Monday, August 10, 2009

Virtual Life as a Component of the Metaphysical Trialism

Traditional dualists described metaphysics as a split between two kinds of reality: mental, spiritual, thinking substance as in the case of God and myself and physical or extended substance such as body, planets, mountains, trees, animals. Early philosophers such as Descartes presented this concept as metaphysical dualism or Cartesian psychophysical dualism. In the modern world with the emergence of the Internet and the emergence of web 2.0 in particular social interaction has taken over the digital space. The addition of social interaction via Internet has created another layer within the traditional dualism – metaphysical trialsm.

Social communication begins with the creation of the digital personas, which interact by recording their thoughts within the Internet space. Digital persona is an electronic representation of someone’s mental, spiritual or physical state, but only in a particular moment in time, which multiple internal and external agents can influence. Individuals can represent themselves by means of creating profiles on various sites, leaving comments, writing blogs, micro blogging, participating in an email exchange, sharing music and so on. The same physical person can be represented in many different ways by creating different digital personals to feed the need of targeting particular perceptions and reaching a distinct target audience.

On Twitter, users have a short profile, and 140-character limitation on their status updates. Twitter users can choose to follow other digital personas based on similar interest characteristics, desire to be in the know on the thoughts those users have, or simply a way to be popular by any means necessary which would include creating an abundant list of those they follow and those that are following them.

On Facebook, a digital persona can add particular groups of people that bring some value or life to the persona’s binary environment. Many are mindful of what they share with others. Some use the websites as a way to network, so naturally they present themselves as professionals of some trade, as is the case with the LinkedIn Professional Network. Those same people can have profiles on other sites such as dating where they want to show themselves as desirable by that niche audience. Depending on the interest and the need to attract certain type of participation, niche coalitions are formed in the form of followers, friends, or matches depending on the virtual environment they are participating in. The result of these multifaceted activities is that someone’s digital representation can be in many virtual environments at the same time. Thus, the representation of once physical persona can vary by the virtual environment they are in at that point in time.

Since the digital persona is an electronic representation of how someone describers his worth or self. It is not necessarily the way others see the persona, and not even a way the persona sees itself. It’s a way the persona chooses to represent itself in a moment of time within a certain layer of the virtual environment.

In a sense a digital persona represented in multiple layers of the virtual system is omnipresent. Digital selves are recorded in the moment when they are tied to a particular emotion and expressed in a stream of mind, and here is when it splits from the traditional dualism. Those digitized bits of life once released into the virtual world then take a life of their own. The individual is no longer interacting with the virtual world, but others are there to react to what was recorded. The digital persona is still there to interact with other digital personas without any control from the originator. Others who encounter the digital persona interact with it by either getting inspired, disagreeing, sharing their opinion of that persona or simply ignoring it. In this sense the virtual persona lives on in a different layer of time and reality.

This virtual life is by no means eternal. It can be, if the digital self is left to fend for itself, but eventually the popularity diminishes, and the persona gets forgotten and dies. Else the physical owner of the digital self can remove the profiles, and kill the virtual life. Or there can be a virus or a systematic removal of records that will bring the deathly plaque that will wipe out any impacted binary life.


Sunday, June 28, 2009

iPhone 3GS First Impressions

I cant say that I fell in love with the phone upgrade at first sight, but we are learning to live together. I do enjoy copy/paste, search, voice command when it works and video capabilities. The quality of videos is pretty impressive. The voice command needs to adjust to my voice and accent. It does make funny decisions sometimes when I ask it to make a call or perform another function. I would love to get into the nuts and bolts of the voice recognition algorithm to figure out how it makes the decisions.

I do wish that the applications I use would integrate with the new OS better. Most of them work fine. I do notice that Trivial Pursuit freezes up. My opponent would be on 3d question and all I see is still the first. That's annoying.

I wish that Skype would develop a new version which utilizes Video capability on the phone. That would be fantastic!

Regardless of the flaws I see, I do enjoy this gadget a great deal. I do not think I will be parting with it in the next 2 years. Thanks apple for the match made in tech heaven!

Friday, June 19, 2009

Geek TV - Wishlist

1. 24*7 coverage from around the world
2. info on latest gadgets
3. developer competitions
4. best practices discussions
5. process improvement tips
6. real companies with real stories
7. dinosaur vs startup
8. focus on innovation
9. active user participation via social media tools

and it has to be entertaining, interesting, and captivating!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Amazon Web Services - aka my playground

This week have had an opportunity to attend Amazon Web Services training at GWU campus. I must say, its very impressive. Ideas are just flowing through. I am going to set up a sandbox lab in the Amazon Cloud. I am also getting a new iPhone, which means my first generation iPhone will be turned into a device.

Why is all of this important? I would like to build out a simple application utilizing a Twitter API. Whats in the application I can not currently disclose. However the idea is really to play around with the virtual machines and iPhone device.

Who knows what kind of trouble I will get myself into next!

Let the journey begin.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Addicted to Tech

The other night I was thinking how my digital persona is viewed by others. Why did I name this blog the way I did? What’s in the name – ‘Technobloggericious”? It sounds like a song by Fergie, or some pop term. Well in a way it is.

The blog was one of my assignments as part of my Master’s Degree. Prior to the blog, long time ago, I actually used to write every day, but as life happens, other activities have replaced my writing habit. University was trying to resurrect and rescue my brain from limited activity, and I thank them for that.
So what is in the name? At the time of creation I had grabbed the name that I thought summarized my digital persona and it just stuck. Now I decided to analyze why was it at the top of my mind? And really that got me thinking about who I am as a person, and what my journey has been so far that brought me here.

I was raised in an academic-intellectual family in Moscow Russia. I attended a highly prestige school specializing in German language and studies. I was enrolled in many activities from drawing, to sculpting to critiquing art. The last 2 years prior to moving to the United States I became a Film Director & Acting student at Moscow International Film School. I acted in several plays as well as wrote a script for a movie dedicated to the literary works of Federico Garcia Lorca. My first typewriting class was in the United States, and my exposure to computers and the first static internet begun then as well. I remember the clunky email systems we had at VCU, the Northern Light research web site, the small screens and slow responses. At the time I was unaware that internet technologies were going to take over every aspect of my life.


Now I have a blog, and accounts on twitter, got glue, facebook, linkedin, friendster, orkut, hi5, and a few other international social groups. How is it that I am represented by so many groups and entities? In a nutshell here is what happened: I entered the internet space while still in college, I got very lucky. I met smart, inventive developers that were riding the 1st Internet wave. Thanks to them I have learned allot in terms of figuring out programming languages, logic, and developed an internet addiction. Now I feed my addiction with the use of the iPhone applications and the device itself pretty much has replaced my personal computer. At work I do solutioning for web-based applications, again still within the digital space. I have figured out how to balance my virtual life with my physical life. I participate in forums and discussions and claim my territory in the social space, but try to not over do it. I don’t like MySpace and don’t have a second life account. May be I should. When Tweeter goes down, I experience severe withdrawal symptoms. Where to microblog? Facebook is there for me, but I miss out on my news and Obama updates. Is this addiction forever? Yes, I am afraid so. I like the idea that my home will be flat-surfaced computing enabled at some point. I like the fact that I can track down my son’s internet usage and be in the know of his activities and friends. Perhaps I need to change the blog name to Confessions of a techno-addict and start a support group.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Sociology and Google Earth

Yesterday, it was twitted that a Google Engineer has developed a first Google Earth map which depicts the stories of fallen soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq. The project is called "Map of the Fallen". His genious creation connects users with the stories of those soldiers.

Please check out his blog for more information. My hat goes off to the creator for knowing when to use technology for the greater good.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Social Media and Career Building

I have been thinking what are all the ways of utilizing social media in career building? Can it be a vehicle for new job opportunitites, recruiter connections, and vicarious interviewing?

I have a confession to make, everytime I interviewed a candidate I always looked them up in Linked In, Google, and Facebook. Doing so gave me an idea about their tech-savyiness, networking skills, and interests; things that are impossible to learn in a 45 minute interview.

However I still needed the resume to get my search going. But, with the use career-focused profiles within the social space, i can locate ideal candidates faster.

In the age of digital media and social IT, it is our job as candidates to represent ourselves all over the social space. Dont limit yourself on Linked-In! Everyone of your profiles be it in Facebook or Twitter needs to represent you as an individual as well as a professional.

The new age in recruiting is social media recruiting, and those guys are out there on Tweeter, and Facebook. And they are looking for you!