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NYtimes.com site traffic visualization on the day of Michael Jacksons Death

eInclusion By Omar Kbiri on December 23, 2009

The visualisation in this video, showcases the global traffic to the website of the nytimes.com. That particulary day the news of Michael Jackson's death came out. You will notice that the traffic in the US explodes around 5:20 AM, which was 1 minute and 10 seconds after TMZ (gossip orientated website) published the news. People went directly to the nytimes.com website to verify the credibility of the news. In other words, in a world where all people can publish their own news via blogs and twitter. Their is still an urge of trustworthy institutions such as nytimes.com. What is also visible from the data visualization is the usage of mobile phones to surf the net in the morning and late in the afternoon.

The video was made with help from Processing and produced by Nick Bilton. Who first worked in the NY Times Research and Development Lab.  

 

Via Spotlight Effect & Edial Dekker  

 

What Project Canvas could mean for the future of media usage

eInclusion By Peter Evers on December 20, 2009

Throughout media history the BBC has always been hated or loved by many media professionals.It's business model is always a point of discussion both in British politics as in British pubs. But it is undeniable that the BBC has been one of the leading companies in developing media technology. Two out of many inventions coming from the BBC R&D department are teletext and stereo sound, which are still heavily utilized technologies today.

 

The same BBC department is now working on a groundbreaking project, called Project Canvas. Project Canvas is initiated by the BBC, but a number of partners have joined the project, amongst them are Channel 4, Five and British Telecom. Last week I witnessed a keynote by Dutchman Erik Huggers, responsible for Future Media within the board of the BBC, who explained Project Canvas. In the video below you can see the demonstration he gave (another conference, but same demo).

 

 

Project Canvas is basically inventing the use of internet applications through your tv set. By plugging your internet cable in your set top box you get access to something which is similar to Apple's App Store. Just like Apple, BBC are also just creating the platform and the accessory software development tools. I believe this comparison is actually a very good way to look at Project Canvas.

 

Apple brought the magic of internet applications, combined with specific mobile phone features, to the mobile phone. Project Canvas is bringing the magic of internet applications, combined with specific television features, to your tv set.

 

Although I have to admit that there is one difference. BBC is not only developing this for itself, but for all tv stations. The ideology behind this project is that the BBC thinks freeview should always be able to compete with paid television. Paid television stations can innovate in a higher pace with the revenue coming from their subscribers and according to the BBC the technology gap between freeview and paid television could become too large. This could cause both a digital divide and a knowledge gap between paying subscribers and freeview viewers. Putting this aside, I am more interested in the new business that is opening up here. Just as we have seen on mobile phones, it looks like we are welcoming the TV App Store soon. The BBC has made clear that it is solely creating a platform, that will be opened up for third party developers. So the majority of the applications on Canvas will have to be developed by third parties.

 

This is not only a very new and exciting business, but is also a big step forward in the convergence of television, computer and mobile phone. Many mobile applications purely offer the phone as a new interface for stuff you already did. Like reading news, checking the weather forecast, looking up sports results, using social networks etc. Basically now we can do pretty much everything we can do on a computer on our mobile phone. Your tv set will just become a new interface for stuff you already do. Obviously you already watch the news on television, now you can watch it whenever you want through the news application on your tv. Just like checking Twitter, Facebook, the weather or even your health insurance (which Huggers actually used as an example). The difference that is left, is that every interface has its physical advantages your tv is for relaxation because it is in front of your couch, your phone is always in your pocket but has a small screen and your computer is great for tasks you really have to focus on. A sensible conclusion is that if you really want to, you will be able to work, relax or anything in between on all your media devices, but the degree to which you actually use it for a certain goal will be completely determined by screen size and screen position.

 

Antarctica last continent to participate in WCIT2010

Creative Industries, eGovernment, Energy By Ivo Nederpelt on December 15, 2009

By planting the WCIT 2010 flag on the Antarctic continent, Antarctica is the 7th and last continent to be involved with WCIT 2010. WCIT employee Ivo Nederpelt planted the flag in the ice near Paradise Bay on November 24 2009. He travelled to the white continent as participant in the International Antarctic Treaty Expedition 2009 lead by polar explorer, thought leader and environmentalist, Robert Swan OBE. The expedition was joined by an international team of 47 participants from 16 nations to focus on leadership towards the strategic climate solutions needed to preserve our planet.

 

 

Antarctica is an interesting continent from the scope of WCIT 2010. Can the IT industry not only learn from Antarctica, but can it also help the only continent without IT to diminish the daily influence that people have on it from all other continents?

 

Climate change has a clear and devastating effect on the Antarctic Peninsula. Upon arriving we were thrilled to see the first tabular icebergs. Only to learn a few minutes later that these were the remainings of the enormous mass of ice, the size of the Netherlands, that broke of the Larsen B ice shelf three years ago.

 

Inspiration

Crossing by boat from the south of Argentina to Antarctic waters takes nearly three days on the infamous Drake Passage, one of the roughest seas in the world that connects the Pacific and Atlantic ocean. Being on a lone ship in a 50 knot storm rocking on six meter high waves makes you truly witness the journey to the end of the world. As the ship approaches the first icebergs the waves give way to silence and peace. The sight of those big, majestic white shapes in motionless water with unearthly lighting is stunning.

 

In the Antarctic inspiration is not hard to find. The coldest, driest and windiest continent on earth nature is a superlative in all aspects. Enormous, pitch black mountains are covered in the purest of snows. Glaciers as far as the eye can see make our 300ft ship disappear in its white and blue surroundings. The beauty makes you feel at home, yet two minutes in the freezing cold waters is deadly to any human being. The millions of penguins fight a day to day battle with gulls, sea leopards and killer whales to survive, but ignorant of the most ferocious predator of them all, they walk up to humans in curiosity and interest.

 

Antarctica is nature in its purest and most unforgiving form. You can only awe at its magnificent beauty and feel humble and guilty as a human to be there.

 

Antarctic waters

 

Innovation

The history of Antarctica is one of exploitation, depletion and conflict. The first man to set foot on the continent in 1821 was not a famous explorer like Magellan, Cook or Tasman, but it was a sealer looking for fur seals to hunt. In decennia to come Antarctica was the scene of the largest massacre of seals and later whales that the planet has ever seen. This profitable exploitation of the continent led to the near extinction of fur seals and most whale species in the southern hemisphere. As the sealers left Antarctica because of total depletion, the whale oil business remained highly profitable. The big blow to the whaling industry was dealt by an IT professional ‘avant la lettre’, Thomas Edison, discovering the electric light bulb as a cheap alternative for lamps on whale oil. From 1879 the whaling industry diminished rapidly.

 

From that time several countries claimed areas on Antarctica. Even small armed conflicts arose between England, Argentina and Chile, who had claims on the same territory. On the first of December 1959 the Antarctic Treaty put an end to all disputes.

 

Transformation

The 15-day expedition to the Antarctic Peninsula aimed to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Antarctic Treaty. This Treaty is a shining example of international cooperation signed in the midst of the Cold War. It proved a brilliant piece of legislation that built a platform over the conflict from which nations could work past their differences and preserve Antarctica for peace and science. We need to take the lessons we've learned here in Antarctica and apply those globally to rise above our differences and create a new framework for addressing our climate issues.

 

In the late 80's global governments and companies cooperated once more, when the hole in the ozone layer became a serious threat to mankind. Stringent legislation and clear agreements put an abrupt end to the use of CFC’s and PCB’s. The hole in the ozone layer still holds an extra danger to Antarctic travel nowadays, but due to unanimous action the ozone layer will be restored to pre-industrial level by 2060.

 

December 2009, our planet faces an even bigger, imminent and manmade danger. Again, we ask our world leaders in Copenhagen to take proper actions in protecting our planet. And again industry is part of the solution. In May WCIT 2010 will show us the answers that IT has to the challenges of today and tomorrow. Let’s work together to make sure that the Declaration of Amsterdam puts these answers into clear agreements and concrete actions of all companies and governments involved.

 

 

 

Gentoo Penguins on the Antarctic Peninsula

In Healthcare You Are Not Alone

eHealth By Maarten den Braber on December 14, 2009
"A hospital is no place to be sick", Samuel Goldwyn (from MGM) once said. 
 
And he was right.  Because ultimately nobody wants to be in the hospital. But we cannot deny the fact that everyone will be a patient sooner or later. Maybe short and only irregular if you're lucky - or for long periods and often, if you are the not so lucky. 
 
Healthcare is an industry. An industry that affects billions and employs millions. An industry means a business. And businesses are there to help their customers and offer products and services that they want. Well, they should.
 
The healthcare industry, and the medical field in general, has always been keen on technical innovation. During the last century some amazing technical innovations have seen the limelight: penicillin, the artificial kidney (invented by a Dutchie) or robotic surgery, just to name a few. And technological innovation growth seems to be exponential. Which means that we now see the developments in mobile (mhealth) and nan technology changing the face of healthcare.
 
But there are two even more important changes in healthcare (in my opinion).
 
The first is that healthcare is not about the patient - which is "bon ton" at the moment (search for patient-centered). Delivering and receiving healthcare is about a network of people involved: patients, e-patients, family, caregivers, insurer, colleagues etcetera.
 
The second import change is about the people that change healthcare. It is no longer only in the hands of professionals only (research, decision makers, CEOs). More and more often patients take control in creating the best healthcare experience there is. Wonderful examples of this can be seen in the stories of ePatientDave or Maarten Lens-Fitzgerald.
 
 (checkout out the stories of &ePatientDave of Maarten Lens-Fitzgerald). 
 
Therefore innovation in healthcare is innovating the whole service: service design (with agencies like IDEO or 31volts showing the way). Technology is a  part of an experience created by and for people. This thinking in networks, services and sharing has recently resulted in a new name that rightfully reflects what the future of healthcare is really about: participatory medicine. The Society of Participatory Medicine (and the accompanying Journal of Participatory Medicine) provide inspiration and pratical examples of how people together, information and technology can co-create a better future for healthcare. Because in healthcare you're not alone.

 

 

Check out this presentation that shows Maarten Lens Fitzgerald story:

 

 

 

 

Blue skies and green clouds

Energy By Aad 't Hart on December 08, 2009

 

Cloud computing the new poster child of Green IT. Large scale computing in the cloud is more energy efficient then decentralized local computing. In a large computing facility it's a lot easier to optimize the hardware, run the processors at a slightly lower frequency to reduce heat or just let them run a little hotter than you normally would to reduce cooling costs. It's possible to fine tune the life expectation versus the energy consumption during the lifespan. All this tweaking and tuning can only be done by these large scale computing facilities and thus creating an energy efficiency over local computing resources.
 
The availability of cloud computing solutions increases day by day. We all have our social responsibilities and why not rethinking our IT strategies towards cloud computing? This is what IT wants us to believe, but is this really going to save the world?
 
In the 1950's the automobile became a product in reach for normal people and the number of cars in the world have only been growing ever since. Technology enhancements and improvements have made today's car a lot more fuel efficient, however this has not been able to keep up with the increased traveled distance. The overall fuel consumption by motor vehicles is still raising. 
 
Cloud computing will have exactly the same effect. Ten years ago I made more mobile phone calls as I do today, but I only needed to recharge my phone twice a week. Today I can hardly live on a single charge a day, because cloud computing has give me the ability to constantly update to the world what I'm doing and where I'm about. The power consumption of my local device has gone up significantly and imagine the computing infrastructure to deal with all the additional information. 
 
Cheaper and easier available computing resources will only increase the overall usage and will not have any positive effect on the overall energy consumption. The skies are gray and the clouds are black. It's time that IT comes will real innovative ways to stop our continues need for increased power consumption.
 

 

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