Jul 2, 2011
If you’re longing for a digital networking space that lets you easily share information with the different facets of your life, then put Google Plus at the top of your “to explore” list. (Assuming you can wrangle an invitation!)
If you’re longing for a digital networking space that lets you easily videoconference with 10 people while everyone watches (and chats about) the same YouTube clip, then put Google Plus (hangouts) at the top of your “to explore” list.
If you’re longing for a digital networking space that integrates functional email, real cloud-based documents, an attractive photo gallery … and lets you eavesdrop on conversations like Twitter does (no reciprocity required in setting up circles) … then put Google Plus at the top of your “to explore” list.
And if you long for a digital networking space that will allow you to easily and simultaneously communicate with people inside and outside of the space … then you must put Google Plus at the top of your “to explore” list.
In October 2009, Google launched Wave. The current launch, Google’s third foray into “social”, is nothing like Wave, except for the clamor to “let me in!”
With Google+, things work. The interface is clean, light, inviting. Engineers have anticipated how we might use existing shorthand (from Twitter and Facebook), such as replying in a comment thread by putting @ in front of someone’s name. They turn that @ into a + automagically and the name becomes a link to the person’s Google profile page. Read more…

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Mar 8, 2009
Twitter is mocked on Daily Show and Colbert Report, adopted by NPR’s Daniel Shorr, and dissed by The Seattle Times Danny Westneat. Monday on The Conversation (Noon, KUOW 94.9), what does Twitter mean to you? Our own Kathy Gill will explain. Our skeptic will be Michael Huntsberger, Professor of Communications Studies, Furman University, Greenville S.C.. He wrote
“I’m not sure that Twitter is such a great thing, because it allows people to communicate without reasonable consideration. Twitterers bypass logic and simply react. I find this especially troubling when we’re talking about members of Congress. Some say the instantaneous nature of Twitter “humanizes” users. I believe it dehumanizes them, like a pack of dogs barking at every passing siren. In a democracy, the bar for civic participation needs to be a lot higher.”
Woof!
Listen live, on line, call the feedback line ahead of time, 206 221 3663, weigh in our fanpage KUOW’s The Conversation with Ross Reynolds, and/or tweet #kuowconvo.

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Feb 2, 2009
Facebook. Twitter. Mybarackobama.com. Text messaging. The president-elect used all of these digital tools to devastating effect in the 2008 election. How did he do it? What strategic lessons can we learn from Barack Obama’s high-tech campaign? How might he deploy this online army of millions to govern? And does President Obama’s historic rise to the White House also propel social networking into the mainstream?
The answers to these important questions have a profound impact on the very near future of our democracy, as well as how we organize, communicate and even do business in the digital age. On the eve of the Obama inauguration, the University of Washington’s Master of Communication in Digital Media program held a dynamic, engaging “UW Insight” conversation that sought to put this digital revolution in perspective.
Part 1 includes the Introduction to this event and a presentation by Prof. Lance Bennett, UW Political Science and Communication, on the digital tools employed during the election.
Parts 2 & 3 after the jump…
Read more…

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Jan 30, 2009
Yes, this is a little late in coming, but I wanted to blog about it for my friends and colleagues in the MCDM community anyways. It seemed especially fitting to send this out to the gang because not only does the subject cover a multitude of issues we’ve discussed and continue to study relative to the Digital Media program, but it’s got Stephen Colbert, too. And as far as I’m concerned, anything with Stephen Colbert is required viewing.
So, a couple of weeks ago Lawrence Lessig from Stanford appeared on The Colbert Report to discuss how copyright law is complicating things for everybody in the digital era, especially for kids, who are, unfortunately, being turned into criminals by institutions like the RIAA. Here’s the interview:
Lessig on The Colbert Report
Of course, near the end Colbert pretty much invites the world to take his material, even this interview, and “remix” it however they want. Three cheers for encouraging the Colbert Nation to steal Viacom’s intellectual property! And, of course, it was only a matter of time before the Interwebs would be all over this challenge.
Read more…

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