an omni-collection of more than 250 highlights of viral sites, videos, and concepts that's been viewed nearly a million times on timeline-sharing site Dipity.
Tropes are devices and conventions that a writer can reasonably rely on as being present in the audience members' minds and expectations. On the whole, tropes are not clichés. The word clichéd means "stereotyped and trite." In other words, dull and uninteresting. We are not looking for dull and uninteresting entries. We are here to recognize tropes and play with them, not to make fun of them.
Twemes.com follows public Twitter.com tweets (messages) that have embedded tags that start with a # character. These are sometimes called hashtags but we like to use the term twemes.
Through the use of twemes, we can all view what people are talking about across the whole Twitter universe. In some sense, this can be thought of as an adhoc chatroom. We also pull in recent public photos from Flickr and public bookmarks from Del.icio.us.
Twemes.com is particularly useful for keeping up on the real-time activities associated with a live event such as a conference. People who attend an event can choose an obvious tag (i.e., sxsw for South by Southwest) and use this tag as #sxsw in tweets, sxsw in uploaded Flickr photos and Del.icio.us links.
Twemes.com also allows for adhoc polls to be created associated to a tweme.
See the help page for more detailed usage instruction for including twemes in your tweets!
Cultural Softwareexplains ideology as a result of the cultural evolution of bits ofcultural knowhow, or memes. It is the first book to apply theories ofcultural evolution to the problem of ideology and justice.
Blogging has a name, but I haven’t found a name for this programming-meets-blogging I like to do...Here’s a start: “blogramming.” The blogosphere has its a-list — so does the, um, blogrammosphere (ouch!)...we are all hooked on the thrill of hatc
Blogging has a name, but I haven’t found a name for this programming-meets-blogging I like to do...Here’s a start: “blogramming.” The blogosphere has its a-list — so does the, um, blogrammosphere (ouch!)...we are all hooked on the thrill of hatc
Database of Intentions is simply this: The aggregate results of every search ever entered, every result list ever tendered, and every path taken as a result. It lives in many places, but three or four places in particular hold a massive amount of this dat
Database of Intentions is simply this: The aggregate results of every search ever entered, every result list ever tendered, and every path taken as a result. It lives in many places, but three or four places in particular hold a massive amount of this dat
You can tag arbitrary content on the web, you can do it in a low-tech way to make it easy for everyone to do...But...How do you find instances that people haven't tagged? Or deal with overlapping meme labels?
You can tag arbitrary content on the web, you can do it in a low-tech way to make it easy for everyone to do...But...How do you find instances that people haven't tagged? Or deal with overlapping meme labels?
... to aggregate blog posts from different blogs about a conference...the trick was that all the posts would use a particular text string or “shibboleth” phrase to identify them as being about the same topic...
... to aggregate blog posts from different blogs about a conference...the trick was that all the posts would use a particular text string or “shibboleth” phrase to identify them as being about the same topic...
What’s interesting about the idea of memes is not simply that they spread but that they spread by sticking in our heads. In other words, you shouldn’t need to do an elaborate copy and paste operation in order to propagate a meme; it should be inherent
What’s interesting about the idea of memes is not simply that they spread but that they spread by sticking in our heads. In other words, you shouldn’t need to do an elaborate copy and paste operation in order to propagate a meme; it should be inherent
S. Hakimov, G. Cheema, and R. Ewerth. Proceedings of the 16th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation, SemEval@NAACL 2022, Seattle, Washington, United States, July 14-15, 2022, page 756--760. Association for Computational Linguistics, (2022)
J. Bullinaria. Artificial Life XII Proceedings of the Twelfth
International Conference on the Synthesis and
Simulation of Living Systems, XII, Cambridge, Massachusetts; London, England, The MIT Press, (2010)ISBN 978-0-262-29075-3.
T. Deacon. Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2004), volume 3127 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 17-30. Springer, (2004)