Archive for May 1st, 2008

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Sitcoms are “Cognitive Heatsinks”

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Here Comes Everybody

Here Comes Everybody

Clay Shirkyon, author of Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations, has an excellent post up, titled Gin, Television, and Social Surplus, where he calls television sitcoms a “cognitive heat sink,” which dissipate our thought potential, preventing us from putting our over-abundance of free time to use in intellectually-productive activities. (Don’t have an “over-abundance of free time?” If you watch TV you do.)

Did you ever see that episode of Gilligan’s Island where they almost get off the island and then Gilligan messes up and then they don’t? I saw that one. I saw that one a lot when I was growing up. And every half-hour that I watched that was a half an hour I wasn’t posting at my blog or editing Wikipedia or contributing to a mailing list. … However lousy it is to sit in your basement and pretend to be an elf, I can tell you from personal experience it’s worse to sit in your basement and try to figure if Ginger or Mary Ann is cuter.

Shirkyon does the math on how many human-hours have gone into writing Wikipedia, and discovers that, for the amount of time we spend watching television, we could produce “2,000 Wikipedia projects a year.” Collective enterprises like Wikipedia and the intertwingularity of Web 2.0 activities are all part of the emerging “Participation Culture,” which values inclusive media over hierarchical mediums, and it’s not just a fad:

Here’s something four-year-olds know: A screen that ships without a mouse ships broken. Here’s something four-year-olds know: Media that’s targeted at you but doesn’t include you may not be worth sitting still for. Those are things that make me believe that this is a one-way change. Because four year olds, the people who are soaking most deeply in the current environment, who won’t have to go through the trauma that I have to go through of trying to unlearn a childhood spent watching Gilligan’s Island, they just assume that media includes consuming, producing and sharing.

Those of use who grew up without computers and the Internet have an excuse for the way we struggle to break our old-media habits. There’s no excuse for constraining our children with them too.

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Science Etcetera, Jupiterday 20080501

Thursday, May 1st, 2008
  • Scientists have found what makes Absinthe psychedelic: getting really really drunk from the alcohol in it.

  • Green Muse

    Albert Maignan’s painting of “Green Muse” (1895)
    shows a poet succumbing to absinthe’s mind-altering effects.

    Courtesy of the Musée de Picardie, Amiens.(Yale)
  • Genetically engineered crops that are resistant to herbicides, may be good for water quality.
  • Irrigating tomatoes with diluted seawater improves their nutritional value.
  • Lean forward, not backward, when you have a nosebleed.
  • T-shirt monitors your heart rate, and looks stylish too.
  • Over the next 100 years bison could make a huge comeback, if properly managed.
  • Very cool RNA Interference Animations (HT Clint).
  • Wow. Something I actually sort of agree with Senator Inhofe on: standing against biofuel mandates, which are skyrocketing the price of food and causing global shortages.
  • Birds know when you are watching them.
  • The organization of dictionaries reflects the organization of the lexicon in our brains.
  • Barack Obama and Bill Clinton owe their current success to their being brought up by a single mother.
  • O’Reilly and Make are coming out with a book on home chemistry experiments.
  • The brain accounts for 20 percent of our energy requirements, Scientific American explains why it needs so much.
  • One of our ancestors, Paranthropus boisei, also known as the “Nutcracker Man,” probably ate mostly fruit (Sorry for the Commodore 64-style image).

  • Paranthropus boisei

    Paranthropus boisei, the “Nutcracker Man,”
    Nicolle Rager Fuller, National Science Foundation
  • An interview with Khoi Vinh takes readers behind the scenes of designing the NYT website (they hand code HTML!!!).
  • Medical scanners plugged into cell phones make Star Trek tricorders a reality.
  • The colossal squid has the largest eyes of any animal on Earth.
  • I said it first. one way to save endangered species is to serve them up for dinner.
  • Experts argued to put the polar bear cub to sleep, now the adolescent Knut has human attachment issues.
  • Dick Cheney must believe the remaining 300 right whales are 300 too many since he has pulled all stops to prevent their protection.
  • Kav’s been covering the UK Science funding fiasco, now, according to a new report the UK looks “incompentent” on the science front.
  • When asking your partner to marry you, ask them in their left ear. The right ear is more effective for giving them instructions.
  • Barcelona, Spain is so short on water that they are importing it with tankers.
  • Could a human and chimpanzee crossbreed?
  • I’m glad Wired said it, I myself unsubscribed from Google’s Sci/Tech news feed because there was no science in it.
  • Cool Animation explaining how Six Feet of DNA can fit into a cell when packaged as chromosomes: