Wednesday, May 7, 2014

epub

Here is a link to my epub:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/w4k8k60hcmlatyq/Huh%3F.epub

Digital Poster


A Digital Poster I made to advertise an experimental publication series I created for my social media class. The series explores the topic of language in three parts: the future, the past and the present. The future publication was created in the form of an ancient technology, the book. The book is titled6,909+, which can be bought on here. The title references the estimated languages that exist and have been documented in the world. The past publication takes on the form of an experimental epub, a fairly new technology and is titled Huh? The title for this publication references one of the first sounds ever spoken and one of the most universal words on Earth. The present publication is this tumblr: Emojified. This tumblr explores the current phenomenon of emojis and how they can substitute language and stand in for emotions in many different circumstances. 
Enjoy!

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Ink to Dot

The article Scan this Book! by Kevin Kelly reiterates just how powerful Google is and wants to be. The massive scanning project frighteningly reminds me of A Brave New World. Why do we need one universal library anyway? Is Google trying to monopolize knowledge? It's really a terrifying thought and one I cannot fully comprehend to imagine thousands of underpaid workers scanning thousands of books a day like robots. They may be scanning these books even as I sit here on my comfy couch typing this blog post. I suddenly feel disgusting...

Don't get me wrong, the idea of a universal library is revolutionary. One place where you can find all the knowledge you would ever need. It is a scholars dream come true. But what happens to the books after they are digitized is something that is mind boggling. Once scanned, Digital books consist of links upon links of information and can be tagged by users. These links and tags are what search engines pick up on. Is it possible that there will be so many tags for one book that a search engine will not be able to find it or archive it properly? Maybe all this interconnectedness in digital books is just too much. It's information overload. 

Kelly brings up another interesting area in the google book scanning project and that is copyrights. Google already faced copyright infringements for the scanning project, but this digitization of printed books raises interesting questions about copyright laws and what becomes of them once they are scanned. 

I recently watched a great documentary on the Google Book Scanning Project. Watch it here.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

The Resurrection of the Printed Book

Kenneth Goldsmith proclaims in The Artful Accidents of Google Books that "the book is far from dead: it's returning in forms that few could ever have imagined." The Art of Google Books, a Tumblr that collects strange and unusual errors found in the Google Books Archive, is just one of many examples Goldsmith highlights where these technological errors in systems take on new aesthetic forms.

The many examples of projects created on the basis of these errors was really captivating for me. Why are these errors so interesting? Is it because we think technology is never supposed to mess up? Or because we often confide in technology as if it is a more accurate depiction of life than reality itself? These were just a few questions I asked myself when reading Goldsmith's article and looking through the projects he describes.

Goldsmith suggests that the obsession with digital errors comes from the sense that these errors are on record and that they are permanent. For example, at such a massive scale of scans, Google is never going to go back and fix these errors because there are too many of them in Google Books. It would simply be impossible to do so and therefore, the errors will remain there, waiting for someone to find them like a new age scavenger hunt.

I think what is most interesting about these digital errors though is that they only exist the moment when technology and humanity intersect.

Must Speak Internet

How can one determine what the language of the present is? In order to know what exactly is the language of the present, isn’t only necessary to look at the language of the past? Let’s face it, no one talks like Shakespeare today. But is this a good or bad thing? Have we downgraded? I feel as though a major cause of the shift in our use of language today was the Internet. Is the internet then the root of our degradation of language?

There was a point starting in the late 90s when the internet was gaining popularity that it was the trend to shorten and abbreviate everything. Internet slang was developed to ease communication, but has it really? I guess it was faster to type ’ ur’ rather than ‘your.’ But with the fastness and easiness of this new slang comes consequences. These consequences are the loss of grammatical rule. Although it is still the trend to shorten words, I think people are beginning to revive the grammar part of language again. I feel like abbreviations and shortened words are less seen than when the Internet first began. I will openly admit that I still use ‘lol’ on a daily basis even when I am not even physically laughing. Some of this Internet slang that is now inherited in the generations around it may never go away.

I am speaking about language in relationship with the internet because that is where I believe language is the most dominant these days and there is many areas of the internet where this is proven. Just look at the hashtag phenomenon. People hashtag complete phrases today. The hash symbol was often used in information technology to highlight a special meaning. Look how the symbol has evolved.  Completely going against what the hash was originally used for, people now hashtag anything and everything. How can this function in the organization system that hashtags were intended for? Is there a limit to how much we can hashtag? Will this system of organization end in a complete chasm in internet databases?


I believe language is more cultural today than at any other periods throughout history. In order to truly understand the language of a specific culture, one must adopt or be conscious of their cultural surroundings. If you do not keep up with viral videos, memes, images, news, etc. surrounding social media than you my not understand what people are talking about. These forces of social media are what give cultural events importance. Social media is really what drives present day language.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

How Much is Too Much?

In James Gleick's article "After the Flood," he reflects on real and imagined libraries. Wikipedia is one of these so called imagined libraries. When I think of a traditional print-based library compared to Wikipedia I think of something that is definitive versus something that is infinitive.Wikipedia is a platform which can constantly be updated and changed and added to. Wikipedia has no limits in quantitative terms since now we are able to store anything  and everything in the "cloud," but a traditional printed encyclopedia has a certain amount of pages, a definitive beginning and end. Although the two platforms are similar in regards to the quality of what constitutes an entry, traditional library is a resource for printed archival information which has been carefully selected by experts as opposed to wikipedia which is a place for shared knowledge with contributors from all walks of life. Not only are people taking in knowledge on Wikipedia, but participating in the creation of it as well. Another thing that sets Wikipedia apart from traditional printed archives is the entries that exist. Wikipedia includes entries just about anything where as traditional encyclopedias, for instance, are more selective in terms of entries. I feel like Wikipedia is geared more towards the "everyman" so to speak where traditional archives are geared more towards people in the realm of academia.