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Frameworks for Citizen Responsiveness: Towards a Read/Write Urbanism. Map based illustration of 311 street sign service calls : US census tracts connected by city roadways. Illustration: Jane Kelly {*style:<b>Seeing the City as Software </b>*}In the past, I’ve often enough described cities as being “ “: about the necessity of negotiating various waits, complaints and fears. Must we accept this, though? Is there anything that can be done about it? Many, many services attempt to address these concerns and inconveniences. 311 provides an online point of entry, but its primary form of engagement is a phone call between a citizen with a question and an operator able to point her towards the proper resource or department. How might we close the loop? We can begin to treat urban environments as system resources, rather than a mute collection of disarticulated buildings, vehicles, sewers and sidewalks. Technology entrepreneur has suggested stealing a page from the practice of software development as a way of addressing shared problem spaces more generally.

(a) . Welcome to AV3 Software | AV3 Software & Plug-ins. The 2010 Europe Digital Year in Review. Download Whitepaper The European Digital Landscape continues to evolve, with 2010 proving to be yet another exciting year of change. The rise of social networking, availability of video content and growing mobile media consumption is changing the marketer’s toolkit and creating new and unique opportunities to engage with the European consumer. The many issues that will be addressed in this report include: How does the European digital consumer compare to the rest of the world? What European markets have the highest engagement online and how does that compare across age groups? Which site content categories are growing in popularity? The comScore 2010 Europe Digital Year in Review offers a comprehensive overview of the digital landscape in Europe. "Selective Memory Theatre" Uses Flickr to Mimic the Brain [Video] | Co.Design.

Digital installations that claim to mimic the ineffable processes of our minds usually do nothing of the sort, but Matthias Dörfelt's "Selective Memory Theatre" is subtler than most. To him, the main difference between our memories and digital files is that our minds can actually forget things stored within them, whereas computers -- outside of server crashes and file corruptions -- never do. "Selective Memory Theatre" pulls images off of the image-sharing site Flickr, then uses two layers of data-processing to distort, remix, and display them in a way that metaphorically mimicks the way our own brains store and reconstruct memories.

Neuroscience tells us that memories, unlike digital data files, are re-built every time we recall them. Dörfelt's art makes a lot of other conjectures about how the brain turns raw perceptions into coherent memories, and if you feel like fact-checking them, head over to Mindhacks.com and go nuts. Social media news and business strategies blog | Socialmedia.biz. IssueMap : Home. Now That AOL Has Huffpo, Where's the Video? - Advertising Age - DigitalNext.

20 of the most innovative Facebook campaigns ever. With marketers around the world all trying to come up with creative ways of engaging with users on Facebook and building fan bases we thought we would do a little research and share some of the best case studies from around the world. There are games, videos, interactive campaigns and lot of big brands spending lots of money on this list and if you have your thinking cap on you might just pick out a little gem for your own campaign. Coke Zero Facial Profiler Maybe not the sexiest name ever but this was a nice Facebook app from Coke Zero (now removed) that allowed you to upload a photo or use your profile photo, and find complete strangers that looked like you. The app attracted over 150,000 users in its first month showing the demand for an app like this that appeals to our egos, or just a general interest in ourselves! It also showed a new way of using the technology available through Facebook.

Vitamin Water This great campaign was a simple concept but worked perfectly. Domino's Superfans. FT Magazine - Facebook’s grand plan for the future. Mark Zuckerberg is pacing before a crowd in Facebook’s Palo Alto, California, cafeteria just before lunch on a Wednesday in November. Fit and jovial, with pale skin and curly brown hair, his boyish face gives away his 26 years. “Zuck”, as friends call him, is wearing what he always wears: a grey T-shirt with an embroidered Facebook logo, blue jeans and tennis shoes. With this perennially casual demeanour, he is showing off new technologies to a few hundred employees, partners and the press. “It’s a good day to launch some stuff,” he says with a laugh.

And with that, Zuckerberg introduces Facebook Deals, a new service that in a matter of days will transform the way local businesses reach consumers as they walk down the street. With Deals, smartphone users who download Facebook’s application can “check in” to a physical location, such as their local coffee shop, and get a little reward. During his presentation, Zuckerberg uses words such as “revolution” and “disruption”. B.J.