Online Social Optimization
July 31st, 2011

White House ‘rickrolls’ Twitter follower who complained about boring briefing

New York, July 31 (ANI): The White House is said to have “rickrolled” one of its Twitter followers who complained about a correspondence briefing being too boring.
@wiggsd Sorry to hear that. Fiscal policy is important, but can be dry sometimes. Here’s something more fun: tinyurl.com/y8ufsnp #WHChat,” the New York Daily News quoted the White House tweet as saying.

http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/232991

by publcindividual | Posted in Memes | Comments Off | Tags: , ,
April 8th, 2011

Memes show information overload « Daily Trojan

http://dailytrojan.com/2011/04/07/memes-show-information-overload/

You think?

We are an adaptable species, though, and this environment is Jo different than the complexities of wilderness, the challenging task a frontier presents. Claiming ‘overload’ showcases a desire for some implausible regression from the encroaching singularity… information is not knowledge until its been absorbed and nuanced, internally categorized, then technologically applied. Overload is what happens when you can’t fit information into your internal categorical models. That’s for you to fix. The world will not wait.

by publcindividual | Posted in Social Optimization | Comments Off | Tags:
December 16th, 2010

Memes, Myths, Birds, Bees, and Markets, via @agent139

What’s the sweet nectar and bright colors that lures in the unwitting insects? That’s the question advertisers are bound to ask. The market is strictly concerned with selling the container, and like the insects, is blissfully unaware of the pollen. Countless dollars have been spent researching customer reaction to different colors, configurations of symbols and patterns. Certainly, much of this plays into the cutting edge of UX design. But, in contradiction of the common wisdom that says our biological similarities make us all susceptible to the same patterns, at least if we are looking for big-picture trends, it has been my experience that results vary depending on the “species of insect.” In other words, though the audience and the authors may all be consciously unaware of the genetic code of their work, we can readily sniff out what suits us and what does not, in the same way we have sized up potential mates through smell before a single word has been spoken. Even our immune systems are keyed to seek viable mates – this relates to our sense of smell as well – and further there is some evidence that even activities such as kissing have a matching and mating purpose, preparing our immune systems for one another.

via Memes, Myths, Birds, Bees, and Markets, by James Curcio | [ open myth source ].

by unruh | Posted in Further Reading | Comments Off | Tags: , , ,
January 9th, 2009

‘bīja has been equated to memetics’

Mandala OS. Spoken Sung Cymatic Bardic Interface_technology_Cool bot world news

“In Vajrayana Buddhism and Hinduism, the term bīja is used for mystical “seed syllables” contained within mantras. These seeds do not have precise meanings, but are thought to carry connections to spiritual principles. The best-known bīja syllable is Om, first found in the Hindu scriptures the Upanishads.” […]

“According to this theory, all experiences and actions produce bīja as impressions, stored in the alaya (storehouse) consciousness. The external world is produced when the seeds “perfume” this consciousness. This view of bīja has been equated to memes, with the theory itself positing an extreme form of memetics (ie. reality and existence consist purely of memes).”

(I added some emphasis there, btw) Anyway, this is fascinating… the wikipedia entry goes on to say: Bija of the ‘Varnamala’ (Sanskrit; English: “garland of letters”; which may be rendered as alphabet) are understood as aniconic representations and sound embodiments of the matrikas, note how nearly homophonic and etymologically related ‘matrika’ is to ‘mantrika’, that is “a practitioner of mantra”.

(Also, the idea of a bardic cymatic interface for an iPhone is pretty cool too)

by unruh | Posted in Further Reading | Comments Off | Tags: , ,













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