Archive for February, 2007

Slife my life?! Activity observation for Mac

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

slife

Surfing my daily blogfeeds I discovered at Riesenmaschine the posting about Slife. Cool. I have colleagues working on such issues to trigger context-aware applications.

Now I have it for my Mac.
I just installed and let you know asap how it may change my digital daily life.

UPDATE! 10 Minutes later … The control freak inside me is already convinced!

There is no rewind button for life

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

nam june paik

I started to work -conceptually- on a talk about Digital Identity 2.0. Re:publica will be the event where I have the opportunity to present my view on this very very hot topic. And anyway it is more than a hot topic, identity evolves during a lifetime.

C4 is back!

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

New Headquarter! Everything is running, office still smells a little bit funny.

Twingly screensaver visualizing the blogosphere

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

Check the video at YouTube

I have not checked the details yet, but it looks awesome!

via: networked_performance

PS: and I really love this comment at YouTube

The blogosphere is the total sum of all blogs connected into a social network. The term was cool a year ago but is too widespread now for the general blog crowd to use it. But since it’s actually a useful term it is still referred to by the inner circle. From there it will work it’s way back into the common language, acheiving a renaissance around febtuary next year.

We are moving

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

This is the C4. Ready-to-move to a brandnew home.

I am exhausted for now.

Wait for next posting around friday!

Visual Programming for Feed Aggregation and Manipulation!

Thursday, February 8th, 2007


Pipes is a hosted service that lets you remix feeds and create new data mashups in a visual programming environment. The name of the service pays tribute to Unix pipes, which let programmers do astonishingly clever things by making it easy to chain simple utilities together on the command line.

via: overstated