Well yes, I know that the title of this post is a terrible pun, but the fact is that the history of the Internet has been documented in a piecemeal fashion - until now.
It was in 1969 that the Pentagon produced ARPAnet, the precursor to the Internet as we know it. Dani Polak,Joep Drummen and Joeri Bakkers, from the Dutch ad agency advertising TBWA\NEBOKO, have put in a lot of effort into producingThe Big Internet Museum. The site faithfully records the Internet's milestones and unlike many museums these days,entrance is free!
The online museum documents and displays the Web’s most interesting artefacts, for today's and future generations. It houses seven specialised wings and each features a different subject.
As well as these traditional 'wings', The Big Internet Museum has other parallels with a conventional museum. Third parties can display their works in a specially assigned temporary exhibition wing. There are plans for the digital production agency, MediaMonks, to fill the temporary exhibition space with an exhibit about the history of Flash.
Got something you thing is worthy of their collection? You can submit it to the museum and, if democratically accepted by public vote, help the museum's collection grow. Visitors are invited to adopt the mantle of digital curator.
The site's creators say: "We seek to educate and inspire visitors from all over the world with an ever-growing collection about the Internet and the World Wide Web. Not only for this current generation, but also for generations to come. Remember the sound of a 56K dial-up modem? Your children probably don't. In fact, chances are they don’t have a clue what a loading bar is."
There are some of us who are old enough to remember the interminable wait for a dial-up modem to connect. Thankfully these experiences have now been consigned to history.
Recent Endorsements
You've left us really enthused about the whole digital dimension and we're looking forward to developing our plan with your support.
Simon Beardow - Deputy Director, British Council, Vietnam
Simon Beardow - Deputy Director, British Council, Vietnam
Showing posts with label Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museum. Show all posts
Saturday, 12 January 2013
Thursday, 16 June 2011
I've Been Framed
The expression "I've been framed" takes on a whole new dimension with the launch of Intel's interactive ad campaign, The Museum of Me.
After connecting with your Facebook account you will be transported through a "visual archive of your social life" which some may find a bit off-putting.
Your tour of the virtual galleries, displays personal photos, video and your friends' profile pictures. The Museum of Me also displays your location on a map, status updates and other wall content, but Intel promises no personal data is collected or stored.
Each gallery comes complete with a digital set of gallery goers checking out the exhibits, all of which revolve around you.
A word of advice; the application is meant to load quickly but I found it 'hung', irrespective of which browser I used. This may have been a temporary state of affairs due to heavy usage?
It is only at the end of the video that the company's advertisement for its Core i5 processors appears.
As Paris-based, Amar Toor in enGadget writes in his review:
"You've mastered the art of the high-cheekboned self-shot. Your acute taste in Iranian New Wave cinema is on full display. That leggy blonde who just so happens to appear in all 200 of your Spring break photos? Why yes, you two do have a thing going on, but honestly, it's no big deal. You didn't even tag her. Yes sir, your Facebook profile is in top form -- a veritable shrine to your unparalleled wit, your ferocious intellectual prowess and your unearthly solipsism. But is it enough? Is your life really getting the Stalinesque digital commemoration it so sorely deserves?".
Based on his observations it might suggest that the user would end up with a tour of a "Playboy Mansion" rather than a "museum". I guess it all depends on your Facebook content.
After connecting with your Facebook account you will be transported through a "visual archive of your social life" which some may find a bit off-putting.
Your tour of the virtual galleries, displays personal photos, video and your friends' profile pictures. The Museum of Me also displays your location on a map, status updates and other wall content, but Intel promises no personal data is collected or stored.
Each gallery comes complete with a digital set of gallery goers checking out the exhibits, all of which revolve around you.
A word of advice; the application is meant to load quickly but I found it 'hung', irrespective of which browser I used. This may have been a temporary state of affairs due to heavy usage?
It is only at the end of the video that the company's advertisement for its Core i5 processors appears.
As Paris-based, Amar Toor in enGadget writes in his review:
"You've mastered the art of the high-cheekboned self-shot. Your acute taste in Iranian New Wave cinema is on full display. That leggy blonde who just so happens to appear in all 200 of your Spring break photos? Why yes, you two do have a thing going on, but honestly, it's no big deal. You didn't even tag her. Yes sir, your Facebook profile is in top form -- a veritable shrine to your unparalleled wit, your ferocious intellectual prowess and your unearthly solipsism. But is it enough? Is your life really getting the Stalinesque digital commemoration it so sorely deserves?".
Based on his observations it might suggest that the user would end up with a tour of a "Playboy Mansion" rather than a "museum". I guess it all depends on your Facebook content.
A 'Museum of Me' Montage - Thedigitalconsultant
Related articles
- Intel's Cool - or Creepy - Museum of Me (blogs.wsj.com)
- How To Turn Your Facebook Profile Into A Virtual Museum Of Your Life (businessinsider.com)
Labels:
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Intel Core i5,
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Monday, 17 January 2011
A Digital Dark Age?
While the aesthetic quality of the artifacts is part of the appeal, their ability open a window to the past through the 'data' they contain is their primary attraction.
What will the museum masses of the future make of our digital age? If some commentators are to be believed they may have nothing to view.
The video below is thought provoking. What happens to all of the knowledge stored with data technologies that will become rapidly obsolete?
It is certainly at risk of being lost and once lost is, in many cases, gone forever.
It is also not simply a matter of backing up as the device or system used could fail with data loss crippling an enterprise.
According to Online Storage Reviews, loss statistics for the last year show that nearly 43 percent of people, who use computers, laptops and other systems, had experienced critical data loss due to one reason or other.
Sometimes, it’s virus infections and at other times, it’s a completely human failure to keep a check on critical data
Is the answer in the Cloud? Online storage solutions certainly minimise the risk and companies such as Box have 73% of the Fortune 500 using their services to share, collaborate and manage content. Box's revenue has tripled since 2009.
Deploying such a back up need not be expensive. Sites such as 4shared.com offer free alternatives which is an option for non sensitive data. Box.net has a free option (which is used on this blog - see below).
Simply backing up your business data on a portable hard drive or laptop is unlikely to be sufficient. Winter cold and freezing temperatures can freeze your data, virtually.
ComputerSight says that feeling uncomfortable out in the cold is not a human prerogative; electronic devices like computers, laptops, notebooks, and external hard disk drives share our predilection for warmer weather. Their way of showing this to you might prove terminal to your data.
Despite the risk of catastrophic data failure one in two small to medium businesses, according to a report by Semantic, have no recovery plan in the event of a network outage, data loss, or other IT disaster.
"Of the firms without a disaster recovery plan, 41% said it had never occurred to them. 36% said they intend to implement one within the next six months. More than half (52%) said they don't think computer systems are critical to business - that translates roughly to one in four of all of the businesses polled."
In an age of ever violent natural disasters (Hurricane Katrina, the Queensland floods, the Christchurch earthquake - to name but three recent examples) companies are derelict in their duties if they do not adopt a rigorous data audit and develop a comprehensive recovery plan.
It is not a question of if data loss will happen, but when it will happen. The U.S. Department of Labor estimates that 43 percent of U.S. companies experiencing disasters never re-open, and 29 percent close within two years. If your business was to lose all of its files would you survive?
The Cloud also currently offers the best solution available to overcome the bugbear of obsolete technologies and hardware.
Related articles
- 57% Of SMBs Have No Disaster Recovery Plan (informationweek.com)
- EU report warns of "digital Dark Age" if digitization left to private sector (teleread.com)
- How to Prevent Data Loss in Winter (computersight.com)
- Calif nonprofit: We'll store digital data forever (sfgate.com)
- Hotmail users lose entire email inboxes, Microsoft restores them 5 days later (downloadsquad.switched.com)
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