The Machine is Us/ing Us
A while back, I blogged an early version of an amazing video journey from paper to Web 2.0.
Here’s the latest, greatest, final version: The Machine is Us/ing Us.
POSTED IN: Web 2.0
by Mike Abundo on March 9th, 2007
A while back, I blogged an early version of an amazing video journey from paper to Web 2.0.
Here’s the latest, greatest, final version: The Machine is Us/ing Us.
POSTED IN: Web 2.0
Technology is a cult. Let\'s monetize cats!
Written by Mike Abundo [email] for b5media.
6 opinions for The Machine is Us/ing Us
Patrick Pichette
Mar 9, 2007 at 8:45 pm
Whenever someone asks me what is web 2.0, I refer them to this video.
Prof. Wesch’s video summarizes the topic perfectly in a creative and entertaining way, by depicting how Web 2.0 is changing how with interact and collaborate with each other.
Emerging Earth - A new world is coming. Will you be in it?
Apr 3, 2007 at 3:47 am
[…] In his book The Long Tail, Chris Anderson makes many brilliant comparisons between supermarkets and online stores. Supermarket 2.0 doesn’t provide any of those brilliant comparisons, instead serving up a funny parody for anyone who understands all this Web 2.0 stuff. […]
The Long Tail of Human Potential
May 6, 2007 at 2:25 am
[…] that which fuels the emerging Earth, the Long Tail of human potential that lay untapped until aggregated by the Web: our own idle hands. In physics, the greatest (theoretical) latent power in the universe is dark […]
Emerging Earth
Oct 15, 2007 at 8:04 am
[…] the nature of information is actually just the nature of paper. In the spirit of his debut video The Machine is Us/ing Us, Professor Michael Wesch of the Kansas State University digital ethnography group shows us the […]
Information R/evolution
Oct 15, 2007 at 3:24 pm
[…] the nature of information is actually just the nature of paper. In the spirit of his debut video The Machine is Us/ing Us, Professor Michael Wesch of the Kansas State University digital ethnography group shows us the […]
162 Million Web Sites Online
Apr 15, 2008 at 5:52 am
[…] the explosion of Web technologies, the first Web site, created by Sir Tim Berners-Lee himself, still looks […]
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