Posts Tagged: projectbamboo


13
Jan 09

PowerPoint Frustrations

I recently saw a really nice Word document with PowerPoint slides in it that made me curious enough to try using PowerPoint again. (I’ve been using Keynote since 1.0.) I’m at the Project Bamboo meeting in Tucson, and I’m knee deep into a presentation I want to make at some point while I’m here, but the following things are driving me nuts:

  • Thank goodness there are some barebones themes — are these fugly ones some sort of commitment to legacy users?

  • Modifying a theme in PowerPoint is not quite as intuitive as Keynote, but it works once you “get it.” PP has this nice option to replace fonts, but I can’t seem to get it work.

  • PP objects don’t seem to be too aware that one often wants to align them in reference to the slide itself — you can do this through the palette but not DEPENDABLY by dragging the object itself.

  • One of the brilliances of Word is the ability to create custom keystrokes. Why does its sibling not have this? Something one does regularly, like moving objects backwards and frontwards, is only available as a submenu off a contextual menu or as a drop-down menu on the palette — which can be torn off, but who really wants tear-off palettes lying about a screen — especially the smaller screen of a laptop computer that one travels with? CMD + SHIFT + B for “Send Backwards” is far easier and faster.

All of this because the Mellon Foundation representative at Project Bamboo, Chris Mackie, did a fantastic print version of a talk he gave. I had the chance to ask him yesterday how he got his slides over — because dragging them from the left-hand pane into my Word document consistently gives me a “you’re out of RAM” warning with no results, and his response was he:

  • clicks on the slide
  • selects all
  • copies
  • pastes into Word

And the cool captions he has in his document like “Slide 1, Animation 1″? He did those by hand! Where’s the smart interaction between suite apps? (Is Pages good about handling Keynote slides? Because I don’t use Pages, I haven’t tried this — the new outlining function has me looking twice, but I live in a world of document exchange built on Word.)


21
Dec 08

Tools and Content for the Digital Humanities

The following was posted as a comment to the Project Bamboo Tools and Working Group’s main wiki page.

Let me begin by saying how sorry I was not to be able to make it to W2. Having participated in the conference call – thank you Tim for setting that up – I feel like there is some common knowledge within the group that I am missing to enable to glimpse the commonality in the potential demonstrators that have so far been discussed.

And so I am going to try to sketch out a framework here and, I hope, in the process back my way into understanding what it is we are up to.

I should begin by noting that I’m a humanities scholar, a folklorist to be exact. Those of you who saw my 4/6 presentation at the Chicago W1 know that my current research focuses on the rise and development of a boat peculiar to south Louisiana, the crawfish boat. But I’ve also done work on a variety of verbal traditions, literature, and done some work in history.

With that as preface, I offer up a sweeping generalization about humanities studies: it is the study of complex artifacts (understood broadly) in service of understanding human nature. (Historians will be somewhat disgruntled by such a definition, but if a census document isn’t a complex artifact, then I don’t know what one is.)

What humanists need, want access to are these artifacts as well as the variety of information clouds that surround them. Now, too often we assume that this stuff that humanists work with is limited to scribed texts of one form or another. What I like about all the proposed demonstrators is that they are clearly not bounded by such precepts: Tim wants to find a way to cite images and their derivatives – I’m assuming the digital form of both. Mark Williams is trying to find a way to make the steady stream of news reporting available for study. And both Ray Larson and Sorin Matei have as one of their proposed demonstrators some form of geographic-aware tool / methodology.

Ray and Sorin’s proposals are particularly appealing to me because as an ethnographic researcher, I have long been interested in some way of “tagging” objects I find in the field and beginning to build a data / metadata cloud around them in their original context – and both objects and contexts being available to other researchers (either in situ or virtually). Objects in this context are stretchy – or “fuzzy” if you prefer. An object could be a town, a building, a boat, a field, et cetera.

So all this is great news. It’s what we’ve long wanted as a complement, not a replacement, for our extant (call them traditional if you like) data structures which were built around centralizing information in places like libraries and museums. One of the promises of the digital revolution is that information focuses on the object itself, which need not be removed from the variety of contexts which give it its multiple meanings.

I stumble upon “promise” here, because I remember working for a short time with a team at Indiana University back in the early nineties which had been commissioned by AT&T to work on what it was calling a “WorldBoard.” (I think the term was supposed to stand in contrast with the electronic bulletin boards of the time, for those who are old enough to remember, in being “location-aware” information.)

Fifteen years later and it doesn’t really seem like we’ve made all that much progress. There is KML and there is the Dublin Core. But there is nothing like a Zotero that allows one either to write data to some sort of common database or to “browse” it.

I bring up Zotero here because I find myself using it and liking it. It’s not the world’s greatest UI, but it offers a fair amount of flexibility for me as a particular researcher and it seems on its way to offering a way to share information with me as part of a greater collective of individuals studying humans as they move through the world. I can even imagine Zotero becoming a kind of front-end for prior Mellon Foundation funded projects like JSTOR and Project Muse.

What I would like to see, and maybe it would be something like what Tim is proposing, is a parallel project to ARTstor which might be something like DATAstor. ARTstor is a great resource for getting access to quality images of physical artifacts that are either drawn from the fine arts or that have been of the kind of nature that they would be acquired by museums. The chief problem is, first, that museums have their own biases (and they tend towards the fine or visual arts) and, second, that the promise of the IT revolution is that we would not be so dependent upon museums for providing metadata about objects.

Interacting with such an infrastructure could mean either making 3D scans or building 3D models of objects and then locating them in time and space. Google has done a great deal towards this, but it does not seem to have caught on. The reasons are probably multiple: First, 3D work is hard. (I know. I have ten thousand images for my current project and only a few primitive models done in SketchUp.) Second, the Google landscape is a bit of a wild west: you’re just not really sure about the quality of the work done there. (Could one peer review within Google Earth?) Third, it is an impoverished infrastructure, at least in my experience, because it principally focuses on geographic concerns with little room, or at least structure, for other dimensions.

Okay, I’m approaching 1000 words, which is probably some sort of limit. I will think some more and write more when I get a chance. I hope this is useful to someone.


15
Jun 08

D2A: Direct to Archive

It’s interesting how not only one’s discipline but also one’s practice within it so sharply shapes your view of methods and technologies both near and far. Reading the Project Bamboo proposal, for example, prompted a field researcher like me to respond that the library is not … [quotation here].

As I noted in my 4/6 presentation in Chicago, I don’t want to marginalize the library. I want to re-center it as a working repository to which many contribute as well as upon which many draw. All of this means that I see the library, or archive (I will use the two interchangeably), as a collaborator in my research process. One way it can do that is to help warranty the safety of my data. How can it do that?

By acting as my backup? That’s right. The archive needs data to exist, and field researchers need a safe place for their data. The great advantage of the digital age is that copying data is easy and inexpensive — all things considered. Just as importantly, in the digital age I can give the library my data and still have it for myself. In fact, by giving a copy away early and often I guarantee I will have it for myself.

This is something I am calling Direct to Archive, or D2A for short. One of the greatest chores in going through a collection of recordings, be they images or audio or video or even pages of field notes, is properly sorting, labeling, outlining, and indexing them. It is joyous when you discover something, but in between those moments of joy are long trawls through a variety of materials. (The trawling of course is what sets up the discovery: it’s only by flipping through photo after photo of an artifact that suddenly, to one’s conscious mind but not really suddenly, a pattern emerges.) One does it when you’re logging materials as you gather then, and then there’s the later effort to do something similar when you turn over a box of materials to an archive.

But why wait? Why not simply make the two motions the same? Coders call it DRY, short for “Don’t Repeat Yourself.” The application here is simple. A lot of field researchers are already using some for of digital asset management software (DAM for short). For me, it’s an application like Adobe’s Lightroom which I use to organize my images. So right away a couple of important caveats here:

  1. I don’t have any good DAM software for audio or for video. (There’s something for a future Project Bamboo team.)*
  2. This software only organizes my digital images and the relatively small percentage of film images — slide and print — that I have had the time or wherewithal to digitize.

My current process when I get back from fieldwork is to take the memory cards out of my camera and/or my camera bag and put them in my card reader. I fire up Lightroom to import the images into my library — Lightroom’s own term. That library sits on an external hard drive, but I have the option, which I use, of simultaneously backing up images to another volume. In the image below, you should be able to make out that backing up to another volume, in this case called “StJerome”, can occur even as I am uploading images onto my main volume.

Lightroom "import" window *Click here to embiggen.

Why not make that other volume a hard drive sitting in an archive vault somewhere? My current DSL connection probably wouldn’t support it, but it will some day. (I could come close now if I was willing to pay AT&T an exorbitant amount of money every month, but I’m not.) Another alternative would be something like the Flickr export plug-in that someone has already made for Lightroom. Why not a similar plug-in for an archive. All my images in my library not only have all the usual EXIF information, which one day will have GPS already built-in, but I have gone through the trouble of adding a fair number of tags:

  • Louisiana
  • Boat
  • Crawfish Boat
  • Gerard Olinger

All my images? Yes. Why not? I have nothing to hide, nothing to lose, by making all my images available. Any system could easily make it possible for a researcher uploading his data to later manage it, setting terms and conditions for usage. One easily imagined term is that no materials would be available to the public for two years, three years, five years, or until a certain date. Et cetera. In the detail below, you can see that “Flickr” is one possible export. If I can export that easily to my Flickr account, surely I should be able to export to an archives. (Here’s a complete view of the export window in Lightroom.)

Lightroom export detail

Such a system would have multiple advantages:

  • A researcher would have a reliable back-up.
  • Such a system backing one up would also encourage researchers to be more thorough-going in their logging — let’s admit that it helps to have an audience and that might take the edge off a task too easily put off for later.
  • Archives would be in a collaborative relationship with researchers from the very beginning of a research project, making it possible not only for archivists and librarians to have a fuller understanding of the research process but also for researchers to have a better understanding of data management. Equally compelling is the opportunity both parties would have in potentially developing new ideas or seeing new things in extant materials. (The old saw about more hands make the work lighter applies here.)
  • Finally, archives could guarantee their own development, nurturing collections even in their formation. (Please note that I’m not concerned about how this might bias data collection. I have faith in the process over the long term.)

3
Jun 08

Slidecasting

It sounds easy. Slide – casting. To slide is to let gravity do the work for you. To cast is to let momentum do the work: you flick your fishing pole with the right amount of force and the bit of weight at the end of the thin line does the rest of the work. Slidecasting itself is not so easy, as I learned this morning, trying to put the Project Bamboo 4/6 presentation on-line.

I should admit upfront that I own Profcast, but I have had some difficulties using it, and I wasn’t sure if it would allow me to edit the voiceover narration and/or add some background sound. I decided I would post everything in iMovie, because I still have the 06 version which allows for multiple soundtracks. (As an added bonus, I know how to use it: I have yet to “kin” iMovie 08.)

Well, if you’re going to do soundtracks, and you’re working at the consumer level, the place to start, on a Mac, is GarageBand. Oh, cool, there’s a podcasting option which even allows you to drag in artwork. I outputted my slides from Keynote and made them available in GarageBand. I quickly typed up a transcript of what I had said in May — I typed in TextMate while flipping through slides in Keynote — and read into my MBP’s screen. And now I know to use a proper microphone. The built-in microphone has too much hiss. I lined up all my slides at the appropriate places in the voiceover, dragged in some background music, and was ready to explort, er, “share,” my production. The resulting file is an MPEG-4 audio file. It’s 3.6MB and has tiny images that do in fact transition at the right time.

I am just not too sure how many people would know what to do with it. Even on my own computer, iTunes wanted to open it and play only the audio. Okay, so back to Plan A. Export audio out of GarageBand — make sure it’s an AIF file — and import it into iMovie. Now import images. Wait, iMovie does not like PNG files. Huh. Export out of Keynote using Quicktime.

Various trials and lots of errors there, including then opening the exported file in Quicktime to save it as an MP4 file because iMovie does not like MOV files. (What’s going on Apple? It’s your own container format. I believe the saying is: eat your own dog food.) So back to Plan A. Audio plus images. Export images as JPGs. Wait, iMovie keeps cropping them.

Finally, I figured out how to go into Photo Settings and turn off this obnoxious behavior. Once the images were in, I went through them and synced them with the audio by adjusting their length using CMD + I. I simply kept a running tally of the start and stop points of the clips as they went along on a piece of paper and worked from that: 0:00 0:14 0:40 1:50 2:04 … and so on. All that done, I dropped some music in — not because I think I’m that good but because the hissing of the microphone needed to be cloaked in some fashion and I am not so fond of the sound of my own voice that I wanted to record myself all over again. The short of it is: the slidecast is done, and it’s up. It’s here.


13
May 08

Notes for Project Bamboo Workshop 1

Clai and I sat down to talk a bit more about what we are already thinking about as a way to start clearing ground for building something new in dialogue with Project Bamboo:

Modularity and the Mature Platform. One of the things we worry about is the problem that mature platforms which is sometimes known as “software bloat” or “feature creep.” That is, the humanities, let alone the arts and humanities, represent, as some of the sources in the bibliography make clear, a very diverse audience. That diversity is not only in terms of needs/wants but also in terms of interests and abilities. Given such diversity, how does one develop a program or platform which affords the majority of users what they consider to be essential functionality and not, in the process, have it so full/cluttered that it is unusable?

Granularity is multi-dimensional. Another thing we discussed was the fact that the fine-grained analysis that the digital era promises also means different things to different people. To highlight one dimension of what we mean by the multi-dimensionality of granularity, we would point only to the current discussions about meta-data. For some users, meta-data are the tags, or descriptors, associated with an item. E.g., the Dublin Core’s suggestive list of tags/meta-data. On the one hand, this notion of meta-data is foundational. On another, this implementation does not go far enough: they would like to be able to tag content within digital artifacts — texts, images, audio, video. For a linguist interested in pronoun usage from a previous era, being able to distinguish between “the” as an article and alternate spellings of “thee” as “the” as a pronoun is crucial. Perhaps another way to say this is that one person’s beach is another person’s coastline. We think it is ineluctable that data will get described in more sophisticated, “fine-grained” if you like, ways as we move forward and that the important thing is establish a base-line from which everyone starts and upon which everyone can depend.

Achieving platform sophistication means going both ways. One way around, perhaps only current, potential limitations of being able to carry content with tags both attached to it and attached to parts within it would be to make users more capable. In the example above, the number of “thes” that would amount to false positives could be significantly reduced by better searching, e.g., use of regular expressions. Regular expressions, while somewhat different across various scripting and programming languages, are fairly consistent and not that difficult to use. They are not, however, part of any humanities computing course of which we are aware.


12
May 08

Some Ideas I’m Taking with Me to Chicago

I’m not quite sure what I am going to encounter in Chicago, but if I were to dream up a digital infrastructure right now I think I would build my dreams on the following:

  • A more fully realized version of the Louisiana Survey not only in terms of its current contents and scope but expanding that scope to a national level. What the Louisiana Survey does, in its current form, is harness the wiki methodology to allow individuals to contribute to the project’s attempt to document Louisiana’s contemporary folk cultures. I think the kind of indexing and cross-indexing that we’re doing is a somewhat unusual harnessing of the wiki engine/methodology. See: http://code.google.com/p/louisianasurvey.

  • A step toward realizing the full potential of the Archives of Cajun and Creole Folklore in terms of delivering its contents — text, audio, images, and video — on-line and at the same time, like the Louisiana Survey, making it possible to contribute to the Archives.

I see both these projects as a chance to engage an audience which would otherwise not have access to or interest in an university campus and which would, I hope, widen our own disciplinary conventions, perspectives, and assumptions. A very distinct use of interdisciplinary work that would also call upon a fair amount of computing power would be:

  • An architectural survey that, a la the Historic American building Survey (HABS), would document extant structures but would expand the range of the “historical” to be all of history. Currently, HABS’ notion of “historical” means “homes of the wealthy,” which means the HABS survey of the south focuses on the plantation landscape. That has changed in the last decade or so, but there is still so much we don’t know about most architectural forms. Louisiana has some particularly interesting forms because of the shotgun house. The shotgun’s transformation into the Louisiana bungalow has been given some attention, but nothing has been done on the Louisiana ranch that followed — it’s something I have only sketched out in my own notes — and the forms that followed in the rest of the twentieth century. What I would like to do, one day, is harness the power of architectural students to take accurate measurements and then make accurate 3D CAD renderings with the documentary capabilities of humanities students to not only produce amazing 3D virtual models — potentially walkable a la LITE — but models that are not empty structures but filled with objects and individuals and their descriptions and narratives.

12
May 08

My Bio for Humanities Computing

In order to join the Humanities Computing mailing list, you have to apply. One part of the application requires that you compose a short biography about yourself with your interest in humanities computing as the focus. Here’s what I wrote:

I am a folklorist whose primary field of interest is human ingenuity. While I have published on linguistic/literary topics, my primary interest is in material culture. My interest in computing has two dimensions: I am interested in technology itself as a manifestation of techné and because it helps me solve problems, both through its application as well as in grappling with it as a craft in and of itself. (I should also admit that I am the son of a mother and father who were themselves gadget freaks and firmly believed that technology, as the manifestation of progress itself, was capable of solving almost any problem. I inherited, I confess, some of their optimism.)

I am currently at work on a book about boats that go on land and water here in south Louisiana. These are clearly technological creations, and computing offers me two things: (1) a better way to describe the archeological record I am creating — through the use of CAD and 3D modeling software — and (2) it gives me some opportunity to make machines of my own — I am currently teaching myself how to script in Ruby and I run my personal website on Rails. I had no formal education in computer science or in programming, and so this is a logic that is fairly foreign to me. Frankly, it makes my head hurt on a regular basis. But in making my head hurt, I am — I hope — training myself to think in new ways, to see new things in what I already know, and learning to communicate complex relationships in another language, in much the same way that I am trying to convert the complex relationships contained within these metal machines into words.

I have for some time been thinking about computers and networks as the new platform not only for study but also for communication, and I have done a fair amount of experimentation in that direction. (There will be more on my website, http://johnlaudun.org/, shortly, but I am slowly rebuilding it and that rebuilding will be delayed by the Project Bamboo meeting later this week.)

I have experimented with using computing as a platform for teaching. Please see the current version of the Louisiana Survey of Folk Culture at http://code.google.com/p/louisianasurvey for the first survey. My idea there — I’m not claiming it was that grand or that well done — was that having students who were taking their first, and typically their only, folklore class write long, synthetic essays was an exercise frustration for both them and me. Better to involve them in some larger project where their steps were straightforward but the edifice within which they worked provided a path toward synthesis. Out of that, we began a wiki that allowed students to index discrete items — like jokes, anecdotes, dites — by genre, teller, location, use, etc. … goodness, this got long. Sorry.


20
Apr 08

In the Era of the Meta-Platform, Content Is King

The Story Everyone Tells

What we are in the midst of, but everyone already knows, is that the computer is displacing all other means of communication and distribution of content. Already the race for IP TV, as it is sometimes called, is on. IP stands for “internet protocol” and it acknowledges that television programming will no longer be delivered in analog waves but in digital bits. Almost all consumers already are getting their television pictures in bits; they just don’t know it. Cable companies may charge more for “digital” packages but the fact of the matter is that even basic cable programming is already largely distributed digitally and then converted to analog at the node as opposed to in your house. Take a close look at your television picture some time, if you have cable, and look at a smoke-filled or dark scene, you will discover a range of digital artifacts that will reveal to you that you aren’t getting a full analog signal but merely a digital signal resolved “up” to something like analog. The switch to digital equipment allows cable companies to push four digital channels in the same bandwidth of one analog. To do so, they have to degrade the picture.

And while radio stations still exist — and they will continue to exist in the scenario I unfold here, but in a lesser, or at least different, capacity — I think everyone would agree that you see few people listening to radios outside of certain contexts. The radio still plays in the car and in shops and other work situations, but when you see people listening to music individually, they are usually porting some sort of MP3 player. Most new cars now come either with auxiliary ports or iPod docks built into their radios.

While we’re in the car, let’s not forget the GPS aids in there, along with the DVD players. When I first wrote the proposal for the LCVC project four years ago, I predicted we would see a convergence of those two devices, and I think that’s already begun to happen. It won’t be long before you’ll not only get live updates of traffic additions to your in-car navigation / entertainment device, but other forms of content streamed to it as well. That device will be simply another computer, one that is location aware — as the iPhone G3 already is.

All these devices will, of course, function by being “on the net.” That means they will be delivering on the great promise that the internet made — at least that was the intent of the people who worked to create the network and so far it has largely held to be true — and that is to put the means of production into a vastly larger number of people’s hands than ever before. The communications industries have their array of catch words for this phenomena, “one-to-one advertizing” or “niche marketing” or “focused marketing” or even “the long tail”, but they are also just as worried about what is, in effect, P2P, because the reality is: they don’t own the network. They can’t, and that boggles and maddens them.

Now, I should take a moment to say what I mean by “communications industries.” For me, these are the usual suspects of radio and television stations and cable channels, the movie studios (which produce content in the sense of financing it but don’t really make anything themselves) and the record labels. It also includes all the support industries that have sprung up to service the financial conduit that make these providers go: advertizing, marketing, etc. Universities train workers for these sectors and lump their job-training programs under the banner of “communications” — sometimes breaking out a department of “mass communications” — and thus it’s just easier for me to call the whole lot “communications industries.”

Now, having defined some terms, let’s get back to the convergence, because it really changes a lot.

(It doesn’t change “everything” as some technologists are fond of proclaiming, and thus I can now further qualify the qualification I made above about how I am not calling for the demise of the communications industries, and the university departments, or other personnel, that serve them.)

Perhaps the best way to describe what is happening is to look no further than the RIAA’s current campaign to make web-based radio stations pay more than broadcast radio stations for the distribution of content. (The figure I have heard bandied about is something like double, but I’ll leave that to others to argue over.) The recording industry’s argument for why conventional radio stations are getting a better deal is that they drive album sales where network radio stations drive only sales of singles. Immediately, a previous era, and its methods and business models, is revealed quite clearly.

In making that claim the recording industry conveniently leaves out a larger history that would recall a rather long period during which radio stations sold “singles” in the form of fast-playing 45s that contained both the single that made it onto the air as well as the once-infamous “B side” cut which everyone hoped would prove the depth of a musical performer and lead to album sales. The album era thus had the down-side of having these singles, which had to be priced less but of which you could sell a lot, but it had the upside that only the record companies could produce them. The audio cassette era was short-lived, but it too had its upside — largely the demise of the single — and its downside — the ability of consumers to make their own tapes.

The “mix tape” survived into the compact disk (CD) era, but the single did not, which meant that the recording industry could sharpen its focus on its business model, which was to continue to generate what really were often “one-hit wonders” that really did sell albums that held only one song worth listening to.

(This experience was recently made fresh for me. Because we live in a small house, Yung-Hsing and I have been making a concentrated effort to “purge” stuff we don’t use or don’t need. We recently came across two boxes tucked up in a closet full of audio cassettes, and as I went through them, I realized how much money I had spent for what really came down to only one to three songs per tape that were worth remembering — quite literally, I could only remember one to three songs per tape.)

So the recording industry built albums with a hit or two on them, and the radio stations played those hits which were, in turn, only available through purchase of the album. It was the rare station that played albums, not necessarily because there really was so little on albums but because in order to maximize the total amount of product displayed, they could only play a song per album. They had to maximize the number of albums because they were, after all, a broadcast medium, which meant they had to appeal to the maximum number of individuals who might be listening during any given time period. It’s one thing to listen to three minutes of a song or musician you don’t like, another to know you have to wait half an hour or an hour to hear something different.

And so audio content got packaged into three-minute chunks. That isn’t necessarily how long all songs or tunes want to be, but that’s how long they are. As a folklorist and as someone who attends live music events, I know — as do you — that the three-minute song in no way reflects the nature of jam session nor does it reflect the classic dance tunes that usually have at least an A and B part and can thus be played for as long as people seem to be willing to dance or the musicians are interested in going. The three-minute single has been here for so long that we are all now convinced that that is how long we want to dance.

Much the same goes for television, with important differences of course. Like radio, television sought to parse out its content in order to maximize viewers. Like radio, it did so in part by limiting the length of its content so that it could rotate enough material so as to minimize alienating individual viewers — thus the half-hour comedy and one-hour drama were born. It also had to schedule its programming so that viewers could find it. Since viewers could not choose when to watch a program, it had to come on at a fixed time, which led to things lasting only in terms of one of three time allotments: half hour, one hour, two hours. (So far as I know, it wasn’t until the mini-series came along in the 1970s that the two-hour ceiling was broken.)

Well, what does all this have to do with the content? (And in turn with the humanities?)

Everything. Perhaps most importantly, in the broadcast era, given the nature of the distribution channels and the businesses that evolved to feed those channels, content was structured for the time allotted. (Movies shown on television now carry the warning upfront that they have been edited not only for various content concerns but also “to run in the allotted time.”)

In the post-broadcast, post-channel era, programming doesn’t need to conform to broadcast schedules, or to air play schemes. Instead, programming can conform to the content. As I said in the talk I gave for the Project Bamboo workshop up in Chicago, an audio program or video program can now be as long or as short as it needs to be to deliver its content. I listen to a variety of podcasts. It’s clear which ones are created by old-school broadcasters and which are generated by new-school content creators. A program like “This Week in Technology” always clocks in right at an hour. A program like “The Ruby on Rails Podcast” is 27:51 one week, 40:55 the next, and 1:02:13 another. It is, in short, as long as it needs to be and no longer. There’s no need to fill for air time and there’s no need to cut things short either.

Just as important, this new network (the network of connected computers) doesn’t care what form my content comes in. It can deliver audio and video, but it was delivering texts for far longer and it does just as well at delivering images. And it can deliver all those formats in any mix I as a content creator want or need or I as a content consumer desire. One photo not enough? I can create a slideshow on Flickr or any of a dozen sites. Slideshow pacing too fast? As a consumer, I can decide the pace at which I want to proceed.

Let’s call it “fit.” In this new network era, the era of the meta-platform as I termed it above, form is fitted to content. Content creators are free not only to choose what form works best to deliver a given content but they are equally free to size the form appropriately for the scope of the content. It’s not just audio and video, the staples of radio and television, that are going to enjoy this new paradigm, but think about texts! I think about it in terms of scholarly publishing in the humanities, where the 7500 to 10000 word article has been the mainstay of academic productivity. Yes, there is some argument to be made that expression of certain arguments or ideas require a given amount of room (words), but it is no less a factor that journals are built around publishing x number of articles averaging y number of words.

It frees up a lot.

And it frees up content creators to engage their readers in more ways. There will always be the simple disgorgement of content, but there is also the increasing number of collaborations that are taking place between artists and their audiences. Blog posts and the attached comments are a writer-reader revolution in this regard. Readers not only respond, but their response becomes part of the content for future readers!

All this is already changing the way I teach, and will continue to do so for some time to come. It, too, is freeing, especially in terms of what it means for the classroom. For certain kinds of content, like lectures, which deliver a fixed and mostly static content, I can create it in advance and post it to a course website. Students need only view the material in advance of a class activity — a discussion, a workshop, or something else that I am now free to invent. More importantly, they can stop and start the lecture according to their needs as note-takers or learners. They can watch a lecture again, if they need to. That frees up class time for other forms of collaboration between teacher and student in order not only to maximize the student’s education but the teacher’s own as well.

Other forms of collaboration are also possible. This past spring I began something I am calling, for the time being and for lack of anything catchier, “The Louisiana Survey.” I asked my Louisiana folklore class to go out and record any kind of stories they had heard that met the requirements for being folklore. Instead of telling them that Louisiana folklore consisted of X genres with Y topics, I allowed them not only to figure it out for themselves, but in the process which actually began to map out not what had been the case, as is the case with the printed collections, but what is the case. So, yes, folklorists know the folktale’s time has come and gone, but it turns out that it isn’t just the personal anecdote and the joke that have taken over in terms of what we talk about when we talk to each other but the history as well. I might have been able to guess this after a year or more in the field, but I would also never quite be sure if the fact that I was an university professor wasn’t skewing the results. With twenty-some odd college students out talking with their friends and the family, there is a much better sense not only that the data reflects a broader reality but with so much of it, we can actually begin to quantify the dimensions of that reality.

All of that material, by the way, is publicly available as a Google Code project. It’s at code.google.com/p/louisianasurvey. And it’s in the form of a wiki. My students not only did the research, but they also did the publishing and are now authors of documentation available to the world at large.

A Condensation of Our Results So Far

  • Reality is multi-modal.
  • The content of any representation of a reality should be in the mode that best suits the function, and purpose, of the representation.
  • The networked era frees content creators to pursue the mode of their choosing.

A New Future for the Humanities

Wasn’t that the title of what was the original Star Wars? (Later, we discovered it was Episode 4, which wasn’t so bad when it was the prelude to Episodes 5 and 6 but not so good when it was the results of Episodes 1 and 2.)

So how do the humanities fit into all of this? Why does any of this matter to me as humanist? (Sure, the technologist in me is also interested, but that’s for another time.)

It’s really pretty simple. I think the humanities are really in the best position, and have in some ways long been about, training content creators, and I don’t simply mean in the way that UL currently has it configured as training workers for the “digital media” industries. Framing it in terms of “digital media” and in terms of “industries” reveals that the folks who wrote the university’s vision just aren’t thinking about how much reality of content creation and consumption may very well already be changing.

What we need to be doing is not creating “digital media workers” but creating content specialists who are fully aware of the new platform and its many possibilities.

But I’m not sure I really like the term “aware” because that seems an awful lot like the current computing requirement of our students. They seem aware that computers can do more things than check e-mail and surf the web, but they have no reality of how any of it works. If they have exposure to production using computers, then it’s mostly to use word processors as somewhat glorified typewriters to mash out term papers in the usual fashion.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m a big believer in texts and textual production. I love turning out words — this text is currently at 3000 words after all, but it troubles me when I discuss hypertext markup and students have no idea what I’m talking about. Hypertext markup. It doesn’t get more rudimentary than that, and yet our students, juniors and seniors, have no idea what it looks like, let alone how to produce it.

Which is another way to say that my vision for humanities becoming the new content specialists is predicated that the larger goal of universities is going to make sure that students have a firm grasp of the foundations of the networked world in which they live. They are going to need to know at least the core concepts and practices of acronyms like IP/TCP, HTML, and SQL as well as the technologies behind DRM and the technologies that implement it like HDMI.

And it goes without saying that I think humanities faculties are going to have to get themselves versed in these things as well. All of these things are involved not only in the production, distribution, and consumption of ideas but the latter are at the heart of emergent intellectual property regimes, which will probably get worse before they get better.

What will humanities faculty being doing in their classrooms? Well, they will probably be discussing many of the same things they always have. Human nature remains as diverse and as consistent as ever. Extraordinary representations of it will continue to seize our imaginations, and examination of those representations will continue to be one way that we encourage students to examine all representations as well as to create their own representations.

That’s the central engine that has always driven the humanities.

But we are in, or, for universities like UL which are not quite there yet, emerging into a universe where the kinds of texts that we examine and produce are far more varied. More importantly, some texts which were beyond us because of the technologies involved — e.g., film — are now within our reach not only as consumers but also as producers.

We will, in short, need to be versed in a lot more media. We will also, however, be free to find those forms, as well as those contents, with which we are most proficient. Content best determines form, but that is in constant dialogue with the producer who will have his/her preferences and proclivities. (Some of us write better than we play music or frame images or edit videos.)

And, I hope, humanities faculty will encourage, if not require, their students to discover for themselves their preferences and their proclivities. And now, with form freed, so can our preferences and proclivities for content. Thoreau once urged his readers to “gnaw your own bone.” I like the way Annie Dillard puts it: each of us has within us that one thing we were put on this earth to give life to. As a folklorist, I am open to the fact that for some this will be a crawfish boat or side plow. For others this will be a particular dish or a quilt. And for others it will be a story or a way of telling jokes. That is, folk culture has long had this openness to diversity, to everyone within a community finding their own excellence and pursuing it.

It looks like we might be on the verge of being able to do this on a larger scale, and that’s terribly exciting.

I’ll leave for another time the program I think humanists need to pursue to get there, but I think I’ve begun to paint the bigger picture as I see it for you. I’ll be discussing some of this when I go to Chicago for the Project Bamboo workshop in a few weeks.