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Of interest: Communications and Autism

Quick break between meetings… a link to this article in Wired this month, “The Truth About Autism: Scientists Reconsider What They Think They Know” By David Wolman  02.25.08  (excerpt below).

“The YouTube clip opens with a woman facing away from the camera, rocking back and forth, flapping her hands awkwardly, and emitting an eerie hum. She then performs strange repetitive behaviors: slapping a piece of paper against a window, running a hand lengthwise over a computer keyboard, twisting the knob of a drawer. She bats a necklace with her hand and nuzzles her face against the pages of a book. And you find yourself thinking: Who’s shooting this footage of the handicapped lady, and why do I always get sucked into watching the latest viral video?

“But then the words “A Translation” appear on a black screen, and for the next five minutes, 27-year-old Amanda Baggs — who is autistic and doesn’t speak — describes in vivid and articulate terms what’s going on inside her head as she carries out these seemingly bizarre actions. In a synthesized voice generated by a software application, she explains that touching, tasting, and smelling allow her to have a “constant conversation” with her surroundings. These forms of nonverbal stimuli constitute her “native language,” Baggs explains, and are no better or worse than spoken language. Yet her failure to speak is seen as a deficit, she says, while other people’s failure to learn her language is seen as natural and acceptable.

“And you find yourself thinking: She might have a point.”

Also see this post in the NYT blog which references the Wired article and provided me with a link to Baggs’ blog

Links (in case the embedded ones don’t work for you)

Tags: communication, autism, Amanda Baggs, Wired.

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Of interest: Forbes coverage of the Microsoft-Yahoo! saga

Forbes offers the The Yahoo! Deal coverage on Microsoft’s bid for Yahoo!.

“Analysis in text and video by forbes editors and writers and industry experts: www.forbes.com/yahoodeal.” 

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It’s real: the Netflix survey to gauge interest in streaming movies via Xbox Live

With all the talk this weekend of HD-DVD (as Reuters noted this weekend) and that main supported Toshiba “will cease manufacturing HD-DVD equipment” (as reported on Japan’s NHK public broadcasting network), interesting to see the increased interest in watching movies on game consoles.  (I’ve written about this opportunity previously, most recently as December when I noted that the increases at Blockbuster have moved us to Netflix.)

Reports came over the last week that Netflix was asking their customers about their interest in watching movies via their Xbox 360 (using Xbox Live) and PS3.  Some thought that this was a blogger stunt, but I found that the survey is real.

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“Stream Netflix movies to your TV with Xbox LIVE…

“Now you can watch movies from Netflix instantly by using your existing Xbox LIVE account.  You can choose from over 7,000 movies and TV series, and your choice starts playing on your TELEVISION in as little as 30 seconds.  Watching is included in your Netflix plan.  There are no extra fees and there are no limits on how much you can watch.”

OK, I’m interested.  Tell me more.

“If as part of your Netflix membership you could instantly watch movies and TV episodes on your TV with your Xbox 360, how likely would you/anyone in your household be to do that?”

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“Definitely would” was my answer. 😉

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Llamas and other helpful options for Valentine’s Day

Admit it: you don’t have a gift for that special someone tomorrow. (Hello… it’s Valentine’s Day.  My gift for my wife was rescuing her from an awkward spot late today, with apologies to attendees at TechReady.) 

My old friend, Ben Calica, is working with a company that is doing a cool little something for Valentines Day. 

Rather than the standard buy consumer goods, the company has set up a pathway to let people do something good in the name/spirit of their sweetie. 

For example, rather than give a stuffed animal, give a needy family a Llama through Heifer.org.

Polka has a way to really treat your sweethearts to something memorable. Welcome to Random Acts of Love — the latest Polka initiative.

This year why not send your sweetie a special Polka-gram with a wonderful gift straight from the heart. Instead of that bouquet and candy box, why not plant some bulbs and buy a box of fair trade chocolates? That overpriced dinner? How about donating to your honey’s favorite charity and buy dinner for those less fortunate?

With our Random Acts of Love initiative, you can demonstrate your love in a unique, thoughtful way by substituting those tired Valentine gifts for something that will make a positive impact. There are lots of great choices and opportunities. We’re sure your Valentine will always remember this gift that can change lives around the world or make a difference right in your own home.

Sending a Valentine’s Polka-gram is free and it’s ok to send more than one!

All Random Acts of Love Polka-grams will be sent on February 14. Cruise on over to the Random Acts of Love and share the love: http://alpha.polka.com/love.php

Ben assures me that there is nothing nefarious here (he said as much ;).  Names will not be used for any ill gotten gain, they are just trying to be a conduit for getting some good done in the world.  (Caveat emptor.)  The company, Polka.com has done some random acts of kindness a couple of times before, helping a family after the San Diego wildfires and adopting families in over the holidays, and they are building it into who they are as a company.

Find out more about it at http://blog.polka.com/

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New York Times: The paperless office at home. In the end, it’s just more stuff.

Hannah Fairfield of the New York Times reports today on the effect of a family going paperless.



“Chris Uhlik’s children can be found in their home computer lab almost every morning. Nicole is writing a story about her two lizards. Tony is playing an interactive spelling game, while Andy is learning multiplication tables. Even 5-year-old Joceline is clicking away at a storybook game.


“Mr. Uhlik, an engineering director at Google, and his family live a practically paper-free life. The children are home-schooled on computers. Other sources of household paper — lists, letters, calendars — have become entirely digital.”


Although going paperless was the Uhliks choice, we see many families going paperless each day.  From online, web-based billing and payment systems, to mortgage statements and even weekly coupons from chain stores, we see more and more of our content coming online. Add to that the scanner we have at home (actually, three of them when you count the ones in the family room, kid’s computer and our home office), we’re finding ways to reduce clutter.

I prefer receiving the offending hard-copy items in electronic form, otherwise I face another problem: finding the time to scan all this paper with the paper-reducing technologies available to us.  I have a stack of stuff collecting to scan, and then you have to manage, back-up and store the digital files (not quite zero footprint). 

The Times article goes on to reports that…


“After rising steadily in the 1980s and ’90s, worldwide paper consumption per capita has plateaued in recent years. In the richest countries, consumption fell 6 percent from 2000 to 2005, from 531 to 502 pounds a person. The data bolsters the view of experts like Mr. Kahle who say paper is becoming passé.”


That may be so, but add to the plateau of content the proliferation of digital content that has been added.  Just because more bits arrive via the broadband service provider rather than the US Mail doesn’t mean that there is not an impact: see How much does spam weigh- (And what to do about it): as I noted, over the course of two weeks, we collected a little more than the reported national averages:



  • 36 pieces of mail, totaling 2 lb 6oz (or about 63 pounds a year), and
  • 80 pieces of junk mail, totaling 10 lb 6.6oz (a little more than 270 lbs per year)

Now that doesn’t sound like much, but in comparison let’s look what came in just to my personal email address at home: 232 pieces of junk mail. That’s 149 caught by my Outlook spam filter and 83 snagged by my Internet service provider. If that junk email were junk postal mail filling my post box, it would weigh close to 31 pounds. Over the course of a year, we’re looking at more than 6,000 junk emails, at a total weight of about 792 pounds.

Ouch.


“Paper is no longer the master copy; the digital version is,” says Brewster Kahle, the founder and director of the Internet Archive, a nonprofit digital library. “Paper has been dealt a complete deathblow. When was the last time you saw a telephone book?”


Au contraire.

You still see so much paper around the office in the form of hard-copy presentations; in contrast, good to see that the majority of white papers and reports I’ve read lately have been made of recycled digital bits rather than bits of recycled paper.  How many times have you heard a coworker lament about the so-called paperless office when faced with a mountain of documentation collected by the end of the work day?  And add to that the number of pages our kids print out when working on a school project, screen captures and artwork (“I love those Pokemon pictures you found on Live Search, CJ… all thirty of them on individual sheets.”).

And am I the only one using Outlook to manage my menagerie of digital statements, reports and documents from outside the home?  Yes, I save web pages and other online documents as XPS files to my computers, and I use Paperport to manage my digital collection of PDF files.  But I have a larger number of archived mails in my Inbox and saved mail storage by a factor of 100.  Companies creating these files make it easier to archive, by sending links to online pages that are archived for as long as I need to hang on to a page for tax purposes, rather than the year or two that many companies seem to support.  I also save digital copies of web files using IE’s Page -> Save As… Web Archive Single File .mht formatAnd heck, I even use my own blog to keep track of what I’ve recently read via my favourite, now-Yahoo!’s del.icio.us (I love Flickr, too ;).

So kudos to the credit card companies, online service providers and banks proving these statements, as well as the newspapers I read regularly more online than I do in print (although there is still an incredible cachet that surrounds the Sunday Paper – capitalized for reverence ;).  And thanks to magazines like Forbes, Fortune, BusinessWeek (and others I subscribe) for making their current issues and archives available. 

Want tips on how to reduce your junk mail? Visit the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse for info: http://www.privacyrights.org/fs/fs4-junk.htm

Also of interest…


The Paperless Home 

The Paperless Home


Paper Trail 

Paper Trail


 


Tags: environment, spam, paperless, home, scanners, New York Times.


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