szmtag

Descriptive Pinterest and a textbased Instagram:

Heute sind mir gleich zwei bilderlose Twitterfeeds für Bilderdienste untergekommen: @PicturelessPins (via Daniel) (“The best of Pinterest without having to look at the pictures”) und Text-Only Instagram (“Your personal Instagram feed in a lightweight text format.”)

Shitter: Twitter-Feeds printed on Toiletpaper

Shitter will take one or more Feeds from your Twitter-Account and turn it into four rolls of toilet paper, delivered straight to your door.”

Data Dealer: Legal, illegal, scheißegal?

 Youtube Direktdata

Wolfie Christl schreibt mir: „Data Dealer: Legal, illegal, scheißegal? Provokantes Facebook-Spiel aus Wien, Video Trailer und Demo-Version haben wir grade veröffentlicht.“ Ich hab’ die Demo zum Game grade mal gespielt und halte die Idee für sehr sehr schick, die Umsetzung okay, aber es ist ja auch noch eine Demo. Und ich muss auch gestehen, dass ich keine Ahnung habe, wie nahe das Game an den Spielmechanismen von Farmville oder Mafia Dings oder sowas dran ist, weil ich solcherlei Dreck tatsächlich noch nie auch nur angetestet habe.

Ein kleines Team entwickelt unter dem Titel “Data Dealer” ein ungewöhnliches Online-Spiel, das sich mit viel Witz und Ironie dem hochaktuellen Thema der persönlichen Daten im digitalen Zeitalter widmet. Das Spiel ist angelehnt an populäre Facebook-Hits wie Mafia Wars, Farmville oder Cityville. Bei Data Dealer lautet die Devise allerdings: Persönliche Daten sammeln – hemmungslos und in ganz großem Stil! Zielgruppe für das Spiel sind gleichermaßen Jugendliche wie auch Erwachsene. Am Dienstag 27.03.2012 wurde ein Video-Trailer und eine Demo-Version für den deutschen Sprachraum veröffentlicht. Später soll das Spiel auch international online gehen. Das Projekt wird ohne kommerziellen Hintergrund entwickelt und ist unter “Creative Commons” lizensiert.

In „Data Dealer“ schlüpfen die Spieler in die Rolle von Daten-Händlern und bauen durch geschickten Handel mit persönlichen Informationen ihr Vermögen auf. Sie bedienen sich legaler wie dubioser Quellen, besorgen sich pikante Informationen vom Daten-Schwarzmarkt und betreiben Gewinnspiele und Telefonumfragen, Internet-Partnerbörsen, Online-Psychotests und schließlich das eigene Social Web. Nach und nach erfassen sie so die gesamte Bevölkerung in ihrer Datenbank. Gemeinsam mit befreundeten Dealern bauen sie mächtige Daten-Imperien auf und wehren sich kaltblütig gegen Image-Störfaktoren wie Bürgerinitiativen, kritische Medien oder lästige Datenschutz-Beauftragte. Dass es dabei nicht immer ganz sauber zugeht, versteht sich von selbst.

Data Dealer (Danke Wolfie!)

Granny shows more Social Media-Advice in beautiful Typography

Chacho Puebla hat seine Oma wieder mit Tipps zum Umgang mit sozialem Netzkram abgelichtet. Das ist zwar immer noch gephotoshopt und die Dame steht eigentlich nur mit ‘nem weißen Schild rum, aber die Idee ist trotzdem noch schick: Grandmother Tips Vol 2.0. (via Electru)

Vorher auf Nerdcore:
Granny shows Social Media-Advice in beautiful Typography

WTF is my mashup?!:

WTF is my mashup: „Get your fucking CPU crunching on an iOS specific Arduino application to enable Diigo and Posterous users to leverage the Google geocoding API for microblogging that breaches a load of fucking copyrights.“ (via MeFi)

Granny shows Social Media-Advice in beautiful Typography

Schickes Typo-Projekt mit guten Tipps zum Umgang mit neumodischem Schnickschnack aus dem Umfeld sozialer Medien von Chacho Puebla und seiner Großtante: Grandmother Tips – Just a few tips that my grandmother should have given me, but unfortunately never did. Ein paar mehr nach dem Klick.

Gib mir den Rest, Baby…

Social Network für Leute mit derselben Darmflora

Ein Social Network, in dem man eine Stuhlprobe einschickt, die dann analysiert wird und Leute zusammenbringt, die die gleiche Darmflora haben. Kein Witz. Die Analyse kostet 2100$ und ich wär’ gern Madonnas Dickdarm, weil dann wär’ ich immer satt. Von New Scientist:

There’s yet another social network on the internet – but this one pairs users up with people who share the same intestinal bacteria.

The new site, MyMicrobes, has been set up by researchers from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Heidelberg, Germany, and aims to bring together individuals with the same gut flora so that they can share questions and concerns about their digestive health. As you might imagine, it looks set to be a rather niche network – and one that requires a little more than the usual email address and password to join.

Social network lets people with same gut flora hook up (via Geekosystem)

ShareMeNot: Social Buttons without User-Tracking

Tolles Firefux-Plugin, das das Tracken der User von Social Buttons wie Facebooks Like- oder Googles +1-Button (die man auch hier auf NC findet) verhindert, ohne den Service selbst abzuschalten. Heisst: Man kann mit diesem Plugin weiterhin Dinge plussen und liken, ohne getrackt zu werden. Sweet!

ShareMeNot is a Firefox add-on designed to prevent third-party buttons (such as the Facebook “Like” button or the Twitter “tweet” button) embedded by sites across the Internet from tracking you until you actually click on them. Unlike traditional solutions, ShareMeNot does this without completely removing the buttons from the web experience.

ShareMeNot – Protecting against tracking from third-party social media buttons while still allowing you to use them (via Boing Boing)

Bookmarks for July 18th: iPhone Fireflies, Dune without Dialoge, Free Running in Gaza

Fireflies HD | crowdflow blog: The following videos show the movement of 880 iPhones in Europe in April 2011.
The story of 15 Second Copy for the C-64 « pagetable.com
The story of FCopy for the C-64 « pagetable.com
The Complete History Of Video Games On "The Simpsons" | Complex
AnonPlus – The Anonymous Social Networking Site.
Dune with no dialog – Boing Boing
A complete guide to the planets’ birthdays
This Is War: Watch the Libyan Revolution Explode through the Lens of a Helmet Cam — Part 4
Archive Gallery: Early Visions of Human Spaceflight | Popular Science

Ken Reid – World Wide Weirdies (1970′s): Ken Reid's "World Wide Weirdies" series was originally published in the comic Whoopee!

Visual.ly | Infographics & Visualizations: Infographics and data visualizations are shifting the way people find and experience stories, creating a new way of seeing the world of data. They help communicate complex ideas in a clear, compact and beautiful way, taking deep data and presenting it in visual shorthand. We’ve collected the best examples on the web and gathered them for you to reference, share, and enjoy.

The Final Image: This film blog is a collection of screenshots of the final thought, le mise-en-scene finale, or the final shot of films I've seen.

Little Annie Fanny – Episodes 18-21 ~ Playboy January-July/1965: Artwork by Harvey Kurtzman, Will Elder, Jack Davis, Russ Heath and Frank Frazetta

A Geek’s Journal-1976: What if there had been blogs in 1976? I would most definitely have had one and this might well have been it. This blog is based on my actual journal kept in 1976.

‪HARREY PODDER: Say the Magic Word‬‏ – YouTube: What would happen in the Harry Potter world if their spells didn't quite go the way they meant them to? Take a look and see. 

Study Shows Parrot Parents Name Their Children | Geekosystem: Each parrot has its own signature call that others use to address it, which is the parrot equivalent of having a name. But where do these “names” come from? New research has shown that just like with human babies, parrot parents name their offspring, even before the babies can communicate themselves.

Sex-Ed DVD Selling Fast in Iran – The Daily Beast: Iran’s first-ever sex-education DVD is wildly popular. Babak Dehghanpisheh writes that the film’s success reveals a thirst for information inside the Islamic republic.

Free Running Gaza – Artscape – Al Jazeera English: Two young Palestinians embrace an art form and athletic discipline that offers an escape from life under occupation.

See something or say something – a set on Flickr: Where people post geotagged photos to Flickr from and geotagged tweets to Twitter from.

Study: why bother to remember when you can just use Google?: In the age of Google and Wikipedia, an almost unlimited amount of information is available at our fingertips, and with the rise of smartphones, many of us have nonstop access. The potential to find almost any piece of information in seconds is beneficial, but is this ability actually negatively impacting our memory? The authors of a paper that is being released by Science Express describe four experiments testing this. Based on their results, people are recalling information less, and instead can remember where to find the information they have forgotten.

Mark Zuckerberg on Google+:

Mark Zuckerberg on Google+. (via Forbes)

XKCD on Google+

Randall Munroe fasst meine Gedanken zu Google+ auf XKCD in drei Panels ziemlich gut zusammen.

Außerdem: Wired: Google+ vs. Facebook on Privacy: + Ahead On Points — For Now, Taking on Facebook, Google’s Social Network Allows Data Exporting

Techcrunch: That Was Quick: Chrome Extension Adds Facebook, Twitter Sharing To Google+, Good First Sign: I Have A Strong Desire To Keep Using Google+, Is Google Asking The Wrong Question With Social?

heise: Google+: Googles Angriff auf Facebook, Mac-Pionier Andy Hertzfeld gestaltet Googles Facebook-Konkurrenten

Data Liberation Front: Google Takout

(Youtube Direkttakeout)

Zeitgleich zum Launch von Google+ kommt Google Takeout. Das Video dazu ist weltklasse.

Since we began in 2007, the Data Liberation Front has been focused on one thing: making it easier for you to take your data in and out of Google. Our first step was to make it easier to get your data out of our products, one product at a time. While we’ve made great progress on this front, we’ve been on the lookout for even better ways to let you take your data out of Google.

Today we’re pleased to announce the Data Liberation Front’s first revolutionary product: Google Takeout.

The Data Liberation Front Delivers Google Takeout (via Waxy)

Wired über Google+

(Youtube Direkt+)

Wired hat einen langen und sehr interessanten Artikel über Googles Social Media-Pläne (Google+ ist noch in einer Closed Beta, hier ein Demo), von denen bislang nichtmal die Spitze des Eisbergs veröffentlicht wurden (was sich aber in den kommenden Tagen ändern wird): Inside Google+ — How the Search Giant Plans to Go Social, Techcrunch hat ebenfalls ein Posting über Googles Social-Web-Dings: Google+ Project: It’s Social, It’s Bold, It’s Fun, And It Looks Good — Now For The Hard Part, hier noch ein Artikel der NYT: Google Introduces Facebook Competitor, Emphasizing Privacy.

The parts announced Tuesday represent only a portion of Google’s plans. In an approach the company refers to as “rolling thunder,” Google has been quietly pushing out pieces of its ambitious social strategy — there are well over 100 launches on its calendar. When some launches were greeted by yawns, the Emerald Sea team leaders weren’t ruffled at all — lack of drama is part of the plan. Google has consciously refrained from contextualizing those products into its overall strategy.

That will begin now, with the announcement of the two centerpieces of Google+. But even this moment — revealed in a blog post that marks the first limited “field tests” outside the company — will be muted, because it marks just one more milestone in a long tough slog to remake Google into something more “people centric.

“We’re transforming Google itself into a social destination at a level and scale that we’ve never attempted — orders of magnitude more investment in terms of people than any previous project,” says Vic Gundotra, who leads Google’s social efforts.

Inside Google+ — How the Search Giant Plans to Go Social

Bookmarks for Juni 24th

  • Vinyl Has Become Too Mainstream So Hipsters Now Making Records On Chocolate | Badass Digest:
  • Plot Device on Vimeo: A young filmmaker obtains a mysterious device that unleashes the full force of cinema on his front lawn.
  • The math of the Rubik’s cube – MIT News Office: New research establishes the relationship between the number of squares in a Rubik’s-cube-type puzzle and the maximum number of moves required to solve it.
  • nathaniel mellors at venice art biennale 2011: british-born, amsterdam-based artist nathaniel mellors displays 'hippy dialectics (ourhouse)' in 'illuminations,' the international exhibition curated by bice curiger at the venice art biennale 2011. a double-headed animatronic sculpture,  the work delivers a short schizophrenic dialogue which is both humorous and disturbing. the parenthetical 'ourhouse' in the title refers to a video work by mellors, a surrealist sitcom about an eccentric family featuring two central figures, ‘daddy’ and ‘the object.’ 'hippy dialectics' features two versions of the 'daddy' character – one blue, one yellow – connected by a ribbon of hair. cast from the face of the actor in the film, the latex heads are brought to life by means of electronics and software. they deliver a looped kind of pep talk, including a range of compliments ('god, you're looking buff. no seriously, you look great!' and 'cool, you are cool!') before reaching an absurdist conclusion of rebutting 'yes' with 'no'. 
  • 555 Chip Footstool:
  • The Shocking True Tale Of The Mad Genius Who Invented Sea-Monkeys | The Awl: As anyone sold by the Sea-Monkey ads could tell you, it was hard to say exactly where von Braunhut was walking on the terrain between truth, embellishment and con. That was his gift. He convinced us to look at the jazz hands and lose sight of the footwork. Von Braunhut’s inventions were not quite what they seemed to be. Neither was he.
  • Robots of Brixton on Vimeo: „The film follows the trials and tribulations of young robots surviving at the sharp end of inner city life, living the predictable existence of a populous hemmed in by poverty, disillusionment and mass unemployment. When the Police invade the one space which the robots can call their own, the fierce and strained relationship between the two sides explodes into an outbreak of violence echoing that of 1981.“
  • 3-D ‘Motion Pictures’ From The Civil War : The Picture Show : NPR: „Here are some animated stereoviews from the Smithsonian's Photographic History Collection to show the images in 3-D by flickering the right and left sides of the views.“
  • Minecraft Katamari Damacy-Mod: „“
  • Poetry Shopdropping: „“
  • LightScythe – The Mechatronics Guy: „The LightScythe is a device for writing text and images frozen in midair. The hardware information and software is open source and anyone can make it.“
  • Bullet time Tesla Coil: „“
  • Paramount Cease and Desist Targets 3D Printer ‘Pirate’ | TorrentFreak: „“
  • 10 cameras + 1 Tesla coil = 70 megapixel bullet time lightning: „“
  • A Journey Through The 1955 Disneyland Guidebook | Disney by Mark: „“
  • In violent video games, teens face (and fight) their demons: „Sixteen-year-old Evan Jones played his first violent videogames when he was 3. He slew demons in Diablo II, blasted Lovecraftian horrors in Quake and shot terrorists in Counter-Strike. If you buy conventional wisdom, by now Jones should be a tightly wound coil of aggression, ready to attack someone at the slightest provocation. Instead, he’s a pretty laid-back kid.“
  • Inside Google+ — How the Search Giant Plans to Go Social | Epicenter | Wired.com: „“
  • Time-lapse Spider in space: „Esmeralda the spider isn't wasting away from homesickness in space, in fact she's doubled in size. She's one of two golden silk orb-weaver spiders (Nephila clavipes) that was recently sent to the International Space Station (ISS) on NASA's last shuttle mission to space, as part of a national education project in the US. One of the experiments, designed by Stefanie Countryman and her team at BioServe Space Technologies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, involves comparing spider behaviour in space and on Earth. Students in elementary and middle schools across the country are watching videos like this one of the spiders spinning webs in near-weighlessness and looking for differences from the same set-up in their classrooms.“
  • Tiny Steve Jobs Still Makes More Money than You Do – Technabob: „1/6 scale Steve Jobs Limited Edition 12-inch Collectible Figurine which will include a 1/6 scale Steve Jobs head sculpt and 12-inch figure body plus 1/6 Scale items such as the iMac, Magic Mouse, keyboard, iPhone 4, iPad 2, Desk, Chair, Steve's outfit (New balance 992 sneakers, black T-shirt and jeans).“
  • The Archiver on Vimeo: „“
  • Splitscreen: A Love Story on Vimeo: „“
  • Göbekli Tepe – The Birth of Religion: „We used to think agriculture gave rise to cities and later to writing, art, and religion. Now the world’s oldest temple suggests the urge to worship sparked civilization.“
  • BBC’s The Romantics: The Birth of the Individual in Modern Society | Brain Pickings: „What The French Revolution has to do with the love of nature and the birth of the modern individual.“
  • Inside Commodore DOS: „Inside Commodore DOS : the complete guide to the 1541 disk operating system.“
  • YouTube – Solarnauts (Part 1 of 3): „An unsold pilot for a proposed 1967 sci-fi actioner out of the UK. Eye-popping costumes and sets belie an overall cheesy but charming tone. Cast of familiar but un-nameable Brit character actors, only Bond-Girl Martine Beswick stands out. Beware of LOGIK! You have been warned…“
  • The Vintage Drink: „“
  • History Cookbook – Cookit!: „Do you know what the Vikings ate for dinner? What a typical meal of a wealthy family in Roman Britain consisted of, or what food was like in a Victorian Workhouse? Why not drop into history cookbook and find out? This project looks at the food of the past and how this influenced the health of the people living in each time period.“
  • Afghanistan’s Amazing DIY Internet | Fast Company: „FabFi is an ambitious project which is creating Internet networks for eastern Afghanistan whose main components can be built out of trash. It's low-tech, it's simple–and it works.“
  • OpenWatch | Demand Marvelous Secrets: „OpenWatch, a global participatory counter-surveillance project which uses cellular phones as a way of monitoring authority figures.“

Turntable.fm – Deejaying Chatroom Webservice

Turntable.fm ist ein relativ frischer Webservice, der sowas wie Chatroom bietet, in denen die Teilnehmer auflegen können. Seine Playlisten stellt man sich über den integrierten MediaNet-Service zusammen, die Leute im Chatroom können Songs und DJs „lamen“ und „awesomen“, worüber man verschiedene Features freischaltet.

Anmeldung funktioniert bislang über Facebook, sofern ein FB-Kumpel bereits User ist, hat bei mir beim ersten Versuch hingehauen. Hier der Nerdcore-DJ-Room, die habe ich aber grade eben mal auf die Schnelle zusammengeklickt, vielleicht sollte mal jemand übernehmen. Könnte ein ganz lustiges Spielzeug sein.

Von Techcrunch:

You join via Facebook; for controlling growth, you must have a friend on Facebook that is already a user of the service at the moment. After logging in, you browse the different music rooms or create your own. If there’s an open DJ spot (five maximum to a room), you click “Play music” and your avatar transports to the stage. Queue up some songs—they have an extensive library or you can upload your own. Songs played in the room rotate evenly between the DJs. Listeners in the room can then “awesome” a song (and their head starts to bob, and the DJ gets a point) or they can “lame” a song. As users earn more points, they unlock different avatars. Listeners can also add the song to iTunes, Spotify, Last.fm, or their Turntable queue.

The only issue I thought Turntable had was needing to deal with the record labels, but it appears they are licensing the streaming catalog thru MediaNet. Turntable does possibly open up some exposure by allowing users to upload their own tracks, but it seems those (maybe) are only accessible to be played by the uploading user.

As soon as you DJ your first song, you’re addicted. Just as you crave to be retweeted or replied to on Twitter, and just as you crave to have something liked or commented on in Facebook, you crave to have people chat about your song or start bobbing their heads in Turntable. Usage is super sticky—you hang around because you want to play your next track and you’re curious what’s going to play next.

The New Early-Adopter Addiction: Turntable