Friday, August 22, 2008

Random Reading: Bookmarks and Books

While reading a great article in the Charleston City Paper (I really have to give props to their Web 2.0 skillz) I found a new bookmarking site, Mister Wong.  It appears to be a multi lingual version of Del.icio.us, which I find really interesting.  I like messing around with languages, words, idioms, etc, and I don't mind subtitles.

During the process of importing some Del.icio.us bookmarks into Mr. Wong, I found a new Library 2.0 site, Open Library, which wants to create a web page for every book, according to their site info.  Looks like an interesting site to keep an eye on and play around with.

I must say that Del.icio.us' new look is much more graphically appealing.  The import/export process was also really easy.  This was the first time, I tried that, too.   I went ahead and imported all my random Del.icio.us bookmarks into one account, as well.  Now to trim the tags.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Meme Streak: The Day After Caturday

I have memes on the brain. 

While reading a William Gibson novel, Pattern Recognition, a virtual, semiotic funfest, I wanted to refresh my understanding of the word "meme".   Discovering that my bed-worthy Webster's Collegiate, circa 1977, was too outdated to help and my newish Websters 3rd too heavy for horizontal use, I decided take the contextually-appropriate Google/Wikipedia route.  This led to more info grazing and I found this online Time article about 4chan, an "off the chain" website, where users share assorted visual tidbits and other stuff. 

According to Time, 4chan is a meme hothouse which started out as an anime/manga fan site modeled after a Japanese site called 2chan.  At some point, 4chan had a Saturday thing called "Caturday", where users posted funny pictures of cats.   This in turn spawned the LOLcat phenom.  Interesting stuff.

Lately I have been really interested in the whole viral info transmission concept.  It figures in several good nonfiction books I have been reading; The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell and The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson.  The internet is a great place to see it in action because it happens so quickly and so visibly. 

It is also interesting to me that 4chan is a mostly unrestricted website that allows for a high degree of anonymity.  I think that theoretically, at least, information evolution/transmission probably occurs more rapidly in this kind of open environment (the watched pot and all that).  I found the anime/manga connection interesting too.  Otaku figure heavily in Pattern Recognition as well.  Just another drop in the meme pool.


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