Last.fm: The Social Music Revolution
Posted on February 20, 2008 by C Johnson
Culture | Leave a Comment
Here at Tuesday, we’re an iPod wearing, mash up mixing, CD-swapping army of music enthusiasts who take our tunes as seriously as we take our work. Internet radio is a collective favorite, so it shouldn’t raise an eyebrow that I’m dedicating this post to the web radio space—in particular the (arguably) biggest player in the Internet radio universe.
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It’s Time to Upgrade the Entire Internet
Posted on March 28, 2007 by Tuesday Creative
Tech | 1 Comment
In 1958 the United States created the Advanced Research Projects Agency to compete with Soviet technology (The USSR launched Sputnik four months earlier). Eleven years later the worlds first packet switched network, ARPANET,was born. Research continued, innovation flourished and on January 1, 1983 the National Science Foundation unveiled the worlds first wide-area network and the TCP/IP protocol. The modern internet was born.
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Kids, the Internet, and the End of Privacy
Posted on February 12, 2007 by C Lin
Culture | Leave a Comment
Kids today. They have no sense of shame. They have no sense of privacy. They are show-offs, fame whores, pornographic little loons who post their diaries, their phone numbers, their stupid poetry—for God’s sake, their dirty photos!—online. They have virtual friends instead of real ones. They talk in illiterate instant messages. They are interested only in attention—and yet they have zero attention span, flitting like hummingbirds from one virtual stage to another. - New York Magazine
Here’s an interesting article from New York Magazine about online users who have multiple profiles and blogs who are increasingly alienating their parents generation. The use of these social networking tools has changed the way we communicate with one another and how we are perceived by our friends. It’s interesting to me to think about how this will affect the new generation who are starting blogs and profiles at a very young age. How will it affect their communication to real people in real life? Also, in the virtual world you have control over how you want to be perceived; you become your own simulacrum, if you will. What happens when you quickly realize that you have no control in the real world of how people perceive you? And finally something that has affected me personally—how do you deal with getting ‘upset’ online in real life? For example, questions I’ve asked myself: why am I not in the top ten of a certain friend’s Myspace top friends list? Why is my ex-boyfriend contacting me through Myspace even though I don’t want to talk to him? It got so bad that at one point I had to commit ‘Myspace suicide’ because my real self couldn’t handle it. These are real emotions, not virtual ones!
Kids, the Internet, and the End of Privacy: The Greatest Generation Gap Since Rock and Roll












