Peter Bihr

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June, 2011 Monthly archive

blitzTag + Light Rider premiere from Jesse Scott on Vimeo.

Awesome lightbike is awesome!

On June 17th, as part of 48 Hours Neukölln, Graffiti Research Lab Germany launched ‘Light Rider’, our mobile a/v bike system, alongside ‘blitzTag’, our new digital graffiti projection suite. We will be doing more guerilla projections throughout the summer – please check our blog at graffitiresearchlab.de for more details. Writers – get in touch! We are also undergoing a crowd-funding campaign in order to purchase a permanent 5K beamer for the Light Rider. Please consider supporting at startnext.de/?light-rider Thanks to [Aktion! Karl-Marx Strasse], the Berlin chapter of the Awesome Foundation, Open Design City, Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenurg, Licht Piraten, and Chicanos South Central. Video shot by Henrik Moltke. Music by The Streets. More details on the projects at graffitiresearchlab.de/?blitztag graffitiresearchlab.de/?light-rider

It’s great to see this come out of Berlin, and (in some very, very small way) be part of it. Rock on, guys!

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Cross-posting this from the CoCities blog:

It is our combined pleasure to introduce you to the speakers that will engage the conversation about the future of cities at De Verdieping on the evening of June 30th.

James Burke, Co-founder of VURB Katalin Galayas, Policy Advisor to the City of Amsterdam Kars Alfrink, ‘Chief Agent’ of Hubbub Edwin Gardner, VOLUME Magazine

The four of them will present their thoughts on urbanity, technology and how we are in the middle of it all. But the Salons are not intended to give only the speakers the stage. While sometimes it is important to only receive curated information, we are very much hoping for a lively debate at the event. Be challenged by the speakers, but also do your best to challenge them.

More details here.

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Just a few brief notes: It looks like I’m going to be traveling a fair bit over the next couple of weeks. If you’d like to meet up, here are some good occasions:

Concretely, that’s London FRI-SUN (17-19 June) for Interesting 2011, Zurich MON-FRI (20-24 June, pending) for a client gig, Amsterdam WED-FRI (29 June-1 July) for Cognitive Cities Salon Amsterdam (updates on the CoCities Salon best via Twitter).

I’m really excited about those trips. (Please note that they might still change a fair bit.) If you’re around, feel free to ping me.

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Goopymart

Facebook has done it again: The company enabled a new feature that uses facial recognition to prompt your Facebook connections to “tag” you in photos they are shown. In other words: It recognizes user faces in photos, then shows them to their friends, encouraging them to identify the user by putting a name to the image.

Sounds useful? Yeah, right.

Consider this: A user does not get the option to pre-approve of photos of themselves being published. As you might know, I usually go for a share-all approach. This case, though, is another notch in Facebook’s bedpost of privacy violations. As so many times before, Facebook defaulted to share personal information instead of to protecting it. Again, they went for an opt-out model (where the user has to become actively involved to protect their privacy) and – to top things off – decided to hide the option to disable this “feature” way down in the privacy settings.

This is beyond bad style. Here’s how you disable facial recognition on Facebook.

I can’t wait for a truly privacy-conscious social networking service.

mystery cat / goopy mart / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

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Goopymart

During a number of conversations recently I realized something. This may be obvious to you, or you might find it mighty strange. But I can say with confidence that at this point in time, 2011, my communications hierarchy is this:

First place is clearly email. This is where everything happens, particularly for business.

Second place is Twitter. All the smaller coordination, as well as a large part of the input and inspiration, happens here. (In fact, a large part of organizing and advertising Cognitive Cities Conference was done through Twitter, too.)

Third place – and a distant third, too – is the phone. Cell phone, of course. Landline has become so ridiculously unimportant that between my company Third Wave, our office mates Yourneighbours/Gidsy and our resident freelancer Fabian we share one (!) landline phone – without ever running into a conflict there.

In between, but too hard to place in this hierarchy, are Skype and similar instant messengers as well as SMS and of course face-to-face conversations.

Even I myself was a bit surprised by how clearly the phone had been demoted like this, and how important and ubiquitous Twitter has become in my daily life. But there you go. Curious to hear about your experiences that way!

Image: magical science creature capture / goopy mart / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

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