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Imogen Heap at Webster Hall from urlgreyhot blogs on November 14, 2006 306 views / likes
Immi graced NY at Webster Hall. I hadn't realized she would be performing with a band, and while I was looking forward to the intimate solo songs, the band really helped with her dancey tunes. Below is video a fan took of "The Walk". I have the iTunes session she did by herself. I think it would be great if she did a recording of one of the live shows with these guys playing with her as well, they really add energy to the live performance. Kid Beyond's beatbox skills are pretty incredible (clip of him beatboxing and looping with Ableton Live). Amazing what you can do with the right gear -- this guy's a pretty incredible one-man show by himself. He was awesome with Immi.
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Behavior of Enterprise Intranet Users vs. Consumer Internet Users from urlgreyhot blogs on August 11, 2006 360 views / likes
My recent post on Ze Frank on Web 0.2 continues my exploration of the topic of information use with regard to web users and the conversational nature of technologies that support peer to peer discussion, collaboration, and multimedia publishing. As you may know, the ideas about society, culture and the impact of these supporting collaborative technologies are cemented for me in the cluetrain and validated when the blogosphere and social software universe are viewed as information ecologies But what is missing is the literature examining the culture and behavior of enterprise users in these new technology-supported, social network environments. In response to my post about Web 0.2, a colleague asked, Does anyone address the question of the distinction between the public user/consumer and the organizational user/consumer? Speifically I mean that users of the "Internet" have desires and they have nothing to lose by freely expressing those desires and pushing for tools to fulfill them. Whereas in the corporate environment there are politics, secrecy/info hording issues, and other factors that may cause "Intranet" users to silence, suppress or censor their desires, leaving us unsure what is really wanted. Or am I making up this distinction? No. To my knowledge, no one makes that distinction in the literature or blogs that I've read. When we talk about Internet users, we're talking about the public and for the majority of the time we're talking about young , middle to upper class consumers who are active users of ecommerce and social software sites. They are the ones playing with social networking, creating, editing and publishing multimedia -- having conversations using the traditional language of the designer. Consumers are becoming prosumers because they have the means and time. They take risks in breaking rules because they don't know them. They publicize their lives on Flickr, MySpace and YouTube, eschewing privacy because they're being raised in an era of blogs and reality TV. But the main point is they are conversing openly and without fear. But the corporate environment is obviously different, especially with regard to large enterprises. We don't appear to have as consistent a picture of the corporate intranet user and their behaviors as we do of the prosumer. But my colleague's impression of Intranet users, while insular with regard to its picture of a large enterprise user, is most likely valid. The constraints of a cultural and political environment might affect this type of users' ability or desire to converse in these new media languages and engage in a culture of collaboration, open conversation and risk. I think the degree to which a corporate Intranet user will risk engaging in these behaviors is also dependent on the corporate cultural (e.g. an open culture like that implied at Google vs. that at an older, large enterprise) and on the influence of an employees participation in the more open, collaborative culture of the public Internet. A flickr and MySpace user who happens to work at a huge corporation might be more inclined to act against a cultural norm that's characterized by witholding knowledge rather than sharing it. I haven't come across any references to published literature researching environmental influences of corporate users yet. But then, I don't spend any time searching deeply on that topic either, e.g. in journal databases. It's a good question. One that I hope to begin exploring. In the meantime, I'm going to ping a few colleagues to see if they can point to any research in this area which might be found, I think, in ethnographic study and incidental findings based on user surveys. --- Update I've received some feedback from colleagues, which I've listed below. Also, see the references added in the comments at the bottom of the page. I will be skimming this literature in the coming days and report back on how they relate to my questions, most importantly this one: When describing the difference in behavior between the risk taking and openness of the public Internet Prosumer vs. the corporate intranet user are methods discussed that make the evolution of the behavior of the business user more like the prosumer? 1) Lilia Effimova blogged the following. Work of Dirk Stenmark on intranets (I referred to his paper earlier in knowledge vs. information discussion): Stenmark, D. (2005). "How intranets differ from the web: organisational culture's effect on technology (PDF)". Proceedings of ECIS2005, Regensburg, Germany, 26-28 May 2005. I could also imagine relevant things in the work of Jonathan Grudin - one of his interests is in corporate adoption of "internet technologies". This one should be on the topic: Messaging and Formality: Will IM Follow in the Footsteps of Email? (MS Word) T. Lovejoy and J. Grudin, 2003. Proc. INTERACT 2003, 817-820. (PDF) 2) Nick Kings provided an article about the Ben Schneiderman's model for trying to describe differences in behaviour. Schneiderman's book, "Leonardo's Laptop" is available on Amazon. Nick touches upon it in a paper he submitted to a workshop on semantic tagging. 3) Abe Crystal offered references from ASIS&T Digital Library. Informational environments: Organizational contexts of online information use. Roberta Lamb, John Leslie King, Rob Kling. Maintaining knowledge management systems: A strategic imperative. Kevin C. Desouza, Yukika Awazu. INTRANET USERS? INFORMATION-SEEKING BEHAVIOUR: AN ANALYSIS OF LONGITUDINAL SEARCH LOG DATA. Dick Stenmark and Taline Jadaan. ASIS&T Annual Meeting - 2006 (ASIS&T 2006). Austin, Texas, November 3-9, 2006 A Perfect Storm for Intranet Search: How One Company Navigates. Moderator: J. Gregory Moxness, IT Fellow, CTO Missile Systems, Raytheon 4) Boris Mann offered a related link on the topic of incenting collaboration. The topic references game theory, karma and corporate communities. Komment Karma -- "Private and Small World is game proof as there is no benefit in gaming it. (Except inside corporate communities. Workaround there is to ration the Karma so that it gets spent wisely)." 5) Stacy Surla offered this paper: Onomi: Social Bookmarking on a Corporate Intranet. (PDF)
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Imogen Heap on Last Call with Carson Daly from urlgreyhot blogs on February 04, 2006 1,188 views / likes
My friend, D, turned me on to Imogen Heap recently. I had been a big fan of Immi from listening to Frou Frou, which you can see is in heavy rotation on my iTunes/iPod. Anyway, when D told me to peep a few tracks of Speak for Yourself on the iTunes store, I immediately came back with, "doesn't that sound a lot like Frou Frou to you". I didn't know Imogen's name yet at the time. One of the down sides of buying music from the iTunes store is you don't get liner notes. Anyway, I've been digging Imogen these last few weeks and caught her on Last Call with Carson Daly this week performing "Hide and Seek" and "Say Goodnight and Go". If you haven't heard her before, do check her out. In the world of electronica, she's unique. Her songs are all about the vocals and lyrics, but the hooky music is also incredibly infectious and danceable. You can preview and buy the album on iTunes or at Amazon. Here are the videos of the performance on Carson Daly. Great performance. I dig seeing all that gear. Hide and Seek (5.4MB Quicktime) [Click the image above to view the video] Goodnight and Go (5.9MB Quicktime) [Click the image above to view the video] Getting the video to Quicktime was an interesting story too because I don't have a direct connection from my TV to my Mac. If I can get geeky on you, here's what I did to get the video: 1) Tivo'd Carson Daly Show 2) Recorded to my DVD player/recorder from Tivo 3) Ripped the DVD video to my Mac using Handbrake 4) Edited and compressed using iMovie Rawwkin! A circuitous process, but it worked. Enjoy.
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Interactive floor from urlgreyhot blogs on January 31, 2005 1,071 views / likes
This is a clip of L running around on the interactive floor at the Toys R Us, Time Square. Watch the movie. (QuickTime, 688K)
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Feeding the seals from urlgreyhot blogs on January 31, 2005 1,038 views / likes
A tiny clip showing the seal feeding at the Prospect Park Zoo. Watch the movie. (QuickTime 1.4MB)
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Learning to play mini golf from urlgreyhot blogs on January 31, 2005 996 views / likes
I think this one is cute. L is playing mini golf for the first time. Shot in Montauk, NY. Watch the movie. (QuickTime, 688K)
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