Date: Tuesday 27 November, 2007 | Posted by:

Doctor Who - The dalec conquests
Do you remember? Doctor Who: The Delek Conquests
[which is the information and which the communication part?] 
 
Yesterday it was a nice day. I participated in a conference for communication. No actually it was about disseminating information. No no ... wait... it was about communication. Or... Communi-rmation?
 
Let's look them up in Wikipedia:
  • Information is the result of processing, gathering, manipulating and organizing data in a way that adds to the knowledge of the receiver. In other words, it is the context in which data is taken.
  • Communication is a process that allows organisms to exchange information by several methods. Communication requires that all parties understand a common language that is exchanged with each other.

I think the difference is obvious and simple. Communication is using Information and actually enhance it. But communication would be useless if there is no productive dialogue. It is noted that only 5% of all readers are going through the total of documents/articles and only 3% is absorves the information. What can we do to make it better? Dialogues! And internet is here to support it either by Fora or Blogs or even Chat.

Flavor of the day: Chocolate Banana Cake 

 

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Date: Friday 23 November, 2007 | Posted by:



A pleasant weekend!

Flavor of the day: Hot Chocolate by Girardelli

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Date: Thursday 22 November, 2007 | Posted by:

Jeff Bezos, Amazon CEO
I couldnt find a photo with a cat and the Kindle

In case you havent heard until now, Amazon has developed an e-reader device, named Amazon Kindle.

The $399 device allows you to read books, newspapers and blogs in an 6" e-paper screen. You can buy content by using the device itself which connects to Amazon through a wireless network. You can also access Google and Wikipedia (but just that) to lookup information and even read your documents (but you have to mail them to a special account and get charged a few cents per document).

Now Amazon is trying to create a lot of buzz on the Kindle, with CEO Jeff Bezos going on the front cover of NewsWeek, adding a personal note on the Amazon.com page, and apparently keeping a very low production schedule in order to produce the "we are so successful we have sold out" news headlines. The bad thing is that Amazon underestimated it's success. This created the ridiculous headline "Amazon Kindle sells out in 5.5 hours".
 
I'm not suggesting that the idea of playing with the availability of your product is bad, but 5.5 hours is so low it is actually negative. Companies are still supposed to have good estimation on their products' success. I wouldn't trust a company that failed in it's estimations so badly. Would you?

Flavor of the day: Aztec Dark Hot Chocolate

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Date: Wednesday 21 November, 2007 | Posted by:

Can I have my data please?
Can I have my data please?

We store more and more data on the net every day. Texts of any kind, photographs, personal data, telephone numbers, even thoughts (if you consider blog entries to be a product of the intelligence as opposed to mind garbagge ;))

But what happen to this data is that often they are tied with the service we have used. The things you can do with your data are thus limited to the features of the particular service. And what happens if (science forbid!) the service closes? Your data is gone with them.

Luckily, services running on the web are more and more providing your data back to... you. In research for this article I looked at the possibilities of Facebook and came up with a decent way to revive my personal site, giannopoulos.info. Facebook provides an RSS feed of my posted items. With the help of Feedburner and some css I am able to post this feed my site as if it was it's actual content. And my site is updated whenever I add something new on Facebook. Of course at the moment you need to be a Facebook user to comment on my posted items but I could script an Essence module to import the data as actual blog entries and allow commenting by everyone.

Still, there is a long road ahead of us. Facebook for example doesnt have an RSS feed for photographs and when I tried to import the feed of ilovehotchocolate.com in my Facebook notes it worked once but then new entries were ignored (as opposed to being automatically imported).So what can you export from your favorite service or site?

Flavor of the day: KitKat

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Date: Friday 16 November, 2007 | Posted by:



Have a nice weekend!

Flavor of the day: Toblerone

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