Lifelogging

You are currently browsing articles tagged Lifelogging.

I’ve only just registered at friendfeed.com and already love it! Finally a useful meta-tool that combines a lot of publishing services.

FriendFeed enables you to keep up-to-date on the web pages, photos, videos and music that your friends and family are sharing. It offers a unique way to discover and discuss information among friends.

It basically is an aggregator that enables you to create a central place for people to check and discuss the latest updates from various of your accounts of services that you are using to publish information. Additionally you can add some information manually. Right now there are 59 services you can add including Flickr, YouTube, Google Reader, Facebook, Twitter and of course your personal blog. Adding accounts or news sources that do not belong to you is also possible.

People can then subscribe to your friendfeed via RSS, instant messaging notifications (Google Talk) or view any updates in real-time on the site. 

There are many more features like private rooms and widgets to embed friendfeed on your website, just check it out. 

friendfeed.com/xixidu

More information:
friendfeed.com/about/
wikipedia.org/wiki/FriendFeed

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Here is an great article by  Ian McDonald at BBC for everyone interested in science fiction in general and especially lifelogging (2) and the concept of beta level simulations as described in some of Alastair Reynolds’ novels:

news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7885803.stm

The bottom line is that if you want to become immortal, better don’t take privacy too serious.

Everyone who engages alot with the metaverse basically leaves a copy of himself, or currently rather a sketch, as an imprint on the metaverse. It’s just a matter of context, drawing the right correlation and connections to be able to listen and talk to this trace of youself.

As the web gets more sophisticated and intelligent, and the complexity of contextual information grows, there may come a time when this simulacrum that you created deliberately or rather unintentional, will acquire a level of sophistication that it will act as an nearly perfect answering machine regarding any like and dislike, emotion, value, want and most memories that make you yourself.

Closley relating this topic may be a recent essay by Susan Blackmore at Edge titled ARTIFICIAL, SELF-REPLICATING MEME MACHINES which is an answer to the annual question of 2009 ”What game-changing scientific ideas and developments do you expect to live to see?”.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes