Policies related to use of social media.

I’m impressed by Keely Kolmes clarity of thought & transparency.  Inspires me to update my Psychotherapy Online page http://www.psybernet.co.nz

Updated Private Practice Social Media Policy | Dr. Keely Kolmes:

This document outlines my office policies related to use of social media. Please read to understand how I conduct myself on the Internet and how you can expect me to respond to various requests and interactions between us. If a time should come when I revise any of these policies, I will bring an updated copy of this form to our session so that you are aware of any changes. If you have any questions about anything within this document, I encourage you to bring them up when we meet.

Sociometry: Facebook & Twitter

I am using Facebook a bit more lately.  I still use Twitter more.  But very differently.  This post for example I might link to Twitter, I found the link on Twitter.  It relates to my “Exploring the Psyche in Cyberspace” – psyberspace project.  And people who don’t like this stuff may well drop off, others who like it will stay on.  But Facebook is different.  Family, friends and local people hang out there.  I don’t want to foist my arcane musings onto them.   I might send a snippet, and a snippet of art.  My photos update from Flickr to Facebook.

Continue reading “Sociometry: Facebook & Twitter”

Being in Nothingness Virtual Reality and the Pioneers of Cyberspace

Being in Nothingness Virtual Reality and the Pioneers of Cyberspace:

Being in Nothingness Virtual Reality and the Pioneers of Cyberspace

“Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions of legitimate operators, in every nation…A graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks of every computer in the human system. Unthinkable complexity. Lines of light ranged in the nonspace of the mind, clusters and constellations of data. Like city lights, receding…”

–William Gibson, Neuromancer

Suddenly I don’t have a body anymore.

All that remains of the aging shambles which usually constitutes my corporeal self is a glowing, golden hand floating before me like Macbeth’s dagger. I point my finger and drift down its length to the bookshelf on the office wall.

I try to grab a book but my hand passes through it.

“Make a fist inside the book and you’ll have it,” says my invisible guide.

I do, and when I move my hand again, the book remains embedded in it. I open my hand and withdraw it. The book remains suspended above the shelf.

I look up. Above me I can see the framework of red girders which supports the walls of the office…above them the blue-blackness of space. The office has no ceiling, but it hardly needs one. There’s never any weather here.

Donna Haraway – Links

Donna Haraway – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

Donna Haraway Donna Haraway with Cayenne, 2006; photograph by Rusten Hogness

Wired Interview:

You Are Cyborg By Hari Kunzru

For Donna Haraway, we are already assimilated. The monster opens the curtains of Victor Frankenstein’s bed. Schwarzenegger tears back the skin of his forearm to display a gleaming skeleton of chrome and steel. Tetsuo’s skin bubbles as wire and cable burst to the surface. These science fiction fevered dreams stem from our deepest concerns about science, technology, and society. With advances in medicine, robotics, and AI, they’re moving inexorably closer to reality. When technology works on the body, our horror always mingles with intense fascination. But exactly how does technology do this work? And how far has it penetrated the membrane of our skin?

The answers may lie in Sonoma County, California. It’s not the most futuristic place in the world; quite the opposite. The little clusters of wooden houses dotted up and down the Russian River seem to belong to some timeless America of station wagons and soda pop. Outside the town of Healdsburg (population 9,978), acres of vineyards stretch away from the road, their signs proudly proclaiming the dates of their foundation. The vines themselves, transplants from Europe, carry a genetic heritage far older. Yet this sleepy place is where visions of a technological future are being defined. Tucked away off the main highway is a beautiful redwood valley. Here, in a small wooden house, lives someone who says she knows what’s really happening with bodies and machines. She ought to – she’s a cyborg.

Book: Reload: Rethinking Women + Cyberculture

Cyberspace—Land of Cyber Cowboys and Women Outlaws – UB Reporter:

They speak their minds in “Reload: Rethinking Women + Cyberculture” (MIT Press, 2002), a groundbreaking collection of theoretical and fictional writing, including cyberpunk, edited by Austin Booth, a senior assistant librarian at UB, and Mary Flanagan, professor of art at the University of Oregon and former UB faculty member.

In it, 27 authors consider the effects of rapid and profound technological change on culture and, in particular, the revolutionary and reactionary effects of cyberculture on women’s lives and identities.

They examine how conceptions of gender are embodied in different technologies and how those, in turn, shape our notions of maleness and femaleness. Their observations are quite explicit, ranging from the use of language in technology to the presentation of women in cyberpunk fiction.

The contributors include women who have lived in some province of the cyberworld as early as the 1930s. Most are contemporary scholars and authors who are up to speed on advanced technology, neuropolitics, culture jamming and the latest technobuzz.

 Booth frequently publishes in refereed journals on women in cyberspace and information studies, and currently is working on a book titled “Bodies at Work: Women’s Work in Cyberfiction, Cyberculture and Cyberfeminism.” Flanagan is the author of a number of articles on gender and narrative in virtual worlds and has produced many innovative media projects, including Internet games, a networked version of the phage computer virus and “Career Moves,” a computer-controlled board game that explores ideas about women and work.

Amazon

Compressionism II

AtomJack, 1998, has a lot insight.  I go on to riff on the compression webpage. and then link & quote.

“we all have different internal filters”

That sums up Gregory Bateson Korsybsi talk.

And now compression has taken new leaps, do less with less

words are compressions – coex systems

Tweets!

tools that do less – Kindle  iPad

“small pieces loosely joined”

the joining is not linear though, joined across isomorphic information systems.

Each small piece is a map and a portal of a territory.

And each territory a map of another larger territory.

Russian dolls

fUSION Anomaly. Compressionism:

“keep it dense. keep it in-tense.”

fuck, okay. “you are what you cache”. or, to codify it: REMEMBER, you are what you cache”. taking this form, we bring as much as we can with us (pack rats), but the problem with clutter is that it’s bulky. not very efficient.

digital trance formation… information in formation… to streamline, we digitize. paper, images, sound, etc. there’s a ton of  information in hi resolution images and sound. but storage and internal link processing power is growing and so far has no limits.

brute force is not a problem. but in the meantime, and this is exemplified by slim systems like palmtops, embedded systems, “elegant coding” for pda’s, etc. demos.. this is all training for elegant, efficient, schemes.. but for what… compressions….(!)

this is the key. we are compressing time. we are fractally involutingly sinking into a wormhole and in order for a tight squeeze you have to compress.. that’s right. so this whole thing about compression schemes and compression algorithms.

wormholes… minidiscs, etc. you want pure? go brute force.

you want the “gist”? the main information? go pkzip. and pk could be psychokenesis, right?

fuckin a.

so this is where we’re at.

compressions. the gist of it.

we all interpret differently anyway, and pure reps don’t amount to much because we all have different internal filters. of course, that IS the optimum and it should be stored SOMEWHERE. like the idea that, atomjack, at oct 14 1998 4:55 pm should remain pure in that form. but to go elsewhere with it? do i need everything? do i need all the unnecesasry baggage? or can i leave it at home on the server where i can access those things i need with my pda?

this is compression. this is compressing time. this is one step closer to fucking immortality and i’m going to get there and bring everyone along with me. scratch that, everyone is ALREADY there. – @Om* on acid 10/14/98


A mattress company with a dream resource page!

Ha!

A mattress company with a dream resource page!

Psychology of Dreams:

Psychology of Dreams Dreams are a sequential series of thoughts, images, and sounds that pass through the human mind during sleep. Dreams have a long history of theories and meanings, including both superstitious and scientific reasoning. Some believed they were divine messages from a god or a path to understanding the human unconscious. Some have even dismissed them as meaningless chemical reactions within the brain. The topic of dreams has always been subject to speculation and are still not fully understood.