Saturday, June 26, 2010
Friday, June 25, 2010
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Situated Technologies
http://www.situatedtechnologies.net/
It is a pamphlet architecture think tank based in conjunction with the architectural league of NY Center for Virtual Architecture, The Institute for Distributed Creativity . basically people that are dealing directly with the idea of networks on urban space.
They are really cutting edge in terms of the architectural implications so its worth a read. If anything it can bring a level of criticality to the ideas.
Protip. Read the bibliography to get real source information. in reality we all stand on the shoulders of giants in terms of pushing ideas. so its good to track where technology and social networking is going.
University of Buffalo is starting to make waves in this field as is MIT of course.
It is a pamphlet architecture think tank based in conjunction with the architectural league of NY Center for Virtual Architecture, The Institute for Distributed Creativity . basically people that are dealing directly with the idea of networks on urban space.
They are really cutting edge in terms of the architectural implications so its worth a read. If anything it can bring a level of criticality to the ideas.
Protip. Read the bibliography to get real source information. in reality we all stand on the shoulders of giants in terms of pushing ideas. so its good to track where technology and social networking is going.
University of Buffalo is starting to make waves in this field as is MIT of course.
Labels:
michael shyu,
reference
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Public Space: Lens
I am viewing public space through the lens of Hannah Arendts view of public space. ie spatial qualities of architecture that allow for the free exchange of ideas in the face to face meeting of individuals. My overall arguement is that physical public space is no longer analogous to that idea do to the mobilized network allowing for users to interact via thier social networks. By creating an open source public space to faciltate the network, this can break the privacy of the virtual social network as well as try to re-engage the sphere of architecture as a means of public activism rather than a background for it.
"The second feature stressed by Arendt has to do with the spatial quality of public life, with the fact that political activities are located in a public space where citizens are able to meet one another, exchange their opinions and debate their differences, and search for some collective solution to their problems. Politics, for Arendt, is a matter of people sharing a common world and a common space of appearance so that public concerns can emerge and be articulated from different perspectives. In her view, it is not enough to have a collection of private individuals voting separately and anonymously according to their private opinions. Rather, these individuals must be able to see and talk to one another in public, to meet in a public-political space, so that their differences as well as their commonalities can emerge and become the subject of democratic debate.
This notion of a common public space helps us to understand how political opinions can be formed which are neither reducible to private, idiosyncratic preferences, on the one hand, nor to a unanimous collective opinion, on the other. Arendt herself distrusted the term “public opinion,” since it suggested the mindless unanimity of mass society. In her view representative opinions could arise only when citizens actually confronted one another in a public space, so that they could examine an issue from a number of different perspectives, modify their views, and enlarge their standpoint to incorporate that of others. Political opinions, she claimed, can never be formed in private; rather, they are formed, tested, and enlarged only within a public context of argumentation and debate."
*excerpt taken from the Stanford University Encyclopedia of Philosphy, and the Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford, CA 94305
"The second feature stressed by Arendt has to do with the spatial quality of public life, with the fact that political activities are located in a public space where citizens are able to meet one another, exchange their opinions and debate their differences, and search for some collective solution to their problems. Politics, for Arendt, is a matter of people sharing a common world and a common space of appearance so that public concerns can emerge and be articulated from different perspectives. In her view, it is not enough to have a collection of private individuals voting separately and anonymously according to their private opinions. Rather, these individuals must be able to see and talk to one another in public, to meet in a public-political space, so that their differences as well as their commonalities can emerge and become the subject of democratic debate.
This notion of a common public space helps us to understand how political opinions can be formed which are neither reducible to private, idiosyncratic preferences, on the one hand, nor to a unanimous collective opinion, on the other. Arendt herself distrusted the term “public opinion,” since it suggested the mindless unanimity of mass society. In her view representative opinions could arise only when citizens actually confronted one another in a public space, so that they could examine an issue from a number of different perspectives, modify their views, and enlarge their standpoint to incorporate that of others. Political opinions, she claimed, can never be formed in private; rather, they are formed, tested, and enlarged only within a public context of argumentation and debate."
*excerpt taken from the Stanford University Encyclopedia of Philosphy, and the Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford, CA 94305
Labels:
michael shyu,
michael shyu midterm,
reference
Spinning DNAudio Augmented logo online
CLICK HERE TO TRY IT, you need a webcam though
Print the marker and go here to test:
DNAudio Augmented reality logo LINK
Labels:
app,
augmented reality,
Carson Smuts
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Monday, June 21, 2010
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