Therapists often run into a curious problem during treatment: Clients
aren’t very good at describing their emotions. How exactly do you
express the nature of your depression?
So this spring, relationship counselor Crystal Rice hit upon a clever
idea. She had her clients use Pinterest, the popular picture-pinning
social network, to create arrays of images that map out their feelings.
It’s a brilliant epiphany: While emotions can be devilishly difficult to
convey in words, they’re often very accessible via pictures. “This way
we can really identify what’s going on,” Rice says.
As Rice discovered with her clients, Pinterest’s
appeal is that it gives us curiously powerful visual ways to
communicate, think, and remember. If you see one picture of a guitar,
it’s just a guitar; but when you see 80 of them lined up you start to
see guitarness. This additive power is precisely what helps Rice’s
clients paint their internal worlds.
Part of the value of Pinterest is that it brings you
out of yourself and into the world of things. As the Huffington Post
writer Bianca Bosker argued, Facebook and Twitter are inwardly focused
(“Look at me!”) while Pinterest is outwardly focused (“Look at this!”).
It’s the world as seen through not your eyes but your imagination.
Granted, Pinterest encourages plenty of dubious
behavior too. It can be grindingly materialistic; all those pins of
stuff to buy! Marketers are predictably adrool, and as they swarm
aboard, the whole service might very well end up collapsing into a heap
of product shilling.
But I suspect we’ll see increasingly odd and clever
ways of using Pinterest. If a picture is worth a thousand words, those
collections are worth millions.
Read more here
This introduction to the world of journalism encourages proactive thinking about the future of media and journalists' place in it, focusing on the need to remain on the innovation curve.
Saturday, October 13
Wednesday, October 10
the Copyright Alert System
The nation’s major internet service providers by year’s end will institute a so-called six-strikes plan, the “Copyright Alert System” initiative backed by the Obama administration and pushed by Hollywood and the major record labels to disrupt and possibly terminate internet access for online copyright scofflaws.
The plan, now four years in the making, includes participation by AT&T, Cablevision Systems, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon. After four offenses, the historic plan calls for these residential internet providers to initiate so-called “mitigation measures” (.pdf) that might include reducing internet speeds and redirecting a subscriber’s service to an “educational” landing page about infringement. The internet companies may eliminate service altogether for repeat file-sharing offenders, although the plan does not directly call for such drastic action.
Read more here
The plan, now four years in the making, includes participation by AT&T, Cablevision Systems, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and Verizon. After four offenses, the historic plan calls for these residential internet providers to initiate so-called “mitigation measures” (.pdf) that might include reducing internet speeds and redirecting a subscriber’s service to an “educational” landing page about infringement. The internet companies may eliminate service altogether for repeat file-sharing offenders, although the plan does not directly call for such drastic action.
Read more here
Sunday, October 7
Trust in Media Survery
Only 8 percent of Americans say they have a "great deal" of trust in the news media, according to a new Gallup poll -- a record low for the 40 years Gallup has been polling the question.
This combined 40 percent who were generally trustful of the media was the lowest percentage ever. Meanwhile, 39 percent said they had “not very much” trust and 21 percent said they had “none at all"—zero confidence in the media and making 60 percent who said they were generally distrustful of the media.
Read more here
This combined 40 percent who were generally trustful of the media was the lowest percentage ever. Meanwhile, 39 percent said they had “not very much” trust and 21 percent said they had “none at all"—zero confidence in the media and making 60 percent who said they were generally distrustful of the media.
Read more here
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