May
18
Filed Under (music) by ib on 18-05-2009

One of this things that has changed my “experience” is the number of new sites with free, legal music. I’m mainly interested in electronica/ambient when it comes to free (well usually .. sometimes there are some low prices) stuff … and if that interests you, try

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/netlabels

Great post by Mark Pesce which powerfully outlines the fundamental issues involving contemporary communications—as these challenge established forms of power and social conventions.

Here is an interesting example of where some more specialist magazines are going online—it also shows how there’s so much more to communication and “journalism” than “journalism”, and how some of the extended roles of newspapers are now dispersing throughout newer media.

It’s a video from a forthcoming series put online by the science magazine Seed, on contemporary design. Well known artist Natalie Jeremijenko (born Australia, now at Yale), talks about Environment Design. There are lots of other great videos on design there as well.


Seedmagazine.com Seed Design Series

May
09
Filed Under (art, video, visualization) by ib on 09-05-2009

via Mitchell Whitelaw, some stunning videos by Jonathan McCabe that the designers among you will enjoy ..

turing pattern 1 from Jonathan McCabe on Vimeo.

Origami Butterfly from Jonathan McCabe on Vimeo.

May
03

Here are some places to go for weeks 8, 9 and 10. Via these links, you can explore issues such as the future of journalism, new forms of media discussion and activism. There is also a small case study set of links concerning climate change. For very recent links go to

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/digitaljournalism

Bold links are the most useful. Also, if you use Diigo or Delicious to tag sites you find, it’s useful if you also tag these sites as “mdcm3000″ and perhaps, for example, “digitaljournalism” or “climatechange”.

Here are the links to the two online required readings for week 9:

Michael Hirschorn’s ‘End Times’

Emily Nussbaum’s ‘The New Journalism: Goosing the Gray Lady’

More specific links below, but, broadly speaking, it’s worth glancing through my links on these and related topics at:

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/digitaljournalism

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/globalwarming

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/mdcm3000

Current and Future State of Journalism

This concerns more than journalism—in fact communications in general—but it’s relevant to journalism. Mark Pesce on new forms of power and communications (very succinct and powerful summary of the issues).

And here’s a very recent—and informative—discussion of the present and future of journalism in the New York Times. (registration, for free, might be required)

Debates

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/sciencejournalism

Swine Flu, Hype and Media

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/digitaljournalism+mdcm3000

(also http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/news)

SourceWatch (lists the often hidden affiliations of various “experts” and institutions such as think tanks)

Documentary reflecting on series 5 of The Wire (warning: Spoilers! - go the The Wire - The Last Word)

New Kinds of News Sites

http://www.nowpublic.com/

Hyperlocal news sites

SiloBreaker

Open Democracy

http://www.daylife.com/

and this on “daylife” kind of sites

The Daily Beast

Huffington Post

Global Internet Activism

Seed Magazine Videos on Design

Wikinews

IndyMedia

Journalism, Recession and Climate Change

Virgance (”Activism 2.0″)

Climate Change/Global Warming

The Road to Copenhagen (Nature magazine on the current situation - a good primer)

Global Warming 101 (video below)

Propaganda and Skepticism Towards Climate Science

The Case of Ian Plimer’s recent book Heaven and Earth.

Brave New Climate

Jennifer Marohasy

The Science is Missing

Review of Ian Plimer’s earlier book

Deltoid on the graph that came from ..

“The Australian’s War on Science 35″

“The Australian’s War on Science 36″

The supposedly “silenced” Ian Plimer

Ian Plimer on ABC’s Lateline

The Australian’s initial Framing and Coverage of this Event (please note that none of the below is written by climate scientists)

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25348271-11949,00.html

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25395523-16741,00.html

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25348908-16382,00.html

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25329958-20261,00.html

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25395364-17803,00.html

and, to be fair, here is a counter to Plimer’s arguments in the Australian

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25433327-25192,00.html

and once again in The Australian, long after the initial fuss, this devastating review

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25433059-5003900,00.html

and for some commenting/reporting on what’s currently happening in terms of policy in Australia

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/brag-now-pay-later–its-just-hot-air-20090508-axx8.html?page=-1

more …

The Age - The Skeptic’s Shadow of a Doubt

Why Isn’t the Brain Green?

Taking a Stand for Science

Anti-green Economics

The Global Warming Debate—A Layman’s Guide

Arguments from Global Warming Skeptics

What does it all mean?

Climate Disaster

Some Blogs

Deltoid

DeSmogBlog

Real Climate

International Journal of Inactivism

Science News

Science Daily

Nature on Climate Change

ScienceMag

and Climate Science related journals … for those who want to go to the source(s)

Alternative Economics

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/economics

Publishing

http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/04/reinventing-the-book-age-of-web.html

http://recursivepublic.net/

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/openaccesspublishing

http://delicious.com/ibbertelsen/publishing

and finally, an interesting recent scandal concerning academic/science/medical publishing