Whoa, Nelly! What Will Tech Look Like When We’re 90?

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Wednesday 31 December 2008 2:42 am

During the Christmas holidays, I visited family and friends; like most of you, our family and close friends came together, prepared a large meal, talked about the past year, and, of course, exchanged gifts.
Among those celebrating with us was a short, spunky, Scottish lady named Nelly. Real name Helen, Nelly has one of those rare energy levels that prompt her to hug and sometimes (if the music is right) dance with those around her. Nelly is a bundle of energy. Why else would friends call her Nelly rather than Helen. Nelly, by the way, is 92 years old.
While the gifts were being unwrapped, I pulled out my two digital cameras (a Kodak EasyShare and a HP Photosmart) and began to shoot those candid moments when surprise turns to happiness (or dismay) as family and friends opened their gifts.
In the process of shooting, Nelly looked at the cameras with amazement. She asked to look at one of them, and so I showed her a camera and the viewfinder, which showed her the pictures I had just taken. She shook her head in astonishment. When I removed the 2GB SD memory card from the camera and told her that all the pictures were stored on this tiny little device, I was afraid she would fall off her chair.
When I slipped the SD Card into a nearby laptop’s memory card reader and showed her the pictures and printed out a few, she look intently at the images and said with the wisdom of ninety plus years of life: “Aren’t they just beautiful pictures. Aren’t they just full of memories.”
While the technology amazed her initially (the advancements in digital photography, the shrinking size of storage devices, the ease to print photographs), she ultimately understood the real meaning behind the technology: It made picture-taking and sharing (and memory-making) more immediate. The human side trumped the technology insomuch that technology simply made the human experience among family and friends (the picture-taking process, for instance) more intimate, more immediate.
After the evening ended, I thought about those moments and wondered how technology will look like when we’re 90 years old. It will certainly amaze us as well, I am sure. I cannot even begin to imagine.
But we can be certain of one thing: Technology will continue to enable us to communicate, create, share, and bond (form communities) with others. How will all this transpire, I can only guess.
What are your ideas - what will technology look like when we hit 90 years old (God and good genes willing.)



Saturday / Sunday Slide: The Daydream

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Monday 29 December 2008 4:07 am

I discovered a gem of talent over the Christmas holiday: San Francisco-based ambient musician and artist Tycho (real name Scott Hansen).

Check out his music here and his art porfolio here.



Merry Christmas

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Thursday 25 December 2008 5:00 pm

Hello Readers,


Just wishing you all a very Merry Christmas, Season’s Greetings, Happy Holidays, and a Happy New Year.

Your blogger in arms,

the DA



“Do it now” revisited

Posted by Steve Lawson | Uncategorized | Wednesday 24 December 2008 9:31 pm

Do It Now

You may remember the “passion quilt” meme from this past spring, where bloggers were making a little image macro or slide that encapsulated a little nugget of advice. My contribution (seen here small, click to enlarge) was “do it now” with an image of my older son with saftey goggles and a drill.

Recently I came across a link (via Waxy) to an old episode of Ze Frank’s The Show. The episode is titled washington, ideas, brain crack. I hope you’ll watch it: it’s short, it’s funny, and he uses the F-word an awful lot in a way that I find silly and amusing, though YMMV depending on how you feel about the use of the F-word in general.

Ze’s “brain crack” is the other side of “do it now.” If you don’t do it now, the larger the idea will loom in your imagination, making it harder and harder to do it at all.

The other “do it now” I wanted to share with you was one of the main inspirations from my original passion meme post. I heard it when Lian Amaris, one of the drama faculty at Colorado College, gave a talk on her performance art piece, Fashionably Late for the Relationship. As a way of partially explaining how she came to embark on a demanding performance piece, staged on the Union Square traffic island in New York, she read a passage from the end of Anne Bogart’s book, A Director Prepares:

Allow me to propose a few suggestions about how to handle the natural resistances that your circumstances might offer. Do not assume that you have to have some prescribed conditions to do your best work. Do not wait. Do not wait for enough time or money to accomplish what you think you have in mind. Work with what you have right now. Work with the people around you right now. Work with the architecture you see around you right now. Do not wait for what you assume is the appropriate, stress-free environment in which to generate expression. Do not wait for maturity or insight or wisdom. Do not wait till you are sure that you know what you are doing. Do not wait until you have enough technique. What you do now, what you make of your present circumstances will determine the quality and scope of your future endeavors.

And, at the same time, be patient.

One Meme to Rule Them All

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Tuesday 23 December 2008 5:39 pm

There are memes, and then there are memes. A meme is a kind of chain letter for the blogosphere without any nasty curses or an overwhelmed inbox of chain-emails, as Walt at Random explains. Someone tags you or serves you a meme and you respond, in turn, following a set of rules.

I have one meme I am working on (I haven’t forgotten you, Oza). But I also served myself with a meme, right in time for the new year:
List 15 things you want to do or want to achieve in the new year, even if they sound improbable or unlikely.
Try it, if you like, and let me know what you wrote. Here’s what I came up with:
1. Attend the launch of a Space shuttle.

2. Fly to the UK, run across the countryside, and fly back home.

3. Meet at least one interesting person each day and learn something new each day

4. Write a book, or several, and give talks around the world to inspire others

5. Read more.

6. Make music.

7. Participate in something greater than myself.

8. Live boldly and authentically.

9. Sleep soundly at night and wake up energized and alert at 6 am.

10. Find a cool gig on a sunny campus in California next to the Pacific Ocean.

11. Dip my fingers in the Pacific Ocean. 

12. Meditate.

13. Rest the mind and work the body.

14. Travel to Asia.

15. Make awesome memories.

A few weeks ago, I was served a meme by local Montreal blogger Oza Meilleur, who blogs at Oza Meilleur (the making of), but, unfortunately, I still have not started working through it.
While I was thinking about Oza’s meme, I started toying with an idea for a new meme, which was partly inspired by a blog post I read on David Lee King’s blog. King, who blogs at, er, at David Lee King, is a librarian, musician, writer, blogger, and videographer and seems like a very nice guy. He loves his job and shares his joy through his numerous social networks.
King’s meme, or the one he had been served, has something to do with 99 things: Things you had done, things you want to do, and things you have not done and don’t ever want to do.
I thought about it, and found myself focusing on things you want to do. That particular one seemed full of possibilities, it was hard to resist.



Doing Business in Second Life: Is Your Digital Archive Open for Business?

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Monday 22 December 2008 7:58 pm

When I worked at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), I learned about a project developed by the World Bank Group called Doing Business, a five-year old project that reviews and ranks government and local business laws and regulations in over 180 member countries and determines which are the best for doing business.

According to the Doing Business blog, which is written by World Bank staff, the World Bank believes that “encouraging business is key to creating jobs and alleviating poverty.
A part of the Doing Business project that caught my attention was that the World Bank had created a virtual community in Second Life that supports the objectives and goals of Doing Business but in a virtual environment. While Doing Business is primarily a real world project, the World Bank is attempting to recreate its success in the virtual realm. In October 2008, the World Bank held its second virtual Doing Business meeting.

At the time, my IMF colleagues were considering whether or not Second Life could play a role in IMF activities. While plans were made to review Second Life further, I started wondering if virtual worlds and virtual communities could have a role in archives.
For those unfamiliar with Second Life, Second Life (or SL) is:
a 3-D virtual world created by its users, also known as residents. Since opening to the public in 2003, it has grown explosively and today is inhabited by millions of residents from around the globe. It offers a platform for communication, business, and education.

Let me know what you think. Archivists in Second Life???



The Friday Abstract: Don’t Fear the Archivist, er, the Reaper

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Friday 19 December 2008 4:47 pm

I usually do extensive research and perform mental calisthenics to write The Friday Abstract. But, alas, today, I have a fever and the only prescription is more cowbell!

From Saturday Night Live - “More Cowbell”



The Self-Interview: Tabloid Edition

Posted by David Kemper | Uncategorized | Tuesday 16 December 2008 10:01 pm
TABLOID Reporter: Dave? Dave?
Dave: What the–? I’m sorry, but I really have no time for this. I have to catch my bus.
TABLOID: A few questions for the scandal sheets…enquiring minds want to know…
Dave: I normally don’t talk to tabloids…
TABLOID: Whatever…You recently launched a third–yes, a third–blog. The question everyone wants answers to know is: Are you out of your mind? Three blogs? How are you gonna handle the pressure?
Dave: Out of my mind? No, of course not. Each blog serves a particular purpose. Arch.i.vi.us, for example, pretty much runs on its own. Not much intervention on my behalf. Just a few tweaks now and then. Thankfully, the blog remains a very good resource. I find something interesting there every day because the content it aggregates is always fresh and relevant.
TABLOID: Horrendous shameless plug. Now what about The DIGITAL Archive? Will your cornerstone blog be tossed to curb like your long line of ex-wives?
Dave: I cannot believe I am hearing you say these things. No, The DIGITAL Archive will remain online as long as its writer has something noteworthy to share.
But at the moment, what I am most proud of is my latest blog venture called Archives*Open, a blog that focuses on how archivists are using technology, particularly Web 2.0, to further enhance and improve public access to and understanding of archival material.
I hope to cultivate a collaborative team spirit with this blog, whereby other archivists can submit their Web 2.0 archival projects that they have recently launched or–and here’s a big scoop!–they can submit their own thoughts and comments on Web 2.0 and Archives.
TABLOID: Major scoop! Archivists can also submit their opinions on Web 2.0 and Archives?
Dave: Yes, that’s a new plan in order to make Archives*Open a more community-oriented, collaborative space. I welcome input. How would archivists use Web 2.0 in their archives? What Web 2.0 technologies, tools, or ethics would they want to implement, and why? I think it could generate some interesting discussions.
TABLOID: Wait a minute! Wait. One. Minute! Archivists and Web 2.0? You’ve got to be kidding me?! I bet half of them don’t know what Web 2.0 is and the other half who do know want nothing of it!
Dave: I refuse to sink to such levels of cynicism. I know archivists are cautious professionals, analyzing the situation before committing themselves or their limited resources. That’s smart. I mean, heck, I think we as a community are still figuring things out in regards to Web 2.0. This is all new stuff! But exciting new stuff, stuff that could change things for the better.
I believe Web 2.0 is a win-win situation, if we are willing to take a few calculated risks. Web 2.0 is not only about technology, it’s also about thinking differently, looking at things differently. For Archives*Open, it’s about thinking differently about access to archival materials. It’s all about giving access to the masses in innovative ways!
TABLOID: Ugh! You have to work on your marketing skills. Listen. I’m still not convinced. I think this Web 2.0 is essentially a fad, like Facebook and Twitter.
Dave: Platforms, like the ones you mentioned, will indeed change or disappear and re-appear with a different look. But the key is what they fulfill: They fulfill the innate human desire to communicate, connect, and build communities. Didn’t Seth Godin write a book called Tribes: We Need You to Lead Us, about people’s desire to form and join a movement, an idea–something along those lines?
TABLOID: OK, Socrates! You’re losing me here!
Dave: Nevermind.
TABLOID: So Archives*Open is open. That’s wonderful news. Great. So much for if it bleeds, it leads.
Dave: Is the interview over then? Are we done?
TABLOID: One last question!
Dave: No more, please. Out of my way.
TABLOID: Dave! Dave!
Dave: Yes! Yes! I’m right here!
TABLOID: Is it true you dumped Jessica Alba for Jessica Biel? And what’s with your obsession with Jessicas anyway?? Hey! Come back! You can’t run away…you can out run me but you can’t out run the paparazzi!

From time to time, I interview myself. I conducted a self-interview a few months ago which went quite well. It was a sit-down interview, one-on-one with myself across a table on a dimly-lit set with questions and answers in the spirit of an investigative Mike Wallace or a probing Charlie Rose interview.
This latest self-interview, however, was different. I don’t know what happened to the previously dignified journalist; he was gone, replaced by some kind of uncooth tabloid reporter, the type who snakes around your favourite watering hole, waiting for you to spill some saucy bit of gossip.
But since I do not drink, I was accosted right outside the The DIGITAL Archive office. Confused and unprepared, walking while talking, I had to react as best as I could when his mic sprung up in my face.



St. Johns County Public Library

Posted by njebbia | Uncategorized | Tuesday 16 December 2008 3:24 pm

Image

st_johns_cty_pub_lib.jpg

Author(s)

St. Johns County Public Library System

Description

Nice redesign of the St. Johns County Public Library using Drupal 6 as the content management system.

Clean format. Easy navigation. Good use of drupal tools to provide a library2.0 experience.

Saturday / Sunday Slide: BBtv Interviews the (other) Digital Archivist

Posted by dkemper | Uncategorized | Sunday 14 December 2008 1:00 am

Boing Boing, the technology and tech culture blog, recently interviewed a human rights digital archivist on its sister video website Boing Boing TV (BBtv, for short).

Popular tech writer Xeni Jardin interviewed WITNESS.ORG’s Grace Lile, the human rights’ organization’s digital archivist in charge of organizing and preserving institutional and user-submitted human rights videos and images.
I mention this piece because I was surprised and pleased to see such an influential blog as Boing Boing mention the importance and necessity of a digital archivist in our digital information age. 
Moreover, I was equally surprised and pleased to hear Ms. Lile talk about raising awareness about human rights issues and its history; engaging the public; and soliciting the public to participate online by submitting stories and videos to Hub, an experimental website designed to be a “global platform for human rights media and action.
UPDATE: Grace Lile added a comment and provided the URL to WITNESS’ Media Archive Blog.
Thanks, Grace. Check it out.



Next Page »