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I love this new post over at HarperCollins’ HarperStudio blog: Would Charles Baudelaire hate the Kindle? As they quote the man himself:
“As the photographic industry was the refuge of every would-be painter, every painter too ill-endowed or too lazy to complete his studies, this universal infatuation bore not only the mark of a blindness, an imbecility, but had also the air of a vengeance. I do not believe, or at least I do not wish to believe, in the absolute success of such a brutish conspiracy, in which, as in all others, one finds both fools and knaves; but I am convinced that the ill-applied developments of photography, like all other purely material developments of progress, have contrib uted much to the impoverishment of the French artistic genius, which is already so scarce….Poetry and progress are like two ambitious men who hate one another with an instinctive hatred, and when they meet upon the same road, one of them has to give place. If photography is allowed to supplement art in some of its functions, it will soon have supplanted or corrupted it altogether, thanks to the stupidity of the multitude which is its natural ally.”
[On Photography, from the salon on 1859]
I’d argue that Baudelaire would have much less against the Kindle than he would against the Internet or print-on-demand publishing in general, since those are really the revolutions that are more of a 1:1 comparison (“X:publishing as camera:painting” would be a nightmare of a SAT question, come to think of it) but I still appreciate the concept, and I love the line about poetry and progress. I don’t agree with it by any stretch of the imagination, but that doesn’t mean Baudelaire’s phrasing isn’t absolute gold.
Courtesy of my friend and coworker Andrew comes the news that Nicholas Negroponte’s One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) group is laying off half its staff, slashing salaries and ceasing its support of Sugar, the XO’s open-source OS to focus on finishing development of its second-generation XO laptop, the (presumably-titled) XO2.
While I’m definitely troubled to see these steps being taken, I’m also secretly somewhat gladdened. This news is long time coming, and to deploy a very geeky metaphor, it feels sort of like the scene in The Dark Knight when the Batpod is launched out of the ruined Batmobile (although the idea of Negroponte as Bruce Wayne is a little disturbing). With luck, the slimmer, nimbler OLPC group will be able to get the XO2 to market, which I’ve long maintained is the closest thing to a perfect e-book reader that I’ve seen yet.
(Update: yes, the XO2, not the X-302. Although that would be awesome.)
This is a tiny little thing, but I was thinking this morning about how the GAMBIT website uses funny terminology for each of its sections. Back when Philip and I were first designing it, we wanted to name each section after a component of the gaming experience, so “News” became “Updates”, “Careers” became “Join Game”, “About Us” became “Campaign” and so on.
This came up because a graduate student writing an article on us pinged me to ask some very basic questions, which would have all been answered by a quick trip to our website. Initially I was irritated because it felt like said student simply hadn’t done her homework, but then I wondered if perhaps our funny naming conventions weren’t part of the problem. You couldn’t simply type in “http://gambit.mit.edu/people” and go to our people section, or “http://gambit.mit.edu/games” and go to our games section.
Or could you?
Ten minutes later, the GAMBIT site now offers logical redirects at:
Trying to anticipate everything people might type in is a fool’s errand, of course, but this is a nice start. Of course, a working search function would be nice too, but that’s coming up fast on the to-do backlog.
…Pation. (Didn’t want to leave you hanging, did I?)
Here’s one to add to my scrapbook of possible future housing ideas: the New York Times has posted a slideshow and article featuring the salon/home of Richard and Lisa Howorth, who own Square Books in Oxford, Mississippi. They have gotten into the habit of inviting authors and other luminaries passing through town to stay with them in their five-bedroom home instead of at a hotel, so almost every week “a best-selling novelist or first-time author is likely to be sleeping in the downstairs guest room”. Above, John Hodgman and Joey Lauren Adams hang out in the Howorths’ living room. How wonderful would that be? (Photo by James Patterson for the New York Times.)
Well, it’s a week into the new year and I’ve already blown most of my New Year’s resolutions. While it’s annoying, it’s also not that surprising: the biggest issue I have right now is trying to rework my daily schedule into something that can accommodate all the different things that I want or need to shoehorn in here somewhere in order to get where I want to be on January 1st, 2010. Since I’m still actively working to make this happen, I’m considering this first week-and-some-change to be the ‘planning stage’ for the rest of the year, and as such it’s still okay that I’m still getting my ducks in a row.
I am writing this from my office in Kendall Square, at the Singapore-MIT GAMBIT Game Lab, from which I can watch the construction of MIT’s new cancer research building across the street. It’s taking the spot of a lovely green space (well, and a parking lot that you would overlook to see the green space) that used to stretch between our lab and Gehry’s magnificently quirky Stata Center, which is one of my favorite buildings on campus. It’s progress that is encouraging and noble, despite the cost of the disconnect between me and a past favorite thing of mine, and it serves as a reminder that the world is continuing to grow despite the current economic downturn.
Said construction site is providing the soundtrack while I hammer out these thoughts on my lunch hour, and this is reflective of the path I’m currently trying to sort out: it’s fitting, although annoying, that my New Year’s resolutions are so keenly playing to multiple senses of the word ‘resolve’. First, they require a great deal of personal resolve in order to make the lifestyle changes required to make them happen. Two, if they come to pass, then they will go a long way towards resolving a number of issues that I’ve been wrestling with for years. Three, in order to make them happen at all I need to resolve these issues with my schedule. These are, I think, the issues that everyone has with New Year’s resolutions, but it’s important to remember that all of this is work, and resource management, and growth, and sacrifice. Just like the construction site across the street.
So, what am I up to? What are these resolutions?
- Read more.
This is a perennial for me. My research last year suggested that I should be focusing on trying to earn a traditional Ph.D to offset the quirkiness of my CMS degree in a largely conservative academic job market, and this just-as-largely makes sense. I have a bachelor’s in English literature from a very good school for that, and I have a master’s in media studies and new technologies from arguably the best school for that, and I have my eye on a Ph.D program that has a very solid chocolate-and-peanut-butter combination of the two. This is good, since this is what I want to be doing (writing, teaching and consulting on the transmedia franchises that I view to be true 21st century literature but more on that line of thought later). However, my actual literature background is currently fairly rusty, and I need to read a whole stack of the classics in order to get myself into a place where I feel comfortable applying for an English literature Ph.D (and theoretically feeling qualified to teach English 101). Much like my AFI top 122 films project, I’ve compiled a list of 200 great books that I want to read, of which I’ve already read 46. While I’m aware that it’ll be impossible to read three classics a week for the rest of 2009, I’m hoping to chew through at least a good portion of the list before submitting applications to graduate schools next December, and then finish up the rest before starting classes in the fall of 2010.
- Finish the AFI top 122 films list.
I’m currently at 92. I am confident that I can do this one, at least. Looking back, this was an amazing project and well worth the time not only have I discovered a number of great new favorite films, I can now sort of hold my own in a number of film conversations with my film nerd buddies. (This is the same place I want to be with literature classics next year, hence #1 above.) I do have a stack of 32 additional movies from the Criterion collection that I want to watch after this is done, so that means that the final count will be 154 of the best movies out there, but I may wait to hit those until after I’m further through the literature list.
- Get back in shape.
Damn dirty desk jobs. Since enrolling at MIT I’ve gained over fifty pounds. This will be undone, dammit. I’m already taking great steps to ensure that this happens, including obtaining a really great stationary bike this Christmas (thanks, honey!) and changing my diet to exclude the worst of the foofy coffee drinks, sugary sodas and snacks and replace them with healthier alternatives, but I have a long way to go. (Not to mention a copy of Wii Fit to dust off, which I might wait to do until after I’m sure than damned little thing will stop whining “That’s obese!” whenever it gives me my weight. Grrr.) Plus, it ought to help with my whole ‘public intellectual’ career thing, since more than one place has also suggested that looks definitely play a part when you’re trying to break into any industry. There’s one piece in a paper here in Boston that explicitly demands to know why, if these bright young novelists are so smart, they’re not bright enough to look better. C’est la vie. (Besides, if Jay Lake can shear off 65 pounds, and I’m something like a decade or two younger than he is, I should be able to do the same thing. And I need to do this before I start developing the serious stuff, like heart disease or diabetes. Yay adulthood.) That said, I have great reason to do this, thanks to the next one…
- Get married.
I finally popped the question to Laura on Christmas, and we’re set to get the hitching done on Halloween of 2009. (Yes, we’re those nerds.) I am determined to look good in that suit, by God. I have a sneaking suspicion this one might rise up and obliterate all the others on the list, as per the snickering of a number of my married friends, but so far so good.
- Write more.
I have a number of writing projects that are gestating but need to be really brought to term and delivered. Although it may be counterintuitive, I suspect that one way to make that happen is to do more regular writing on places like this blog, the GAMBIT blog, the C3 blog, the IAF blog, and other places where I’m considered a regular. I had a scheme all set where I’d blog in one place or another each day every week, but, well, it hasn’t happened yet. Again, this first week has largely been planning, mmmkay?
- Get fiscally responsible.
This is something I’ve been working on for a long, long time and I’ll probably still be working on for the next ten years. It’s a simple truth that academics and academic staffs don’t make huge piles of money (with a couple of notable outliers, of course there are some graybeards here at MIT that are making out like goddamn bandits, but they’re rock stars) and that’s why so many academic types like myself do so much consulting on the side. My consulting business has been taking off like a rocket ship this year, even though this website doesn’t really reflect that yet. Which brings me to my next resolution…
- Make geoffreylong.com more representative of me in 2009.
Every year for the past couple of years I’ve just changed the date up there in the corner. (Which I still need to do yet for ’09… Fark.) This year I need to really overhaul some of the basics, so that this site does a better job of working for me as a calling card, portfolio space and public laboratory. I need to build up my traffic, I need to conduct some experiments, I need to make more art and upload stuff more reliably. I know I say this a lot, but watch this space.
So there you have it my seven key resolutions for 2009. Thanks for joining me as I continue to hammer out a more successful state of existence. 2009 is going to be amazing, I can feel it and, more importantly, I’m determined to make it amazing. Stay tuned.
Every time I leave Ohio it gets a little harder.
Back in Boston on Sunday or so, and regular blogging will resume then. Probably.
Happy New Year, everybody.
December 22, 2008 12:07 pm
Greetings to anyone coming to this site via the mySingapore Twitter stream! To provide you with some context, my name is Geoffrey Long and I’m the Communications Director for the US side of the Singapore-MIT GAMBIT Game Lab. In early December 2008 I flew from chilly Cambridge, Massachusetts to sunny Singapore to help our Singapore lab present at SIGGRAPH Asia 2008 and to see Singapore for the first time myself. Armed with my trusty Canon PowerShot SD890 IS, I decided to keep a running videoblog of my experiences there and the results are below. You can also find still photographs from my trip in this Flickr album.
And now, the links:
- SG0801: The kickoff! Wherein our hero gets things going from the tarmac at Logan International Airport in Boston.
- SG0802: Heathrow. Wherein our hero reflects on the pug ugliness of Heathrow Airport’s new Terminal 5, which looks like the Airport That IKEA Built – and not in a good way.
- SG0803: Singapore! Wherein our hero reaches Singapore at last, and realizes that the key to creating an airport that feels welcoming, as opposed to industrial and cold, is a combination of color and foliage.
- SG0804: iHotel. Wherein our increasingly-exhausted hero sets up camp at the hotel in Singapore, and reflects on what he’s learned in one bewilderingly long day of travel.
- SG0805: Hiking in the Park. Wherein our hero makes the boneheaded mistake of scaling a set of steps up a huge hill at around 11AM near the Earth’s equator. *cough, wheeze*
- SG0806: The Spice Trail. Wherein our hero reveals his secret foodie nature and miraculously refrains from making a Dune joke.
- SG0807: 360 Degrees of Singaporean History. Wherein our hero does his best iPod commercial impersonation while literally surrounded by Singaporean history.
- SG0808: Christmas on Orchard. Wherein our hero reports from one of the biggest, most impressive stretches of shopping space he’s ever seen.
- SG0809: Geekville. Wherein our hero, lost in one of the biggest malls he’s ever seen, discovers that days spent in meetings and setting up show booths are bad for blogging.
- SG0810: @SIGGRAPH. Wherein our hero reports from the expo floor, remarking on the apparent state of computer graphics in Singapore.
- SG0811: Let it rain, let it rain, let it rain… Wherein our hero, weary but happy, relaxes outside the mall to the lovely sounds of a Christmas typhoon.
- SG0812: Digital Trees? Wherein our hero reports in after the Lucasfilm Singapore party and marvels at a canopy of towering structures serving double duty as public art and public function.
- SG0813: Illuminated. Kites. Wherein our hero is awestruck by the simple ingenuity of putting lights on kites.
- SG0814: After Lucasfilm. Wherein our hero speaks briefly about his time visiting the Lucasfilm Animation Singapore offices. (Apologies for the sound quality, lighting quality and lack of content due to NDA – most of you can probably skip this one.)
- SG0815: At the Night Zoo. Wherein our hero pays a visit to Singapore’s famed Night Zoo and then discovers that his camera really doesn’t take video in the dark worth a dang. This footage of the fire show was the best I could do!
- SG0816: Night Zoo, Lucasfilm and the Last Day. Wherein our hero provides a recap of the Night Zoo and the Lucasfilm visit, sends a shout-out to Eddie Wong, and contemplates plans for the last full day in Singapore.
- SG0817: Malls and Circuses. Wherein our hero expounds on the Singaporean love of shopping malls.
- SG0818: The Asian Civilizations Museum. Wherein our hero explores, among other things, a video triptych entering the Asian Civilizations Museum.
- SG0819: The Merlion! Wherein our hero successfully completes his pilgrimage to the (in)famous Singapore Merlion.
- SG0820: The Esplanade. Wherein our hero introduces the audience to the arts and shopping center that is Singapore’s Esplanade (and reveals that he’s not entirely sure about the preferred pronunciation of the word esplanade).
- SG0821: Signing Off from Terminal 5. Wherein our hero brings this entire adventure very nearly full circle by signing off from London’s Heathrow airport, and begrudgingly revises his opinion of the earlier-maligned Terminal 5.
Thanks for stopping by, and let me know what you think!
December 17, 2008 1:13 pm
As many of you know, I finished my master’s degree in Comparative Media Studies at MIT in the spring of 2007. I liked it so much there that I decided to stay on, first as the Communications DIrector for CMS and the Singapore-MIT GAMBIT Game Lab and then as a combination of Communications Director and Researcher for GAMBIT. As you may also be aware, the co-founder and co-head of CMS (as well as my friend and mentor), Henry Jenkins, is leaving MIT for USC. The state of CMS at MIT is, as you might imagine, in a somewhat perilous state at the moment: among other things, admissions to the CMS master’s program is on hold for 2009-2010. The official line is:
In light of the upcoming departure of Henry Jenkins, the faculty and Dean are working to ensure the continued success of the program while exploring potentially new lines of inquiry and activity within media studies. CMS will continue its undergraduate degree programs, its programming, and its research throughout this time, and will have more to report about the Masters program next fall. Please check back then.
There’s a heathy dollop of irony in the fact that although I am a Communications guy, I haven’t felt it appropriate to say much about this, given my employment by the university. Still, I don’t think it’s outside the realm of reasonability for me to repost an open letter to MIT that was co-penned by a number of alums from the CMS class of 2005, including my friends Brett Camper, Rekha Murthy, Karen Schrier and Parmesh Shahani. I believe it was first posted to Rekha’s blog yesterday, and it’s been forwarded on to other media outlets such as The New York Times. We’ll see where all it ends up, but it’s the last paragraph that really drives the point home. Concerning the first sentence of that last paragraph, I hope it’s not too much to my employers for me to note, simply… Yup.
Take it away, Master’s class of ’05:
Why We Need Comparative Media Studies
– an open, collaboratively written letter to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
December 5, 2008
Dr. Susan Hockfield, President
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
Dr. Hockfield:
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is known globally for bringing the best and the brightest together in a hotbed of intellectual energy, innovation, and applied study. Increasingly, its reputation for academic leadership is reaching beyond science, engineering, and economics and into the humanities. As graduates of MIT’s Comparative Media Studies (CMS) Masters program, we have seen firsthand the role this visionary program plays in the wider world. Recently, CMS co-director Henry Jenkins III announced his plans to leave the Institute for a post at the University of Southern California, leaving only one dedicated faculty member — co-director William Uricchio — and an uncertain future for both the graduate and undergraduate programs. This decision has inspired us, the CMS Class of 2005, to reflect on our program’s unique and important approach to the study of media and technology. We urge you, Dr. Hockfield, and others in the Institute’s leadership, to give the support Comparative Media Studies needs to truly succeed at MIT.
Every fall, Professors Jenkins and Uricchio welcome a small cohort of students and professionals to a two-year graduate experience that will transform them into the media experts that industry and academia increasingly seek. The co-directors, whose complementary experience and leadership styles have been key to the program’s success, practice a philosophy they call “applied humanities”. With so much of our time spent interacting through and with media, applied humanities calls for a greater understanding of its historical, cultural, economic, and global context. Everyone — business and government leaders, journalists, educators, and citizens — benefits from humanities learning, including the ability to read, write, and circulate information to diverse audiences, across distribution channels that vary in their form and content demands. Applied humanities blends traditional academic research with hands-on engagement in the public and private sectors. Comparative Media Studies creates the environment for such principles to flourish by bringing together students from a wide range of fields, including education, film and video preservation, journalism, advertising, software development, and venture capital. The program’s deeply collaborative environment turns out thinking-practitioners who can translate for a broader public and ask forward-looking questions. How is social networking changing politics? What are the ethics of video games? What happens when popular cultures move across national borders? What is the future of digital reading?
Our rapidly changing times also call for the remembrance of technological and media history, lest we remain caught up in our societal fascination with newness. CMS reminds us that early radio in the 1920s and comics in the 1950s triggered moral panics over our “impressionable” youth — fears which we look back on as reactionary and simple-minded, even as the same turns of phrase are employed over certain video games and social networking sites today. Meanwhile, the asynchronous debates of Current TV and Twitter are pulling the political town hall meetings of the past into the 21st century, and Obama’s weekly online video address is bringing F.D.R.’s fireside chats to YouTube. From Herodotus, to the printing press, opera, and silent film, the CMS program’s deep grounding in history has taught us to apply an active historical frame in our professional roles shaping media business and policy.
We have had three years since graduation to test what Jenkins, Uricchio, and a supporting team of non-CMS faculty have imparted: in industry, academia, non-profits, and beyond. We’ve brought our talents for reflective communication to books, blogs, video games, and top Ph.D. programs. Many of us have created our own job descriptions. As Jenkins explains, the CMS program prepares students for jobs that may not have existed just a few years ago, yet are becoming vital to public and private sectors in flux.
Comparative Media Studies is not the only top-notch media program out there, but it is one of very few in the United States. As a field, media studies is often ensconced within humanities and social sciences departments, with limited exposure beyond pre-existing disciplines such as sociology, film studies, art history, or education. Forging a new paradigm for intellectual accomplishment means breaking down barriers between academic disciplines in non-tokenistic, durable ways. In the seemingly unlikely setting of MIT, applied humanities has flourished, with students drawing from urban studies, architecture, history, anthropology, and computer science to formulate and express their ideas. The program’s weekly public colloquia have brought leading media scholars and professionals to MIT, creating a rare opportunity for cross-disciplinary dialogue. Over the past decade, the program has also hosted several international scholars-in-residence, who have shared their expertise on topics as diverse as mobile phone culture in Japan and the history of military games in Germany. The program has also led to the formation of several major research initiatives, including the Convergence Culture Consortium (media convergence and its business ramifications), Center for Future Civic Media (social bonds in local communities), Project New Media Literacies (participatory culture) and the Singapore-MIT GAMBIT Lab (problem solving through video games).
With CMS, Jenkins and Uricchio created a new paradigm, yet they were never fully supported financially, physically, or emotionally by the Institute. Unfortunately, this is part of a more widespread reluctance of policymakers and academic institutions from K-12 onward to fully integrate media studies as an essential discipline of study in the 21st century. We applaud the work of programs at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Carnegie Mellon, the University of Michigan, and USC, where students and faculty are innovating the field. As these and other universities begin to recognize the value of applied humanities, we urge MIT to continue its leadership role in this field. Jenkins’ departure will be a huge loss for the MIT community. Let’s not compound his loss with the greater one of the entire program. Comparative Media Studies can continue into its second decade, but only with the full support — both moral and financial — of the Institute behind it. We hope that you and other decision-makers will see this time of change as an opportunity to demonstrate that the principles established by the founders are big enough to endure. We appeal to MIT to continue the Comparative Media Studies program, and we encourage other such programs to take form at colleges, universities, and K-12 schools around the world.
Yours sincerely,
The Comparative Media Studies Class of 2005
-Brett Camper
-Joellen Easton
-Brian R. Jacobson
-Andrea McCarty
-Rekha Murthy
-Karen Schrier
-Parmesh Shahani
cmsalum05 [at] gmail
December 16, 2008 11:52 am
Wherein our hero brings this entire adventure very nearly full circle by signing off from London’s Heathrow airport, and begrudgingly revises his opinion of the earlier-maligned Terminal 5.
Final bonus video: turnaround footage of Terminal 5.
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