4. Oct 29 th (the Internet is officially born) Diagram of the first 4 nodes on the ARPANET May 23rd Alden Library opens itâs doors April 14th (McCaskill School â Jr Kindergarten) First class presentation on community helpers
6. Alden Library opens its new Knowledge Ecology Center kinetic networking fuels world grid FDA approves FOY drug after 10 year debate over genetic age management
10. Economics = Power hierarchy = Values = Information = ideas & access reach of personal network connections & relationships NETWORKS & OPEN COLABORATION instantaneous, global & highly personal Information Age:
18. â Twitter serves as the best poster child for this new model of social creativity in part because these innovations have flowered at such breathtaking speed and in part because the platform is so simple .â
21. In 2008, Amazonâs Kindle, sold 500 thousand units, 32% more than the iPods sold in the year of debut of Appleâs player. - Citi Investment Research estimate based upon Sprint network activations http://www.flickr.com/photos/nydiscovery/2212528583/
22. Google deal brings classic books to Sony Reader March 19, 2009 Sony's e-book reader is about to get a little help from Jane Austen in its battle with the Kindle. Sony announced a partnership with Google that will bring a half-million classic books to the Sony Reader Digital Book. Users will now be able to access the free book downloads through Sony's eBook Store. For years, Google has scanned books and converted them to digital format--at least in part--for its Google Book Search project. For now, Google is providing books to Sony whose copyrights have expired, which means most of the new additions to the Sony Reader will have been published before 1923, according to The New York Times.
29. http://www.flickr.com/photos/wink/192265445/ Six in 10 people around the world (60%) now have cellphone subscriptions, signaling that mobile phones are the communications technology of choice, particularly in poor countries . â UN Report, March 2, 2009 Up from 2002 â 15% Internet worldwide: 11%- 2002 >> 23% - 2008 Trend âș Mobile builds bridges faster
30. While just 1 in 50 Africans had a mobile in the year 2000, now 28 percent have a cellular subscription. â UN Report, March 2, 2009
31. The world has more than three times more mobile cellular subscriptions than fixed telephone lines. http://www.flickr.com/photos/ecmorgan/3271187857/
32. Countries by advanced information and communications technology (ICT) : 1) Sweden 2) South Korea (nation-wide gigabit bb 2012) 3) Denmark 4) Netherlands 5) Iceland 6) Norway 17) United States - UN report, March 2009
35. 365.2.72 reading my vampire stories Phot:o carrieoke13 | http://www.flickr.com/photos/carrieoke13/3359310659/
36. http://www.flickr.com/photos/kanjiroushi/107257226/ In 2007, cell-phone novels ( keitai shosetsu) held four of the top five spots on the literary best-seller list . $240 million market â07 Trend âș Cell-phone novels arenât so novel anymore. Theyâre serious business
40. â As many newspapers struggle to stay economically viable, fewer than half of Americans (43%) say that losing their local newspaper would hurt civic life in their community "a lot." Pew Research Study: Stop the Presses (March 12, 2009 ) http://www.flickr.com/photos/gog/21039882/
45. Trend âș Augmented reality is the new information window http://blog.stratepedia.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/42A94156-89A4-4D61-84FA-FE426B647889.jpg
55. Itâs not the death of the book to fear⊠http://www.flickr.com/photos/aprilzosia/2585184283/ itâs our dependency on formats as our community (service delivery) value! Change
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) net of the U.S. Department of Defense, UCLA & SRI (Sanford Research Institute) are the first two connections. The first attempt to connect the two through NCP (network connect protocol) fails, but 2 nd goes through. First transmitted word = logon. It failed the first attempt. Only got ad far as LO
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) net of the U.S. Department of Defense, UCLA & SRI (Sanford Research Institute) are the first two connections. The first attempt to connect the two through NCP (network connect protocol) fails, but 2 nd goes through. First transmitted word = logon. It failed the first attempt. Only got ad far as LO
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) net of the U.S. Department of Defense, UCLA & SRI (Sanford Research Institute) are the first two connections. The first attempt to connect the two through NCP (network connect protocol) fails, but 2 nd goes through. First transmitted word = logon. It failed the first attempt. Only got ad far as LO
http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009/03/02/un-telecommunications.html http://www.tgdaily.com/html_tmp/content-view-41586-113.html Two thirds of the worldâs cell phone subscriptions are in developing nations, with the highest growth rate in Africa where a quarter of the population now has a mobile, a United Nations agency said on Friday. While just 1 in 50 Africans had a mobile in the year 2000, now 28 percent have a cellular subscription, according to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU). The world has more than three times more mobile cellular subscriptions than fixed telephone lines, and in some countries in Asia and Europe people have more than one contract each, pushing the mobile access rate above 100 percent.
New Yorker: New Yorker: http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/12/22/081222fa_fact_goodyear NYTimes article: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/20/world/asia/20japan.html
The story of the Phoenix is as old as time. The tale of a bird burning itself every 500 years in order to renew its immortality has been passed through all major civilizations since the ancients Greeks. Sensing old age and lackluster, the mystical bird collects kindling and fans its own fire while nesting upon the flames. From the ashes of the old Phoenix, a young and beautiful Phoenix is reborn. By overcoming fire, death, and old age, the Phoenix represents triumph over adversity and rebirth into glory, thereby providing hope and constancy.
he handprint to the right is a cave painting drawn 32,000 years ago and is the oldest portrait of man. On the walls of Chauvet Cave in southern France, the artist used the technology of his day, tinted charcoal dust blown through a straw, to create a simple, yet powerful icon of human-ness. This image captures the essence of human-centered computing. Much like the Paleolithic beings, we still use technology to relate to, understand and depict the world around us, still trying to say "I am here. I am human."