Saturday, April 7, 2007

Bonus 2: Second Life, Game or Pocket Lint?





Second Life isn’t a game because it doesn’t have any objectives/goals for the player (socially-destitute and major investor in the myopia industry) to achieve – ‘Key components of games are goals, rules, challenge and interactivity (Wikipedia, Games 2007). Although Second Life might have the element of interactivity, it’s still just an environment for people to come together and do as they please; it’s more like a forum or an online community in terms of principle than a game.

Virtual worlds such as Second Life mimic reality as much as technologically possible. The game even has its own currency, which you work to earn or trade for that crosses over the reality boundary and makes it translatable into actual cold hard cash! This seems a lot like life doesn’t it? Especially with the concept of earning real moolah! If so, would you consider life a game? The players also have great fun participating in the ‘game’ where they get to sightsee and discover an entirely new concept: friends.

However, since it’s a virtual world, the players are able to do things beyond their wildest imaginations/physical limitations. Yes, they’d be able to see their own toes! Not only that, when they chat up a stranger, the chances of them replying instead of hurling abuse is greatly reduced! Magnificent, no? But seriously, what attracts people to the game is the fact that they can have a go at a ‘second life’ and try their hand at professions they always wished they could be involved in (a thin person with no geeky glasses) or a drastic lifestyle change like having friends. Players can even build their own furniture and put them up for sale for real money (how this transaction works I haven’t any idea, probably credit cards and such involved)! Why stop at furniture? They can even erect buildings (unless they chance upon a someone exciting, which ‘buildings’ will then just be a euphemism for something else)!

In another similar but more game-ish game, World of Warcraft, a WOW player quoted ‘Warcraft is the new golf… I actually clinched a deal with a company I met through WOW.’ Although being associated to a proper game and sport like golf, all this ‘game’ is doing is being an alternative to life. True, interactivity is crucial in such games but that’s all they have to offer in essence. As stated earlier, a game has to have goals, rules, challenge and interactivity. Second Life only has interactivity as its corner stone and nothing more. Would you conclude that just because Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew has opposable thumbs similar to a primate’s then he must be a chimpanzee (even though he has the uncanny resemblance to one)?

Second Life may be coined a ‘game’ but is in fact nothing more than a glorified online community/forum with better graphics and a higher level of interactivity.



References:

Wikipedia. ‘Game’. (2007). Retrieved April 6, 2007 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game

Levy, Steven. (2006). ‘World of Warcraft: Is it a Game?’ Retrieved April 6, 2007 from http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14757769/site/newsweek/page/3/print/1/displaymode/1098/


Clarren, Rebecca. (2006). ‘Virtually dead in Iraq’. Retrieved April 6, 2007 from http://www.salon.com/ent/feature/2006/09/16/americasarmy/

QotW10: Second Life is a major Number Two!

like a polaroid picture...
GOT MILK?


Wow, never in my life have I been so thrilled to exit a game. Second Life really was a chore to both set up and play. I don’t understand why people get so hooked on the game; well maybe it’s because I’m a more outdoorsy person and believe in sports and REALITY. Nonetheless, I did complete the orientation island bit with its atrocious lag.

My avatar, Suiluj (Julius backwards) Allen, was the only character that had itself clad in black and seeing how black’s my favorite color, I chose it to represent me. Throughout the game, I, through the avatar, scolded people for joining the community mainly because I was irritated and wanted to annoy people. See, I don’t believe in the whole two-faced approach that individuals have when they live their lives online and in reality. It’s another form of fraud, which in essence makes them no better than the executives at Enron, only they got rich lying to people.

I picked this really retro disco area, which I’m sure no one else picked as my most favorite place in the game (really because I was developing a headache by the time I found the disco floor). Although it might not seem suitable – a cyber goth dancing – I felt the sight of my avatar ‘shaking it’ on a pretty rad-out retro disco floor was refreshing and awkward (much like myself, only I’m not down with the dancing). The fact that the disco area was really out of place made me like it even more and choosing it as my favorite destination portrays my queerness (being odd, not the type who’d hang around Market Street in Frisco a lot) and how I stick out like a sore thumb.

Eventually, I still feel that nothing beats doing something for real. Why feed your character in World of Warcraft when you could order a pizza? Why play football with fellow avatars when you could go to the park? I like donuts.

cheers all!

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Qotw9: STOMP it like you just don't care (cause i sure don't)


As every one gets more and more versed in the ways of the Internet, it can be seen that whatever practices are carried out in the ‘real world’ can also be translated into the virtual world, including but not limited to news/information broadcasts and discussions on interesting current affairs. One upside about having such activities going on online as opposed to in reality is the drastic amount of freedom given – say or suggest anything you want with the least bit of judgment being passed on you or the subject matter. A result of this impeccable freedom is what we know today as ‘citizen journalism’.

Known also as ‘participatory journalism’, citizen journalism is the act of citizens ‘playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analyzing and disseminating news and information’ (Citizen journalism, 2007). It’s sort of an opportunity for kids with weird fetishes about the journalism world to play ‘pretend journalist’ and not be gawked at for. According to Gillmor (2004), this is only possible ‘because of new publishing tools available on the Internet’. With technology at our fingertips these days, all we need for citizen journalism to take place is some form of a discussion avenue where the sharing of information/news can occur. In essence, every one can participate in citizen journalism with the emergence of the Internet and more social networking sites such as web logs, message boards, chat rooms, mobile computing, and Wikis. It is so easy that’ Every Citizen is a Reporter’ (Oh, 2000).

STOMP is an example of such an online community in Singapore, which clearly shows that “[t]he Internet has enabled citizens to contribute to journalism, without professional training” (Citizen journalism, 2007). It’s basically a 3-in-1 centre (chatroom, forum and announcement board), catering to locals with various interests and helping them find the right ‘clique’ to join or be a part of. With what we have learnt in online communities, people can then report on anything at all and and have others responding or adding on to their reports or comments.

A key feature seen in such articles published by citizen journalists is that the reported news appears to be written in a more informal and personal manner – such as that of a blog – and often biased. Although not as accurate as proper news reports and articles, it does often give the reader a fresh and different perspective of the issue – the citizen journalist’s point of view.

Even though STOMP might seem to not be a total waste of time and even a decent avenue for citizen journalism to take place, I do believe it’s got room for growth (a lot, actually) and development. The ‘reporters’ can sometimes write on totally irrelevant issues such as shopping or how they feel suicidal and that smoking is bad or some poppycock like that. It’s becoming a dumpsite of random news that no one would ever care about, not even their own parents which is probably what drove them to write about their sad lives anyway (just like people who blog which I apparently am but only because it’s required and it justifies me having a computer). I feel that moderators should monitor the news posts to determine whether they’re worthy of people’s time.


References:
“Citizen Journalism” (March 29, 2006) From Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Retrieved March 29, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizen_journalism

STOMP (2006) From Singapore Press Holdings
Retrieved March 29, 2007 from
http://www.stomp.com.sg/

Bowman, S., Willis, C. (2005). Nieman Reports: The Future Is Here, But Do News Media Companies See It?. Retrieved March 29, 2007, from Hypergene Media Blog Web site: http://www.hypergene.net/blog/comments.php?id=327_0_1_0_C

Bowman, S. & Willis, C. (2003). We Media. Retrieved March 31, 2007, from http://www.hypergene.net/wemedia/download/we_media.pdf

Friday, March 23, 2007

QotW8: I'm Not Wearing Any Pants

Finally, an exciting topic such as this! Politics makes me dance and jump for joy on the inside, just like how Mikey gets when he passes a childcare/maternity ward. Yeah politics sure does a number on me! I lie.

So I googled ‘political blogs’ and the search came up with some interesting (not really, more dry and mundane) blog links and being the adventurous boy that I am, I clicked on the very first one entitled ‘Alfian’s Secret Wank Shed’ (http://alfian.diaryland.com/.html) that apparently is pretty… shall we say racially provocative? Loves it.

One particular entry (also the latest one, not because I was/am lazy) invoked much interest in me, well as much as an absolutely un-ambitious 17-year-old who reads web logs as much as he says nice things about people (never) – the post ‘the scolding repertoire of malay mothers’. In this entry, he meticulously analyzes the manner in which Malay mothers reprimand their children (which does in fact explain a lot) e.g. 5) She resorts to the obscene to make her point: "Why must you turn on the toilet light when it’s afternoon, are you counting your pubic hair?" Well it’s no Jerry Seinfeld but it certainly makes for good reading (seeing how it’s probably the only thing I’ve read all day)! The rest of his 6-year-old blog just about runs along the same path – racism.

Although treading on pretty thin ice with his controversial views on such politically sensitive issues such as racism, I feel that Alfian should continue writing provocatively and expressing himself in a similar manner. Well actually it’s because I want to see him get arrested and beaten with the same ferocity expressed by Mel to the Jews. I’m a sadist like that.

Finally, with its definition being: ‘the rule of people’ (Wikipedia, Democracy 2007), I do think that blogs allow for greater democracy in Singapore, only that the already- ‘democratic’ government, which obviously allows the jury system (just to name ONE) to be established in the local justice scene, will quash it. Even though ‘the government has seen this trend of blogs and even started blogging’ (Giam, Gerald, 31st December 2006). Although having blogs will make the general public feel that they can say whatever they truly feel instead of what they’re supposed to. I also believe that many people in Singapore would feel safer voicing their opinions online as opposed to off, for fear of being prosecuted, which is an irony when you consider the definition of democracy.

Colbert gets his own ice cream because he is witty and has his own show.



References:

Giam, Gerald (31st December 2006), Review- The politics of Singapore’s new media in 2006.
Retrieved on 22nd March 2007 from http://theonlinecitizen.com/2006/12/31/review-the-politics-of-singapores-new-media-in-2006/

Wikipedia 2007. Democracy. Retrieved on 22nd March 2007 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy

Thornton, A. (2002, October). Does Internet Create Democracy. Retrieved March 23, 2007 from http://www.zip.com.au/%7Eathornto/thesis_2002_alinta_thornton.doc

Alfian’s Secret Wank Shed (26th September 2006), The Scolding Repertoire of Malay Mothers

Retrieved on 22nd March 2007 from http://alfian.diaryland.com/motherscold.html

Friday, March 16, 2007

QotW7: Online Communities and i think the more you take a dump, the more weight you lose

Yes I guess I’d consider Twitter to be an online community. When the term ‘online community’ comes to mind, we usually associate it with a place where individuals come together to communicate and exchange views and opinions. However, according to Wikipedia, an online community might also be defined as ‘a group of people that may or may not primarily or initially communicate or interact via the Internet.’ (Virtual Community, 2007)

There’re many approaches to communicating in an online community, with such advances in technology. One way is the use of pseudonyms, where your real name needn’t be used in order to send instant messages or share ideas. Who knows; the really cool chick you’re constantly e-mailing and IM-ing might just turn out to be your own mom! Gross! Every one has the ability to control the information they wish to offer and receive – forums in websites such as LastFM.com specify and cater to the music-inclined. Of course, as with any domain whether virtual or real, rules do exist and have to be abided by to maintain the level of order and harmony that goes on within the community. In an online community, the world can be brought together just by contributing in an online community: ‘The advance of technology brings nations together and narrows the differences between the experiences of their people.’ All you need to join up is an open mind and more importantly, a decent Internet connection!

Okay so why’s Twitter an online community? Besides the fact that it’s easier to suggest that it is rather than isn’t, Twitter allows for strangers (strange people) to communicate with one another, as perverse and creepy as it might seem, and share ideas (or lack thereof in the case of most who just want to have a realm that they can pretend to feel that they ‘belong’). Personally I think it’s quite sad that people need online communities to join so that they feel less of a tool and an outcast that they actually were already born as, but hey, that’s just me. Twitter lets you leave comments and messages, which are obvious tools for interaction and is mainly why I consider it an online community. It also allows you to add friends and strangers from around the world ‘without regard to race, creed, gender or geography.’ (Wellman & Gula, 1996) Awwh… ain’t that sweet!

Having used Twitter for two days now (no, not really I just joined up because I thought it’d make me appear more sociable since apparently every one needs friends), I’ve come to find it very much like iChat and MSN Messenger, where you send instant messages to friends and sometimes strange people or strangers, only you don’t get as instant a response. Every other aspect seems somewhat similar – the sharing of thoughts and offering of advice and all that jazz.

Online communities and forums are like support groups – they have a specific agenda, a loyal following from the defective individuals and they discuss their thoughts/problems with the group; however the ‘Hi my name is Julius and I’m a junkie’ bit is replaced with claims of hypothetical scenarios and pseudonyms.

Have a good life!


References:

Rheingold, H. (1993). The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier. Retrieved March 16, 2007 from http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?sid=4AAFDF98-AA07-4D29-9B42-A356DC54A8D7&ttype=2&tid=3823

Fernback, J. & Thompson, B. (1995). "Virtual Communities: Abort, Retry, Failure?" Retrieved March 15, 2007 from http://www.rheingold.com/texts/techpolitix/VCcivil.html

Wikipedia (2007). Virtual Community. Retrieved March 15, 2007 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_communities

Wellman, B. & Gulia, M. (1996). "Net Surfers Don't Ride Alone: Virtual Communities as Communities." Retrieved March 15, 2007 from http://www.acm.org/%7Eccp/references/wellman/wellman.html

Thursday, February 22, 2007

QotW5: Online Identities (pictures are overrated so i don't have any and it's not cos i was just being a pain and lazy. okay yeah it was but still...

Ever look in the mirror one morning and after cursing and swearing at the horrid beast that stared back at you, decide to go back to bed and never leave the house till either your appearance changed for the better or every one else suddenly turned blind? Yes, even I too have those days and the fact that I used ‘even’ doesn’t mean that I believe God chose to flaunt his talents by creating me, it just suggests it. So anyway, don’t you just wish there was some way to annihilate the feeling of insecurity which greets you every morning at the mirror? Well, there isn’t any way other than cosmetic surgery, which costs a bomb and a bag of chips to pay for and sorry folks, cause the norm is: one body, one identity (‘Identity and Deception in the Virtual World’ by Judith Donath, 1996); however you can confide in the fact that it’s possible to be the ‘perfect’ person or the person you’ve always wished you could be, in another realm – the virtual world. Enter the online identity.

In the physical world there is an inherent unity to the self, for the body provides a compelling and convenient definition of identity (‘Identity and Deception in the Virtual World’ by Judith Donath, 1996). In the virtual world, however, you can have as many different identities as you want to create! Fancy being a chick or a dude (or in some sick programs both)? Then be one! Games such as World of Warcraft which I play (no not really cause I’m not a geek like that and yes I’m stereotyping and yes I’m offending but that’s what your blogs are for – to get back at people like me who choose not to understand the ways of the geek) allows you to be anyone you want, from a warrior to a priest or even a I don’t know what they’re called but they have pets that follow them around! You can even choose your character’s appearance! Think The SIMS Online, only with a storyline and people who play it usually own several pairs of spectacles and comic book collections and most definitely are intimate with their right hand (the few minutes of the day that they’re not entirely engrossed in the game). It’s a way of ‘re-inventing’ oneself, living out one’s dream or fantasy but in a different world.

Online identities can however, be stolen – just like an actual real world identity, only much easier. All it takes for your online identity to be stolen is a hacker. Once hacked into your account, the hacker has full access. Scary but true, and all it takes is for the criminal to collect enough personal data on someone to impersonate the victim (Mitigating Identity Theft). It’s like how you’d forge your parents’ signatures on report cards to avoid them seeing the grades you so tragically got, or how you’d speak in a low voice to your principal or teacher over the phone, should they call and enquire on your whereabouts seeing how you skipped school and all, and pretend to be your dad.

Online identities can be a fun thing (if you’re a total geek and have nothing else to do with your time like all you people out there who play MMORPGs or whatever they’re called) if your account’s not been hacked into or if you’ve got hot friends involved in the community and you’re doing it just to have something to talk about at the lunch table. On the other hand, they can be pretty addictive, especially if you’re fat and a total nerd, and take away your social life. Oh wait, if you’re fat and nerdy you wouldn’t have one. The reason Bill Gates is cool is because he’s got a lot of money and although geeky, he’s not fat.

Merry Chinese new year!


References:

Donath, J (1996,11,12). Identity and Deception in the Virtual Community. Retrieved February 20,2007, from http://smg.media.mit.edu/people/Judith/Identity/IdentityDeception.html

Online Identity. (2007). Online Identity. In Wikipedia [Web]. Retrieved February 22,2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_identity

Schneier, B. (2005). “Mitigating Identity Theft”. Retrieved February 21, 2007 from http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2005/04/mitigating_iden.html

World of Warcraft Review, retrieved February 22, 2007 from http://www.firingsquad.com/games/world_of_warcraft_review/

Friday, February 9, 2007

QotW4: Gift Economies: Wha?!


Upon reading this week’s topic, I wanted to just go to bed. It’s so… meh-ish. I had no idea what it truly meant or what I had to do with it. So, inevitably, more reading had to be done. Oh yay.

From the term, you can roughly get a hint of what it’s about - an economic system in which the prevalent mode of exchange is for goods and services to be given without explicit agreement upon a quid pro quo (the Latin term for the concept of "a favor for a favor"). Typically, this occurs in a cultural context where there is an expectation either of reciprocation--in the form of goods or services of comparable value, or of political support, general loyalty, honor to the giver, etc.--or of the gift being passed on in some other manner" ("Gift Economy," 2007). In layman’s terms, although that was already pretty simple to understand, one favor begets another/you give to receive. A traditional gift economy is based on the obligation to gift, the obligation to accept, and the obligation to reciprocate (Lewis Hyde, 1983)

You might think that a gift is something tangible; however, for gift economies, the ‘gift’ in ‘gift economies’ shouldn’t be taken literally and is often in fact, attained through means other than monetary. I guess this’ why we might already be in one without knowing it (Kevin Lim, 2007)! It’s a good way for cheap people to still be useful – they can exchange advice, information, and etc. all without spending a penny!

In this modern age, more people are turning to the cyber world and spending their time there. Eventually, when enough people get online together, they start to realize and discover that many others out there have the same interests as them. When that happens, they then form virtual communities, which they use to talk about and share their interests. The interaction we see going on in these forums and communities is a trait of gift economy. Online communities such as forums are a huge part of today’s gift economy. I personally enjoy dabbling in discussions in some of them (okay not really, but I figured this piece would be a lot more authentic/believable if I said I did). Heavy Metal Realm is a forum I visit quite a bit.

At Heavy Metal Realm, angst-filled teenagers and those who lie to themselves that they’re still indeed young at heart because they have no jobs and still live in their parents’ garage come to talk about bands which play nothing but good music (noise to those over 25 and prefer classical, melodic music). We discuss upcoming tours, concerts and merchandise, often exchanging valuable information in the process like how the bass wasn’t tuned properly in the Iron Maiden concert of 2003 in Perth, Western Australia, or how the name ‘Black Sabbath’ came about when Geezer Butler, bassist for the band, saw it on a movie theatre marquee and thought it suited the band. Yeah… valuable information indeed. Members of this forum who’re more experienced with the scene and have ACTUAL valuable information such as tour dates and ticketing information post it up for the rest to know about. These people are often the ones contributing the most and by offering their experience and advice to the community, they seem to receive more help more quickly when they ask for something” (Wellman & Gulia, 1997; Rheingold, 1993).

Clearly, we can see that a gift economy is really a vicious cycle, only not vicious. The people contributing the most are at some point of time on the receiving end as well. When push comes to shove, it all boils down to people wanting and willing to give and take, and by having a balance of both give and take, online gift economies can certainly stay active and continue to be a way for people to interact and have a space to share their interests and passions.

Personally, I’d rather give than take, so I can hold it over the other person and have the upper hand whenever. But that’s just me and I reckon I have issues. Okay time for them references aye!




References:

Kollock, Peter (1999). 'The Economies of Online Cooperation; Gifts and Public Goods in Cyberspace" Retrieved February 8, 2007 from http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/soc/faculty/kollock/papers/economies.htm

Wikipedia (2007). Gift economy. Retrieved February 8, 2007 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gift_economy

Matzan, J. (2004). The gift economy and free software. Retrieved February 7, 2007, from http://software.newsforge.com/software/04/06/04/142238.shtml?tid=150&tid=82

Friday, February 2, 2007

QotW3: Virtual Pirates: Show Them Some Love (some of them might be really hot)!


We’re all familiar with the term ‘piracy’ or ‘software piracy’ and it’s easy to put an ugly face on it and deem it bad and a form of defamation to the industry. Too easy. Even though the Computer Crime Research Centre (CCRC) in Ukraine calls it ‘dirty campaigning,’ we should take a closer look at both sides of the coin, and examine the bigger picture to this controversial issue.

Personally, I feel that piracy is not such a big deal and if anything, is a mostly-positive attribute to technology and society. The attitude I’m harboring towards this matter might be due to the fact that I’m not losing billions of dollars in sales each year, like gaming companies such as Activision and Electronic Arts do. The truth of the matter is, computer piracy is a costly business for many companies and that is why governments are taking such a fervent stance against it. In 1997 alone, the worldwide estimate of losses due to piracy was approximately $11.4 billion (Software Publishers Association, 1997). That just makes you want to shout out in disbelief and envy doesn’t it? That’s enough to buy over Krispy Kreme and maybe a bag of cheetos and that’s all I really need!

As much as piracy brings disgrace and loss to companies, it has its advantages and positive points as well. If you think about it, I’m sure you’ll agree with me or at least give the whole issue a second thought before condemning it entirely.

Firstly, piracy is a form of flattery, just as imitating is. Software companies should instead take it as a compliment that their product is something so desirable and has acquired so much attention that it’s brought about other independent agencies manufacturing copies of it. It’s like starting a trend. I’d certainly take it as a compliment, should others adore my produce or me so much that it causes the majority of them to replicate what they see. Wouldn’t you?

Secondly, I see piracy as just another form of publicizing a product. Just as how although celebrities whine and complain about the paparazzi and tabloids being annoyances, they in fact need to be grateful to these sources for their fame and stature – without the press publicizing and promoting them and their work, mass recognition would be not be a possibility. Likewise, by reproducing computer games for example, pirates are actually helping to promote the manufacturers and their games! Instead of denouncing them, software giants such as Microsoft should give them credit for part of the publicity gained for the company or their software. It’s all about exposure, baby.

Thirdly, we all know that originals are a lot more expensive than copies. This poses a difficulty in acquisition for the poor and needy. Imagine what it’s like struggling to keep the family together financially and still having to purchase the latest version of Microsoft Office for your job, which pays as much as Walmart pays its deli workers. Caught between a rock and a hard place, wouldn’t it be a load easier if you could find something within your budget? Well piracy helps bridge the gap between the rich and the poor, in that aspect (of being able to buy a particular piece of software or item). It increases the accessibility of the good by selling it at a much lower price, so as to make certain that every one gets a fair, or should I say more apt, opportunity to buy it. See, there’s some good in their hearts after all! Awwwh…

Lastly, making replicas at low cost and high profit is but an extremely entrepreneurial way of making money. Though not the most creative or moral, or legal for that matter, the bottom line is that it makes money. No risk no gain right? It’s like having a franchise of the Olive Garden, only with the price and quality of the food lowered.

Conversely, the main reason that governments and authorities are coming down hard on piracy – ‘infringements can be punishable by up to five years in prison and $250,000 in fines’ (Penalties of Piracy, RIAA) – is that it makes money, a lot of money. Do you honestly reckon they’d give a New York minute’s worth of attention on an industry which, though illegal, only brings in about $500 a year – maybe something like illegal doughnuts or the unauthorized use of paper towels in restaurants? I don’t think so. Sure, it might also be due to the protection of intellectual property and all that jazz but c’mon, when push comes to shove it’s all about the moola!

In conclusion, maybe my perception is a little flawed, okay a lot, but I seem to think I make sense (either that or the weed’s kicking in). I hope that the next time you pass vendors retailing pirate software, movies, games, etc (doughnuts included), you’d patronize them instead of calling the cops, or at the very least just walk on by. They need to make a living too you know!


References:

Brian A. Cole (1998, Nov 5) ‘Computer Piracy’ Position Paper. Retrieved January 30, 2007 from:
http://u.cc.utah.edu/~bac2/piracy/paper/paper.html

Recording Industry Association of America ‘What the RIAA is Doing About Piracy’ Retrieved February 1, 2007 from:
http://www.riaa.com/issues/piracy/riaa.asp

Business Software Alliance ‘Software Piracy Figures’ Retrieved Febrary 1, 2007 from:
http://www.bsa.org/hongkong/press/newsreleases/Latest-Worldwide-Software-Piracy-Figures-Released-Five-Years-US-59_2-Billion-Lost-more-than-half-of-all-business-software-used-in-Hong-Kong-still-illegal.cfm

The Shadow Internet. Retrieved February 1, 2007 from:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.01/topsite_pr.html

Friday, January 26, 2007

COM 125 Week 2: E-mail

The creation of electronic mail or ‘e-mail’ is, to me, one of the most significant inventions of the Internet world. Not only has it reinvented the way we communicate; it has also made efficient the way we did.

E-mail is a natural use of networked communication technology that developed along with the evolution of the Internet. Think standard snail mail on steroids, because that is what e-mail is. Instead of writing a letter by hand, pen and paper, you do it on a computer or in these days, even a mobile phone and at your own convenience. E-mailing a friend or business partner is extremely much more efficient than writing to him. It is also more accessible and cost-efficient than writing a letter – it takes a fraction of the time to send and receive them and practically costs nothing! This way, you’ll never be placed in the annoying situation of being out of envelopes or stamps whenever you want to send a message. E-mail is a form of asynchronous communication, which means that communication does not occur at the same time: the sender sends a message and the recipient reads it at his own convenience. This is especially useful for communicating between long distances and different world time zones.

On the other hand, security and privacy are rather low with e-mail. Although the majority of them are delivered to the correct addressee without intervention, there are certain times that the messages may be intercepted by individuals other than the sender or recipient. This could occur due to an incorrect address, system administrator intervention or maybe even a transmission error. It also happens because ‘e-mail messages are not generally encrypted and have to go through intermediate computers before reaching their destination, meaning it is relatively easy for others to intercept and read the messages,’ as stated by Wikipedia’s Definition of E-mail. Just like everything else, there are pros and cons with e-mail as well.

The Internet we of today are so familiar with is actually using many characteristics inherent of e-mail and since it is a known fact that ‘it actually predates the Internet and was a crucial tool in creating it’ (History of the Internet, Wikipedia), it is only fitting.

These days, most if not all consumer-related websites have a ‘Contact Us’ link on their webpage that upon clicking reveals contact details and sometimes even the address of the company or organization. This trait is very helpful to visitors of the site as it enables them to direct any queries they might have to the company, most of the time via e-mail. Being able to communicate online on different webpages and to groups not only increases interactivity, it also makes the acquisition of information so much easier. Imagine logging on to Apple.com and having a question regarding the Dashboard application. Is it not just remarkable that you can access their support page and post your query to them, before definitely getting a reply?

On to a larger scale, the whole instantaneity of the modern Internet appears to be somewhat similar to its predecessor, e-mail, does it not? Searching for ‘cheap car rentals’ on Google.com and getting almost instant results seems a lot like the almost-immediate response you would get from an e-mail, does it not? Think of hitting the ‘Search’ key as sending an e-mail, and the results you get as the recipient replying your e-mail. They are indeed very similar are they not?

In conclusion, I feel that although the technologies involved with the creation and use of e-mail are many, the main and probably most distinct quality would be its instantaneity. In this day and age where immediacy and speed are synonymous with the Internet, we have but the genius of e-mail to thank, as much as we take it for granted.

So the next time you do a search online, try thinking of it as sending another e-mail.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

when the pants are down

if any of you watch the L word, i think you're brilliant! i like shane cos she's so hardcore-ish and i'm sure you can tell, i have nothing to blog about. oh the life of a lifeless. okay so anw, i don't get why sgp doesn't allow the L word to be aired here. it's plain sick that thousands (or however many people there are in sgp) are missing out on such a killer show! it's like sex and the city, only think of carrie's mr big as a chick and you're done, mostly. as if that doesn't sound enticing enough, em' chicks are SO DAMN 'oooh break me off a piece o' that!' GORGEOUS, you'd probably convulse at the start! it's as irresistible as an all-you-can-eat bacon buffet, where they marinate everything in bbq sauce and then line the bacon with more bacon and cram it into a bacon roll, is to large dude. mmmm that's mighty tempting/awfully greasy and disgusting! ima go sleep now, just because.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

are your pockets full of sand?

i often feel insecure. i don't have many friends, nor do i want any. the world's so tough on me and sometimes i wish i weren't apart of it. oh why must i feel this way, oh why.


HAHAHAHAHA so now i know how you depressed people feel when you write about your emotions in your blogs. ugh, tis disgusting! awwwh... boo hoo, i'm down, i'm upset... boo YOU. oh wait, apparently mocking emo people is wrong, and a tad insensitive. i hope i didn't hurt any of your feelings, emo ones. PSYCH! ima go eat cereal now. bonne chance!

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

au sujet de moi

sometimes i have trouble breathing.


so i'm somewhat a 17-year-old boy who likes his sleep. i sorta have a thing for it. the parents call me julius btw. i used to be really interested in sports (anything that made you perspire) but that's up till i figured it'd be easier to NOT be active, or maybe even be in a comatose state, chowing down on em' krispy kremes! mmmm... krispy kreme... eating's good, i enjoy eating. only, i'm kinda small so i can't really eat much - maybe a dozen bags of cheese puffs, a super-sized quarter pounder with cheese meal, some seasoned curlies and probably a serving of cherries jubilee. all that aside, i guess my special ability is being random, really random. the typical start of a conversation with me might resemble something like this: 'hey how goes it? what'dchew do last night?' 'jeebus! muffins are boiling as we speak!' yeah it happens as commonly as finding hoboes sleeping behind the deli in your local walmart. this coveted skill comes in handy if you need me to space-out and start having a spaz right in the middle of class so it'd attract enough attention for you to walk right out. my foot itches - okay so maybe it's a disease i can't control, who's minding?! i'll think of what else to write so in the meantime, this' all you're getting! yes, it's all that and half a pie. au revoir!