Week 2: Response to Pink, Sarah & Jennie Morgan. “Short-Term Ethnography: Intense Routes to Knowing.” – Hanna Rinderknecht-Mahaffy

In their article, while arguing for the benefits of short-term ethnographic studies, Pink and Morgan say that, “to achieve this we often need to intervene in peoples’ lives in new ways that are intensive, potentially intrusive, and involve asking what they might think are irrelevant questions. None of which is sustainable over longer periods of time” (353). This argument for the benefit of short-term ethnographic studies over long-term ones doesn’t make total sense to me, since it seems to me that people would still be reluctant to fully answer “intensive”, “intrusive” questions, even if it is only in the short term. While I do see some of the benefits of short-term ethnographic studies, I also questions whether it is possible to really get to the truth of peoples’ lives through short-term, intense interviews. The article also discusses the use of mediums such as video to collect more in-dept data on a short term basis. I think this method seems more likely to be  a successful technique, because it allows researchers to collect great amounts of data, and takes a less personal observer approach, which I would think leads to more objective results. 

In the section “The Ethnographic Place,” the authors argue that this place is a way in which to explain how “a range of different types, qualities and temporalities of things and persons come together asp art of the process of the making of ethnographic knowledge or ways of knowing” (354). I found this section of the text to be somewhat abstract and difficult to understand. While the authors do argue that The Ethnographic Place looks different for long term versus short term studies, the lack of examples of these differences makes their argument less clear and less convincing. 

Week 2 – Response to “The Medium is the Message” by Mcluhan – Milly Cai

As Mcluhan gives out his idea in his book that “the medium is the message”, he argues that the medium itself is more important than the so-called information it conveys, which means the effect of the medium itself should be taken seriously rather than the “content” it carries. He brings us a brand new view of the“medium” and “message” to our culture.

 According to the traditional dominant view, as Mcluhan describes, “A chicken is an egg’s idea for getting more eggs” (157). Nothing is meaningful beyond the medium — the message transferring machine. However, this discourse definitely fails to be true, as the examples of existing in the current age prove it well. The rapid revolution of technology nowadays refreshed the way and the container of the information quickly. “If it works, it’s obsolete” (159) The most popular medium (eg. smartphones, wi-fi…) even do not exist ten years ago. People’s habits and minds of receiving the information has been totally changed compared with before. This just fits Mcluhan’s thought that the medium itself is also a kind of message that greatly influences human society and our culture. This idea forces us to review the history of the medium culture and also its relationship to the general human history: ratio, as well as the internet, turn our reception of information from five senses into intangible waves and data; printing changes the weight of visual sense in the culture learning, as a result, several human philosophy theories have been gradually changed: individualism, nationalism…; TV provoked the revolution of sounds and touch…As for today, for instance, the AR and VR redefine the idea of reality and virtuality…The transition of the medium has always been closely tied with the way of human thinking. “Interaction”, “visualization”, “internet”… all of these new concepts burst in the new age of human civilization with the constant new inventions of the medium.

Though it’s not an easy topic to make clear the complex idea that how to analyze the effect that medium has on the culture transformation. It’s still necessary for us to think about what’s beyond these mediums and where will they lead us to.

Week 2: HTML Portfolio – Val Abbene

Website Link: http://imanas.shanghai.nyu.edu/~vra230/week-1/images/index.html

I think that I might have gotten a bit carried away with this assignment because it was very rewarding to experiment with the code and use problem solving skills to get it to work. This was my first time using HTML code so it was interesting to dive into online resources and figure out what worked and what didn’t. 

Week 2: Portfolio About Page – Samanta Shi

Here is the link to my index.html page: http://imanas.shanghai.nyu.edu/~sls741/portfolio, and here is a direct link to the about.html page http://imanas.shanghai.nyu.edu/~sls741/portfolio/about.html (which can also be accessed through the index.html page).

As someone who is very familiar with CSS, I struggled to create something without styling it. However, sometimes it is useful to think about the structure in more depth before styling it, so I appreciated that this exercise forced me into practicing a different approach.