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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.11.81 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Fri, 24 Feb 2012 05:48:58 GMT--><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><title>Blog</title><subtitle>Blog</subtitle><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/</id><link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/"/><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/atom.xml"/><updated>2011-12-12T11:35:36Z</updated><generator uri="http://www.squarespace.com/" version="Squarespace Site Server v5.11.81 (http://www.squarespace.com/)">Squarespace</generator><entry><title>Bad English.</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/12/12/bad-english.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/12/12/bad-english.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-12-12T11:17:01Z</published><updated>2011-12-12T11:17:01Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>Language is a key part of my everyday worklife. I listen and speak to people, read and write stuff constantly. While I get to speak my own mother tongue at home with my kids, that is not the language I usually work in. Neither is Finnish, the dominant native language in my home country where I live and work, but most of my work day is communicating in English. The multicultural and international environment is great, I truly enjoy it - and don&#8217;t mind a slight misunderstanding here or there, especially while talking you can quickly double check things.</p>
<p>But where this becomes a bit awkward is on the official side. When documents like diplomas, titles, letters etc need to be written in English - still a foreign language to most of us, a very small percentage here are native speakers, errors are not as easy to brush off as something equally funny and cute. They are embarrassing.</p>
<p>The question rises, what should be the demand level for such documents then? Finland has been bilingual for years, so we do have a tradition to translate stuff - have official documents in multiple languages. We should know this already. But also the quality of the language used in the &#8220;other domestic&#8221; language has deteriorated. Does it matter?&nbsp;</p>
<p>I think it does. It&#8217;s not that I want to police the use of language. I truly don&#8217;t mind a punctuation error or word spelled wrong, but the accumulation of these errors does worry me, because language is the way we communicate - and if we ignore the noise in this communcation, also our capability to understand each other is eventually hampered. This will start to happen at the stage when words are interpreted wrong, semantics become obfuscated or sentence structures turn their intended meaning upside down. We just need to pay attention to the language we use. Nothing more, nothing less. And ask for advice, double check, if not sure.</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>Blogging is so yesterday...</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/10/23/blogging-is-so-yesterday.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/10/23/blogging-is-so-yesterday.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-10-23T07:56:12Z</published><updated>2011-10-23T07:56:12Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>Well, maybe not quite that - but in a way it&#8217;s not as much part of the flow and signals that are trending now. Why is that? Well it takes a bit more to start writing an entry in a blog that just not a response to something, and even if we complain about the short size of a tweet, it actually also lowers the threshold to start writing.</p>
<p>Of course we love to complain that a tweet is too short for whatever we want to say, but therein lies the beaty. We can blame it, not us.</p>
<p>Today I read that political blogs in Finland are becoming more professional and less personal. Good news! It is relevant and essential for a democracy that a political debate is open, transparent and well documented. Our elected representatives should be expected to be able to formulate longer than one sentence opinions. Based on those views and opinions we can make our own judgements in the next elections. Campaigns are superficial, this is where the action is - in real life.</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>Time to do more research for a change!</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/10/2/time-to-do-more-research-for-a-change.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/10/2/time-to-do-more-research-for-a-change.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-10-02T19:24:45Z</published><updated>2011-10-02T19:24:45Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>This august was the tenth year I was working as a teacher in the Media Lab at the University of Art and Design Helsinki, now called Aalto University. It has been a great time and I truly enjoy the job. For the last few years I&#8217;ve been in charge of the MA in New Media programme, and while it&#8217;s been great too - the stuff I enjoy the most is experimenting, exploring and working with all these great people, brilliant students and colleagues.</p>
<p>The bureaucratic tasks are really not my cup of tea, even if I don&#8217;t mind doing them and naturally see the reason for such taks as well. With the exceptions of scheduling - creating calendars is like a big puzzle!</p>
<p>Now writing in past tense might be a bit wrong, I still do enjoy this very much and look forward to continuing the same for as long as I can - but right now I&#8217;m going to take a few months of to really focus on research.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not a long time, but I hope to get my algorithm for narrative inertia one major step forward, maybe some tools and articles written along the way.</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>Lawnmowers?</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/7/4/lawnmowers.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/7/4/lawnmowers.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-07-04T19:42:35Z</published><updated>2011-07-04T19:42:35Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>In July it&#8217;s full vacation time here in Finland - people leave the city to go out to their summerhouses or cottages to live a simple life. Some do it less simple than others, but most important to the equation is the change to the daily urban routine.</p>
<p>A big part of a place for the summer is to be close to nature - maybe the sea or forest, maybe a garden - or both. For myself it&#8217;s always been self evident that I need to spend some time in the archipelago, and my current place is a small house on an island with a huge lawn. With huge I mean relatively huge, not a football field - but almost. It&#8217;s a lot of work to keep the grass short - and letting it just grow is really not an option for many reasons, one of the biggest one being the lawn becoming populated with deer-ticks.</p>
<p>But lawnmowers burning gasolene, making a lot of noise and taking up a huge amount of time is a challenge I want to solve. I&#8217;ve been looking at robots to do the job for quite a while - however they are not cheap and it&#8217;s hard to tell if they actually do a decent job on this challenging lawn.</p>
<p>This weekend I gave in, and ordered a solar powered Husqvarna. I don&#8217;t expect it to fully run on solar energy, but if it helps it&#8217;s a plus - it&#8217;s quieter, greener and automatic. What more can one wish for? As an added bonus I hope that the little fellow running around the grass will keep unwanted wild guests away too - like snakes, rodents and deer. Yes, deer, they are pretty - but carry ticks and eat all our plants.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s see if the thing works.&nbsp;</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>A "Steve Jobs" WiFi-moment...</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/5/10/a-steve-jobs-wifi-moment.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/5/10/a-steve-jobs-wifi-moment.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-05-10T15:30:10Z</published><updated>2011-05-10T15:30:10Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>Well, it feels slightly better to label a situation where a live performance is interrupted by a WiFi overload crash.</p>
<p>Extremely annoying. Could have been avoided, but not detected without proper stress testing. I was caught off guard by the limits of the technology, even after years of experience. Damn.</p>
<p>Apart from that the performance went really well, the backend server worked, people were engaged in the interaction and the overall feeling was good.</p>
<p>The learning experience once again was the weakest link will break. This time the only module without redundancy was the router, which had served me for years without a glitch. I expected a network slowdown, but not a downright crash. Repetative crashes actually. But after the first we kept rebooting it during the breaks.</p>
<p>That the same thing in a different scale happened about a year ago for Apple is not much comfort. They should&#8217;ve known too.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>Chasing a moving target...</title><category term="New Media"/><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/3/23/chasing-a-moving-target.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/3/23/chasing-a-moving-target.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-03-23T21:32:49Z</published><updated>2011-03-23T21:32:49Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>I can&#8217;t stop finding it really exciting that year after year we get back to the same ol&#8217; question at work: &#8220;what is New Media?&#8221;</p>
<p>The difficulty of defining the term really is related to the context and scope of the question and who asked it. But what I find so exciting is that what might have been the right answer yesterday, could and most probably is no longer a complete definition tomorrow.&nbsp;</p>
<p>We&#8217;re aiming at a moving target. That&#8217;s the whole point. If it stops moving we&#8217;ve missed it.</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>Task management</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/1/25/task-management.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/1/25/task-management.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-01-25T10:06:14Z</published><updated>2011-01-25T10:06:14Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>Getting things done.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s funny how this has even become a trademark issue, with a gazillion little apps to help you out, all of which have some nice and smart features, but at the same time lacking some fundamental element to be really efficient.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m still waiting for the perfect setup.</p>
<p>The difficult part is that the perfect solution should be so simple, so extremely transparent that to reach that level of simplicity an enormous amount of complexity has to be overcome.</p>
<p>Like a miracle. Magic.</p>
<p>Until I find that perfect app, that syncs transparently, keeps track of what I need to do, when and where I&#8217;ll continue ticking off items one by one on my current setup.</p>
]]></content></entry><entry><title>Need a coffee.</title><id>http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/1/24/need-a-coffee.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.mediamania.com/blog/2011/1/24/need-a-coffee.html"/><author><name>Rasmus Vuori</name></author><published>2011-01-24T13:01:23Z</published><updated>2011-01-24T13:01:23Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-IE"><![CDATA[<p>I know, this should rather be a tweet than a blog post. But I can't help it. And besides, in a tweet 140 characters would be up in a second.</p>
<p>My craving for coffee is definitely much bigger than 140 chars. Enormously much bigger. And I try to cut down.</p>
<p>Boring ramblings, I know, and I must sound like a smoker talking about how he's about to quit smoking. I did quit coffee. For almost a two weeks this summer. Well, almost.&nbsp;</p>
<p>It was lovely to visit China and the wonderful city of Xi'an - and even if they did have decent coffee at the hotel, and with the help of my amazing colleagues who were able to smell out the good coffee places, it wasn't just the same commodity as here at home where I can just walk for 1 minute and get myself a cup of hot coffee, any time.</p>
<p>What I did find amazing in Xi'an was also the effort the good coffee places put on making it, it often took 15-20 minutes to just get one cup as they started brewing it when you ordered. Very good for a coffee addict like me to sit down a while and wait. And why not, waiting for something good is always healthy.</p>
<p>But enough waiting, I'll go get my cup now. Just plain, normal coffee with a drop of milk in it.</p>]]></content></entry></feed>
