Sunday, April 11, 2010
Future of Internet
Social Networking and Online community
Multimedia and Entertainment
Internet changing the world of journalism
Journalism has now reached another level with the high usage of blog and other internet services.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Security on the Internet: to trust or not? (Part Two)
A different kind of unauthorised access to computer networks is involved in the activity of “mooching” or “piggybacking” on an unsecured wireless network. Although prosecutions for this kind of activity are rare in Asia and indeed globally, Singapore already has a reported case. In March 2007, it was reported that a 17-year-old who piggybacked on his neighbour’s wireless Internet connection in order to engage in online chatting was sentenced to 18 months’ probation in the District Court.
Mooching does not seem like a harmful act but it does, infringes people's rights and is a form of cheating because basically you are using somebody's connection without paying nor permission. Such act do not appear to be serious and is an inevitable offence by the offender. This comes to a question of how serious should the punishment be should a older person be convicted of such crime? After reading this article, i must be more careful when my laptop is connected to a WLAN network, whether its mine, or has my laptop accidentally been 'mooching' on other networks.
Food for thought: Are you one of those who are sub-consciously committing this offence?
Security on the Internet: to trust or not? (Part One)
We the NETIZENS of singapore. Pledge ourselves as one united community.
The Singapore government warned that “persistently political” websites would be required to register with the Government and be subject to the same restrictions as political party websites.
Far from having a chilling effect on local “blogosphere” (the community of blogs), many bloggers simply ignored the directive. Numerous blogs sprang to action to cover the elections, discussing many issues which the Government-controlled mainstream media had omitted. Mobile phone videos of almost every opposition rally were uploaded to video sharing site YouTube and cross-posted on blogs, despite a controversial law which bans “party political” videos in Singapore.
Local humour writer mrbrown created a series of digital audio recordings, dubbed “persistently non-political podcasts”, in a spoof of the minister’s warning. His podcasts used everyday Singaporean experiences to poke fun at various players in the election, particularly the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP). One clip after the election results featured a student boasting to his friends that he scored 66.6% in his examinations. That figure was the percentage of the popular vote that the PAP had garnered, and which the mainstream media had proclaimed was a decisive victory. However, inSingapore’s highly competitive academic culture, a score like that would be considered mediocre at best.
Some were surprised that the Government did not take any action against these law-breaking bloggers. After all, this was a government that had always enforced laws that they enacted, especially those oriented towards managing political dissent.
The Singapore Government had earlier said that as part of their efforts to promote the use of the Internet to the country’s economic advantage, it would adopt a “light touch” towards regulating online content. So far, this promise has been largely kept. There have been only three Singaporeans who have been publicly hauled in for material posted on the Internet. All had posted offensive remarks about other ethnic groups or religions — a taboo in multi-racial Singapore. To date, no Singaporean has got in trouble for posting dissenting political views. This is despite the fact that most political expression on the Internet is critical of the Government (One PAP MP, Denise Phua, put the figure at 85%).
Some have attributed the lack of enforcement to the inability of the Government to find violators who use pseudonyms to cloak their identity. This is a mistaken assumption, as the “racist” bloggers — all of whom used pseudonyms — would attest. Nevertheless the sheer number of bloggers makes it impractical to hunt down every one of them.
Paradoxically, humourist mrbrown was fired as a columnist from mainstream newspaper Today for an article that sarcastically declared that Singaporeans were “fed up with success”. Among other things,mrbrown had criticised Singapore’s high cost of living. Such an article would not have raised an eyebrow had it been posted online. The Government was signalling a different treatment for political expression online and in the mainstream media (To be exact, the Government did not sack mrbrown. The information minister’s press secretary merely wrote a strongly-worded letter to the newspaper’s editor. The signal, however, couldn’t be clearer).
The Government’s rationale is not hard to guess: The traditional media reaches out to a far larger audience than the Internet, even in a highly-wired society like Singapore. Mainstream English newspapers The Straits Times and Today have a combined daily readership of over 1.7 million, while even the most popular local socio-political websites are each visited by no more than 9,000 readers a day. After factoring in television and the vernacular press, it is clear that the mainstream media has a commanding mindshare of voting citizens.
To differentiate society’s level of acceptance of the news from the mainstream media and the Internet-based media, the Government has attempted to portray the latter as irrational and unreliable compared to the former. In a speech to international journalists in October 2006, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong charged that the Internet “enables clever propaganda, inflammatory opinions, half-truths and untruths to circulate freely and gain currency”.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Usage of Internet tools: Video Presentation
Since, i'm using the macbook, i created this video through imovie, the application is really user friendly.
did a simple slideshow and some personal videos here's the video! and pardon on my unprofessional video skills and do leave some comments! much appreciated! :)
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Saturday, February 6, 2010
E learning is the next big thang!
Avatar, second life, etc...
will virtuality replace reality?
The future classroom will have neither walls nor ceiling.
The future classroom will lack blackboards, dusty chalk fumes, school uniforms and tables and chairs.
The future classroom will no longer have pen and paper, heavy cumbersome textbooks or teachers to pay attention to.
Instead of time wasted stuck on buses and trains, squeezing with commuters during peak hour traffic jams, you are almost in school 24/7 as long as you are logged on the school website and such. The digital classroom would be the new matrix of the future. Some might bemoan the loss of the age-old excuse: “I can’t hand in my homework because my dog ate it” with the arrival of the futuristic classroom and the subsequent digitization of all school materials but on the other hand, there will be no teachers breathing down your neck, monitoring your homework progress like a hawk.
Would we use avatar to represent ourselves in the future classroom?
Rather, the digital classroom will replace teachers with education facilitators, altering the formulaic teach-and-learn method with a revolutionary facilitate-in-learning method. The latter allows the student to take charge of his own learning journey, providing him with a virtual chest filled with an assortment of gems of internet data, awarding him a place at the helm of his own boat to navigate the high seas of knowledge.
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Revolution of Retail Therapy
Also, such shops gain greater exposure. That is, anyone on the globe could be a potential buyer as long as he/she has internet access. The traffic level of these online stores are also generally higher!
Here's a few of my favourite online stores.
Retail shops branching out into online sale.
forever21.com
topshop.com
and of course, blogshopping!
love and bravery is a singapore based blogshop that provides international shipping.
The modparade started out using the livejournal domain and eventually progressed and finally getting a stand-alone domain @ modparade.com. A fine example of how a successful a blogshop can be. modparade even has a store at haji lane!
These online stores are generally easier to manage! firstly, getting a livejournal or blogger domain is free, on the other hand, the offline counterparts have to pay a hefty rental fee. In addition, the seller can design and customise the blogshop for free or at a minimal price, yet, doing up a proper retail shop can be costly.
However, i feel that such online shops lack interactivity. after all, the rate of responding to an email to much slower and personal than face to face. this is one of the main reasons that keep me away from shopping online.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
introduction to my blog and the internet relay chat
it got me thinking about how internet has come about and my reliance on this service and today's technology.
By the time i was 11, i began using the mIRC. Unlike phone or mail services, mIRC was one of the first few free of charge chat services available on the internet. It provides a forum for exchanging opinions and information. There were different lines/ channels for different people of interests. Hence, many people actually got to expand their social circle, make new friends, find their other half (But we should be cautious while doing so!).
For example, i knew my seniors through my school channel even before secondary school began for me. It was informative for me, as my schoolmates-to-be shared with me what secondary school would be like.
This is how mIRC looks like back in the early 2000s.
nicknames with a @ infront are referred to as bots. They are in charged of the channel and set the rules of it. They are free to kick or ban any visitor. normal members can request to be a bot from the bots themselves.
and now with the new and more user-friendly interface
One of the other impressive thing about the mIRC is that we are able to share files online.
mIRC allows downloading of documents and software. I used to go to channel #mp3files and we could just randomly share files. It is illegal and the service was banned later. Also, i used to transfer files and pictures via mIRC because MSN was yet to be common and email has little storage space.
mIRC is entertaining and was one of the most advanced services during the early 2000s. However, it is also unsafe because everybody and anybody could be chatting with you. It was also known that mIRC was a platform for spreading virus. In all, use everything moderately and rationally. With other internet chat services like MSN and skype, i wonder if mIRC was able to keep up with the times. Maybe i should try downloading and trying out the service again.