silly idea

The first 7,300 days

According to my calendar, as of today, it’s been 7,300 days, (not that I’m counting). If you do the math and remember to account for leap years, that works out to a handful of days short of 20 years.

So how have the past 7,300 days been for you?

Seven thousand, three hundred days ago, a chap named Tim Berners-Lee showed off a working computer program called “WorldWideWeb”. The overall project he was working on was named “World Wide Web” which beat out his other name choices of “Information Mesh”, “Information Mine” and “Mine of Information”.

Note that the “official” 20-year anniversary was in March 2009. But that marks the day when Berners-Lee first submitted his proposal for the project:

Tim Berners-Lee holds a copy of his 1989 proposal titled, “Information Management: A Proposal” during an event to mark the 20th anniversary of his proposal to create the World Wide Web, at CERN labs in Geneva Switzerland on 13 March 2009. Berners-Lee stands next to the computer he used as the first web server. (Note: my caption. Handout photo contained no caption information.)

Photo credit: Maximilien Brice/ © 2009 Cern

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!,.? – “…” [ (;) ]

Yes, you guessed it. Today, Friday September 24 is National Punctuation Day in the USA. Someday, maybe Canada will realize the importance of punctuation and adopt this as a new national holiday.

Here are some official tips on how to celebrate.

A Penny for your Thoughts

If online content becomes a free commodity, will your creative thoughts have any value? Of course, everyone loves free but sometimes free costs too much.

Should everything be supported by advertising so that all content can be free?

If yes, then is the ultimate conclusion that the only online content will be advertisements? Ads disguised as news. Ads disguised as entertainment. Ads disguised as relevant information.

Far-fetched?

 

Connect the dots

Why doesn’t a newspaper do this:

For each online crossword, sudoku or whatever daily quiz the paper uses, that is correctly completed by a reader, (within a certain time period), the paper donates, say, $1 to a local charity. The chosen charity can change daily or weekly.

Have the daily quiz sponsored by an advertiser which will make the charitable donation. The advertiser’s logo and message would sit right next to the quiz. Fifteen minutes to do the quiz means 15 minutes of exposure to the ad.

How many readers will take the time to complete the daily quiz knowing that it will do some social good in their community? How much word-of-mouth will this create as readers get their friends to join in and help fundraise for a charity?
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Being Different

“Performance artist” may be the best description for Chinese artist Li Wei. Although “crazy” could also be used.

Take a look at the mind-boggling photographs on his web site. (The site doesn’t seem to mention the name of the photographer(s).)

Aha! They’re all fake! Photoshopped pictures!

Actually, you might be surprised.

While several of the images were edited to erase the steel cables or ropes that supported the flying people, not all pictures were altered. Apparently, for a few high-air pictures, Wei just climbed up and did his stuff.

Many of his floating head pictures have no digital magic whatsoever but they do use old centuries-old trickery. Some of the floating heads in the “Dream-Like Love” series must have been Photoshopped because there seems to be no other explanation.

The web site also has small videos which show some behind-the-scenes activity. In one video, while dangling from a 25th-floor ledge, Wei is suspended only by a rope handheld by two other guys.

While this work was done purely for the art, apparently Wei’s plan is to move into advertising. Do you think wildly different pictures like this might help get a business noticed?

Does corporate photography always have to be safe (and boring)? When should a business take a risk with its marketing photography?

 

The Sport of Photography

Chess, bridge, billiards, power-boating, hot-air ballooning, flying an airplane and dancing are among several activities that have been recognized by the International Olympic Committee as being a “sport”, although none are (yet) part of the Olympic Games.

From olympic.org :

If it is widely practised around the world and meets a number of criteria established by the IOC session, a recognised sport may be added to the Olympic programme on the recommendation of the IOC’s Olympic Programme Commission.

It’s high time that photography be recognized as a sport. It could even be in both the winter and summer games.

Photography is certainly widely-practised. It is one of the very few sports that can be played and enjoyed by people of any age, weight, height or sex, able-bodied or not.
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