August 2008

Instructable Goodness.

Work has me transcribing video footage these days. While the work is interesting, I thought to make a footswitch…makes the transcribing easier. Armed with an Arduino, a VOX amp pedal and a little bit of code, I made my first instructable.



Mac OS Foot Switch from a Guitar Amp Pedal. - More cool how to projects

This growing repository of procedural knowledge is pretty sweet. A happy stomping!

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Show me the text!

My grande latte friend likes to think in pictures. Most people tend to gravitate towards text…or at least its easier to build texty things over imagey things (where you apparently have a fight on your hands).

Thus began the hunt to mix text into video in a meaningful way. Nico Nico did something stunning with regard to design and implementation. Occlude the video - show the comments. In a sense, the video becomes a MacGuffin.

Really, it is quite something - the above video is someone cooking chicken. The sad thing is - there is no English version of the site…I did manage to log in by setting the language to Spanish. Running with the idea, Anodos decided to kick it up a notch (or back) over to the sofa:

The $2,000 prototype gives you that MTV4 SMS comment stream on any TV channel you might be watching…course its a hardware tv widget. I’m left wondering (and hoping) if this is becoming a style of virtual temporal graffiti.

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Participate in Jim Wilkie’s online PhD studies!

Jim Wilkie Smiling politely

Jim Wilkie Smiling politely

I always enjoy trying to think about new research methods or employing some innovative approach to different elements of the study. At Y!RB (RIP), we have even tried several new things, including one pretty successful “integrated” solicitation for a study on Zurfer (not RIP yet: use it!).

That’s why I greatly enjoyed running into the following call-to-action inside a simple Facebook display ad:

PhD Jim Needs You: Find yourself with time to kill? Why not help a PhD student by taking 3-10 min. online studies? You can win prizes for each completed!

Complete the ad with a picture of Jim smiling smugly from ear to ear, and I couldn’t help by clicking through to Jim’s Facebook group, where he collects participants and distributes studies. Help Jim Wilkie*, research czar, get a biased sample of the world**, right here!

* A Northwestern PhD student - Ayman, and I thought nothing good came out of Northwestern since the PhD student that graduate ahead of you!

** I hope his studies are not sensitive to this selection bias.

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NBC and the Past of Media

Frank reports on a bad experience with the NBC Olympics site - the 200m dash may have been the fastest ever, but NBC took their sweet time putting the footage on their site. I had the same experience a few days ago, when Bolt made a joke out of 7 other runners and the world record on the 100m dash (yes, I was going to write about it anyway, but thanks Frank for the trigger). I heard about the race (having taken place in some ungodly US hour) in the morning, from the news and from a friend that called from Israel. Immediately heading to the NBC website, I was disappointed to only find an article about the race and no link to video - not even “video will be published at XX:YYpm” that would have saved me a couple of minutes of fruitless exploration of their site.

Turning to YouTube was mostly useless - it’s too popular now and the copyright police patrols it often enough (I did find one low-quality recording that was almost enough to satisfy my curiousity). The savior? an Israeli news website that did not block non-Israeli visitors.

So, NBC is delaying posting of videos to rescue their prime-time coverage. But with alternative global sources, and various pirating methods that easily escape copyright, all they are doing is losing and alienating viewership. Great job! The most annoying bit in all this is that the prime-time coverage does its best to hide the fact that the races are pre-recorded and shown with considerable delay. Tell it like it is, NBC! Start getting used to a new media world.

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Remixing the World’s Knowledge.

Not unlike my other friends, Naaman decided to draw my attention to Omnisio’s acquisition.  Now its not like we all haven’t seen this before.  Google’s acquisition, well, it just follows the time.

At Yahoo! Research Berkeley, we investigated the hypercontexts around sharing and linking videos through social constructs.  Last year we claimed pragmatics are more important than semantics.  It was a pretty bold research move (but was typical of myself and my tall colleague).

The core of whats happening here (and hopefully Google knows their purchase is indicative of this) is we dont always consume media for content.  We watch videos to be conversational.  We watch videos to add or listen to commentary.  For example, violence during a soccer match can be conversationally funny—we saw the hilarity ensue. YouTube’s annotations were a start but I didn’t see much come of it.  Maybe Omnisio will help.  The tricky part is making something useful available to people, be it in sync or async. Oh, and you should checkout Andy Baio’s use of Viddler; its my favorite video tagging usage to date.

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