Showing posts with label new media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new media. Show all posts

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Flashy, but is it useful?

I will buy a copy of the mag, but I'm not sure this is the future of print publications. Now if they included RFID chips and the mag could get on WiFi or something, that would be cool. Gizmodo nixes the idea.

US: "The possibilities of print have just begun," Esquire designs flashing mag cover

On its own, the magazine will run for 90 days by a battery small enough to fit inside the cover. "Mr. Granger knows some will see the cover as a gimmick -- but he says he thinks the technology behind it, which has been used for supermarket displays but never embedded in a magazine, speaks to the possibilities of print," reported NYT.
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Monday, April 28, 2008

Global consciousness, global village

Den Haag flagImage via WikipediaAfter a bit more than 78 hours, I'm headed back to Chicago via London. On Thursday, I was at O'Hare, flying to Belgium. I have been in Brussels, passed through Antwerp and Rotterdam, to spend a day at the Peace Palace in the Hague. Then it was back to Brussels, with a brief explore of the Grande Plasse, Manichen Pis, and the street of the mussels restaurants.
In a way, I've been to the future and back. In 1973, we were reading McLuhan's Medium is the Message in a Mass Communications course, and being introduced to the concept of the "Global Village." Now intellectually, I know that business travelers have been experiencing the contraction of geographic space for 20 years, but this is the first time I have flown to Europe to work for a day after classes one week, and I'll be back in time for class next week.There is no need for me to revisit the ideas McLuhan presented, but it is the experience of it as an interesting and yet mundane experience that is notable.

I could be twittering as if I was sitting in my blogger p.j.s at home, yet I was crossing international boundaries. An the boundaries themselves have diminished since the advent of the EU. Of course, this trip, physically expanding, was fiscally demanding, as the dollar is not worth much compared to Euros or the British pound in the waning months of the Bush presidency. Well, we will be boarding from Brussels to London, so I'll sign off for now.