Monday, April 5, 2010

Blog #6

Weinberger's main point was about everything becoming miscellaneous with the internet and how ways to organize things have completely changed resulting in a change in the way people communicate and learn.

Jenkins's main point was that the internet has led us to convergence culture which has caused communication to evolve into participatory culture.

Lessig's main point was that the internet has changed the way we view copyright and that creative industries are going to have to change, they can't change the public.

I think that their aren't really any crucial key terms to understand their points because I feel like the key terms are fairly self explanatory (miscellaneous, convergence, participatory culture, hybrid economies, remix) and we spent a lot of time going over them already I feel like they're been beaten to death.  All three books really center around media convergence and how media and information are becoming more and more interconnected.

Connections:
All three books focus on participatory culture and convergence and how websites like Wikipedia have changed how we search for information and use information and how regular people are now major players in creating information.  These books all discuss how the world is changing with the invention of the internet and the Net Generation which has had access to the internet basically their whole life and how that has made us process information very differently from generations past.

Final Project:
I think it's important for us to consider that while we are familiar with all the concepts discussed in all three of these books, many people that will visit the website are not and aren't used to using information like we are.  This website and social media will have to be extremely basic and user friendly in a way that we would not necessarily consider.  We have to reorganize this information with the people that Weinberger, Jenkins and Lessig wrote their books for in mind, not people our age who are used to the internet and the way information is organized with the internet.

1 comment:

  1. Based on things you say in class, I'm pretty sure you get it, but this post is a bit vague. When you say things like, "ways to organize things have completely changed resulting in a change in the way people communicate and learn" I want to know "but HOW has it changed? what, specifically, has changed?" It has a lot to do w/ authority, with truth, with the old standard of knowledge-making falling by the wayside. While a lot of this stuff may be obvious to you, it's definitely not to my parents' generation. So, just think to yourself: yeah, ok, things are clearly changing, but what is it, specifically, that's changing?

    Thanks.

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