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Notes
guess I'm a sucker for a good social network diagram. A couple weeks back, I read an article about Cornell professor Jon Kleinberg and his analysis of interactions on social networks. Using data from the LiveJournal blog network, Kleinberg sought to find out what makes some networks grow, and others fail. Below is a picture Kleinberg drew to depict community and group formation inside a social network. Click on the image to get an annotated version that explains the circles and lines in the diagram. This is one example of a "visualization": a way to depict an online community or network in graphical form. It reminded me of other ways people have tried to depict online groups. The best-known examples are probably the scatter plots and treemaps Marc Smith and his colleagues at Microsoft Research have popularized in their analyses of Usenet Newgroups.
(edit)
lithosphere.lithium.com/t5/Inside-Enterprise-Communities/...
From: www.connectedaction.net
Link: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/6903608625/sizes/l/
Data set: nodexlgraphgallery.org/Pages/Graph.aspx?graphID=415
These are the connections among the Twitter users who recently tweeted the word obama AND SOTU when queried on January 25, 2012, scaled by numbers of followers (with outliers thresholded). Connections created when users reply, mention or follow one another. The data set starts on 1/25/2012 13:41 and ends on 1/25/2012 14:07 UTC. Green lines are "follows" relationships, blue lines are "reply" or "mentions" relationships.
Layout created with the "Group Layout" feature of NodeXL which tiles bounded regions for each cluster. The Harel-Koren layout algorithm positioned each vertex: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Force-based_algorithms_(graph_drawing).
Clusters calculated by the Clauset-Newman-Moore algorithm are also encoded by color. Clauset-Newman-Moore algorithm is defined here: pre.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v70/i6/e066111
A larger version of the image is here: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/6903608625/sizes/l/
Betweenness Centrality is defined here: en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrality#Betweenness_centrality
Top most between users:
@time
@ronpaul
@dougbenson
@borowitzreport
@theatlantic
@thinkprogress
@cbsnews
@yahoonews
@markknoller
@foxnation
Top word pairs by frequency of mention
last, night, 117
president, obama, 108
union, address, 63
union, speech, 53
ron, paul, 51
paul, responds, 48
#sotu, #gop, 45
#tcot, #ronpaul, 45
#sotu, speech, 39
obama, made, 36
second, term, 34
#sotu, address, 34
great, speaker, 31
obama, plagiarized, 30
million, people, 28
unemployed, #sotu, 28
#sotu, #jobs, 28
full, text, 26
barack, obama, 25
Graph Metric, Value
Graph Type, Directed
Vertices, 1000
Unique Edges, 2653
Edges With Duplicates, 690
Total Edges, 3343
Self-Loops, 718
Connected Components, 264
Single-Vertex Connected Components, 256
Maximum Vertices in a Connected Component, 728
Maximum Edges in a Connected Component, 3038
Maximum Geodesic Distance (Diameter), 8
Average Geodesic Distance, 3.285081
Graph Density, 0.002319319
Modularity, 0.440592
NodeXL Version, 1.0.1.199
More NodeXL network visualizations are here: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/sets/72157622437066929/ and here:
www.nodexlgraphgallery.org/Pages/Default.aspx
A gallery of NodeXL network data sets is available here: nodexlgraphgallery.org/Pages/Default.aspx?search=twitter
NodeXL is free and open and available from www.codeplex.com/nodexl
NodeXL is developed by the Social Media Research Foundation (www.smrfoundation.org) - which is dedicated to open tools, open data, and open scholarship.
Donations to support NodeXL are welcome through PayPal: www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_bu...
The book, Analyzing social media networks with NodeXL: Insights from a connected world, is available from Morgan Kaufmann and from Amazon.
Marc Smith on Twitter.
Based on the bibliography database a few years back at my research group SANS (now CBN) at the Royal Institute of Technology. People who have written paper together are joined. The color of the link shows the number of papers, the size of a node the number of papers and the intensity the time since the last paper. One can see different external research groups (like Mike Hasselmo's at the top) and internal research topics (the ANN side of Sans to the right, the more biological neural network projects along the left).
A piece I wrote on my blog. blog.deolandicho.com
I’m disconnecting
“It’s not technology we should be afraid of. It’s a life where we’re always connected, always interrupted, always distracted, always bombarded with information and requests. It’s a life where we have no time to create, or connect with real people.
Disconnection is the solution, or at least an integral part of it. It’s very difficult for many people, because connection is addictive.” – Leo Babauta
I plan to be a ‘digital hermit’ or at least an absentee in the digital world, the internet, the web for as long as I can manage. I want to be disconnected and be connected only when it is absolutely necessary. For several days this is what I’ve been trying to do after reading a book by a man I didn’t know and chanced upon only on the internet (of all places). You know, this guy’s insights are so dead on I can’t help but feel thankful for him. Maybe you can think about it too, so please read on.
Facebook is evil, Twitter is evil, Youtube is evil, Google is evil. That’s what I’ve always thought. And that’s what I’ve always said to people I know. The thing is, I didn’t know why they are evil? After reading the book I realised we have shrunk the world so small with instant connectivity, live streaming and live updates that we’ve actually set ourselves up for a gigantic trap: the trap and the need to be ‘always’ connected. These social networks feed us this addiction for connection, much like a pusher is to an addict.
Who of you here don’t take a peek at Facebook every now and then (some of us spend as much as 8 hours just logged in on the thing)? Who doesn’t tweet a juicy rumour or a fantastic review of something we saw recently? Who of us photographers and photo hobbyists don’t post photos as soon as we shot and processed them (guilty!)? There’s probably a small percentage of us at work who don’t look at our inbox every 20 minutes or so. Let’s admit it we’re hooked. We think that if we are off the grid for a few minutes the whole world will zoom by and leave us behind. We’d miss all the fun. Or would we really?
Just imagine. Imagine how much work can be done if we’re not constantly chatting on YM, spreading office rumours or posting silly photos and videos that don’t have anything to do with our work? Imagine not constantly checking news feeds, email updates on things we think we are ‘interested’ on? Imagine how much energy we could have saved by not clicking the refresh button so that we can see the latest updates on twitter? Don’t get me wrong, the internet has and can provide us with a lot of information. It can also serve as some form of release. We use it for research, for inspiration. We use it for work. But if we switch from work then status updates on Facebook, for example, the quality of your work will diminish. If you are in a creative industry as I am, let me put it to you bluntly, you will produce trash just because there is no focus, there are a lot of distractions. Like what Pablo Picasso said, “Without great solitude, no serious work is possible.”
Imagine if for example, a person who is very good in theatre would stop or lessen time with her Farmville. She could have written the greatest libretto that the whole world will rave about. Farmville robbed her of that. Her defence can be that she needs it to get her mind off work. But if you’re doing it for hours on end, you are not doing any work at all. How about a talented artist who instead of babbling on the internet and announce what he’s going to do next, actually goes out and do it? He could be the artist that we’d read about in some fancy international magazine and you can say, ‘hey I know this guy.’
One may argue that social media has done a lot of good especially during tragic times. Yes, I would agree, it is very important. I’ve experienced that personally when tragedy hit my country last 2009 during one of the greatest flooding in our nation’s history. It even helped the world’s most powerful nation elect their first African-American president by tapping the power and influence of social media. But how many tragedies and life-changing events happen every day or even every month? Surely, we can disconnect for a moment and see what’s really going on around us.
But what about my family and friends? There’s a ‘need’ to always be connected especially to ‘touch base’ with people you’ve known for years. I do that on Facebook. To know what’s happening to my old, long-lost friends, my high school batch mates, my college friends on Facebook. But I don’t need to know every little thing that they do and want to do. I’d rather meet with them. Meet them face to face over coffee. See that behind that youthful enthusiasm is a person who has grown in wisdom. That’s what reconnecting really means.
The greatest sin is time away from family. We share photos and notes of how happy we are with our loved ones and spend minutes answering comments from friends. Those minutes, you could have spent reading a book to your little child or at least notice what the little one wants to do next with you there, undivided in your attention. Those are precious moments Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and those other “social networks” are taking from us. I’m not saying don’t be connected ever, but if your son is right in front of you begging to play, please for your sakes, play with him. Don’t tell him to go play with his dsi or PS3 while you go and ‘socialise’ on the net. It’s unfair to everyone.
I could go on and on but the benefit of being disconnected will be different for everyone. My point is, if you spend more time on the net than on things that are more important to you, then consider yourself robbed of a huge portion of your life. It doesn’t have to be a permanent disconnection. It can be a temporary disconnection set at regular intervals. Whatever works for you. The idea is to make you think if being constantly connected is doing you a lot of good or adding a lot of unnecessary stress in your life, and ultimately to act on it, to change things.
It’s only a few days. I’ve noticed that when I started to disconnect with regularity (and with commitment) I actually cherished more the time I spent on twitter and on Facebook. Even my chat sessions were somewhat concentrated on weightier issues. I actually now have idle moments yet I’m doing a lot more. More importantly, I have written more (like this entry) and am encouraged to go out, shoot, without the pressure of sharing it with others. Just for me and my creative pursuits. I’ll share them in the right time.
So why am I doing this? I’m disconnecting so I can focus on my ‘self’, my family, my work and my passions. I intend to shoot more and go through my images one by one, study them and see if they really stand for something I believe in. I intend to write more and post on the internet, on my blog and concurrently on Facebook. You just can’t expect me to answer your comments right away (and I apologise) or check how many hits I got on the blog. I intend to spend more time with my family (though it’s hard to do that now, but it’s a preparation of sorts) and my friends.
I’d be writing more about this in the future. Think about what I’ve written here. Here’s hoping you’ll have more time for more important things.
Deo
PS. You may email me but it will take time for me to answer unless it is work. Or you can catch me on YM at around noon till 3pm. Other than that, you can call me and I’d love to someday sit down with you over coffee and we could talk about anything.
Kudos to Leo Babauta for sharing his thoughts on his wonderful book and website.
Focus. A simplicity manifesto in the Age of Distraction. focusmanifesto.s3.amazonaws.com/FocusFree.pdf
Website : zenhabits.net/
A graph showing co-authorship of papers (the small ellipses) between people (yellow boxes) at SANS/CBN. The fontsizes of the people boxes are proportional to the log of the number of published papers (to avoid professor Lansner swamping us all), the paleness the time since last publication and the color of the articles their age (red 2004, blue sometime in the 1980's). It is worth noting how much Sten Grillner's research group at the Nobel Institute for Neurophysiology is mixed up with the Sans group; there is a long-standing collaboration on lamprey locomotion here. It is also interesting to see how the clouds of papers to the left indicate the time certain lines of research and researchers were active.
www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/project_details.cfm?id=509&am...
The prevalence of obesity has increased from 23% to 31% over the recent past in the United States, and 66% of adults are overweight. In order to better understand this phenomenon, the authors in this study performed a quantitative analysis of the nature and extent of the person-to-person spread of obesity as a possible factor contributing to the obesity epidemic. The authors evaluated a densely interconnected social network of 12,067 people assessed repeatedly from 1971 to 2003 as part of the Framingham Heart Study. The body-mass index was available for all subjects. They used longitudinal statistical models to examine whether weight gain in one person was associated with weight gain in his or her friends, siblings, spouse, and neighbors. The image shown here depicts the largest connected subcomponent of the social network in the year 2000. This network is sufficiently dense to obscure much of the underlying structure, although regions of the network with clusters of obese or non-obese persons can be seen. Each circle (node) represents one person in the data set. There are 2200 persons in this subcomponent of the social network. Circles with red borders denote women, and circles with blue borders denote men. The size of each circle is proportional to the person's body-mass index. The interior color of the circles indicates the person's obesity status: yellow denotes an obese person (body-mass index) and green denotes a non-obese person. The colors of the ties between the nodes indicate the relationship between them: purple denotes a friendship or marital tie and orange denotes a familial tie. Discernible clusters of obese persons were present in the network at all time points, and the clusters extended to three degrees of separation. These clusters did not appear to be solely attributable to the selective formation of social ties among obese persons. A person's chances of becoming obese increased by 57% if he or she had a friend who became obese in a given interval. Among pairs of adult siblings, if one sibling became obese, the chance that the other would become obese increased by 40%. If one spouse became obese, the likelihood that the other spouse would become obese increased by 37%. These effects were not seen among neighbors in the immediate geographic location. Persons of the same sex had relatively greater influence on each other than those of the opposite sex. The spread of smoking cessation did not account for the spread of obesity in the network.
Showing the social module in action - light on means a friend is listening. Pressing the light/button shows who they are and what they are listening to. Pressing select tunes in.
The movement of brand credibility along social networks, which depends upon brand involvement, fan engagement, and content value. All comments and improvements to the graphic are welcome!
Most people generally just act without thinking at all. If you are rational and you really use your brain before doing something, you should notice that some services are identical or just a bad clone of other services. This picture exactly show how people continue to use the wrong website / service, even if the other one offers much more / is the original version. PS: for those that still haven't understand that too, "xvideos owns at least 20+ identical websites!". Same happens even for identical software, just selled under different names and websites! - Stop using WhatsApp, start using Telegram! via t.me/WhatsAppStop/35 #WhatsApp #WhatsAppFan #WhatsAppFans #WhatsAppMessenger #Meta #Facebook #Zuckerberg #MarkZuckerberg #WhatsAppBusiness #WhatsAppvsTelegram #WhatsAppTelegram #TelegramvsWhatsApp #TelegramWhatsApp #Telegram #WA #WhatApp #WhatsAppItalia #WhatsAppEspana #WhatsAppFrance #WhatsAppDeutschland #WhatsAppNederlands #WhatsAppRussia #WhatsAppBrasil #WhatsAppiOS #WhatsAppAndroid #Messenger #Messages #Message #SocialNetwork #SocialNetworks
social network, social networks, bigpoint, apps, app, einloggen, applikation, applikationen, studivz, schülervz, meinvz
social network, social networks, bigpoint, apps, app, einloggen, applikation, applikationen, studivz, schülervz, meinvz
This graph contains all Twitter users who sent tweets that contained the hashtag #tcamp12 from April 28 to May 1, 2012. In this graph there are 367 nodes (“Twitter users”) with 1107 unique edges (“mentions”). The graph is laid out using the Harel-Koren Multiscale algorithm. Twitter users are grouped by color automagically by the Clauset-Newman-Moore clustering algorithm. Twitter users are sized by betweenness centrality.
Top ten users ranked by betweenness of centrality:
tcampdc23502.981
sunfoundation 16236.783
craigfifer15258.757
tsagov14022.989
citizentools13420.000
elle_mccann12504.825
digiphile11569.597
_anna_shaw10835.748
javaun8020.142
joelogon7213.984
For comparison the average betweenness centrality is 834.807
Overall graph metrics:
Vertices367
Unique Edges1107
Self-Loops164
Maximum Geodesic Distance (Diameter)8
Average Geodesic Distance3.540974
Graph Density0.007020443
Modularity0.447527
From the official press release:
Remember the good old days of 2008 when Facebook let you design the layout of your own page? At The Wahmbulance happy days are here again!
Tweets are ghey... The Wahmbulance gives you a blog – that's right, a fucking blog – to fully express your inner entitled child.
Here's what's not waiting for you at The Wahmbulance: Data mining, copyright shenanigans or ads – unless we become really successful, of course, then all bets are off.
All you need to sign up is an email address. Use a fake one, we don't care. Geez, get over yourself, already!
So what are you waiting for? If you feel a tantrum coming on, CALL THE WAHMBULANCE!!1!
"Spiderman", "Andrew Garfield", acrylic on canvas, by Fin Collins, part of The Film Icons Collection
Acting website www.irishfilmactress.com/
This evening I am watching The Social Network, updating Twitter and checking Facebook. I took a photo to add to Flickr for today's photo, which I will share to Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr for the full house.
️ THE VIDEO HERE : www.youtube.com/watch?v=C45g1B53RYQ
"His light dazzles us"
✔️ Download VIDEO by L.Guidali : www.dropbox.com/s/gxq7niumay7va6s/etoile.mp4?dl=0
👑 Senses : 👀 Vision 👆 To Touch 💃 Proprioception Equilibrioception 👃 Smell ♨️ Thermoception
⚡Intelligences : ⛹️ Kinesthetic Body Intelligence
🔢 Intelligence Logic Mathematics
💡 Imagination
📋 WHAT :
🌟 : Etoile (Logo)
💫 : Etoile World
🌌 : Logo Galaxy
✨ : Drawing Universe
📝 Type : Drawing
🎨 Style : Drawing on a white sheet with a pencil and black felt and gray pencil.
🔊 Language : International (🇬🇧 description in English, but comprehensible by the whole world)
© You are free to use our video from the moment you include the "Follow Us" section in your publication description. Do not forget other items like music ... etc
️ You can use your playlists as filters, to find what you're looking for exactly (Download the application if you want a more exhaustive list) : www.youtube.com/channel/UCCliHvw1KYxChV92iEzpRKg/playlists
📏 HOW MUCH :
👑 6 Senses
⚡ 3 Intelligences
WHO :
✍ Drawed by LG
🎥 Filmed by LG : Samsung Galaxy S7
📡 Posted by LG
📼 Video made by LG (Windows Movie Maker 2017)
🎵 Music Used (No Copyright) : Etoile - Theme 2 : www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_5z60PLkF8
© Etoile Copyright (Drawing and Music)
⚠️ The description may no longer be up to date. Due to human discoveries and improvements. Pay attention to the date of publication and creation. Even works of art suffer the outrages of time
📍 WHERE : Pontault Combault (🇫🇷 France)
🕓 WHEN : 18 November 2017
👉 Follow us :
💥 Facebook : www.facebook.com/EtlOfficial/
💥 Instagram : www.instagram.com/officialetoile/
💥 Flickr : www.flickr.com/people/etoileofficial/
💥 Dailymotion : www.dailymotion.com/EtoileOfficial
💥 Youtube : www.youtube.com/channel/UCCliHvw1KYxChV92iEzpRKg
💥 Tumblr : etoileofficial.tumblr.com/
💥 Pinterest : www.pinterest.com/EtoileOfficial/
💥 Google + : plus.google.com/u/0/b/108884110114655726091/1088841101146...
💥 Twitter : twitter.com/OfficialEtoile
🔖 React with official Hashtags : #Etoile #ETL #App
💌 Contact : etoilecontactetl@gmail.com
The Milgram experiment on obedience to authority figures was a series of social psychology experiments conducted by Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram, which measured the willingness of study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts that conflicted with their personal conscience. Milgram first described his research in 1963 in an article published in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, and later discussed his findings in greater depth in his 1974 book,Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View.
The experiments began in July 1961, three months after the start of the trial of German Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem. Milgram devised his psychological study to answer the question: "Was it that Eichmann and his accomplices in the Holocaust had mutual intent, in at least with regard to the goals of the Holocaust?" In other words, "Was there a mutual sense of morality among those involved?" Milgram's testing suggested that it could have been that the millions of accomplices were merely following orders, despite violating their deepest moral beliefs.
“I hate it” brings a radical version of the Milgram experiment onto unsuspecting digital citizens: what happens when you are instructed by an authoritative process, such as the ones commonly found in social networks, to perform an act of violence onto a digital avatar? And what happens when you realize that the avatar is physically connected to a human being?
From: www.connectedaction.net
Link: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/6802596543/sizes/l/
These are the connections among the Twitter users who recently tweeted the word ford foundation OR fordfoundation when queried on February 1, 2012, scaled by numbers of followers (with outliers thresholded). Connections created when users reply, mention or follow one another. The data set starts on 1/25/2012 23:20 and ends on 2/1/2012 16:12 UTC. Green lines are "follows" relationships, blue lines are "reply" or "mentions" relationships.
Layout created with the "Group Layout" feature of NodeXL which tiles bounded regions for each cluster. Clusters calculated by the Clauset-Newman-Moore algorithm are also encoded by color.
A larger version of the image is here: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/6802596543/sizes/l/
Betweenness Centrality is defined here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrality#Betweenness_centrality
Clauset-Newman-Moore algorithm is defined here: pre.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v70/i6/e066111
Top most between users:
@fordfoundation
@lksriv
@fromthehip
@cynmull
@dpgilmartin
@benevolentmedia
@grahamsw
@masmartgrowthal
@clarissaanja
@reachscale
Top keyword pairs
V1, V2, WEIGHT
ford, foundation, 99
franklin, thomas, 15
named, president, 10
thomas, named, 8
foundation, dll, 6
first, black, 6
major, foundation, 6
karya, lain, 5
lain, @gm_gm, 5
dibiayai, nbeneran, 5
dibiayai, ford, 5
foundation, sidelines, 5
thought, pieces, 5
tempo, magazine, 5
amend, mentgroups, 5
black, president, 5
wealth, creation, 5
rural, communities, 5
large, body, 5
money, completely, 5
Graph Metric: Value
Graph Type: Directed
Vertices: 106
Unique Edges: 121
Edges With Duplicates: 108
Total Edges: 229
Self-Loops: 62
Connected Components: 53
Single-Vertex Connected Components: 45
Maximum Vertices in a Connected Component: 39
Maximum Edges in a Connected Component: 121
Maximum Geodesic Distance (Diameter): 6
Average Geodesic Distance: 2.242092
Graph Density: 0.009883199
Modularity: 0.387454
NodeXL Version: 1.0.1.200
More NodeXL network visualizations are here: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/sets/72157622437066929/ and here:
www.nodexlgraphgallery.org/Pages/Default.aspx
A gallery of NodeXL network data sets is available here: nodexlgraphgallery.org/Pages/Default.aspx?search=twitter
NodeXL is free and open and available from www.codeplex.com/nodexl
NodeXL is developed by the Social Media Research Foundation (www.smrfoundation.org) - which is dedicated to open tools, open data, and open scholarship.
Donations to support NodeXL are welcome through PayPal: www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_bu...
The book, Analyzing social media networks with NodeXL: Insights from a connected world, is available from Morgan Kaufmann and from Amazon.
Marc Smith on Twitter.
WET MAGAZINE OF GOURMET BATHING - Lot of 8 issues 1979 - 81
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wet_(magazine)
"Remember, a gift of Wet is like a pardon from the governor"
Wet was an avant-garde Los Angeles-based magazine that revolved around the idea of "gourmet bathing" and later evolved to "gourmet bathing and beyond."
Its publisher and creator was Leonard Koren, an architecture school graduate. The magazine covered cultural issues and was known for its innovative use of graphic art.
Over the years, Wet began to reflect a broader expanse of stories, capturing a kind of smart, artsy Los Angeles attitude that was emerging at the same time as punk, but had its own distinct aesthetic.
Contributing photographers included Moshe Brakha, Brian Leatart, Claude Mougin, Matthew Rolston, Guy Webster and Penny Wolin.
Wet lasted 34 issues, spanning the years 1976 to 1981.
Issues in this set:
--------------------------
DRY LOVE - #16 Jan-Feb 1979
first oversized issue
Paul Bowles in the Desert
Falling in Love with Bob & Bob
last chapter from an unpublished, surrealistic novel by Sharon Hennessey
Hot-Dry Architecture
----------------------------
FOOD - #18 May-June 1979
Margot Kidder cover
Death by Starvation
Undernourished Relationships
Gourmet Bubbles (aprés Perrier, le dèluge)
Eat Me Architecture
Iggy Pop talks turkey with Kristine McKenna
WET Reader Questionnaire
-----------------------------
OUTLAWS #19 July-Aug 1979
Debbie Harry cover
"Zero Gravity" by Jeff Johnson, photos by Wynn Miller -- skateboarders
Boomtown Rats' Bob Geldof interviewed by Kristine McKenna
Bob & Bob interview Real Cops
"Vegitecture" by Michael Sorkin
---------------------------
INTERIOR SPACES #23 March-April 1980
Kenneth Anger interview by Ann Bardach
Dick Dale interview by Kristine McKenna
Kobo Abe's "The Box Man"
"No Deposit, No Return" by John Peasles and Victoria Hamburg
-----------------------
WETROSPECTIVE #25 July-Aug 1980
Whitey Stang (dog) on cover
60 pages: last oversized issue
WET Looks Back at the last fifteen issues
Kristine McKenna interviews Brian Eno
Winners of the 1st Annual WET PLACES Competition
-------------------------------
HEROES #27 November 1980
72 pages
Dribble: Sartrek
Robert Smithson Enters Art History
JFK Jr, Jello Biafra, Ross Perot, Gregory Corso
Bud Cort, Kooky Driver by Debba Kunk
---------------------------------------
FIRE #28 December 1980
last issue entirely on newsprint -- 72 pages
"Barbecuing White People in the Suburbs" by Lewis MacAdams
Kristine McKenna interviews George Clinton
"Playing With Matches" -- backyard explosives with Greg McGregor
"Luncheon with the Sunshine Boy" -- Blair Sabol interviews David Hockney
------------------------------
#30 March-April 1981
68 pages printed on glossy paper (except insert by Bob Zoell)
Kristine McKenna interviews Mark Alan Stamaty, Helmut Newton, and Becker & Fagen of Steely Dan
"Sex With the Dead" --Lewis MacAdams on John Duncan
A Palazzo in Venice (California)
Bob & Bob Sound the Alarm: Ronald Reagan Doesn't Need Art
Yes, it is a social network by loose standards. All my friends are connected by physical and twitter relationships.
The Social Couple - 2013
Con: Lisa Baldi e Paolo Moznich
Soggetto: Michele Leccese
Musica: Luca Francini
Regia: Stefano Masi
Follow me on:
I've started taking photos of key charts during presentations - easier to file than notes.
This is one of Amy Chorew's charts from a recent class in Scottsdale.
The Milgram experiment on obedience to authority figures was a series of social psychology experiments conducted by Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram, which measured the willingness of study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts that conflicted with their personal conscience. Milgram first described his research in 1963 in an article published in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, and later discussed his findings in greater depth in his 1974 book,Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View.
The experiments began in July 1961, three months after the start of the trial of German Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem. Milgram devised his psychological study to answer the question: "Was it that Eichmann and his accomplices in the Holocaust had mutual intent, in at least with regard to the goals of the Holocaust?" In other words, "Was there a mutual sense of morality among those involved?" Milgram's testing suggested that it could have been that the millions of accomplices were merely following orders, despite violating their deepest moral beliefs.
“I hate it” brings a radical version of the Milgram experiment onto unsuspecting digital citizens: what happens when you are instructed by an authoritative process, such as the ones commonly found in social networks, to perform an act of violence onto a digital avatar? And what happens when you realize that the avatar is physically connected to a human being?
Esther Zhang, Lally, Aenah and Myuu are working on social network project in student lounge BCIT. The purpose is to promote Lally's father's performance at a restaurant, we need to build various social media accounts , as well as website, for the performance. Having a good time sharing ideas with peers, always can get new view.
Social Networking pictures from the social netowrking expert Mr Viral Marketer www.mrviralmarketer.co.uk - for all your sales and marekting business needs in Uk, London, Europe
"He turns not back who is bound to a Star."
✔️ Download VIDEO by L.Guidali : www.dropbox.com/s/cc40h10sb5y4l1q/Etoile%20Logo%20V.2.mp4...
👑 Senses : 👀 Vision 👆 To Touch 💃 Proprioception Equilibrioception 👃 Smell ♨️ Thermoception
⚡Intelligences : ⛹️ Kinesthetic Body Intelligence
🔢 Intelligence Logic Mathematics
💡 Imagination
📋 WHAT :
🌟 : Etoile (Logo V.2)
💫 : Etoile World
🌌 : Logo Galaxy
✨ : Drawing Universe
📝 Type : Drawing
🎨 Style : Drawing on a white sheet with a pencil and black felt and gray pencil.
🔊 Language : International (🇬🇧 description in English, but comprehensible by the whole world)
© Logo Etoile
© You are free to use our video from the moment you include the "Follow Us" section in your publication description. Do not forget other items like music ... etc
📏 HOW MUCH :
👑 6 Senses
⚡ 3 Intelligences
WHO :
✍ Drawed by LG
🎥 Filmed by LG : Go Pro Hero 5
📡 Posted by LG
📼 Video made by LG (Final Cut Pro)
🎼Music promoted by eMotion :
📼Video Link : youtu.be/spsm_JaDcig
Support Keys of Moon :
📌 Youtube : www.youtube.com/channel/UCWtFgusZT03fNCqtPBrhh9g/featured
📌 Facebook : www.facebook.com/serjo.de.lua.music
📌 Twitter : twitter.com/KeysOfMoon
📌 Soundcloud : soundcloud.com/keysofmoon
📌 Instagram : www.instagram.com/keys_of_moon/
💌 serjo.de.lua.music@gmail.com
️ Paypal : www.paypal.me/KeysOfMoon
️ Patreon : www.patreon.com/user?u=10500501
🕓 WHEN : April 12, 2018
👉 Follow us :
💥 Facebook : www.facebook.com/EtlOfficial/
💥 Instagram : www.instagram.com/officialetoile/
💥 Flickr : www.flickr.com/people/etoileofficial/
💥 Dailymotion : www.dailymotion.com/EtoileOfficial
💥 Youtube : www.youtube.com/channel/UCCliHvw1KYxChV92iEzpRKg
💥 Tumblr : etoileofficial.tumblr.com/
💥 Pinterest : www.pinterest.com/EtoileOfficial/
💥 Twitter : twitter.com/OfficialEtoile
🔖 React with official Hashtags : #Etoile #ETL #App
️ THE VIDEO HERE (How to Draw) : youtu.be/U4gL2EPKEvM
💌 Contact : etoilecontactetl@gmail.com
Проект страниц для социальной сети, в полном формате www.derwhite.com/2011/04/21/proektirovanie-socialnoj-seti/
“24% of marketers have run a viral marketing campaign, but many struggle to get the expected buzz.” (JupiterResearch)
www.nytimes.com/2008/07/06/business/06count.html?_r=1&...
Background image courtesy of: www.flickr.com/photos/twenty_questions/2192450204. This citation appears in the top right of the image.