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Yes, you need quality. But you also need quantity.
Body language makes all the difference in how you are perceived by people you know and don't know.
The modern garage first appeared in the 1920s, and inventors—of automobile parts, among other
Humans are all about pattern recognition: we want—and maybe need?—to believe that there’s order and meaning behind everything we see and do in life.
Kodak employed 140,000 people. Instagram, 13. A digital visionary says the Web kills jobs, wealth -- even democracy
PageOneX is an open source software tool designed to aid the coding, analysis, and visualization of front page newspaper coverage of major stories and media events. Newsrooms spend massive time and effort deciding what stories make it to the front page. Communication scholars have long used column-inches of print newspaper coverage as an important indicator of mass media attention.
A map of recent contributions to Wikipedia from unregistered users.
As more sites focus on longform content, Fast Company disclosed some statistics on how its longer pieces have been doing — but the data shows that the real secret isn’t length but ongoing engagement with readers.
We are used to thinking of a “mass media” market made up of large newspapers and TV networks as the normal state of affairs in media, but what if that was just a historical anomaly?
Only 3% of all recorded meteorites that have struck the earth were seen falling. Now you can watch every one of those 1,045 fall in this amazing animation.
Don't give advice, but don't just sit there either.
The YouTube Trends Map is another way to see what's popular, but from a geographic and demographic point of view.
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FourSquare makes keeping track of where your friends are effortless, but what if you're not feeling particularly social on a given day? Hell is Other People is "an experiment in anti-social media"...
The live Twitter-powered film clip for the single Preflight Nerves, from Melbourne-based electronic folk band Brightly.
NYU ITP graduate student Federico Zannier collected data about himself — online browsing, location, and keystrokes — for his thesis. As he dug into personal data more and looked closer at company privacy policies, he wondered what it might be like if individuals profited from their own data. That is, companies make money using the data we passively generate while we browse and use applications and visit sites. What if individuals owned that data and were able to sell it?
Las nuevas tecnologías y las redes sociales han perturbado el sistema de jerarquías vigente y han agravado la crisis de gobernanza; el reto de los medios sociales es convertir la multitud boba en multitud inteligente.
What happened to the family that hid in the water? The Holmes family speak exclusively to the Guardian in a multimedia journey exploring what happened the day fire devastated their town
Watch the silos disappear.
Jaime del Val artista y filósofo madrileño, fundador del colectivo Reverso, ha obtenido una financiación de dos millones de euros por parte de la Unión Europea para la realización de Metabody, un proyecto que lucha en contra de la creciente...
MIT Open Documentary Lab: "[Katerina] Cizek is currently the director of the NFB’s HIGHRISE project, exploring new forms and new approaches to content. HIGHRISE is a multi-year, many media series of projects. You can see it at highrise.nfb.ca and her previous project Filmmaker-in-Residence at filmmaker.nfb.ca."
Via The Digital Rocking Chair
An interactive look at time...
El proyecto busca que niños imaginen monstruos y luego los impriman en 3D, sin necesidad de crear complejos modelos
What do address books, video cameras, pagers, wristwatches, maps, books, travel games, flashlights, home telephones, cash registers, Walkmen, day timers, alarm clocks, answering machines, The Yellow Pages, wallets, keys, transistor radios, personal...
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