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With the advent of the cameraphone as a ubiquitous platform for media production, sharing, and use, we have the opportunity to reinvent media participation on the personal, social, and global levels. We can now gather and correlate media metadata about the spatiotemporal context and social community of media capture and use it to enable people around the world to create, describe, find, share, and remix media content. To do so, we are engaged in the iterative design, development, and analysis of large scale 'sociotechnical' systems that will ultimately connect billions of humans, computational devices, and media assets into a global processing network. The design of these sociotechnical systems for mobile media participation requires us to rethink the core assumptions and boundaries of computer science, information science, social science, media studies, and design, as well as to create new processes and organizations for interdisciplinary collaboration. The key intellectual shift reframes technological challenges for mobile media within social and humanistic understandings of information, communication, context, memory, and identity. As a result, by understanding mobile media technologies as sociotechnical systems that connect people to the spatiotemporal contexts of their activity and to each other, we enable new technological innovations. This talk will describe the concepts and methods we have developed to create interdisciplinary innovation in mobile media research and design at: Garage Cinema Research in the UC Berkeley School of Information, the UC Berkeley Center for New Media, Yahoo! Research Berkeley, and Yahoo! Inc. We will also show mobile social media systems that leverage context, content, and community: the Mobile Media Metadata projects which pioneered context-aware mobile media tagging, sharing, content recognition, and data visualization; ZoneTag, a Web 2.0 version of context-aware mobile media tagging and sharing integrated into Flickr; and TagMaps, which enables the visualization and exploration of geocoded tags and photos on Flickr maps.
Cette conversation permettra de décrire les notions et méthodes que nous avons élaborées pour créer une innovation interdisciplinaire en matière de recherche et design en médias mobiles à la Garage Cinema Research de l'UC Berkeley School of Information, l'UC Berkeley Center for New Media, Yahoo! Research Berkeley et Yahoo! Inc. Nous présenterons également des systèmes de médias sociaux et mobiles qui tirent parti du contexte, du contenu et de la collectivité : les projets Mobile Media Metadata, qui ont été à l'avant-garde du marquage, du partage, de la reconnaissance du contenu et de la visualisation des données en termes de médias mobiles sensibles au contexte; ZoneTag, une version Web 2.0 de marquage et partage des médias mobiles sensibles au contexte intégrée dans Flickr; et TagMaps, qui permet la visualisation et l'exploration de balises et photos géocodées sur des cartes Flickr. Marc Davis is Social Media Guru at Yahoo! Inc. where he works on the
theory, design, and development of digital media systems that combine
contextual metadata and the power of community to enable people to
produce, describe, share, and remix media.
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