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The InfoSphere:

Communication Infrastructure

 

  LECTURE  

The InfoSphere

embedded uTube Lecture-clips:


  Entering the infosphere* (Michael VlahosJournal of International AffairsNew York: Spring 1998.Vol.51, Iss. 2;  pg. 497, 29 pgs): "The Infosphere is shorthand for the fusion of all the world's communications networks, databases and sources of information into a vast, intertwined and heterogeneous tapestry of electronic interchange. The global fusion of networks changes the character of each individual network. Networks will no longer serve simply as the medium through which people in different places can communicate... The global fusion of networks creates a... place in which people can gather and do business...The Infosphere has the potential to gather all people and all knowledge together in one place. This is what makes the Infosphere so compelling. The place itself is not "real," meaning, it is not part of our normal, physical world. Operating in the Infosphere is disconcerting today, but people accept its alien environment because it offers tremendous advantages....Business transactions and financial exchange are already migrating to the Infosphere, which is rapidly becoming the new global marketplace."

  1. Digital Outlook Report 2009 (Razorfish) "Clients are desperately dealing with a laundry list of challenges: A sinking economy. A connected, in-control consumer. A drive for lower costs. The disruption of traditional media channels. An expansion of global competition. The list is long and growing. In this environment, clients need ideas that will transform their business. In the past, when our only tool was paid media, it was  virtually impossible to develop an idea that could change a client’s fundamental competitive position. Now, digital has the potential to re-imagine a consumer connection, or reinvent a business model. And we have a long list of consumer touchpoints with which to work, starting with the Web, then expanding to mobile applications, social, gaming, viral, digital-out-of-home, widgets, gadgets and more. Now, anything is possible..."

In the past few decades cataclysmic changes in the nature and capabilities of communication channels have most certainly & profoundly impacted society in general and marketing in particular.

   And with technological convergence corporate convergence wasn't far behind...

    'Until the 1980s, media systems were generally national in scope...and ...domestically owned and regulated. But "beginning in the 1980s ...pressure to deregulate and privatize media & communication systems coincided with new satellite and digital technologies, The result:  by the end of the 1990's  - nine media-conglomerates dominated the media world: AOL-Time Warner, Disney, Bertelsmann, Viacom, News Corporation, TCI, General Electric, Sony  and Seagram (Robert W. McChesney,  The Global Media Giants)

    New technologies, --new capacities & capabilities-- digitalization, demassification, global media & corporate conglomerates.... As the mass media disintegrates ~ interactive media integrates. Assuming  sufficient time has elapsed -- and we are immune from MEDIA MYOPIA -- the ramifications of the emerging Infosphere are clear:

 

Focus:

 Issues/ Concerns:

 Key Concepts & Related Issues:

Communication  Nature & Capabilities of Media Channels

We are the web...

The Semantic Web  

Weaving the Semantic Web

Tim Berners Lee on the Semantic Web

mCommerce  

Marketing Promotion & Communication Strategies

Enterprise Blogs

Does Your Small Business Need a Blog?

The business case for enterprise blogs

See the 25 best blogs of 2009.

 

TWITTER

Twitter101

10 Ways Twitter Will Change American Business


 This Week's Assignment #3:

Congratulations! You have been appointed Director of  Marketing Communication for your company. As your 1st order of business -- you need to draft a memorandum that: 1) Outlines your philosophy & approach to  advertising & promotion-- in light of the realities of the new media environment. And, 2) specifies what mistakes to avoid & what principles & practices to employ in message & media-vehicle strategies....


  : "YouTube to YouNiversity"

Optional/suggested viewing  ~1 hour lecture (2007)  by Henry Jenkins - the founder and director of the Comparative Media Studies Program at MIT,
Abstract: For those of you keeping score, the dotcom era has ended. The age of social networks and mobile media has emerged from its ashes. We are no longer talking about a digital revolution, which envisioned new media displacing the old. We are now talking about media convergence, where old and new media interact in ever more complex ways. We are no longer talking about interactive media technologies; we are talking about participatory culture.
This presentation will address the terms of our participation in this new convergence culture, which are being shaped by governmental policies and court decisions but also by choices being made both in corporate boardrooms and in teenager's bedrooms. As fans, gamers, and bloggers, we are learning new ways to use media to serve our own ends and we are discovering new ways to pool our knowledge and work collaboratively to solve puzzles and master complex texts. What we are learning as consumers has the potential to change how we think as citizens. And these new social skills and cultural competencies have implications as well for the future of education


 

Syllabus Curre

nt

Issues

in

Mark

eting

Seminar

 

Readings & Assignments    

Intro NewE   Tech     Info     Socio Psycho   Bio/Pwr Future