Un désœuvré motivé a créé un historique visuel des couleurs des crayons crayola à travers les âge, des 8 couleurs du début aux 120 d’aujourd’hui. ça donne ça :
Mois : janvier 2010
Vous voulez vous sentir vieux? (Oui je sais c’est post traumatique au passage de la trentaine…) Une étude américaine d’envergure montre que les jeunes (8-18 ans) passent beaucoup de temps à ingérer/gérer des médias. Avec un recul étonnant de la télé et une augmentation du… multitasking! A priori un ado "consomme" actuellement 11h de média dans 7h30 de temps par jour. (cela inclu les média écrans, audios, ou mobiles). Et dire qu’étant jeune c’était "seulement" pas loin de 3h de télé par jour.
Tout est dans le titre…
Un bon jeu de psychopathe : First-Person Tetris
Le gouvernement chinois a tenté de pirater google en décembre dernier pour identifier des dissidents au régime…
La prochaine évolution industrielle
Ma prévision pour la décennie 2010
Les années 90 ont transformé nos vies avec l’apparition du Web et du courriel.
Les années 2000 l’ont fait à nouveau avec l’apparition des réseaux sociaux.
À mon avis, les années 2010 vont complètement changer la façon dont nous consommons l’information, notamment grâce au papiel (papier électronique).
Comme je le disais ici et ici, le papiel est sur le point de connaître les conditions de rupture technologiques qui vont rendre le papier hors de prix (et complètement dépassé).
Ça, c’est pour l’aspect technologique. Ce que peu de gens comprennent, c’est que ce nouveau support va devenir un nouveau média en soi.
Quand la télé est arrivée dans les foyers, les émissions de l’époque n’étaient que du contenu radio et des pièces de théâtre mis à l’écran. Avec le temps, les artisans de la télé ont appris à utiliser ce nouveau média et, petit à petit, à exploiter son potentiel.
Dans ce billet, je propose une vidéo qui donne un aperçu de ce à quoi pourra ressembler le contenu sur du papiel. Mais ce n’est encore là qu’un portrait incomplet. Je crois sincèrement que dans 10 ans, notre manière de lire et de consommer de l’information sera transformée autant que les réseaux sociaux ont influencé notre manière de communiquer entre nous dans les années 2000.
Nous assisterons, dans ces 1o prochaines années, à la naissance d’un nouveau média, avide de contenu de toute sorte, sans frontière géographique, sans délais de publication, portatif, convergent entre l’audio, la vidéo, l’écrit et l’animation.
Ce n’est pas seulement un nouveau gadget. Le papiel sera un nouvel outil de la démocratie.
en anglais par la BBC…
BBC – Magazine Monitor: 100 things we didn’t know last year
The most interesting and unexpected facts can emerge from the daily news stories and the Magazine documents some of them in its weekly feature, 10 things we didn’t know last week. To kick off 2010, here’s an almanac of the best from the past year.
1. Using both hands to read Braille achieves an average speed of 115 words a minute, compared with 250 words a minute for sighted reading.
More details
2. Gold medal winner Chris Hoy was inspired to cycle by ET.
More details
3. Moby is related to novelist Herman Melville and was named after his most famous creation.
More details
4. You can hiccup while asleep.
More details
5. Countdown is French.
More details
6. John the Good was bad and William the Bad was good.
More details
7. In camel racing the jockeys are electronic robots.
More details
8. The bubonic plague still exists.
More details
9. Indonesia is the world’s largest exporter of edible frogs.
More details
10. The brain chemical serotonin causes locusts to swarm.
More details
11. Naked rambling is legal in Switzerland.
More details
12. Facebook was originally called "The facebook".
More details
13. Being born with additional digits (fingers/toes) is called being polydactyl.
More details
14. The famous "Keep Calm and Carry On" poster was never actually used during World War II.
More details
15. The Channel between Dover and Calais froze over in 1673.
More details
16. King Henry VIII was a soppy romantic.
More details
17. You can safely eat more than three eggs a week.
More details
18. Paraskavedekatriaphobia is the fear of Friday the 13th.
19. Elephants kiss.
More details
20. Grizzly bears hate getting their ears wet.
More details
21. There are two types of intelligence.
More details
22. Nicolas Sarkozy collects stamps.
More details
23. The average number of friends is 150.
More details
24. Barbie dumped Ken.
More details
25. Monkeys floss.
More details
26. Holding your hands up on a rollercoaster stretches the torso, enhancing the physical sensations.
More details
27. ‘YR’ was an abbreviation for "your" in the 17th and 18th Century too.
More details
28. Mining output fell more in the periods before and after Mrs Thatcher than during her time as prime minister.
More details
29. Parts of cremated bodies are recycled.
More details
30. A broken heart is known as Takotsubo cardiomyopathy and it can be cured.
More details
31. Britney Spears’s family comes from Tottenham in north London.
More details
32. There are 19 countries in the G20.
More details
33. The song Agadoo by Black Lace is originally French.
More details
34. Breaking wind is a bookable offence in football.
More details
35. Britain pays an annual sum to Ireland to cover healthcare costs of Irish workers who have returned home.
More details
36. Squatters take over islands, as well as homes.
More details
37. Being sorry originally meant to be distressed and sad.
More details
38. Paper can be made from wombat excrement.
More details
39. Five trees make an orchard.
More details
40. Wine varies in taste from day to day.
More details
41. Many mosques in Mecca point the wrong way for prayers.
More details
42. An outbreak of swine flu in 1976 killed one person but a vaccine to combat it killed 25.
More details
43. Britain once sent an envoy with a quadruple-barrelled name to Moscow – Admiral Sir Reginald Aylmer Ranfurley Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax.
More details
44. Youth hostelling was invented in Germany in 1912.
More details
45. A tribe in Bolivia has a festival of violence to settle disputes.
More details
46. Franco had one testicle.
More details
47. Britain had animal welfare laws before it had child welfare laws.
More details
48. The man who was the voice of Mickey Mouse was married to the woman who did Minnie’s.
More details
49. Stabbing in the buttocks has its own verb in Roman dialect.
More details
50. The Apprentice losers’ café featured in Z-Cars.
More details
51. In the 1970 US Census, the number of people who said they were aged over 100 was about 22 times the true number.
More details
52. Canada used to border Zimbabwe.
More details
53. More than half of all Patels in the UK are married to people born Patel.
More details
54. Streetlights cause problems for bats.
More details
55. Scotland has the lowest age for criminal responsibility in Europe.
More details
56. Buddhist monks sleep upright.
More details
57. There is a long tradition of "medals of dishonour".
More details
58. Chilli can be used as a weapon in crowd control.
More details
59. Fred Perry was also table tennis world champion.
More details
60. The keffiyeh, a chequered scarf worn mostly by Arab men, and made famous by Yasser Arafat, is now mostly made in China.
More details
61. Trousers used to be called unmentionables.
More details
62. The best place to put a wind turbine is in Orkney.
More details
63. Brahms liked his audience to clap in between movements.
More details
64. The best Italian saffron is made from crocus flowers picked at dawn.
More details
65. It’s always "esq" and never "esquire" as a written honorific.
More details
66. Football score announcer James Alexander Gordon suffered from slurred speech as a child.
More details
67. A third of England’s coastline is inaccessible.
More details
68. Bees warn other bees about flowers where dangers can be expected.
More details
69. Men At Work’s Down Under was inspired by Dame Edna’s nephew.
More details
70. Bristol is the fourth most visited city in England.
More details
71. You’re as likely to be hit by lightning as killed by a mentally ill person.
More details
72. Only about one or two in 200 people with autism have a savant talent, or exceptional ability.
More details
73. North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il has a water slide in his garden.
More details
74. Emoticons in the East are the right way up (^_^).
More details
75. The UK population grew more in 2008 than at any time since 1962.
More details
76. The village of Cambourne, in Cambridgeshire, has a higher birth rate than India and China.
More details
77. The crease under your buttocks is called the gluteal fold.
More details
78. Nasa gave moon rocks to more than 100 countries following lunar missions in the 1970s.
More details
79. Married couples used to always sleep apart.
More details
80. Everyone once used the left-hand side of the road.
More details
81. There are so few redheads in Mexico they often greet each other in the street.
More details
82. Sportswear firms Adidas and Puma have had a 60-year feud.
More details
83. All British industrial action ballots must be by post, except for workers at sea.
More details
84. Banana skins can take two years to biodegrade.
More details
85. The only woman ever in the French Foreign Legion was British.
More details
86. Ken Livingstone was twice rejected for a cameo in EastEnders.
More details
87. Homes are 4C warmer, on average, than 50 years ago.
More details
88. In the early days of barcodes, there was a plan for round ones.
More details
89. Male life expectancy in the UK goes up by about three months every year.
More details
90. The flash on David Bowie’s Aladdin Sane album cover was inspired by the logo from a rice cooker.
More details
91. Boyzone sold more singles than Take That in the 1990s.
More details
92. Morecambe and Wise nearly split up, before they had even got on television.
More details
93. William Pitt’s dying words were about House of Commons catering.
More details
94. Bagged salad is photographed 4,000 times a second.
More details
95. The city of Bath, in Somerset, was referred to as "The Bath" until the 19th Century.
More details
96. Tattoos can be done with a person’s ashes.
More details
97. The BBC rejected Sesame Street in 1971 because it was "too authoritarian".
More details
98. French babies cry with an accent.
More details
99. Travelling in a "road train" can cut fuel consumption by 20%.
More details
100. Teeth grinding is known as bruxism.