| Culture Books |
1. Networked Publics 2. Best Ideas for Teaching with Technology 3. Republic.com 2.0 4. Welcome to the Machine: Science, Surveillance, and the Culture of Control 5. Cyberbullying and Cyberthreats: Responding to the Challenge of Online Social Aggression, Threats, and Distress 6. IT Success!: Towards a New Model for Information Technology 7. The Masters of Deception: Gang That Ruled Cyberspace, The 8. Tagging: People-powered Metadata for the Social Web (Voices That Matter) 9. Closer: Performance, Technologies, Phenomenology (Leonardo Books) 10. Digital Retro: The Evolution and Design of the Personal Computer
|
|
ASUS Launches External COMBO Drive for Multimedia Purposes ASUS Launches the CB-5216A-U External COMBO Drive for Fast Data Read/Write/Rewrite and Digital Multimedia Entertainment
BlueArc Turns Titan Up Another Notch BlueArc has unveiled new management software for its high-end unified storage system that offers a range of features from virtualization and ILM to remote mirroring and compliance.
Toshiba boasts smallest hard disk drive Monsters and Critics.com, UK -... It will be able to store more than 1,000 songs, about the same capacity as Apple Computer, Inc.`s popular iPod mini, the Asahi Shimbun reported Monday. ...
Gpic Worm Hits AIM UPDATED: Gpic.aol is the latest in a spate of worms to hit AOL's IM client.
|
|
| Books - Digital Business & Culture -
Culture |

|
Networked Publics
Authors: Hardcover, 186 pagesPublisher: The MIT Press Publication Date: 2008-10-31 Reviews :

Digital media and network technologies are now part of everyday life. The Internet has become the backbone of communication, commerce, and media; the ubiquitous mobile phone connects us with others as it removes us from any stable sense of location. Networked Publics examines the ways that the social and cultural shifts created by these technologies have transformed our relationships to (and definitions of) place, culture, politics, and infrastructure. Four chapters—each by an interdisciplinary team of scholars using collaborative software—provide a synoptic overview along with illustrative case studies. The chapter on place describes how digital networks enable us to be present in physical and networked places simultaneously (on the phone while on the road; on the Web while at a café)—often at the expense of non-digital commitments. The chapter on culture explores the growth of amateur-produced and -remixed content online and the impact of these practices on the music, anime, advertising, and news industries. The chapter on politics examines the new networked modes of bottom-up political expression and mobilization, and the difficulty in channeling online political discourse into productive political deliberation. And finally, the chapter on infrastructure notes the tension between openness and control in the flow of information, as seen in the current controversy over net neutrality. An introduction by anthropologist Mizuko Ito and a conclusion by architecture theorist Kazys Varnelis frame the chapters, giving overviews of the radical nature of these transformations. Online content including a research blog and lecture videos may be found at http://www.networkedpublics.org. Contributors: Walter Baer, François Bar, Anne Friedberg, Shahram Ghandeharizadeh, Mizuko Ito, Mark E. Kann, Merlyna Lim, Fernando Ordonez, Todd Richmond, Adrienne Russell, Marc Tuters, Kazys Varnelis....
$35
New Price: $20
|
| |

|
Best Ideas for Teaching with Technology
Authors: Justin Reich. Thomas Daccord. Paperback, 291 pagesPublisher: M.E.Sharpe Publication Date: 2008-06-11 Edition: 1 Reviews :

This practical, how-to guide makes it easy for teachers to incorporate the latest technology in their classes. Employing an informal workshop approach, the book avoids technical jargon and pays special attention to the needs of teachers who are expanding the use of computers in their classroom. The authors focus on what teachers do and how they can do it better, and provide a wide variety of proven tools, tips, and methods for enhancing these activities with technology. The book provides extensively illustrated tutorials for a wide variety of software, online tools, and teachning techniques. It covers everything from lesson plans, to time management, how to show animation, blogging, podcasts, laptop strategies, and much, much more...
$34.95
New Price: $26.62
|
| |

|
Republic.com 2.0
Authors: Cass R. Sunstein. Hardcover, 272 pagesPublisher: Princeton University Press Publication Date: 2007-08-20 Reviews :
What happens to democracy and free speech if people use the Internet to create echo chambers--to listen and speak only to the like-minded? What is the democratic benefit of the Internet's unlimited choices if citizens narrowly limit the information they receive, creating ever-smaller niches and fragmenting the shared public conversation on which democracy depends? Cass Sunstein first asked these questions before 9/11, in Republic.com, and they have become even more urgent in the years since. Now, in Republic.com 2.0, Sunstein thoroughly rethinks the critical relationship between democracy and the Internet in a world where partisan Web logs have emerged as a significant force in politics and where cyber-jihadists have embraced the Internet to thwart democracy and spread violence. Emphasizing the value of unplanned, unchosen encounters, the original Republic.com provoked a strong reaction from cyber-optimists. In Republic.com 2.0 Sunstein answers the critics and expands his argument to take account of new developments, including the blogosphere, and fresh evidence about how people are using the Internet. He demonstrates that the real question is how to avoid "information cocoons" and to ensure that the unrestricted choices made possible by technology do not undermine democracy. Sunstein also proposes new remedies and reforms--focusing far less on what government should do, and much more on what consumers and producers should do--to help democracy avoid the perils, and realize the promise, of the Internet. ...
$24.95
New Price: $15.5
|
| |

|
Welcome to the Machine: Science, Surveillance, and the Culture of Control
Authors: Derrick Jensen. George Draffan. Paperback, 285 pagesPublisher: Chelsea Green Publishing Company Publication Date: 2004-09-15 Reviews :

Machine-readable identity cards are issued to prisoners, workers, and schoolchildren around the world. Tiny ID chips track every car, shirt, and razor blade purchased from every corporate manufacturer in America. Chips track--and control--humans and other animals. Exoskeleton armor makes soldiers invincible; mind-altering drugs make them incapable of remorse. Scientists design swarms of nanoparticles as weapons to target specific ethnic groups. Governments and multinational corporations gather gigabytes of information on every citizen’s race, family life, credit record, telephone conversations, employment history, buying preferences, favorite TV shows. Welcome to Western civilization, 2004. In their new collaboration for the "Politics of the Living" series, Derrick Jensen and George Draffan reveal the modern culture of the machine, where corporate might makes technology right, government money feeds the greed for mad science, and absolute surveillance leads to absolute control--and corruption. Through meticulous research and fiercely personal narrative, Jensen and Draffan move beyond journalism and exposé to question our civilization’s very mode of existence. Welcome to the Machine defies our willingness to submit to the institutions and technologies built to rob us of all that makes us human--our connection to the land, our kinship with one another, our place in the living world. Welcome to the Machine is part of the "Politics of the Living" series, a collection of hard-hitting works by major writers exposing the global governmental and corporate assault on life....

$18
New Price: $9.949999999999999
|
| |

|
Cyberbullying and Cyberthreats: Responding to the Challenge of Online Social Aggression, Threats, and Distress
Authors: Nancy E. Willard. Perfect Paperback, 320 pagesPublisher: Research Press Publication Date: 2007-01-18 Edition: 2nd Reviews :

Online communications can be cruel and vicious. They take place 24/7. Damaging text and images can be widely disseminated and impossible to fully remove. There are emerging reports of youth suicide, violence, and abduction related to cyberbullying and cyberthreats. In this book,the author provides school counselors, administrators, teachers and parents with cutting-edge information on how to prevent and respond to cyberbullying and cyberthreats. It covers challenging issues that occur as students embrace the Internet and other digital technologies such as: *Sending offensive, harassing messages *dissing someone or spreading nasty rumors online *Disclosing someone's intimate personal information *Breaking into someone's e-mail account and sending damaging messages under that person's name *Excluding someone from an online group *Using the Internet to intimidate The book includes detailed guidelines for managing in-school use of the Internet and personal devices, including cell phones. Appendices contain reproducible assessment and program forms, as well as parent and student handouts....
$35.95
New Price: $25.99
|
| |
Short News |
|
FCC Launches Obscenity Info Site Agency aims to educate public about what is -- and is not -- obscene,
indecent and profane material.
Design News Announces Ground-Breaking Online Motion Control and Automation Conference 2005, Sponsored by National Instruments, Galil and Aerotech Design News announces the Ground-Breaking Online Motion Control and Automation Conference 2005, Live October 11-12, 2005. The event is sponsored by National Instruments, International Rectifier, Aerotech, Galil Motion Control, Parker Hannifin Electromechanical Automation Division and Banner Engineering. [PRWEB Oct 10, 2005]
|
|
| |

|
IT Success!: Towards a New Model for Information Technology
Authors: Michael Gentle. Paperback, 182 pagesPublisher: Wiley Publication Date: 2007-12-04 Reviews :
“Fifty years after the birth of corporate computing, IT today is still characterized by 50-70% project failure rates. Which is pretty scary when you come to think of it: either a goblin has cast a spell on a whole profession – or that profession is doing something fundamentally wrong”. IT Success! challenges the widespread assumption that an IT department is like a building contractor whose project managers, architects and engineers (all construction industry terms…) are supposed to deliver systems on schedule, within budget and to spec. Michael Gentle explains why this is not possible, and turns conventional wisdom on its head by showing that: - you cannot define an IT project in terms of contractual budgets and schedules
- anything can change during the life of a project
- what is eventually delivered can never be what is actually needed
He proposes a new model for IT in which the traditional client/vendor relationship, with its contractual commitments, is replaced by a shared risk/reward partnership geared towards workable results over time. Using real-world examples and a case study, the author walks you through the end-to-end processes of an IT department, covering subjects like demand management, investment planning, agile development and managing production applications....

$40
New Price: $16.99
|
| |

|
The Masters of Deception: Gang That Ruled Cyberspace, The
Authors: Michele Slatalla. Paperback, 240 pagesPublisher: Harper Perennial Publication Date: 1996-01-10 Reviews :

The bestselling account of a band of kids from New York who fought an electronic turf war that ranged across some of the nation's most powerful computer systems. "An immensely fun and -- one cannot emphasize this enough -- accessible history of the first outlaws in cyberspace."-- Glamour...

On January 15, 1990, the AT&T long-distance phone network crashed. Although it was eventually ruled an accident, the event was a wake-up call to telephone companies and law enforcement agencies everywhere, exposing the fragility of the systems that we all heavily depend on. The feds decided that the time had come to crack down on the handful of computer hackers they had been monitoring for several years in connection with the phone companies. The term "hacker" is about to become a household word, and not in the sense of "great programming." Set against this backdrop, two rival gangs--The Legion of Doom and The Masters of Deception--are about to go to war. What sounds like a clash of comic-book supervillains is actually a feud between factions of teenagers, fueled by misunderstandings and adolescent testosterone. The events leading up to the conflict and its climax are riveting and fun. The book features great depictions of some of the earliest celebrities of hackerdom, including Acid Phreak and Phiber Optik, as well as tales of their exploits and rivalries. Slatalla and Quittner do a great job of portraying the principals as both the powerful cyberspace masters they want to be and the scared, emotional young men they really are. There is also a nostalgic attraction at work in Masters of Deception. Anyone who remembers their first Commie 64 or TRS-80 will long for those golden days and be thankful that they were elsewhere when the Secret Service came calling....

$15
New Price: $2.87
|
| |

|
Tagging: People-powered Metadata for the Social Web (Voices That Matter)
Authors: Gene Smith. Paperback, 216 pagesPublisher: New Riders Press Publication Date: 2008-01-06 Edition: 1 Reviews :

Tagging is fast becoming one of the primary ways people organize and manage digital information. Tagging complements traditional organizational tools like folders and search on users desktops as well as on the web. These developments mean that tagging has broad implications for information management, information architecture and interface design. And its reach extends beyond these technical domains to our culture at large. We can imagine, for example, the scrapbookers of the future curating their digital photos, emails, ticket stubs and other mementos with tags. This book explains the value of tagging, explores why people tag, how tagging works and when it can be used to improve the user experience. It exposes tagging's superficial simplicity to reveal interesting issues related to usability, information architecture, online community and collective intelligence....
$39.99
New Price: $20.59
|
| |

|
Closer: Performance, Technologies, Phenomenology (Leonardo Books)
Authors: Susan Kozel. Hardcover, 380 pagesPublisher: The MIT Press Publication Date: 2008-04-30 Reviews :

In Closer, Susan Kozel draws on live performance practice, digital technologies, and the philosophical approach of phenomenology. Trained in dance and philosophy, Kozel places the human body at the center of explorations of interactive interfaces, responsive systems, and affective computing, asking what can be discovered as we become closer to our computers—as they become extensions of our ways of thinking, moving, and touching. Performance, Kozel argues, can act as a catalyst for understanding wider social and cultural uses of digital technology. Taking this one step further, performative acts of sharing the body through our digital devices foster a collaborative construction of new physical states, levels of conscious awareness, and even ethics. We reencounter ourselves and others through our interactive computer systems. What we need now are conceptual and methodological frameworks to reflect this. Kozel offers a timely reworking of the phenomenology of French philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty. This method, based on a respect for lived experience, begins by listening to the senses and noting insights that arrive in the midst of dance, or quite simply in the midst of life. The combination of performance and phenomenology offered by Closer yields entwinements between experience and reflection that shed light on, problematize, or restructure scholarly approaches to human bodies using digital technologies. After outlining her approach and methodology and clarifying the key concepts of performance, technologies, and virtuality, Kozel applies phenomenological method to the experience of designing and performing in a range of computational systems: telematics, motion capture, responsive architectures, and wearable computing. The transformative potential of the alchemy between bodies and technologies is the foundation of Closer. With careful design, future generations of responsive systems and mobile devices can expand our social, physical, and emotional exchanges....
$35
New Price: $27.99
|
| |

|
Digital Retro: The Evolution and Design of the Personal Computer
Authors: Gordon Laing. Paperback, 192 pagesPublisher: Sybex Publication Date: 2004-09-21 Reviews :

The late Seventies to the early Nineties was a completely unique period in the history of computing. Long before Microsoft and Intel ruled the PC world, a disparate variety of home computers, from an unlikely array of suppliers, were engaging in a battle that would shape the industry for years to come. Products from established electronics giants clashed with machines which often appeared to have been (or actually were) assembled in a backyard shed by an eccentric inventor. University professors were competing head to head with students in their parents' garages. Compatibility? Forget it! Each of these computers was its own machine and had no intention of talking to anything else. The same could be said of their owners, in fact, who passionately defended their machines with a belief that verged on the religious. This book tells the story behind 40 classic home computers of an infamous decade, from the dreams and inspiration, through passionate inventors and corporate power struggles, to their final inevitable demise. It takes a detailed look at every important computer from the start of the home computer revolution with the MITS Altair, to the NeXT cube, pehaps the last serious challenger in the personal computer marketplace. In the thirteen years between the launch of those systems, there has never been a more frenetic period of technical advance, refinement, and marketing, and this book covers all the important steps made on both sides of the Atlantic. Whether it's the miniaturization of the Sinclair machines, the gaming prowess of the Amiga, or the fermenting war between Apple Computer, "Big Blue," and "the cloners," we've got it covered. Digital Retro is an essential read for anyone who owned a home computer in the Eighties....
$29.99
New Price: $9.390000000000001
|
| |
|
|
Computers & Internet News |
|
PayPal Expands Services, Releases API On Monday, the online payment processor will announce its first non-hosted product as well as an express checkout service and support for purchases by phone, fax or mail.
iTunes 4.9 adding support for podcasts Apple says the next version of its iTunes music management program will give people a way to find and subscribe to podcasts, MP3 audio files online. Podcasts are downloadable "radio shows" that can be created and listened to by anyone...
Epson Debuts New Stylus Photo R1800 Printer Produces 13-inch-wide ... DTV Professional, CA -... CD Software, Print Image Matching Plug-in for Adobe Photoshop and three filters from Nik Color Efex Pro 2.0, which operate on both PC and Macintosh platforms. ...
|
|
|