It has been a day of firsts for me, both coming together in East London . . After a crazy few hours participation in the final pages of the first edition of the redesigned half-Berliner format Guardian Weekly, I jumped in a taxi with Will, Jenny and Natalie for a slow dash to Stratford and the Guardian Press Centre.
So my first is the redesign I've worked on for ages finally coming to publication, and my second first is seeing the fantastic Guardian Print Centre. I have not seen many presses, that's for sure, but I did visit the previous Guardian press, but this place is great. We watched the presses running from inside this large room flanked by windows, which look out onto Great slabs of metal with paper rushing past and through them.
The physicality of the press is something to be seen. Printers stand in front of very high tech computer consoles, against which they'll hold the actual copy that has just been pulled form the press. The newspaper is positioned against an array of buttons, and the printer studies it to see if the inking is correct. If not he or she will press a button below the under-inked bit on the page, and because the button corresponds to that physical position in relation to the paper rushing through the press, it will affect the colour on the next copy pulled from the press . . .
Hmm, geek, me?
Anyway, it was exciting on all counts. Guardian Weekly looks and reads great. I am very pleased with the GW team for handling the new design so well, and more than satisfiedwith how it has turned out.
Lets hope some berliner presses get up and running in the US and Australia in the not to distant future, and the quality of printing and all-over colur can be seen around the world!
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
If the robot shoots, who's to blame?
"Imagine the miners strike with robots armed with water cannons, these things are coming, definitely."
Interesting piece on the BBC website, looking at the ethical issues around the use of robots. Apparently Samsung is working on a robot which will have 2 cameras and a machine gun . . reminiscent of Aliens . . but to patrol (and kill) people. It also brings to mind Robocop.
There was a great graphic in the Guardian today—in the wake of the revelation that the US is building a wall in Bagdhad to keep Sunni from Shia—showing the extent of walls and fences around the globe built to keep groups of people away from each other. There are loads of them, all around the world - and I guess that those Samsung robots are for patrolling the 248km fence between North and South Korea.
Is this because to resolve these various conflicts would be too much of a volte-face for any of these political systems? Or that too little has been done to resolve these issues for years - that colonial and imperial chickens are coming home to roost.
hmmm.
Interesting piece on the BBC website, looking at the ethical issues around the use of robots. Apparently Samsung is working on a robot which will have 2 cameras and a machine gun . . reminiscent of Aliens . . but to patrol (and kill) people. It also brings to mind Robocop.
There was a great graphic in the Guardian today—in the wake of the revelation that the US is building a wall in Bagdhad to keep Sunni from Shia—showing the extent of walls and fences around the globe built to keep groups of people away from each other. There are loads of them, all around the world - and I guess that those Samsung robots are for patrolling the 248km fence between North and South Korea.
Is this because to resolve these various conflicts would be too much of a volte-face for any of these political systems? Or that too little has been done to resolve these issues for years - that colonial and imperial chickens are coming home to roost.
hmmm.
Saturday, April 21, 2007
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Is change possible
Just had lunch with my brother and mother, during which she said that she was becoming quite depressed at her own growing scepticism about the possibility of real change (in the world).
I find this too. I think that this is a result of 2 main currents: Firstly, events which happen are so difficult to comprehend although you know they're real (like the "war on terror") and secondly, because the domininant idea at present is that capitalism will solve all - that the individiual can do nothing except for themselves - and this combination is so prevalent, even in places (the labour party for example) which had more collective ideas previously, that many people are just giving up on bigger social ideas . .
Its all a little unnerving.
I find this too. I think that this is a result of 2 main currents: Firstly, events which happen are so difficult to comprehend although you know they're real (like the "war on terror") and secondly, because the domininant idea at present is that capitalism will solve all - that the individiual can do nothing except for themselves - and this combination is so prevalent, even in places (the labour party for example) which had more collective ideas previously, that many people are just giving up on bigger social ideas . .
Its all a little unnerving.
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Are free newspapers destined for the dustbin of history?
London is getting sick of the enormous amount of litter generated by the 2 newest free newspapers available every day on our streets, according to MediaGuardian. I don't travel by tube train myself, but have heard from friends how they find themselves wading through a dirty carpet of newprint . . ironic though, that in this time of anxiety over the future of paid for newspapers, due to migration of advertising money - and changing reader habits, that free papers should come unstuck by their very physicality . . .
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Closed systems and polls
With so many people able to access a page, and stumble upon it with little less than a search which tangentially connects to that page, the possibility or likelihood of receiving a huge amount of unfiltered nonsense, from many alienated people around the world is very high.
This is the “democracy of the web” at work, and it is not democratic and neither is it useful. It is not democratic as a democratic process involves some level of responsibility and accountablitiy. With the comparative anonymity and the huge numbers of people who can be involved this is difficult if not impossible
This suggests that closed systems are attractive to those who would like to participate in discussion and debate without having to run through a lot of nonsense to do so. A small filter, by way of free registration - which gives access to an number of spaces segregated from the web in general makes sense. (Filtering also comes in the shape of minority interest sites, and moderation.)
Polls on site might be quite useful. The process of gathering the opinions of the passing traffic, which while not scientifically accurate might generate an interesting statistical flow itself. The user expreince is good - seeign my jprefernce in relation to my peers; and providing attractive visual stuff on the page. And it might be useful in terms of some (probably) interesting data snapshots of users interests and preferences.
Polss types: (to be added to) film reviews, positions on debates, factual info about self (do you smack your child, do you have a flat screen telly etc)
None of this is new . . it all happens now . .just some small attempts to get my head around how these actualites work, can be used . .other than just to increase "stickiness"
This is the “democracy of the web” at work, and it is not democratic and neither is it useful. It is not democratic as a democratic process involves some level of responsibility and accountablitiy. With the comparative anonymity and the huge numbers of people who can be involved this is difficult if not impossible
This suggests that closed systems are attractive to those who would like to participate in discussion and debate without having to run through a lot of nonsense to do so. A small filter, by way of free registration - which gives access to an number of spaces segregated from the web in general makes sense. (Filtering also comes in the shape of minority interest sites, and moderation.)
Polls on site might be quite useful. The process of gathering the opinions of the passing traffic, which while not scientifically accurate might generate an interesting statistical flow itself. The user expreince is good - seeign my jprefernce in relation to my peers; and providing attractive visual stuff on the page. And it might be useful in terms of some (probably) interesting data snapshots of users interests and preferences.
Polss types: (to be added to) film reviews, positions on debates, factual info about self (do you smack your child, do you have a flat screen telly etc)
None of this is new . . it all happens now . .just some small attempts to get my head around how these actualites work, can be used . .other than just to increase "stickiness"
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
People and the tendency to bad organisation
If a car was made of living parts, and the engine started failing, some other part might decide it were time to build another engine - or find a workaround - and in time you might have 2 engines, each getting strange interference from the existence of the other but not understanding why.
I think that is what organisations are like, unless there is a conscious structure of communication, internal collaborative as well as hierarchical command . . . and even then . . .
Most companies have replication etc because of peoples desire to make things work better - for themselves and for the common purpose. Some are less socially interested, just self interested - but know they cannot succeed without achieving the collaborative goal. Others are more collaboration motivated, but sometimes will stand in the way of those more self interested in order to allow (they believe) the machine to run better - and slow the thing down as the self interested person was leading, apparently despite but actually because of their self interest.
Complexity and malleability: we are very similiar to each other, but the subtle differences in goals, and private internal dialogue and variety of ways of hearing and understanding the same message make for complexity . . but we are very malleable, and constatly adapt ourselves to the subtle variations
That is why it is possible for awful organisation or lack of any can survive for years . . as the organism that is the company of people finds its way through.
A car that is a car, ie dumb - - will stop working if something goes serioulsy wrong. it won’t attnet to mend itself. and because there is a trail within the physical transmission path, the problem can be located and fixed.
I think human organisation must be more difficult to unpick because it is not dumb .. . . and tries to find a different way.
The program The trap, whatever happened to our dreams of freedom was interesting in its look at past attempts by the state to make models, theories of human behavior - and in the that process successively machinising people. It also showed how this funneling of human potential into situations where we are confronted by each other via the market always works nett against social interest . . as people will alway try and look after themslelves - to the social expense if the are set an unachievable set of goals.
I think that is what organisations are like, unless there is a conscious structure of communication, internal collaborative as well as hierarchical command . . . and even then . . .
Most companies have replication etc because of peoples desire to make things work better - for themselves and for the common purpose. Some are less socially interested, just self interested - but know they cannot succeed without achieving the collaborative goal. Others are more collaboration motivated, but sometimes will stand in the way of those more self interested in order to allow (they believe) the machine to run better - and slow the thing down as the self interested person was leading, apparently despite but actually because of their self interest.
Complexity and malleability: we are very similiar to each other, but the subtle differences in goals, and private internal dialogue and variety of ways of hearing and understanding the same message make for complexity . . but we are very malleable, and constatly adapt ourselves to the subtle variations
That is why it is possible for awful organisation or lack of any can survive for years . . as the organism that is the company of people finds its way through.
A car that is a car, ie dumb - - will stop working if something goes serioulsy wrong. it won’t attnet to mend itself. and because there is a trail within the physical transmission path, the problem can be located and fixed.
I think human organisation must be more difficult to unpick because it is not dumb .. . . and tries to find a different way.
The program The trap, whatever happened to our dreams of freedom was interesting in its look at past attempts by the state to make models, theories of human behavior - and in the that process successively machinising people. It also showed how this funneling of human potential into situations where we are confronted by each other via the market always works nett against social interest . . as people will alway try and look after themslelves - to the social expense if the are set an unachievable set of goals.
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