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  • ...complex techniques of cartography and GIS and places them within reach of users and developers.
    738 B (113 words) - 18:22, 31 July 2010
  • ...d updates are controlled by the user. Facebook’s architecture morphs its users into a social structure of consumption and eavesdropping. A good software p ...usic to reconnect themselves to place. This technosocial interaction helps users to transcend the heaviness of a fully rendered physical body stuck in space
    46 KB (7,981 words) - 16:24, 1 October 2011
  • ...the user. "Given the sometimes rocky road to love in the real world, many users find virtual partners even more desirable than the flesh-and-blood variety"
    4 KB (572 words) - 23:52, 30 June 2011
  • ...es like $10,000 prizes work once in a while, but tend to frighten off many users who would normally work towards a progressive goal along the lines of the p ...itter). The database/user experience must expand more from the side of the users and the system must be mutable enough for the to move with the space of the
    2 KB (365 words) - 22:23, 14 August 2010
  • ...g a period of flow characterized by multi-tabbing and multitasking online, users often have "insufficient control over their conscious thinking and memory, ...that might be considered as mild psychosis can easily occur with Internet users because there is often no material evidence to them. Many people hoard info
    3 KB (419 words) - 00:33, 19 December 2011
  • ...social invites. Social obligations and the need to save face prevent most users from unfriending those whose digital selves leave behind a trail of digital
    2 KB (274 words) - 22:41, 3 July 2011
  • ...ors can hook into in order to connect with other sensors, data sources and users. Though many at research institutions such as PARC and SRI expected ubiquit
    3 KB (449 words) - 20:48, 29 October 2011
  • ...units sold in Japan at an approximate price of $21. There are three modes users can pre-select on their device that reflect the mood they are currently in
    1 KB (178 words) - 17:23, 6 June 2011
  • ...ps into smaller sets of steps, anticipating how a certain user or group of users might approach things, and synthesizing these variables together is a proce
    4 KB (614 words) - 21:59, 16 December 2011
  • ...ists use artifacts to make statements about occupants of a physical space. Users of information resources leave behind data–based artifacts when they inte ...e posted to theSpark.com, a once popular hub ("over 4.5 million registered users!" says the website banner). [http://web.archive.org/web/20010330123058/www.
    25 KB (3,731 words) - 02:19, 21 January 2011
  • ...fy elements of social media practice that are persistent across platforms, users, and cultures. *There will be a gap between what users say they do and what they actually do as the investigation of privacy conce
    1 KB (204 words) - 04:08, 16 January 2011
  • ...y social networks have learned to quantify the digital footprints of their users and used them them to improve click-through rates on ads placed on their pa
    1 KB (200 words) - 23:47, 23 October 2011
  • ...rsquare awards points to users who check into a place, and more points for users who create a place. Creating a place is technically a data entry task, but
    4 KB (560 words) - 04:08, 15 August 2012
  • ...le hit China. Several of those who experienced the earthquake were Twitter users, including @dtan. When @dtan reported the earthquake, Tech Reporter Robert
    2 KB (285 words) - 06:02, 14 October 2011
  • For the most part, she says, computer users who have achieved this new way of knowing, "suspend disbelief and become ab ...st enjoy them. In fact, Turkle's approving description of the way computer users, "suspend disbelief," and are content to take what happens on the screen "a
    8 KB (1,459 words) - 23:55, 18 October 2010
  • ...ing environment, to describe their thoughts, frustrations, and excitement. Users' Jots are displayed on their Scratch user pages, so they can explore their ...erges if a sound is made at the same time. By touching the painting again, users can play back the sound. This creates a new level of accessibility for reco
    12 KB (1,841 words) - 21:09, 15 January 2011
  • ...k in the early '80s, it may have seemed a bit far-fetched to most computer users: "What? How can my interaction with a computer have anything to do with the
    2 KB (358 words) - 17:49, 27 April 2011
  • ...eated [http://www.alice.org/ Alice], a 3D programming environment allowing users to create animations for telling stories, playing interactive games, or cr
    2 KB (225 words) - 01:57, 21 November 2010
  • ...ned by a set of symbols that designate the cell phone user as a cell phone users. The phone is a symbol, as well as how the device is placed against the ear ...cterizes the hybridization of the human to a technosocial actor. Bluetooth users experience shorter distances between pure technology and pure 'humanness' w
    9 KB (1,388 words) - 19:19, 6 March 2011
  • ..., created by [[http://0009.org/blog Jason “Fekaylius” Wilson]] enables users to be ‘adorned’ with all sorts of different sounds, even while the phon
    2 KB (321 words) - 12:38, 21 November 2010
  • ...eresting enough to browse through and click on. Twitter basically sets new users as default "socially opted out" until they gather content to follow. When t
    4 KB (556 words) - 05:25, 8 August 2012
  • ...artificial intelligence. Through its news feed feature, it can tells other users what happened in the community. ...t does not create itself, but is continuously created by the user; without users, it would not qualify as any useful object, both to the user and to the adv
    10 KB (1,632 words) - 04:35, 23 November 2010
  • ...detect when two people are a certain distance of one another. When the two users are a certain distance apart, an SMS or Push notification message could sen
    4 KB (672 words) - 04:05, 28 December 2011
  • Users of social networks teleoperate each other's walls and social presences whil
    1 KB (195 words) - 21:27, 29 October 2011
  • ...telepresence robots remove this limitation because they allow their remote users to move their extended technosocial self to opportunities and spaces of act
    6 KB (938 words) - 20:27, 27 November 2010
  • ...xcessive updates afflict Twitter users, which often cannot follow too many users unless they craft a personal filtration system, or adopt a 3rd party tool s
    4 KB (596 words) - 21:54, 26 November 2010
  • ...and “Which Kind of Zombie Are You?” plagued the system and the system users. Each time a user logged in, the app requests inhibited normal user action ...orm and then the software developers choose the best ones with the highest users ratings to invite into the formal plugin repository. Inviting only the clea
    2 KB (287 words) - 23:41, 7 August 2012
  • ...has extended the capabilities of museums, increasing accessibility. Flick users have become curators. ...be searched and grouped together. The ease of use that Flickr creates for users when uploading and tagging files makes it an increasingly popular destinati
    12 KB (2,092 words) - 22:27, 26 November 2010
  • ...hese shorter URLs are a better fit for the 140-character cell that Twitter users live in.
    1 KB (250 words) - 23:38, 26 November 2010
  • ...2009, typographer Thomas Phinney gave a presentation to the Adobe InDesign Users Group in Seattle, Washington. ...d, updated version interacts with the entire software ecosystem and set of users is akin to a paleontological record, with Mac 0.63 Photoshop from Oct. 1988
    765 B (118 words) - 23:42, 26 November 2010
  • ...ther creators, in the case of the software designers, or the most prolific users of the system, such as Scoble on Twitter or Friendfeed. These are the local
    2 KB (436 words) - 23:57, 26 November 2010
  • ...various households and included two-way communication systems that allowed users of the system to choose images to be displayed on their television screens
    5 KB (710 words) - 02:48, 26 January 2024
  • "A user interface is the system by which people (users) interact with a machine. The user interface includes hardware (physical) a ...system, and/or Output, allowing the system to indicate the effects of the users' manipulation" [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_interface].
    3 KB (446 words) - 01:00, 27 November 2010
  • ...t as connected literature. Documents would remain accessible indefinitely. Users could create virtual copies of any document. Instead of having copyrighted
    2 KB (301 words) - 04:19, 26 March 2012
  • ...Moving to the 940 was a major breakthrough because it allows for multiple users. Then there was the freezing the code before the presentation. There was fr
    26 KB (4,479 words) - 23:32, 27 November 2010
  • ...cial object that enables an actor (user) to communicate with other actors (users) on a network (information exchange and connectivity) is an example of a lo
    1 KB (169 words) - 00:07, 24 July 2011
  • ...communication and commerce. A downloadable client software program allows users to interact with each other over the internet using ‘avatars’ which the
    5 KB (813 words) - 21:19, 31 August 2012
  • ...rnet for Me,” author Joanna Ng describes the Open Graph procedure as, “users integrat[ing] web pages themselves by using the Facebook’s “Like” but ...our counterpart is indeed learning. This really is allowing, “Facebook users [to] become kind of curators of the web, saying what they like and what the
    21 KB (3,196 words) - 18:43, 1 January 2011
  • ...acky, humorous and surprisingly human bot that has learnt from millions of users, in many styles and languages.
    2 KB (239 words) - 07:27, 27 December 2010
  • ...tends to be human by chiming into conversation periodically. Like many IRC users, Nerdle is a 'lurker', meaning the he is a passive reader and browser of co
    643 B (92 words) - 07:11, 27 December 2010
  • *[S&D] Mumford, L. "Tool-Users vs Homo Sapiens," and "The Megamachine." pp. 344-50.
    23 KB (3,023 words) - 01:51, 15 January 2011
  • ...f engagements with actual communities (in social housing, schools and with users of public spaces) to play with the emerging possibilities of public authori
    2 KB (320 words) - 19:43, 15 January 2011
  • ...and the reaches of the Milky Way, such maps are usually presumed—even by users who should know better—to be strictly scientific. Yet by drawing our atte
    2 KB (298 words) - 22:27, 15 January 2011
  • *72% of text message users and 79% of those who send text messages several times a day say they use th
    4 KB (734 words) - 17:21, 16 January 2011
  • ...s the discipline becomes more mainstream (in line with the great number of users adopting digital devices and practices) we will likely see one of these gui
    4 KB (616 words) - 23:42, 23 October 2011
  • ...n in-app purchase increases the layer of fractal aesthetic further inward. Users of these systems are more likely to fall prey to [[Future Runoff]].
    2 KB (294 words) - 05:26, 23 September 2012
  • ...various households and included two-way communication systems that allowed users of the system to choose images to be displayed on their television screens
    3 KB (384 words) - 04:11, 15 August 2012
  • ...often used by ux designers when trying to determine the different possible users and user scenarios of a site in hHCI research. they are also known as "pers
    610 B (94 words) - 03:49, 26 January 2011
  • The totem for many Internet users is cats <ref>http://www.rathergood.com/cats</ref>.
    573 B (88 words) - 21:12, 13 February 2011
  • everyday practices by its users, especially in the area of online with video game users who often appropriate the media in
    34 KB (5,305 words) - 19:16, 26 January 2011

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