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Which clippings match Simon Perkins' concept of 'Integration' pg.1 of 36
26 AUGUST 2010

The UK Soundmap project: mapping Britain's sonic environment

"The SoundMap is a partnership project of the British Library and the Noise Futures Network. It uses widely available mobile technology in a novel way to capture and aggregate research-quality audio samples. Your recordings will be studied by experts from the Noise Futures Network and we shall post an overview of the research results once sufficient data has been collected and analysed.

Britain's sonic environment is ever changing. Urbanisation, transport developments, climate change and even everyday lifestyles all affect our built and natural soundscapes. The sounds around us have an impact on our well being. Some sounds have a positive or calming influence. Others can be intrusive and disturbing or even affect our health. By capturing sounds of today and contributing to the British Library's digital collections you can help build a permanent researchable resource."

(The British Library Board)

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TAGS

around us • audio • audio samples • belongingcitycollectiveconvergence • countryside • culture • digital collections • environmenteverydayexperiencegeographylifestylelocationlocation-specificmobile • mobile technology • natural soundscapes • Noise Futures Network • placeplace-based contentrecordingresearchresourcesocial change • sonic environment • sound • SoundMap • soundscape • technologyUKurbanisation • well being

CONTRIBUTOR

Simon Perkins
22 AUGUST 2010

Most video on the web is published using the H.264 format

"Adobe has repeatedly said that Apple mobile devices cannot access 'the full web' because 75% of video on the web is in Flash. What they don't say is that almost all this video is also available in a more modern format, H.264, and viewable on iPhones, iPods and iPads. YouTube, with an estimated 40% of the web's video, shines in an app bundled on all Apple mobile devices, with the iPad offering perhaps the best YouTube discovery and viewing experience ever. Add to this video from Vimeo, Netflix, Facebook, ABC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, ESPN, NPR, Time, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Sports Illustrated, People, National Geographic, and many, many others."

(Steve Jobs, April 2010)

Fig.1 video of iPhone mugging attempt on Steven Levy's phone.

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TAGS

2010ABCAdobe SystemsAppleCBSCNNCODECcontentconvergence • ESPN • FacebookFlash • Fox News • H.264HTML 5 • iPads • iPhoneiPodmobile device • MSNBC • National Geographic Magazine • Netflix • New York Times • NPR • People Magazine • publishing • Sports Illustrated • Steve Jobs • Time Magazine • video • video on the web • VimeoWall Street JournalYouTube

CONTRIBUTOR

Simon Perkins
28 JULY 2010

Posterous: CMS for simple web publishing via email

"Posterous is the easy way to get content online using e-mail. You can e-mail content of just about any type (such as rich text, photos, music, video, Word/Powerpoint/Excel/PDF documents, and zip archives) to us. We will post it online in the most web-friendly format, then reply with a public URL that can be forwarded or shared with friends. Account creation is never required, but if a user does create an account, posts from your various e-mail addresses (work, home, and mobile phone) can all be integrated into one blog."

(Posterous, Inc.)

Fig.1 Susie Blackmon's Posterous weblog [available at: http://susieblackmon.com/].

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TAGS

2008 • blog by email • bookmarklet • CMScollectcontent • documents • emailentrepreneurialismExcelICTMS WordonlinePDFphotos • Posterous • Powerpointpublishingpublishing system • Redpoint Ventures • repository • simplicity • technology • Trinity Ventures • usabilityweb application • web-friendly • weblog • Y Combinator • zip

CONTRIBUTOR

Simon Perkins
08 JULY 2010

Historypin: annotate your spaces with your personal snapshots

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TAGS

2010animated presentationannotationchronologycollaborationcommunity • digital history • family albums • geoannotateGoogleGoogle MapsGoogle Street Viewheritagehistory • Historypin • information in contextinteractionlocallocationmapmemorynarrativeneighbourhoodphotoplacescrapbook • snapshot • spacestorytimelinevisual depictionvisualisation • We Are What We Do

CONTRIBUTOR

Simon Perkins
06 JULY 2010

There was relatively little divide between spectator and performer in the archaic theatre

"In the archaic theatre there was relatively little divide between spectator and performer, seeing and doing; people danced and spoke, then retired to a stone seat to watch others dance and declaim. By the time of Aristotle, actors and dancers had become a caste with special skills of costuming, speaking, and moving. Audiences stayed offstage, and so developed their own skills of interpretation as spectators. As critics, the audience sought to speculate then about what the stage-characters did not understand about themselves (though the chorus on stage sometimes also took on this clarifying role)."

(Richard Sennett, 2008, p.125)

Sennett, R. (2008). The Craftsman. London, Penguin Books.

Fig.1 Lysistrata Summer 2006 University of Florida

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TAGS

2008actor • archaic theatre • Aristotleaudienceauthorshipboundary • chorus • Classicalcostumedance • demarcation • engagementjoinorderingparticipationperformance • performer • Richard Sennettscriptible • seeing and doing • showskillspectatorshipstagetheatre

CONTRIBUTOR

Simon Perkins
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