Slideshow transcript
Slide 1: Memoz \"Spatial weblogging\" jon.hoem@hib.no BlogTalk 2008
Slide 2: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz: Spatial webpublishing
Slide 3: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz texts images videos animations yellow \"stickers\" maps All presented in a sclable interface where objects can be placed freely
Slide 4: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz Memory organizer in tribute to Vannevar Bush's memex memory extender
Slide 5: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 6: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Nettet Information overflow Et sted vi går til ... ... eller et sted vi er? or potential?
Slide 7: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 let's hold on to the potential for learning but how to organize online information and make it (re)findable
Slide 8: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Parts of the solution are searchengines tagging-services social networks wikis and weblogs etc
Slide 9: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 10: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Vannevar Bush (1945) Selection by association, rather than indexing trail blazers those who find delight in the task of establishing useful trails through the enormous mass of the common record
Slide 11: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 What do trails look like on the Web?
Slide 12: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 13: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 14: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 15: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 16: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 17: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Most existing tools organize information in topics and sequences they can be linked and shared but follow atextual logic where one thing follows the other...
Slide 18: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 19: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 images are different
Slide 20: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Battle between Carnival and Lent - Pieter Bruegel
Slide 21: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 22: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Space, place and memory Ars memoriae - the art of memory Giulio Camillo Delmino L'idea del Theatro (1550) Mapping content in a virtual space located in recognizable places
Slide 23: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 24: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 weblogs organize information temporally
Slide 25: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 how does temporality support mental maps?
Slide 26: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 A mental map refer to an individual perception of an environment The concept of mental maps have been widely used to think about navigation in hypertexts.
Slide 27: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 The City Image Paths forms a network of minor routes, mostly used by those who have local knowledge Districts areas that share some characteristics that are easily identified Edges lines that divides districts Landmarks objects that can be used as points of reference Nodes places of a break in transportation, a crossing or convergence of paths Kevin Lynch, The Image of the City , 1960
Slide 28: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Story and places As far as I'm concerned, the loss of place is a lost quality in movies. It comes with a loss of reality, a loss of identity. Maybe it is a European distinction to have more of a sense of place. Of course, there are more borders, more languages, more national identities. Wim Wenders http://www.dga.org/news/v28_4/craft_wendersplaces.php3
Slide 29: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Variation of mindmaps Content structured in space http://www2.skolenettet.no/journalist/5.htm http://www.steinbo-dialog.no/dialog4.asp http://piczo.com
Slide 30: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 31: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 32: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 The Geoweb
Slide 33: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Virtual spaces
Slide 34: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz memory spatial organizing
Slide 35: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Example: Film history
Slide 36: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Example: Working with text
Slide 37: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Example: Places along the Berlin wall
Slide 38: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Example: Analysing The Nightwatch
Slide 39: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Example: The world's environment
Slide 40: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz - movable and scalable –––Any object can be placed freely Navigator –––––––––––––––––––
Slide 41: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz - add text, images, animations, videos and maps
Slide 42: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz - media archive Mediearkiv
Slide 43: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz - allow comments
Slide 44: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Memoz - using Google maps Reference to KML-files
Slide 45: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 That's nice, but is this blogging?
Slide 46: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 47: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 48: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 49: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008
Slide 50: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Jörn Barger (1997) \"... a weblogger (sometimes called a blogger or a pre-surfer) logs all the other webpages she finds interesting.\"
Slide 51: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 Arguably the weblog's most important features are usability, the personal voice, and the hypertextual connetions to, and feedback from other publicists. Chronological sequencing of posts is a technical feature! One can speak about weblogging even without sequencing. From this follows that spatial weblogging makes sense
Slide 52: Jon.Hoem@hib.no - 2008 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Torah_and_jad.jpg http://www.flickr.com/photos/wwworks/2102790208/ http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Torah_and_jad.jpg http://www.dga.org/news/v28_4/craft_wendersplaces.php3



Add a comment on Slide 1
If you have a SlideShare account, login to comment; else you can comment as a guest- Favorites & Groups
Showing 1-50 of 1 (more)