Archive: The Gnovis Blog
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Product Displacements as Catalysts to Engagement
Lately I’ve been noticing a trend of product displacements that are arguably more clever and memorable than even some of the most exhaustedly planned brand integration strategies. During the product displacement process, any form of recognizable branding (i.e. logo or brand name) is removed or covered and essentially erased. This often occurs to avoid giving a brand free advertising or is requested by brands themselves if they sense that they will be presented negatively.
Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Crowdsourcing Phenology: the Citizen Scientist
This summer, about a month into my research of rising land prices in Vilcabamba, Ecuador, I experienced a moment of profound clarity. It came in the form of an answer to a question I had asked a million times: what changes have you observed in Vilcabamba in the past 5-10 years? The answer hardly varied (more foreigners, more cars, rising prices, etc) and the question soon became simply a routine to get the conversation started, so much so, that when I heard a dramatically different response, it took me a minute to fully comprehend it. Before she answered my question, this elderly Ecuadorian woman looked at me for a long time, until she finally said: “The sun is hotter…and the winds are stronger.”
Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Let the Web 2.0 Presidency Begin
Remember the days when we elected politicians who didn’t know how to e-mail? While some candidates think they can still get by with rhetoric from the Stone Age (McCain, anyone?), those days of the not-so-technologically-savvy president are gone, thanks to Barack Obama’s administration. The Blackberry-toting Obama marks the country’s first president to adopt e-mail, despite the technology going mainstream some two decades ago. As a result of Obama’s Web 2.0 White House, we have a president eager to communicate through mediums neglected by past presidents and — for the first time in my generation — Americans have lent their ears to our new leader.
Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Facebook and the Price of Privacy
Late last year, Facebook launched a new system called Facebook Connect. Haven’t heard of it? Facebook probably thinks that is a good thing.
Facebook Connect is a system that allows third-party sites to access your Facebook information and post your web behavior to your Facebook account. Sound more familiar? Facebook’s first attempt to integrate with third-party sites via their “Beacon” system was received with such hostility that it eventually was disabled after Facebook was overwhelmed with privacy complaints. The most memorable case was probably that of a young man who purchased an engagement ring on Overstock.com, only to later find his purchase broadcasted to his friends via his Facebook newsfeed — including his girlfriend. Facebook Connect, however, promises to be different, if for no other reasons than someone thought it might be a good idea to ask users for permission to access their data and post on their newsfeeds. Still, there is a lot of buzz in the blog-o-sphere, comparing Connect to Beacon and weighing the probability of a reprise.
Yeah, yeah… so Facebook is awful at privacy. Am I a horrible person if I think we should cut Facebook a break?
Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Blog Wrap Up: Inauguration, Rationality and the Ubiquity of Twitter
As everyone recuperates from Inauguration weekend, the blogosphere is buzzing with inauguration reflections, planning for the new administration and social media critique.
On Gnovis:
Reflecting on her Inauguration Weekend experience , Trish discusses embodiment and offers some reasons why being there in person, despite the giant screens, is still a more authentic experience than watching it online.Category: The Gnovis Blog
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At Obama's Inauguration, Millions of Bodies that Matter
In the days leading up to today’s historic Inauguration, my
friends debated (via Facebook) the potential costs and rewards of schlepping to
the Mall or just watching from the comfort and safety of their sofas. On the
one hand we have hoards of people, 20 degree weather, foregoing a chance to
sleep in, the shameless merchandise (Obama puppets… really?!?!). On the other, one cannot deny the desire to be
as close as possible to the History that was made this week.Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Blog Wrap Up: Thesising kicks off and classes begin
We’re back and have gotten the semester off to a strong start. Check out what’s going on
in and around CCT.On Gnovis:
As Margarita embarks on her thesis research, she shares with
gnovis the deeply personal and complicated relationship she has with her
subject matter.Category: The Gnovis Blog
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In the field: the challenges of ethnographic research in rural Ecuador
This is the story of how I became an active member of the Ecuadorian real estate market. You see, I went to Vilcabamba – a tiny town in the south Andes – to study the emergence (the construction?) of a modern real estate market. The town is a microcosm of what is going in many other places in South America (and Asia, for that matter), which is that increasingly more regulated real estate markets are replacing informal land sales, and the corresponding changes in land representation inevitably alter the cultural fabric of the towns and eventually the countries where this takes place. I have my opinions about the phenomena, which I tried very hard to keep out of my research, but needless to say, they do not align well with being a part of it. Looking back, it seems that once I was in the system, regardless of my initial role as an observer, I soon was balancing two additional, and conflicting roles – that of watchdog and that of agent.
Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Our Generation, Unimaginative?
In a recent article in the Atlantic, P.J. O’Rourke discusses the difficulty Disney’s had in renovating the House of the Future attraction in Tomorrowland. The problem is of course that when it came out, folks apparently were willing to accept that the 1950s was the golden age of Americana (an ideology most recently and perhaps effectively argued against in AMC’s "Mad Men.")
Category: The Gnovis Blog
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Book Review – "Hacking: Digital Media and Technological Determinism"
On Friday afternoon, during my third attempt to locate Steven Weber’s book "The Success of Open Source" at Lauinger Library, I scanned the spines of several hundred books, hoping to find it misshelved nearby. Instead, I stumbled across Tim Jordan’s "Hacking: Digital Media and Technological Determinism," which has turned out to be the most delightful read I’ve come across since I began working on my thesis .
Category: The Gnovis Blog