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New Media Technologies: Communication Theories COM 300 Kathy E. Gill 6 April 2005
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Agenda Recap Monday Characteristics of New Media Lab
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Why Use a Technology? Cognitive Needs – Desire (demand) for information, knowledge, understanding Affective Needs – Aesthetic, pleasurable, and emotional experiences Personal Integrative Needs – Inner-directed, deal with credibility, confidence, stability, and status Social Integrative Needs – Outer-directed, strengthening relationships with family, friends, the world Escapist Needs – Desire for tension release or diversion - Katz, Gurevitch, and Haas
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Diffusion Theory Rogers (1995) outlined four parts: Innovation Social system Time Communications channels And five steps: Knowledge Persuasion Decision (adopt or reject) Implementation Confirmation
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Characteristics of New Media Compare/contast with “old” media Review Networks of Remediation Examine McLuhan’s “medium is the message” Review Manovich’s five points
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New Media Characteristics A blend of characteristics from “old” media Print Radio Film TV
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Print Characteristics Abstract Fixed Linear Primarily verbal Reader controls pace Transient audience
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Radio Characteristics Dynamic Linear “Live” — happening in real time Auditory Creator controls pace Transient audience
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TV Characteristics Dynamic Linear “Live” — may be happening now Primarily visual Animated Creator controls pace Transient audience
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Film Characteristics Fixed Linear Primarily visual Animated Creator controls pace Captive audience
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New Media Typically nonlinear Dynamic “Live” (maybe) Multi-media (visual, auditory) Relies on hypertext User controls pace and direction Transient audience
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Source: http://www.mala.bc.ca/~soules/CMC290/290wk5.htmhttp://www.mala.bc.ca/~soules/CMC290/290wk5.htm One new technology
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Hypertext Presents information as linked nodes Breaks the linear narrative Envisioned by Vannevar Bush (1945) Coined by Ted Nelson Apple : Hypercard Online (software) Help systems Tim Berners-Lee
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Networks of Remediation (1/5) “A medium is that which remediates” … and it is measured “against” other media (like we just did) New media in turn change the “older” media TV … tickertape Print … adopting web design conventions
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Networks of Remediation (2/5) Economic success depends on supplanting a pre-existing medium Conflict: newspaper websites v paper Conflict: CDs v downloadable (sharable) songs Hypermediacy Survivor… The Apprentice… mediated or authentic?
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Networks of Remediation (3/5) How do we separate technology from its social use? Can we? Technological determinism : says technology causes social change … Social determinism is the converse Corollary: “nature versus nurture” … “'technology-push” v “demand-pull” Can new media technology offer us transparent democracy? Howard Rheingold, John Perry Barrow
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Networks of Remediation (4/5) Postman: “the uses made of technology are largely determined by the structure of the technology itself” For example, arguably the underlying Net Tech is ‘old’ (TCP/IP) and yet adoption has proved to be a function of ‘ease of use’ (new software) and social necessity (network effects)
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Networks of Remediation (5/5) “The Male Gaze” Which economic sector was the first to be profitable online? (hint: the first letter is “p”) Are webcams mediating today’s “strip tease” by providing a sense of immediacy and transparency? What about sites like “Wicked Weasel Bikinis” (Australian firm)?
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McLuhan (1/4) Believes media (technologies) affect cultural (social) change Differentiates between a medium and its content Same content (words) is a different message when delivered in print, face- to-face, or on television
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McLuhan (2/4) Historical Construct Tribal Age (oral culture – intuitive) Age of Literacy (invention of phonetic alphabet – emergence of logic) Print Age (invention of printing press – linear thinking – science – individualism) Electronic Age (ushered in with telegraph, poster child: TV – global village – decline of logic and linearity - image) image
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McLuhan (3/4) Theorizes that a print culture created conformity and continuity Think about America’s #1 export: culture/movies/logos Western technology and remote geographies: Al Jazerra – satellite technology to most of the Middle East; banned by several ME countries
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McLuhan (4/4) Compare our immediate knowledge of the 26 December Tsunami with the 1556 Chinese earthquake that killed 830,000 If, as he suggests, print created individualism and nationalism … what might networked communication create? Will familiarity breed contempt or collaboration?
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Manovich’s Five (1/6) Numerical Representation Modularity Automation Variability Transcoding
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Manovich’s Five (2/6) Numerical representation “zero’s and one’s” Vector graphics v Bitmaps Analog v Digital Early complaints about CD v LP
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Manovich’s Five (3/6) Modularity The “whole” consists of many “objects” Example from blog: Google Images PPT and Excel HTML page (javascript, JPGs, etc) Individual blog posts
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Manovich’s Five (4/6) Automation What computers do best! From blog post: “Apple’s new OS X Tiger… and Automator” Photoshop automation; running “Cron” jobs; database driven websites RSS readers Object management and search (Google)
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Manovich’s Five (5/6) Variability Website customization possible by automation Presenting data (shaping appearance) based on output device: monitor, PDA, cellphone Scaling (zoom – Google Maps)Google Maps
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Manovich’s Five (6/6) Transcoding Two distinct layers: cultural layer and technology layer … the intersection is a field called Human-Computer Interaction
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Summary We define (or frame) new media in comparison to old media There is an intrinsic relationship between content and technology: both contribute to meaning Churchill : “we shape our buildings and then our buildings shape us”
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