There Is No Shelf
intrinsi on October 28th 2007 in Information Science, Media Theory, Virtuality
One of the objects shown on screen is a Web browser displaying Wikipedia’s home page. While watching this, it hit me that websites, as we know them today, will almost certainly disappear within the next, say, 5 to 10 years, being replaced with XML-based, user-defined, and user-driven presentations of two-, three-, and maybe even four-dimensional content. I can’t wait.
Perceptive Pixel, Inc. was founded by Jeff Han in 2006 as a spinoff of the NYU Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences to develop and market the most advanced multi-touch system in the world.
intrinsi on August 7th 2007 in Media Reviews, Media Theory, Web Development
Social networking comprises the heart of Web 2.0, a phenomenon whose socioeconomic center is something called The Long Tail. For businesses like Amazon and eBay, The Long Tail promises prodigious profits via the sale of products and services that traditional brick-and-mortar stores like Wal-Mart and Target cannot carry due to practical considerations, like shelf space and findability. The Internet makes it possible to instantaneously personalize information to the nth degree.
The Long Tail essentially promises to turn any willing consumer into a sole proprietorship, since any consumer now has the ability to dive deep into a market niche and pull out unique and traditionally low-demand products and services that make money in small batches via broad distribution channels. What interests me about all of this is the long-term effects of this emerging consumer-proprietor duality. To be brief, if anyone can cheaply and easily become a buyer and a seller, does this sort of socioeconomic equalization strengthen or weaken Adam Smith’s invisible hand? Can capitalism survive Web 2.0?
intrinsi on July 26th 2007 in Media Theory