[LINK] McKenzie Wark Through the Looking Glass
Tom Worthington
tom.worthington at tomw.net.au
Wed Apr 6 10:24:45 AEST 2011
Greetings from CCA-EDUCAUSE Australasia 2011 in Sydney, where McKenzie
Wark is speaking on "Alice Through the Looking Glass". He argued that
there was no millennial generation of students who are comfortable with
technology. Students producing a "newspaper" still want to see it in print.
I tried to find where I first came across McKenzie, so I did a web
search and found a Libertus.net entry on the Austrlaian Senate Committee
on Internet censorship 1997. This has a link to McKenzie Wark's
commentary and my commentary.
McKenzie talked about Betaville, an "open-source multiplayer environment
for real cities". The idea being that the public can experience proposed
buildings and art installations before they are built (or ones which are
completely virtual).
"The Beach Beneath the Street: The Everyday Life and Glorious Times of
the Situationist International" is a graphic novel coming out in June 2011.
McKenzie pointed out that the cost of software distorts the education
process. If students can't afford the software they learnt on after they
graduate, them may have to enrol in a further course just to get access.
He therefore argues for open access tools at unviersity. He suggested
that courses should teach media students about rival video standards and
the benefits of open formats (I teach this in my e-records course). He
pointed out that game engines can be sued for creating videos, without
using conventional movie making tools.
McKenzie argued that blogs are not a useful way to interact about a
large text work. He pointed out that with a blog there will be a large
lump of text from the blogger and then comments tacked on at the end.
Instead he showed an interface showing the comments as stacked cards,
linked to sections in the text. This reminded me of an early Apple
Mackintosh application which used a card metaphor.
McKenzie explained that giving books away online helps print sales. He
said he did not understand why this works and that publishers are
willing to try this as they are so desperate for sales. I suspect that
this only works for well know authors.
McKenzie demonstrated an animated online graphic novel. This looked
okay, but he commented it can't be found with a web search. I need to
show him how this can be easily fixed by following the web accessibility
guidelines.
This was a virtuoso performance and worth the whole conference fee to see.
Educause finishes at lunch time today, but theme will continue in Sydney
with Ted Nelson, Founding Designer, Project Xanadu is speaking at
Unviersity of Sydney at 6pm this evening.
Links in the blog version at:
<http://blog.tomw.net.au/2011/04/mckenzie-wark-through-looking-glass.html>.
--
Tom Worthington FACS CP HLM, TomW Communications Pty Ltd. t: 0419496150
PO Box 13, Belconnen ACT 2617, Australia http://www.tomw.net.au
Adjunct Senior Lecturer, School of Computer Science, The
Australian National University http://cs.anu.edu.au/courses/COMP7310/
Visiting Scientist, CSIRO ICT Centre: http://bit.ly/csiro_ict_canberra
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