Internet è più grande di quello che credi
Arturo Di Corinto
per Peace Reporter Dicembre 2010

"Qualcuno si illude che il mondo finisca con Facebook perchè è lì che si trovano i nostri amici. Altri pensano che con Google si trovi tutto quello che serve, per una tesina o per un viaggio. Altri ancora sono certi che youtube sia sufficiente a sfamarci di video e che su Flickr ci siano le foto più belle del mondo. Ma non è vero.
[...]  "Flaneur è una parola introdotta nell’uso comune dal poeta francese Charles Baudelaire, e indica il gentiluomo che vaga per le vie cittadine, ma soprattutto indica una pratica, un’attitudine che lascia spazio all’esplorazione non affrettata e libera da mappe e programmi."


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“The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it.”
– John Gilmore


-----nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it ha scritto: -----
Per: nexa@server-nexa.polito.it
Da: bernardo parrella
Inviato da: nexa-bounces@server-nexa.polito.it
Data: 05/02/2012 05.29PM
Oggetto: [nexa] The Death of the Cyberflâneur


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/05/opinion/sunday/the-death-of-the-cyberflaneur.html?hp=&pagewanted=all

(by Evgeny Morozov)

Transcending its original playful identity, [the Internet] is no longer a place for strolling — it’s a place for getting things done. Hardly anyone “surfs” the Web anymore. The popularity of the “app paradigm,” whereby dedicated mobile and tablet applications help us accomplish what we want without ever opening the browser or visiting the rest of the Internet, has made cyberflânerie less likely. That so much of today’s online activity revolves around shopping — for virtual presents, for virtual pets, for virtual presents for virtual pets — hasn’t helped either. Strolling through Groupon isn’t as much fun as strolling through an arcade, online or off.

THE tempo of today’s Web is different as well. A decade ago, a concept like the “real-time Web,” in which our every tweet and status update is instantaneously indexed, updated and responded to, was unthinkable. Today, it’s Silicon Valley’s favorite buzzword. ….

In a way, we have all become such sandwich board men, walking the cyber-streets of Facebook with invisible advertisements hanging off our online selves. The only difference is that the digital nature of information has allowed us to merrily consume songs, films and books even as we advertise them, obliviously.

full article: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/05/opinion/sunday/the-death-of-the-cyberflaneur.html?hp=&pagewanted=all _______________________________________________
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