August 2005

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Like so many other great ideas and technologies for the Internet, Flickr emerged from a soup of game thinking. Nice interview with JJG:

adaptive path » an interview with ludicorp’s eric costello

JJG: How much of The Game Neverending would you say is still present in Flickr in its current state?
EC: I think the spirit of it is there, definitely. Someone once described Flickr as “massively multiplayer online photo sharing.” I think that’s a good description. There’s kind of a feeling of exploration within Flickr. It feels like a world where you can move around and find wonderful things – the wonderful things being the great photographs that people upload.
And because it’s got the social network aspect of it, you can kind of build neighborhoods within Flickr. The page in Flickr that shows you all the photos from your friends and family is very much a space like you might find in a game. It’s a place where you go and interact with the people you know.

Cool article (via bloug) for a number of reasons. But the one thing that really popped out for me was the fact that missionaries, in order to convert other cultures to Christianity, are first converting other cultures into written-language cultures.

It’s like “terraforming” (converting a planet into one hospitable to earth life forms), but for religion. The missionaries are certainly creating written languages for spoken ones in part to just help societies enter the global community (I suppose), but also to get them on track with Biblical scripture and whatnot.

And it begs a question, for me (and not out of disrespect, because I still consider myself Christian), about the nature of religious truth. Or truth in general. How does the cognitive landscape shift when a culture’s language suddenly becomes writable and readable? How does it affect history and communal understanding?

I can’t imagine a more fundamental, bone-level shift in reality for human beings.

How Linguists and Missionaries Share a Bible of 6,912 Languages – New York Times

Based in Dallas, S.I.L. (which stands for Summer Institute of Linguistics) trains missionaries to be linguists, sending them to learn local languages, design alphabets for unwritten languages and introduce literacy. Before they begin translating the Bible, they find out how many translations are needed by testing the degree to which speech varieties are mutually unintelligible. “The definition of language we use in the Ethnologue places a strong emphasis,” said Dr. Lewis, “on the ability to intercommunicate as the test for splitting or joining.”

Interestingness

I’m still giddy, even in my jaded state, whenever I hear about yet another yummy infospace architecture element that creates emergent structures.

I’m not even sure if I just said anything that makes sense … what’s the official terminology?

Anyway, now Flickr is using some fun math to track the ‘interestingness’ of photos on the site.

Flickr: Explore interesting photos around Flickr

There are lots of things that make a photo ‘interesting’ (or not) in the Flickr. Where the clickthroughs are coming from; who comments on it and when; who marks it as a favorite; its tags and many more things which are constantly changing. Interestingness changes over time, as more and more fantastic photos and stories are added to Flickr.

Stirring

I’d like to point out this first-rate publication: Stirring : A Literary Collection

My endorsement may or may not have anything to do with anything published in this month’s edition.

(The poem is from about 9 years ago, but I’d never sent it anywhere. It’s really strange to see it in print now, in different life circumstances.)

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