Robots? Did Somebody Say Robots?


Sparks Fly

Today I took my two sons out to San Francisco State University for the 2nd Annual RoboGames formerly known as the ROBOlympics.

We had a great time seeing all the robots and I put together a little photo series of the robots entitled “I Am Robot, Hear Me Roar,” for those of you who might be interested. The series has some great high resolution robot shots for your downloading pleasure. If you want a copy of a picture just click on the photo in the series and a high res copy will pop up and you can do a save as.

Laughing Squid has a ton of photos of the event as well.

How Did We Ever Manage Before RSS?

TinyScreenfuls.com: Pruning My Feeds: Bye-Bye if You Don’t Provide Full Text Wow, Josh Bancroft has 1250 feeds that he follows on Bloglines and that’s after pruning it down from just under 1400! That’s very Scoblelike. And whew! thomashawk.com still made the cut in his digital media folder after the pruning.

I thought the 196 or so RSS feeds that I follow was a lot. I may have to step it up a bit to keep up with guys like Josh and Scoble. The nice thing about Bloglines is that they allow you to publish your list of feeds if you want. I may have to do a little feed diving in Josh’s pool to see what I’m missing.

How did we ever manage before RSS?

Alexander Grundner, Podcaster?

eHomeUpgrade | Audio Pitch: Media Center Communicator Alexander Grundner of the excellent site eHomeUpgrade is out with something new that he calls “Audio Pitch” where he interviews companies on their products for the digital lifestyle. Pretty cool stuff.

Grundner’s first interview is with Dean Weber, CEO of One Voice Technologies, who has developed something called Media Center Communicator. The software is a voice recognition plug in to allow you to control your Media Center PC with voice commands.

Although I’m still pretty skeptical about most voice recognition technologies these days their software does sound pretty cool. Just say, “play Beatles” and the Beatles start playing. Of course hopefully the Beatles play instead of the Beastles, but sometimes that might not be so bad either. Once Windows Media Player gets their media player library to a place where I can search without it taking five minutes I will have to try this technology.

The company also allows you to speak email and they have a PC to phone calling package for $14.95 per month.

On Getting Noticed in the New York Art World

Micro Persuasion: Blog Crisis Catches Museums Sleeping Steve Rubel blogs about a UK painter who has placed his works of art in four of New York’s most prestigious art museums. The Brooklyn Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art and the Museum of Natural History.

The paintings were placed there by artist Banksy who wore a disguise while placing them into the collections. Bansky rationalized that “They’re good enough to be in there, so I don’t see why I should wait”


‘Discount Soup Can’, Screen Print on Paper. 2005 Installed 13 March 05

“This historic occasion has less to do with finally being embraced by the fine art establishment and is more about the judicious use of a fake beard and some high strength glue.” Banksy said.

The real question would have been how many of the regular patrons in the museum of Modern Art would have guessed that his work didn’t belong without the museum pulling his piece. My guess is very few due to the somewhat cryptic nature of the modern art form.

In fact, in terms of the Museum of Modern Art, you might argue that his act alone is a form of art and somebody ought to make the case for having them put it back up. Although you can’t just have any old person hanging their art up in a museum, in a strange way the fact that he did it at the MOMA is a statement about what it takes to get noticed and the stranglehold that a museum can have on distribution and and promotion of art.

You might argue that his placement of his art in the MOMA was a blog. A blog that is trying to share it’s voice in a crowded world that places tight controls on the voices through traditional journalism and the media. If there is space in the world for blogs to exist alongside traditional media, perhaps there is space for Banksy’s work in the world of traditional art.

It’s not a bad soup can and the commentary on what is art in contrast with Andy Warhol’s soup can is an interesting one. Banksy’s generic soup can indeed lacks the polish of Warhol’s Campbell’s soup can but it is not bad art and as the blogger might lack the finese of the New York Times, sometimes, every so often a voice that comes from the rough may have something equally important to say.

I hope Banksy continues to hang his art in the world’s museums and that someone recognizes the significance of what he is saying.

For more on the prank see “Wooster Collective : A Celebration of Street Art” For more on Banksy see, Banksy, the Exterior Paint Specialist.

Scoble Pans OurMedia

Scobleizer: Microsoft Geek Blogger Robert Scoble is out with a post on OurMedia and says that OurMedia is a LONG way from a service that anyone can use.

“First of all, the uploading experience, in particular, sucked. I tried more than half a dozen times to upload a video. In both IE and Firefox. It barfed everytime and gave very vague error messages.”

Of course I guess some of this is expected and is why the software is presently in “alpha.” I’d assume that even when the product matures to “beta” that bugs still remain and that it could easily be several years before the end product is finally released.

That being said, there are folks seriously working on these bugs and I’d give it a couple of months before giving it the “LONG way from a a service” diagnosis.

They do need some kind of an uploading tool though beyond just an html interface that allows you to upload one file at a time. It just takes too darn long to load media. What ought to be developed is a media uploading tool where you can add 50 files or so and then go to bed and have them on the site when you wake up in the morning. Of course the current method forces meta data entry whereas a bulk uploader might necessarily not but I think it’s better to be able to easily get content up on the site and add the meta data in later on a user by user basis.

Certain meta data might automatically be captured from the file such as created date, etc. This could always be modified by a user if it was incorrect.

Scoble’s right, OurMedia may not be ready today (I’ve already loaded media that never made it) but I hope that we are a SHORT way away from having a service everybody can use rather than a LONG way away from a service that anyone can use.

By the way, Marc Canter and J.D. Lasica are featured on a “Behind the Mic” podcast with Doug Kaye on IT Conversations that is definitely worth checking out. It gives a lot more background on the OurMedia project.

Good Friday’s 20 Random Songs from Thomas Hawk’s Windows Media Player 5 Star Playlist

1. Freedom of ’76, Ween, Freedom of ’76 CD Single
2. Kentucky House, Freakwater, Old Paint
3. Jaded Lover, Jerry Jeff Walker, Ridin’ High
4. Seventeen Again, Eurythmics, Eurythmics Greatest Hits
5. Tangled Up in Blue, Bob Dylan, Blood on the Tracks
6. Tomorrow is a Long Time, Rod Stewart, Every Picture Tells a Story
7. Bad Mouth, Fugazi, 13 Songs
8. Tuff Gnarl, Sonic Youth, Sister
9. Youngstown (live), Bruce Springsteen, Old Habbits (bootleg)
10. I Am the Walrus, The Beatles, 1967-1970
11. Tear Stained Eye, Son Volt, Trace
12. Kids in America, The Muffs, Clueless Soundtrack
13. I’ve Been Delivered, The Wallflowers, Breach
14. Asking for It, Hole, Live Through This (bootleg)
15. Flake, Jack Johnson, Bushfire Fairytales
16. I Don’t Beleive You, Bob Dylan, Seven Years of Bad Luck (bootleg)
17. Love Song (live), Tori Amos, After Burn (bootleg)
18. Watching Amy Dance, Buddy Miller, Your Love and Other Lies
19. Landslide (live), Stevie Nicks, VH1 Storytellers (bootleg)
20. Long Black Veil, Johnny Cash, Unearthed, Disc 1

Why Intrusive FCC & DRM Will Actually Be Good For Consumers

Democracy in Media: Why Intrusive FCC & DRM Will Actually Be Good For Consumers Hollywood adopts more digital product because they feel safe with DRM. More “safe” digital product makes more consumers accept digital product and digital delivery vs. traditional ways to buy and consume media. Once digital conent and it’s delivery receive mass acceptance, customers retaliate and the backlash as a larger part of the population opens up the digital meda.

I’m not sure that I buy the argument as justification for why the broadcast flag is a good thing, but A. Rowland has an interesting way of looking at it.