Wednesday, March 25, 2009

New Media & Porn - A match made in adult heaven


This semester, I'm enrolled in a human sexuality course, taught by Dr. Robin Sawyer. Tuesday morning, we started our unit on pornography by looking at the history of porn and legal battles involving porn. We also watched one Dateline piece and one 60 Minutes piece on recent issues stemming from the porn industry.

One piece was about the seizure and eventual banning of the 1979 movie The Tin Drum in Oklahoma City. Go read about it. It's terrifying on so many different levels.

We also watched a 60 Minutes piece from 2004 on the evolving porn industry, Porn in the U.S.A, and how it has become more mainstream and has entered into our culture. One point made in this piece I had never thought of before is how new technologies have fueled porn, and how porn has fueled new technologies.

The piece explains:

Adult entertainment is so lucrative and profitable that it's become part of the mainstream culture -- readily available, easily accessible, and all but impossible to legislate away. How did it happen? It began 25 years ago with a brand new household appliance: the video cassette recorder.

Paul Fishbein, the founder and president of Adult Video News, the industry's trade publication, further explains this relationship between technologies and porn.

"Most people had never seen an adult movie, because they had to go out in public, to a theater, to see it. I mean, sex is a very private thing. So, now that you can watch it in the privacy of your own home, nobody has to know. And I think that's what drove the VCR. And I think, to a degree, it's what drove a lot of people to get on the Internet."

The piece continues:

In fact, pornography has helped drive early sales and the development of most new entertainment technologies for the past 25 years - providing software for the latest gadgets, and a reason to buy them. And usually the first people who do are affluent young men who like porn. Type the word "sex" into an Internet search engine like Google and you will get 180 million hits. [This number is now 751 million.] For years, adult sites were the only ones to turn a profit. They have pioneered and helped to develop numerous technological breakthroughs from online payment methods to streaming video.

Personally, I love new technologies. I love my internet, my cell phone, my DVD player and my former VCR. It made me feel slightly uncomfortable when I started thinking about the massive role porn played in the creation and evolution of these technologies. Then I though, "Meh, no big deal." If the porn industry is responsible for giving me streaming video and PayPal, then here's to the porn industry.




Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Hey Look, New Facebook

So new Facebook launched today. Every time Mark Zuckerberg comes out with a new iteration, I care a little less about Facebook. I miss the good ole days, where you had to be in college. I think I have a John Kellogg opinion when it comes to Facebook: it's a necessary evil.

I'm about to graduate, and hopefully enter the workforce, so I think my use of Facebook will definitely be curttailed, but I'll still have to use it. So many of my friends, relatives and other contacts are on Facebook, it's one of the only options when it comes to staying in touch with a lot of these people. Like I said, necessary evil.

Facebook, Inc.Image via Wikipedia



Hey, at least it's better than Twitter!
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Adding Technology to Admissions

Gone are the days of checking the mailbox everyday in the Spring, hoping for a big, thick envelope from your first choice school. No more scheduling tours with the university's visitor's center, or trying to find current students to talk to over the phone to answer your questions. No more visiting the local Lion's or Rotary Club to ask about scholarships.

The college admittance process of our parents is gone....forever.

Now, colleges and universities are incorporating new technologies to make the process as easy as ever for potential students. Steps include notification of acceptance online, about two weeks faster than letters traditionally sent out through the mail. Scholarship information is also available online, making it even easier for students to find potential sources of money for college.

Beyond notification, admitted students are encouraged to contact current students online. Maryland, on March 9 and 10, held online chats for admitted students. Different programs throughout the university hosted chat rooms where high school seniors could ask questions of current students. It's a more casual way for students to have their questions answered.

Potential students also receive phone calls, emails and even texts from current students. Universities are getting more competitive when it comes to recruiting better students, and are using technology to literally inundate a prospective student with all the reasons why this university is the best.

Maryland has even talked about ceasing the process of sending letters of acceptance to save postal fees and paper. Maybe in 5 years, students will eagerly await that big, thick email in the Spring.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Me & My MacBook


To be perfectly honest, I love my Dell desktop. It's this big, honking massive computer, but it can do anything I throw its way. I also like the stability of always being able to complete my work in one place. It makes me more productive. And part of me still looks at laptops like toys; I can't do serious work on a laptop. I can play a mean game of Text Twist, but I just can't do real work on a laptop.

When I studied abroad in France two years ago, I was forced to buy a laptop to take with me. Luckily, the French university system didn't require I do that much work, so I was able to get things done. At the same time, I kept my laptop in exactly the same place everyday, so I could have that stability I love so.

I'm heading abroad again after graduation, so the laptop was again necessary. This time, however, my mom had commandeered my former Dell laptop to use for her more and more extensive travels. This gave me the opportunity to join the cool crowd and buy a MacBook. I also got the Adobe Creative Suite, since I wanted to expand my web design and Photoshop skills.

Never having used a MacBook before, it is a transition that takes getting used to. I keep trying to right click and nothing happens! It is no where close to becoming my primary computer, since my desktop is still around and still awesome. I think over spring break I'm just going to have to force myself to use nothing but my MacBook for a week, so I can get totally comfortable with it.

Come June 1, when I'm in Salzburg, Austria, it's going to be my only computer.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Thursday, February 26, 2009

I don't understand Twitter

Apparently, as of February 2009, Twitter is the 3rd largest social networking site (after Facebook and MySpace) with around 6 million users. That's great and all, but to be honest, I don't understand Twitter!

A friend of mine recently created a Twitter and sent me a link, and this was my first exposure. I had heard people talking about Twitters, but I never cared enough to go investigate before now. It looks like all you do is write quick posts under 140 characters in length, either from your computer or from your mobile device. I don't understand how this is different from a blog. It just seems like a blog with shorter posts.

Twitters have been used for ongoing commentary-type situations, like during the President's recent State of the Nation. People were writing instant feedback to literally every sentence the President said on their Twitters. I guess that's cool.... I guess.

My friend, however, just uses his Twitter for "witty" observations about every day life, such as "Liberal arts means you have to dissect a grasshopper to be a journalist," or "Whoever decided that Al Gore should get a Nobel Prize before the guy that came up with pizza delivery obviously did not go to college."

It's mind blowing, earth shattering information, is it not. I think he should just get an imaginary friend to tell all these witticisms to, so the rest of the world doesn't have to suffer through them.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Distributed Computing aka Chris is a nerd

About 98% of what I know about computers, technology and all that other stuff, I've learned from my friend Chris. He's a computer engineering major who creates Facebook applications in his spare time. So when I was talking to him last week about the discussion we had in class on contributory creation of new technologies, he's like, "Yeah, it's SETI at home, but more interactive." And I said, "Uh, what???"

He then explained to me in slightly condescending terms that SETI is the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence - a government funded program of satellites north of San Francisco that constantly collect data from outer space, hoping to find some intelligent communication. It's a bunch of satellites that face the sky, so the picture to the right probably looks familiar.

After telling me the basics, he started to explain what SETI@home is. Essentially, starting in 1999, people could go to the SETI@home website and download a program. The program would send packets of unanalyzed information to your computer, and while your computer was in its screen saver mode, it would use your computer's power to sort through the information.

Seti@Home 1000+ UnitsImage by Michael Heilemann via Flickr


The analyzed information was then sent back to a lab in Berkeley. It was a cheap way to have the computing power of tens of thousands of computers without having to purchase a painfully expensive super computer. As of January 29, 2008 the SETI@home achieved an average throughput of 387 TeraFLOPS, making it equivalent to the second fastest supercomputer on Earth.

If extra terrestrials aren't your thing, there are other options. Protein folding, LIGO, CERN and other projects are all looking to borrow your computing power. It's a way to contribute, without really doing much at all.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Books vs e-Books: A Family Holiday Debate.


It just wouldn't be the holidays without family, friends, good food, cheer and some sort of argument. This past holiday season, a contentious debate broke out between my father and oldest brother about the newest member of the family.... Kindle.

My father is an constant traveler for his work, and is weirdly proud of himself for owning one of the first Kindles ever sold on Amazon.com, since he purchased his on the release date back in November, 2007. He has gone through two more Kindles, since he tends to drop them a lot.

My brother, Brendan, is a constant reader (non-fiction, of course), and is weirdly proud of himself for having read all of the Pulitzer Prize nonfiction winners of the 20th Century. Far and away, his biggest monthly expense is books. This boy can't stop buying books. Despite the economic recession, I think he single-handedly keeps Amazon in business.

So my dad had this great idea: get Brendan a Kindle for Christmas. Even with the initial $230 you swallow for the purchase of the Kindle, it's actually more cost effective for the avid reader. Digital book downloads cost anywhere from $10-$20 while the actually hardcover of the same book costs anywhere between $20-$35. My dad thought by covering the biggest expense, he would saving my brother a lot of money and adding a lot of convenience.

Brendan feigned excitement at his gift, but it was obvious he wasn't pleased. The conversation went something like this:

Dad: But I thought you'd love a Kindle. You read so much you're running out of space on your bookshelves.

Brendan: But I like books. The actually, physical book. I write in margins, I make notes, I cross reference, I organize them on my shelf by theme.

Dad: Get with new technologies! Books will all be digital in 20 years! (This is also the man who used an ATM for the first time in 2005 and thought it was 'Fabulous!').

Everyone in the room not born during the Eisenhower administration: Eye roll.



Personally, I love books. Much like my oldest brother, I like to feel them and hold them and make little notes I'll find in 10 years when I read them again. Plus, you get to show off with the books you're reading. You can flash titles while you hold the book under your arm. "Oh, you're reading 'The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire?'" asks someone sitting next to you in class. "Why yes, yes I am." No one can tell how erudite you are by the white cover of your Kindle.

Well, my brother is getting married the end of May. Hopefully, on this family event, we can keep technology debates out of it.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]