Hi Dan!!! How funny that we are on the same mailinglist! I hope you are good, and the sun still is shinning in wonderful Berkeley. Nikoline and I went back to Denmark the 17th of August and is getting used to the raindy gray weather in DK. However I wish I still was in Berkeley and enjoying the student life on campus and the work with DUSTY and professor Hull. How are you? Did you girlfriend finally return to Berkeley so you can enjoy the perfect view from the balcony :) If you are planning to come to the next Air-L conference, which I hope you do, please let us hang out, since the conference is here in Copenhagen. Let's stay in touch, Best, Anne Den 19/09/2007 kl. 19.27 skrev Dan Perkel: Hi David, McCarthy and Wright's Technology as Experience (2004) may be helpful in this regard. They don't take a phenomenological approach, per se, but they do comment on prior phenomenological approaches (as well as others, so this book might point you in directions you want to go) as well as introduce an interesting take on the notion of "experience." http://www.amazon.com/Technology-as-Experience-John-McCarthy/dp/ 0262633558/ref=sr_1_2/103-5114096-0795858? ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1190137635&sr=8-2 Regards, Dan Dan Perkel School of Information University of California, Berkeley dperkel@ischool.berkeley.edu http://dream.sims.berkeley.edu/~dperkel/wordpress/ http://digitalyouth.ischool.berkeley.edu On Sep 18, 2007, at 10:30 AM, Alecea Standlee wrote:
David, I wonder if the literature on anonymity, flaming,trolls etc might be a place to start.
-A
David Brake <d.r.brake@lse.ac.uk> wrote: I presume there is literature out there taking a phenomenological view of what using a computer feels like but I am not sure where to start looking. I hope to use it to buttress a hunch I have about why people seem to have trouble in managing public vs private space online. My feeling is that its because typing stuff into a computer just doesnt feel like you're addressing a large crowd at that moment - it feels like you are talking to yourself (unless you are addressing it to particular named other people who you can then visualise). One can make a similar point about the long life of blog postings. They feel conversational, not like having something published and indexed.
Anyway given this example I hope you can see the kind of literature which might help here. Any ideas? If not of texts directly about the experience of using a computer then perhaps just the best literature to apply to approach the subject generally. Schutz?
--- David Brake, Doctoral Student in Media and Communications, London School of Economics & Political Science
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