Some public notes::::
How can one not appreciate AI as a teacher and problem-solver? ChatGPT just taught me how to make a .ics file to put on emails out to people who should attend an event. Here’s my first, for Helen Nissenbaum’s talk next Tuesday. Click on it if you’d like it in your calendar. It even has the Zoom link you’ll need.
nissenbaum
In The Ozempicization of the Economy, Kyla Scanlon discusses “the shift from infrastructure that served everyone to technologies built around the mobile, private individual.” She concludes, “Despair right now is extremely convincing and extremely profitable. Hope would be the opposite – something that doesn’t need you to feel desperate in order to work.” It’s all over the place, but a worthwhile read.
This post on Antipodes is getting some action.
Algorhythms is going on here at Indiana University. If you’re here, be there.
My blog on infrastructure is getting a facelift soon: from an ancient WordPress theme to a modern one.
“Broadcast” still gets mentioned a lot. As far as I know, I am the only person in my town to watch broadcast (over-the-air) TV. You know, with an antenna.
A Reddit thread on the Canada Air flight crash at LaGuardia is frozen but interesting as it stands. It starts with a passenger who was on the plane.
Music streaming is a bad business.
Once an airport is gone, it doesn’t come back.
The Corporate BS Generator echoes BuzzPhraser, first published in the early ’90s and still there!
Somebody pointed me to this talk, which I gave back when I still had hair. Interesting how the exterior of one’s body ages while one’s voice does not. (So far.)
The four roads to the intention economy are still open.
Dr. Barkhuff‘s stoic approach to the Trump matter.
Hadn’t watched Parks and Recreation until last night. It’s funny, as promised. We were also charmed to find the show set (as are we) in Indiana.
A little reliving of a warm and fuzzy past of mine, with WQDR radio in Raleigh, in its rock years.
Now that we’ve left, Hawaii is looking great.
Please enjoy Eddie Dalton.
Remembering Kai Tak, Hong Kong’s amazing and scary waterfront airport in the heart of the city.
Is this wrong? I think so.
Overheard: “Does your body prove a concept?”
Despite my pushback, a search for “intention economy” is still thick with bad PR.
In an email response to this Wall Street Journal story about how much people hate seeing ads on their Samsung refrigerator screens, I wrote this:
Advertising corrupts, and digital advertising corrupts absolutely.
Samsung TVs come with Samsung’s own collection of channels. Two thousand of them, it seems. The UI prioritizes those, robo-subordinating the streaming services, over-the-air, cable, and your own HDMI-connected devices to places as far as possible away from the action on your screen, so you get dark-pattered into looking through those channels (old westerns, stations from Wichita and Fort Wayne, no-name news and weather services…) instead of what you want. Why? Because Samsung sells ads on those channels. Probably personalized, because they want to spy on you as well. If they go to that much trouble, and junk up their UI so much on their own TVs, why not do that on a full-screen fridge?