise.
Thus, I vote for you to keep all of your widgets.
Furthermore, I implore you to ask different questions in dealing with the widgets issue. Instead of asking what to remove, ask what can be done to make them do what you want them to (speed, look-and-feel, etc).
Technology brought you all of these wonderful tools and technology can make them all work the way you want. You know that is true. Settle for nothing less.
January 4, 2007 by Jim Parker in avatar, future, technology
Avatars will become our agents, handling all contacts with the world when we don’t want to or when we can’t.
We can’t be everywhere all of the time. But we want to be. Back in the day, we purchased answering machines, and then voice mail. These were (are) a very simple way of communicating to anyone the following:
Perhaps not everyone wanted to communicate all of the above things, but everyone at least wanted to communicate one of them. In effect, we “programmed” our answering machines/voice mail to handle contacts from the world.
And my point in bringing up voice mail is that people don’t always want to be live or can’t always be live – yet, they still want to be properly represented. In this case, voice mail is acting as their agent.
Jump to today and beyond:
Avatars are commonplace today on the internet. Second Life and such virtual worlds aren’t the only place to find them though. Any graphical representation of your person is a form of avatar – be it a picture, a cartoon, a stick-in-the-mud, or anything. It is something that represents you. And these are found everywhere – Myspace, mybloglog, digg, blogs, youtube, flickr, etc, etc, etc.
However, the real future of avatars is with a company called OddCast. OddCast provides slick animation-synced-with-speech avatars. They move, they talk, they watch what you are doing. And they are capable of Text-To-Speech.
Imagine this scenario:
But this scenario is just the beginning. Ray Kurzweil’s avatar “Ramona” can answer questions. Thus, when the tools to consume natural language become more ubiquitous, I too will be able to easily setup a database of my life, my writings, my pictures, my video’s, etc and serve it all up through my avatar.
Avatars are becoming programmable. They will soon be our programmable agents, just as the answering machine is today.
January 2, 2007 by Jim Parker in family, future, media, technology
What a wonderful fall it has been, truly a dream come true. I’ve been dying to come back and write about all my news. I’ve got a lot to talk about.
Arianna and Ethan are doing well - they are a very loud bunch. They’ve brought joy to my life I never knew I could have.
Thus, I have a different perspective on everything - different than the perspective I had yesterday.
And I have learned this: Blogging, managing my online identity, and connecting to more and more people is something that I love to do. This is my passion: Using technology to bring people together in ways they never knew were possible (in addition to the passion I have for my family).
May 19, 2006 by Jim Parker in media, technology
Boy have I got a lot to learn…
On his site, Umair made a comment on one of my a recent posts. My post included this:
“…Things like search cost and distribution cost and microchunking cost (sorry umair ) don’t add up to a hill of beans when it comes to true entertainment value.” jim parker
Umair added:
“What is microchunking, from a functional point of view? The ability for people to be more creative, without having to pay the costs of buying a block of mass media time.”
…which is exactly true. I was missing the point…which is this: As we mitigate the costs of such powerful tools such as search, distribution, and microchunking, these tools will be much more desired by people who want to create (because they have become/will become cheap and easy to use). People would rather play an active role in their entertainment - they don’t actually want to sit passively, (err sleeping), watching “a block of mass media time”. They want to contribute, interact, meet people, make relationships, all in the name of fun entertainment. That’s what super high-tech and super usable search, distribution, microchunking, etc, etc affords them.
It’s entertainment that develops you. Improves you. Excites you. And it’s custom made just for you.
I don’t know why, but I have a huge, huge respect for “the tools of economics”. Thanks for that Umair.
So I suggest this: The people will, indeed, have the power. We just need to get them the tools ASAP. They are waiting on us right now.
jim
May 17, 2006 by Jim Parker in family, future, technology
(or when virtual reality becomes actual reality)
I had a conversation with a close body a couple of weeks ago about how Virtual Reality (VR) will enhance the family experience. His argument was “Why would anybody want to spend any time in an area that just wasn’t real? I’d rather have real life than a made up fantasy land.” Which is a very well made point.
Yet, I believe otherwise. I asked: “When you go see a movie in the movie theatre, how much of that 2 hours do you actually spend communicating with your family?”. Continuing with, “Most families I see at the movie theatre are very quietly, politely sitting in submission to the big screen.” “Is that what you call real?”, I asked.
Instead, my vision of what’s really real is when a family meets in VR on a Friday night from 6pm until 8pm every week.
The Son, living in New York, the sister in Chicago, the parents in St. Louis, and everyone comes together for some family activity once a week. Exploring the Taj Mahal this week, Grand Canyon next week, the Florida Keys the week after that - all virtually, but all together. Making ripples back and forth on the pools of the Taj Mahal, standing at the edge of The Canyon, wind blowing everyone’s hair as we watch a beautiful sunset, or taking a couple of jet skis weaving in and out of dangerous coral areas…But never life threateningly dangerous…and all of this I share real-time with my family.
What could possibly be more real than that?
Other Posts By Jim
Dear Fred,
In response to Widget Removal - Please Vote:
First off, I’ve been a big fan of yours for over a year now. In that time, I have read every post you’ve made, I have linked at least a couple of times from my blog, and I have made several comments (some perhaps naïve). I read […]
It looks like the Old Media Companies have their own idea about Media 2.0. Though they’re smart enough to not call it “Media 2.0″. I think they’ve got it figured out. The mainstream media is definitely changing. I believe that Old Media is well positioned to reap the benefits of the value they are creating.
What […]
If you have any interest at all in the issue of flag burning, please read this post: I wish I knew what I know now, when I was younger by Tony Alva.
He says what I would say if I were so eloquent.
I’ll not be posting anything in the near future…busy with a project and the babies. Try back in January ‘07.
In the mean time, visit the Parker Family blog where I will be posting pictures every couple of weeks.
What a wonderful fall it has been, truly a dream come true. I’ve been dying to come back and write about all my news. I’ve got a lot to talk about.
Arianna and Ethan are doing well - they are a very loud bunch. They’ve brought joy to my life I never knew I could have.
Thus, […]
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