<$BlogRSDURL$>
Bloghome at www.klastrup.dk

This is the research diary of researcher Lisbeth Klastrup, since february 2001 sharing her thoughts on life, universe, persistent online worlds, games, interactive stories and internet oddities with you on the www.

I am currently on leave from the IT University of Copenhagen, and from aug. 2006 - aug. 2007 working as Associate Research Professor at the Center for Design Research Copenhagen, an independant center situated at the School of Architecture. During this year, I will be working on a book about the development of aesthetics, design and interaction on the WWW, together with colleague Ida Engholm.

My blog often reflects how busy I am in general, so posting may be pretty irregular, as well as my potential response to comments. But I read them!

My list of publications.
My official homepage at ITU.

Contact:
lisbethATklastrupDOTdk

Archives
February 2001 March 2001 April 2001 May 2001 June 2001 July 2001 August 2001 September 2001 October 2001 November 2001 December 2001 January 2002 February 2002 March 2002 April 2002 May 2002 June 2002 July 2002 August 2002 September 2002 October 2002 November 2002 January 2003 February 2003 March 2003 April 2003 May 2003 June 2003 July 2003 August 2003 September 2003 October 2003 November 2003 December 2003 January 2004 February 2004 March 2004 April 2004 May 2004 June 2004 July 2004 August 2004 September 2004 October 2004 November 2004 December 2004 January 2005 February 2005 March 2005 April 2005 May 2005 June 2005 July 2005 August 2005 September 2005 October 2005 November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 February 2006 March 2006 April 2006 May 2006 June 2006 July 2006 August 2006 September 2006 October 2006 November 2006 December 2006 January 2007 February 2007 March 2007 April 2007 May 2007 June 2007

Fellow research bloggers
-Denmark
Jesper Juul
Gonzalo Frasca
Martin Sønderlev Christensen
Jonas Heide Smith
Miguel Sicart
Mads Bødker
ITU blogs

-Norway
Jill Walker
Torill Mortensen
Hilde Corneliussen
Anders Fagerjord

-The World
Terra Nova (misc, joint)
GrandTextAuto (US, joint)
Mirjam Paalosari-Eladhari (SE)
Jane McGonigal (US)
Patrik Svensson (SE)
Elin Sjursen (NO)
Adrian Miles' Vog blog (AUSTR.)

Other Related Blogs
Mediehack
Hovedet på Bloggen
Bookish
Tempus Tommy
Flickwerk
Jacob Bøtter
Corporate Blogging

Fellow Researchers, non-blog
-Denmark
Susana Tosca
T.L. Taylor
Espen Aarseth
Soeren Pold
Ida Engholm
Troels Degn Johansson
-Norway
Ragnhild Tronstad
-Sweden
Anna Gunder
Jenny Sunden
Mikael Jacobsson
-Finland
Aki Jarvinen
Markku Eskelinen
Raine Koskimaa



©Lisbeth Klastrup 2001-2007

This page is
powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?


25.5.06
Of man and monkey 
Video showing how a small monkey can be man's best friend. A charity in Boston, Helping Hands, trains small monkeys to help disabled people. Endearing movie, indeed. I wouldnt mind one as research assistant :).


22.5.06
My first frontpage 
Today, quotes from the interview I gave last friday to a journalist from Urban (the free daily newspaper distributed in public transport devices in Århus and Copenhagen) made it to their monday frontpage. Urban is doing a lot to get their readers to start blogging and this feature is clearly part of that enterprise, but commendable in a Danish context, where not many newspapers have given their readers this possibility yet (fyns stiftstidende an exeption).

This is the online version:Blogs giver nyt liv på nettet.


Liveblogging from Vlogs & Corporations event at ITU 
DONA of which Im now a proud executive board member, has invited two of the most knowledgable vloggers, Jon Froda and Andreas Haugstrup Pedersen in Denmark to give a talk here at ITU today. I (ITU) have provided the facilities (the auditorium etc) in return for all ITU students and staff getting free entry. Great deal :)

Right now they are explaining the practical details of how to videoblog - using blip.tv as an example. Before that they pointed out that the videoblog in general has a lot in common with the weblog. Comments, social, feed etc.

Blip.tv also provides the opportunity to point to a still image that represents the video, which will be the starting point.
AQ (audience question): How heavy mb-loads can you expect users to put up with? (4 MBs per second for 4 mins, roughly 20 min).

Consumption of the blog: "read it" as a blog.
First vlog: january 2004. june 2004, around a doxen. Today: vlogmap.org 947 vlogs, mefeedia.com 7100+ vlogs. Jokers: YouTube, Googlevideo. As with blogs: we can only count the (v)bloggers that openly show they blog.
(sidenote: Im sure Adrian Miles in Australia starting doing vlogs before january 2004, yes he did, he started his original vog back in november 2000, now he is not vlogging very much anymore, but blogging about vlogs, so it goes. Should note that Adrian has approached it from a more artistic pov)

Now they have alreday vlogged the start of the talk. Sometimes I wonder whether it isnt all about documenting that we are at an event rather consuming the content of it;)?

Vlogs as medium: Andreas on the 3 "revolutions" that the videoblog brings to the communication market:
distribution: everybody have access to the creation of audio-visual products
(sidenote: do any silent vlogs exist??)
communication in a network: placed in a blog-context, part of a network (if you want!), everybody can be senders and/or receivers in this network, the form of the video is adapted: ie rather than thinking in long features, you are thinking about the vlogs as a series of short features, "chapters" of an experience (example of visit to nambia - kristjansson.dk). This is 8 feeds into the network, each of which can receive individual comments.
the power of the recipient: as vlog-user you have choice of through which media you want to view the vlog through (LK: and when to watch it too!)

The use of vlogs in organisation:
* use both externally and internally
* a human face, the reality of everyday life (the general blogs in corps argument)
* basis for discussion
* boring stuff in conversation (bad food in canteen) more fun when put in images
* getting to know your co-workers "face and body" when working in a big corp where you never meet them, but communicate with them (or receive communication from them)
* example: Microsofts Channel 9

Good advice for vlogs in corps:
know your community
learn from the grassroots
be part of networks and communities
(basically same advice as for blogs in general)


Genres in videoblogs:
* collaboration (for instance a group vlog or portal: example the israeli embassy websites in washington collecting vlogs about visits to Israel (here you can see stuff you never get to see on tv)
* diaries (example dad-blog, Siesta) - difference: can be much quicker to describe experiences this way
* news (rocketboom)
* interviews, conferences (occasional and "random" rather than linear progression??)
* videoart
* themeblogs (crash test kitchen)

Sidenote: it seems like they are making the same arguments regarding the "advantage" of images above text, that film makers were making in order argue in favour of the novel. Remediation all over again (Bolter and Grusin in their book Remediation argues that new media assert themselves by arguing that they present the world in a "better way" than "old" media).

VIdeoblogs a bit like tv-commercials: in that they operate as very efficient short stories, that have to be told in compact space, and the type of intertextuality (popular culture references)often appearing, serial. (Nikefutebol.com)

the advantages of vlogs in corps:
* show dont tell
* having an authentic visual identity online
* possibility to influence discussion in strategic direction
* crisis management
* corporate social responsibility
* stakeholder relationship nursing

Other functions of the vlog
* a hub for the local community (the roanoke.com blog), also serving as collective memory
* independent political rallying, campaigning (former senator john edwards, interesting example of users sending videos with q's to Edwards who then responds in another video, a good point from the audience: this appears to be more authentic, because a video cant be ghostwritten! shows that it is really him that have chosen to dedicate himself to answering this)

the future: remixing culture (f.i. youtube), "mobility" (jup!), few-to-few broadcast

(and while I blogged all this, Kim Elmose of Mediehack blogged about me blogging this, and now Im blogging that. But we are still "here" too. Sort of.)


20.5.06
Danish student website about viral marketing 
The website Timecodes is made by students at the University of Copenhagen Film- and Media Studies Dept. THey have a nice little subsite with various interviews and links regarding viral marketing:Viral markedsfoering på timecodes.dk. All in Danish, alas.


17.5.06
Back from guest lecture gig at Sødertørn Høgskola 
While on the plane to Sweden(or was it on one of the many trains I rode today to get back and forth from my guestlecture at Sødertørn University College), I was think how I have reverted to "postfacto" blogging rather than "proactive" blogging. (Meadows in Pause and Effect talks to Raph Koster who comes up with the nice term "post-facto" story telling to describe what is going on narratively in MMOGs, "proactive" is just one of those management buzz words) - ie I blog after things have happened, rather than before, or during...mostly. Could one categorise blogs, this way I wonder? Anyway, the point of partly using this blog as a branding tool goes awry, when I post about events where people can see me, after I've gone home again ;).

Anyway, belated blogging, because Im busy, this May Im supervising an insane amount of students (May is ITU's dedicated project writing period) and doing quite a few out-of-the-house activities too, running behind to fit them in. But as said, went to Sweden for guest lecture, talked to same very nice Swedish reseachers working there, who had lots of good comments to my death-stories project, as did the students (as per usual :)). Here is my slides, ver 4.0 of the death-stories talk, with more stuff added, due to the now 37 responses to the survey, providing some very interesting material. Beware a
big file (14+MB even in pdf because of the high-resolution screenshots). Will be removed in a week.


15.5.06
Musical cornucopia 
Occasionally I do lead a life outside of academia. Sometimes I go to concerts, but there can be weeks, even months between. However, by chance (and a generous donation of a ticket), I will be going for 3 completely different musical experiences this week, spanning five centuries:
Wagner's Das Rheingold (from 1854) at the Opera tomorrow
Belle and Sebastian (1996-) at Vega on friday &
The fifth concert in the amazing row of performances by the Musica Ficta ensemble on Sunday - this time they are singing music from the 1570s.

Sorry, WoW!


14.5.06
Academic literatur on moblogs and moblogging? 
Some students just asked, and I've been thinking that not much academic literature have been written about moblogging: however this article looks pretty interesting, judging from the intro: Location-Based Moblogging as Method:
New Views into the Use and Practice of Personal, Social, and Mobile Technologies
.

A Google Scholar search does present a list of 100+ articles and entries. There is hope, though it appears there is not necessarily a strict division between the use of cameraphones and moblogging per se.
Must remember to check out the Dalton & Donath article: Privacy and Context in Online Diaries.

Do you know of any good articles on moblogs/moblogging/camera-phone use in a diary context?


11.5.06
Late liveblogging from Cross Media Seminar in Århus 
Im currently in Århus and writing this while desperately trying to get the wireless network to function (Arne Krumsvik who is sitting next to me has it up and running, so I know it is possible!) - I will start typing and then go online, once I get it to work. //Update: several hours later still havent gotten online, though Im told that the network exists and the signal strength is excellent. Update II: Eventually I had to wait until I got home to upload this, because I never managed to get online//


The point of this seminar is/was to gather the authors for a book about crossmedia (production) in media corporations; however visitors have been allowed to listen and learn. Since the theme of the Mobile Content Laboratory this term have been crossmedia production, and I personally have been thinking about phenomena such as crossmedia storytelling (transmedial universes) and the interplay between web and mobiles (moblogging), I thought it could be quite interesting to go to a seminar where I could learn more about what people working with the media and studying the media (e.g. primarily news producing media) thinks about the reality of crossmedia production, and about future trends and developments in the field.

How many forms of communication media can you find on this picture?




1st speaker: Arne Krumsvik on Multiple Media News Production for a Global Market
A model for understanding cross-media as the outcome of commercially-oriented strategies. He presents Miles & Snows categorisation of organisations:Defenders, Prospectors, Analyzers and Reactors. CNN, his case, has moved from being a Prospector to being an Analyzer. Their news production and publication in various media is syndicated and controlled by one central instance, the HQ in Atlanta. What shapes the making of online news? He presents his own tentative model: online news both strengthens the brand of the corporation while pointing to content in old media, and it provides a niche for new revenues (such as subscriptions). NB! Remember to look at MacManus' model of commercial news production.

2nd speaker: Ebbe Grunwald on Multimediality and the Language of the Journalist
What happens to language and the way we tell stories when we follow a concrete story in a multi-medial and cross-medial context? Does language change when used in different media? First case – a story about youth homicide in Northern Jutland shows that story was online first,but that the story were distributed also via sms, so a lot of people knew about it via sms before anything else. But this is perhaps special to exactly this story. The online versions of the story, shows that the story gets more precise with each update (telling what happened, not what was believed to have happened), within the first 4 hours of the homicide, they had at least 4 news updates on it, when the story was in the newspaper the day after, news were already old and had not been elaborated.

3rd speaker: Anja Bechmann Pedersen on the Concept of Cross Media Anja is trying to make a more general model of cross media as a form of communication. She gave a similar talk (the longer version) at ITU 3 weeks
ago, and is doing a good job of mapping out cross media as a concept, and in a way so we can use her concepts to describe what media corporations (DK: mediehuse) are doing. Her cases are the Nordjyske Media Corporation and the Youth Department of DR (Denmarks Radio), the public service broadcasting institution, DK's equivalent of BBC. Some categories:<
Cross media as relations between media products (f.i. a story, conceptually(graphics), navigational)
Cross media as media structures (ideas about media, translation btw media)
Cross media as actor-platform relations (users & platforms, designers & platforms; platform both as physical, technological, economical and organisational).

NB! remember to look at Paddy Scanells article on the concept of Liveness, the book Radio, Television and Modern Life.

The Norwegian opponent: what is the use value of this "tidying-things-up" project, apart from the fact that it is nice to have, he is critical of the media theorists need to "erect taxonomical constructions"; consider concepts such as displaying, cloning, versioning.

4th speaker. Lennart Højbjerg on Visual Cross Media Aesthetics
How TV2 has been using a computer interface aesthetics and following the development of general GUI developments in their remediation of it. In the 1990s the graphically advanced interface (3D, cyberspace imagery, now increasingly influenced by the aesthetics of the internet, f.i. the navigation and menus look aesthetics, use of fonts, animations with flash-look etc. Underlying premise is that this development is software-based. And it is tied to a need to deal with a way of living that is increasingly digitalised.Based on the products “claim to fame”, their need to establish their position on the media market – so aesthetics grows out of a need to either position oneself (differentiation) or dominate.

5th speaker: Espen Ytreberg on The combining of Platforms
(research project at Oslo Uni: Participation and Play!)
Research project focus: How the combination of massmedia and digital media shapes non-professional participation (8 researchers, incl. 2 ph.d.s) – Anders Fagerjord, an old DAC friend is part of this.
“The Elite Survey”: They have interviewed 45 decisions makers in Norwegian Media Industry to find out the strategic impact on program offers which include audience participation
Showed that mobile platforms are key factor in the future according to these people, konfluens (??UK name – the platforms should influence each other, not converge) is more important than “convergence”, the combination takes places through coordination, integration and articulation.

Some believe that technological convergence will not lead to the convergence of user habits and media is used and will continue to be used in various social settings. The consequence is therefore not is not to plan solely for convergence, for also for the articulation of each platforms and the ways platforms influence each other. For instance, thinking of TV as a “portal” to other platform uses: since TV is still the platform (media) that most easily and readily attracts attention – so the use of other media should happen through the entrance via the “TV portal”. Still ideas exist of what is high prestige and low prestige jobs in the media business.

[note to self: apart from Anja who is one of the organisers, I’m the only woman who have asked a question so far. The only female presenter today is Anja. I wonder why? My impression is that this field is not male dominated in general??]

6th speaker: Yngvar Kjus: New Media – Old Broadcasting
What is at stake in increasing audience participation between online media and tv:
Analysis of the program: STORE NORSKE
How to promote and control audience participation in a way that suits the producer (NRK as case) – modes of participation: nominations, discussion of nominations, voting – not all forms of participation are allowed, some censored – as programme progresses, participation is restricted more and more
There is a very long tradition for participation in “old” media (like TV); look for instance at the history of Eurovision Song Contest (France allowed phone votes from late 1970’s)
After monopoly has disappeared, increased strategies for the creation of intimacy (cf audience involvement?)

7th speaker: Roel Puijk: On Time and Timing in multiple media production - a case study from NRK
Looking more closely at relation between tv and internet production: org models for production, rutine and creativity, genre differences, changes in journalistic ideology (from watch-dog to guide-dog?!!). Different models of relation between tv content and internet content: seperated model (no- coop), reuse-model (tv content redone for web), added value model, integrated model (diff. media serve different, but supplementary functions).

Study show that very little news-item content is produced for the web, creativity lies more in the construction, layout of features, not in content. Rare examples of progressive content is the "Clickable body" archive navigation at Puls. TV is what they define themselves as making (the journalists??, producers), appearing changes is more focus on popular culture stuff (online), more weight on form and graphical elements.

8th speaker: Steen Rasmussen on The Cross Field of Convergence
Presents a model of convergence, that can be used as a tool for discussion about convergent media production inside media corporations. On the internal side: process (idea, gathering material, editing), version, synergi. Externally: product, quality, use value.

General notes and thoughts: (in the train on the way home)
Would have liked to make people discuss and spell out the difference between the multiple media mode (flermedialitet) and cross media. To me it seemed as "multiple media" basically meant "producing and distributing content for several platforms" and cross media was mostly used interchangeably with this. However, to me, cross media is about producing content that it is split up between different platforms and can only be understood in its whole by gathering and looking at the content from all platforms involved. Multiple media mode production seems to be more about adjusting content for various platforms and audiences, and in the process emphasisng certain aspects of the content for the platform in question, while still reproducing the same basic content on all the platforms (f.i. a news story). I think there is an essential difference between multiple media production and cross media content (in my understanding) and that we are still very far from seeing authentic and orginal scripted cross media content in a Danish context (though I know DR might have something of the kind up their sleeve..).

Another issue that wasnt adressed was that of the difference between remediation and crossmedia production. I came to think of this possible difference/dichotomy during Lennart Højbjergs presentation. To me it seemed that he was describing a history of remediation (tv remediating computer interface rhetorics) rather than a process of mutual content fertilisation (tv using computer interface aesthetics as part of telling a story, the web using a "video on the tv screen and remote control" aesthetics as part of telling a story), ia the notion of cross media as, in this case, the two media forms telling a story which you would not be able to understand without knowing the other media forms and recognising the remediation process going on. Lennart wasnt able to describe the difference either, and I also need to think further about it. But I have an intuitive feeling that something could be gotten at by thinking more in depth about differences and likenesses betweeen the two concepts.


5.5.06
Messy slides from today's talk at Research School course at Biblioteksskolen 
Preparing a talk when you're ill, isn't necessarily the optimal way of getting the perfect powerpoint show. Had too many slides and too little slides, and a voice that almost gave up half way through my talk at the research school course and Visual Knowledge? On verbal and non-verbal communication. THe present ph.d.students were very patient. Thanks to them. Here are the slides. For a little while.


3.5.06
There are more conspiracy theories between heaven and earth... 
Here is a chapter in one of the many Conspiracy theory to end all conspiracy theories? involving the Illuminati....this is an un-presentable Danish translation of a so-called channeling of deceased Matthew Ward. English version here.

There is indeed room for everyone on the internet.


2.5.06
For the students: 8 Web Design Warm Fuzzy Feelings 
Damn, for my last slide presentation in my course, I forgot this piece: 8 Web Design Warm Fuzzy Feelings, from Tokyo-based mag PingMag.

And the image for the article reminds me, that I really should install Firefox one of these days. According to my website stats, 7.4% of my readers are definitely using Firefox (46.7% use an unknown browser, 30.1% IE, 6.5% Mozilla) so I need to look more closely at browser optimisation after having helped preaching about it to the students.


1.5.06
Successful operation 
Amazingly, a smart dentist fixed my bluetooth connection yesterday. The appropriateness of this operation just occured to me....Perhaps I should let my computer be handled by professionals more often ;).


My Other Places
Death Stories project
Walgblog (DK)
DK forskerblogs (DK)
klast at del.icio.us
Site feed Link (Atom)
Klastrup family?

****************

Buy our book

****************
Conferences
ACE 2007
Mobile Media 2007
MobileCHI 07
Perth DAC 2007
DIGRA 2007
AOIR 8.0/2007

****************
My Ph.D. thesis website:
Towards a Poetics of Virtual Worlds


****************
Misc
I also used to host & work in a world called StoryMOO.