I spent my weekend with some folks at Designcamp Cologne 2009. Not much words, just some pictures and the quote of the day:
Chocolate is a bitch
Torsten Schöneich from Törtchen Törtchen Cologne
Jan 27
More then 20000 users have contributed to the growth of the project OpenStreetMaps. Using wiki principles the project collects information about streets, buildings, rivers, landscapes and everything that is usually displayed on maps. The agency Itoworld has created a video that animates the coverage of the gathered data. Really beautiful:
So you say: What do I need another free map service for? Is Google Maps not enough?.
Check out this comparison by Bodenseepeter [in German, illustrated]. He analyzed the extend of the two map services usinng ten examples worldwide. For example Cape Town:
| Left in Google Maps | Right in OpenStreetMaps|
|
|
Wikipedia:
OpenStreetMap (OSM) is a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. The maps are created using data from portable GPS devices, aerial photography and other free sources. Both rendered images and the vector dataset are available for download under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 licence.
via T3N magazine Germany
Jan 10
So this is what communication mania is making out of us and web2.0 creatives:
Somehow we -consumers and deciders- are totally horny of being part of the bigbuzz communities we simply forgot about security.
So this happened:
A hacker gained access to several Twitter accounts by brut force – among them Barack Obamas and Britney Spears’. Twitter was already known for having security isuues do to unencrypted password transmission. Well, here’s a video that explains what he did:
Official Twitter feeds belonging to Barack Obama’s campaign, Fox News and Britney Spears were hijacked to send out fake messages on Monday, two days after a password-stealing phishing attack targeted the microblogging service.
“A number of high-profile Twitter accounts were compromised this morning, and fake/spam updates were sent on their behalf,” the company acknowledged on its website Monday. “We have identified the cause and blocked it. We are working to restore compromised accounts.”
Read on at wired.com
Jan 07
Warning: This video is nerdy and technical.
But you will learn something if you make it to minute 6:47. You will understand the most important relations in the evolution of web technologies – from the first remote connection 1957 to the world-changing TCP/IP protocol.
It’s a diploma by Melih Bilgil.
History of the internet is an animated documentary explaining the inventions from time-sharing to file-sharing, from arpanet to internet.
The history is told with help of the PICOL icons, which are also a part of my diploma. The icons are soon available for free on picol.org
Jan 04