networking
Astroworld and the trickiness of tragedy blame games
Social media doesn’t always help us make sense of horrific events.
An 8-Year-Old Explains the Metaverse
“One minute you get scammed, another minute you’re having the best time of your life, making billions of dollars.”
The complicated promise of Amazon’s space internet
At the top of an Amazon press release sent out this week , there’s an uncanny image. It’s a rocket imprinted with an American flag and, above that, Amazon’s smiling logo, blasting off to the heavens. The company is officially taking its business to space, and Jeff Bezos isn’t even providing the ride.
Google’s Project Starline Wants to Turn You Into a Hologram
Video: Google Over the past several years, Google has been working hard to craft software experiences that make you feel like you’re present with another human being, even if they’re several time zones away. On one end of the spectrum is boring Google Meet , the company’s Zoom competitor.
But nothing within that gamut was cutting it for Clay Bavor, the high-energy Googler who heads up the company’s augmented- and virtual-reality efforts. He wanted full-on photo-realistic, volumetric video meetings that make it look, sound, and feel like the other person is sitting across the table from you—no headset required.
Source: Google’s Project Starline Wants to Turn You Into a Hologram
Facebook’s new Meta logo is a graphic trope that was trendy in 2008
The Facebook rebrand to Meta brings with it a new stock symbol , new social media handles , and heavy critiques of the company’s new logo. Graphic design critics were predictably abuzz as soon as CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed the wordmark for Meta, Facebook’s new corporate brand, at the tail end of his 80-minute keynote at the Connect conference on Oct 28. “The word ‘meta’ comes from the Greek word [μετά] meaning ‘beyond,’” he explained, revealing an animated symbol that resembles an infinity symbol. “For me, it symbolizes that there is always more to build.” The logo has already been compared to a pretzel, a Pringle chip, a thigh master , IBM’s design thinking loop , Microsoft Visual Studio’s old avatar , and inevitably, a phallus .
Source: Facebook’s new Meta logo is a graphic trope that was trendy in 2008
Zuckerberg Announces Fantasy World Where Facebook Is Not a Horrible Company
Moments before announcing Facebook is changing its name to “Meta” and detailing the company’s “metaverse” plans during a Facebook Connect presentation on Thursday, Mark Zuckerberg said “some people will say this isn’t a time to focus on the future,” referring to the massive, ongoing scandal plaguing his company relating to the myriad ways Facebook has made the world worse. “I believe technology can make our lives better.”
Source: Zuckerberg Announces Fantasy World Where Facebook Is Not a Horrible Company
Why Scientists Have Spent Years Mapping This Creature’s Brain
Flies are capable of sophisticated behaviors, including navigating diverse landscapes, tussling with rivals and serenading potential mates. And their speck-size brains are tremendously complex, containing some 100,000 neurons and tens of millions of connections, or synapses, between them.
Since 2014, a team of scientists at Janelia, in collaboration with researchers at Google, have been mapping these neurons and synapses in an effort to create a comprehensive wiring diagram, also known as a connectome, of the fruit fly brain.
Source: Why Scientists Have Spent Years Mapping This Creature’s Brain
Why is the idea of ‘gender’ provoking backlash the world over? | Judith Butler
The attacks on so-called “gender ideology” have grown in recent years throughout the world, dominating public debate stoked by electronic networks and backed by extensive rightwing Catholic and evangelical organizations. Although not always in accord, these groups concur that the traditional family is under attack, that children in the classroom are being indoctrinated to become homosexuals, and that “gender” is a dangerous, if not diabolical, ideology threatening to destroy families, local cultures, civilization, and even “man” himself.
Source: Why is the idea of ‘gender’ provoking backlash the world over? | Judith Butler
The grand unified theory of aesthetic vlogging
While we all occasionally note the way information and images are presented, most people tend to prioritize function over aesthetic value. But not aesthetic vloggers. Viewing and evaluating the internet as chiefly an aesthetic object — how aesthetically pleasing, beautiful or cute something is displayed/presented — is what unifies them.
Gone are the days of endless customizability (Myspace, Tumblr, Neopets, Live Journal), so aesthetes are tasked with creatively filling the content void left by mid-to-late aughts fashion bloggers (Lookbook.nu, The Sartorialist, Style Bubble, etc.) and 2010s beauty gurus.
Source: The grand unified theory of aesthetic vlogging – TechCrunch
Leaked files show Facebook is in crisis mode over losing young people
Earlier this year, a researcher at Facebook shared some alarming statistics with colleagues. Teenage users of the Facebook app in the US had declined by 13 percent since 2019 and were projected to drop 45 percent over the next two years, driving an overall decline in daily users in the company’s most lucrative ad market.
Source: Leaked files show Facebook is in crisis mode over losing young people
Remote work is bringing the city to the suburbs
In the spring of 2020, many of the typical draws to cities — plays, nightclubs, restaurants — shut down. Space took on a premium, as small apartments close to others felt particularly claustrophobic. All of a sudden, a big home in the suburbs for the same monthly price as a tiny apartment in the city got a whole lot more attractive. The lifestyle also seemed safer, as you could travel in the isolation of your own vehicle and play in personal green spaces with less fear of infection. More companies than ever are allowing employees to work from home, and studies say that between 13 and 45 percent of the workforce is now remote some or all of the time.
This startup is creating personalized deepfakes for corporations
Deepfake tech, which allows a user to create highly realistic simulations of a real person, has been widely associated with pornography and fears of political misinformation. (Rephrase.ai distances itself from the term “deepfake,” and calls its technology “facial reenactment”). But it’s steadily gaining a toehold in the corporate world. Rather than going through the arduous process of finding a film crew, booking an actor, hiring expensive equipment, and spending time on postproduction, brands are trying out platforms where they can simply type in the script to create realistic AI-generated videos.
Source: This startup is creating personalized deepfakes for corporations
Kat Norton’s spiritual journey to becoming a Microsoft Excel influencer
Kat Norton is dancing her way to internet fame—but not in the way you’re probably thinking. On TikTok, where Norton has about 650,000 followers , she has an ulterior motive when she busts a move. To Gary Lee Clark Jr.’s cover of “Come Together” by The Beatles, Norton gyrates as she shows her followers how to combine two separate columns on a spreadsheet.
Source: Kat Norton’s spiritual journey to becoming a Microsoft Excel influencer
Governments are finding new ways to squash free expression online
Freedom House, a think-tank, reports that in the past year efforts to control speech online escalated in 30 of the 70 countries it monitors, and receded only in 18 (see map). Many autocrats and would-be autocrats look with envy at China, where the Communist Party has overseen the construction of a walled-off information sphere, within which criticism of those in power can barely be seen or heard. None can copy it exactly, but many are deploying digital tools to curate the information that reaches their citizens.
Source: Governments are finding new ways to squash free expression online
Human History Gets a Rewrite
Yes, we’ve had bands, tribes, cities, and states; agriculture, inequality, and bureaucracy, but what each of these were, how they developed, and how we got from one to the next—all this and more, the authors comprehensively rewrite. More important, they demolish the idea that human beings are passive objects of material forces, moving helplessly along a technological conveyor belt that takes us from the Serengeti to the DMV. We’ve had choices, they show, and we’ve made them. Graeber and Wengrow offer a history of the past 30,000 years that is not only wildly different from anything we’re used to, but also far more interesting: textured, surprising, paradoxical, inspiring.
Source: Human History Gets a Rewrite
Raya and the Promise of Private Social Media
The app has created a space free of the problems that plague the rest of the Web, but only by leaving almost everybody out.
Facebook Hides How Terrible It Is With Hate Speech
In public, Facebook seems to claim that it removes more than 90 percent of hate speech on its platform, but in private internal communications the company says the figure is only an atrocious 3 to 5 percent. Facebook wants us to believe that almost all hate speech is taken down, when in reality almost all of it remains on the platform.
Source: How Facebook Hides How Terrible It Is With Hate Speech
All risk, no reward: Why Microsoft gutted LinkedIn in China
Why deal with political risk when your product isn’t working anyway?
Source: All risk, no reward: Why Microsoft gutted LinkedIn in China
⚠️ Caution! ⚠️ These emoji mean different things in different countries
Emoji are practically a universal part of language now, with chat conversations liberally sprinkled with little pictograms. But just because they’re widely adopted doesn’t mean they’re fully understood.
Source: ⚠️ Caution! ⚠️ These emoji mean different things in different countries
She pulled herself from addiction by learning to code. Now she’s leading a worker uprising at Apple.
Cher Scarlett grew up poor and dropped out of high school. As a teenager, she struggled with addiction, danced as a stripper and tried to overdose on pills. Her ticket to a better life was learning to code. Last year, she became perhaps the least probable member of Apple’s elite software engineering corps.
Source: She pulled herself from addiction by learning to code. Now she’s leading a worker uprising at Apple.