Tag Archives: 2013

The 2013 PTJ Tech Term of the Year

This week we present our tech term of the year for 2013. I know most news sites and blogs like to do these, oh I don’t know, right around Halloween, but in all fairness we here at the greatest geek-culture and technology podcast the galaxy has ever SEEN…. um, I’m sorry, HEARD (Trademark Pending) made the decision to wait until the year was actually over before bestowing this most prestigious honor. What if there was a late surge in some previously obscure tech term that suddenly became as ubiquitous as Miley Cyrus or the Harlem Shake? We’d be left with a carton of egg on our face now wouldn’t we.

This wasn’t an easy decision to make as there were some great contenders out there but in the end we realized there was only one tech term that dwarfed all of the others. Hey, if it’s good enough for The Oxford Dictionaries Online to choose as their word of the year, then it’s good enough for us! Although, I must point out that there is a difference between the O.D.O. and the the Oxford English Dictionary. The O.D.O. focuses on current English and includes modern meanings and uses of words. The O.E.D. is a historical dictionary and it forms a record of all the core words and meanings in English over more than 1,000 years, from Old English to the present day. I’m not just throwing words at you, that comes straight from the word nerds at Oxford.

“Selfie” is the 2013 Pop Tech Jam Tech Term of the Year!

They define the newly minted informal noun as “a photograph that one has taken of oneself, typically one taken with a smartphone or webcam and uploaded to a social media website”

According to The New Zealand Herald the first confirmed recorded use of the word selfie is from 2002, in a photo and report of a drunken party posted to an Online forum but self-portraits have been around since well — forever.

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Not surprisingly, Hollywood celebrities and pop-singers are some the most devoted selfie artists out there but one look at Instagram clearly shows that many of us in the hoi polloi can shamelessly self promote with the best of them.

In an opinion piece for The New York Times actor, poet, artist, director, screenwriter, producer, teacher, author and, apparently, selfie-expert, James Franco gets to the heart of what the selfie phenomenon is all about. Beyond the vanity, the narcissism and the self-involvement Mr. Franco states, “attention is power.  And if you are someone people are interested in, then the selfie provides something very powerful, from the most privileged perspective possible.”

Now if you’ll excuse me, El Kaiser is not getting enough attention, and is not nearly powerful enough, so he must get in a few minutes of duck-face practice before the Polar Vortex freezes his lips off.

PTJ 76: The Desolation of El Kaiser

This week J.D. helps us deal with holiday travel by sharing tips on making the experience a little easier and Pedro helps us stuff our stockings — and our ears — with a review of two new earphones from RBH Sound and Bowers & Wilkins. In the news Twitter changes its blocking policy but has an immediate change of heart; Facebook rolls out auto-play video ads; Samsung gets set to release its own Android gamepad; Apple announces its iTunes year-end Top Ten; The Museum of Science Fiction is set to open in 2017; and Flash Gordon could be headed for a serious big-screen remake.

PTJ 76 News: Flash Back

Twitter briefly changed its blocking policy last week but reversed the decision after a whopping backlash. The change — which critics say allowed stalkers and abusers access to the posts of people who had blocked them instead of making those posts invisible — led to a huge public outcry from people who favored the old blocking function. Twitter reversed course and announced the move in a blog post titled “Reverting the changes to block functionality.”

Meanwhile, Facebook is starting to roll out auto-play video ads into user news feeds as it describes in its own blog post titled, “Testing a New Way for Marketers to Tell Stories in News Feed.” Also looking for the story: Researchers at Facebook and Carnegie-Mellon University who released a study this week looking at self-censorship on the Social Network. (While a story that appeared about the study on Slate.com implied Facebook reportedly tracking what you type on the site even if you don’t post it, other more technically oriented sites have read more closely and debunked some of the points.) Speaking of Facebook, the Wall Street Journal has an article this week about how the company and other technology Bigfoots like Google and Amazon are trying to take control over more Internet backbone and infrastructure.

Moving on to lighter fare, Samsung is releasing its own Android gamepad controller for its Galaxy line of phones and Apple announced its 2013 year-end Top Ten charts from the iTunes and App Stores. (For those looking for a new browser for the iPad, Opera has just released an update for its Coast browser.)

If you have an HP Chromebook 11, be aware that Google and HP are recalling the power adapter for the laptop due to safety issues; contact Google for a replacement. Over Microsoft way, the Verge site reports that the upcoming Windows Phone 8.1 software will include a Siri/Google Now-like personal assistant and an Android/iOS-like Notifications center for alerts and messages.

imageThe Museum of Science Fiction is expected to open in our nation’s capital in 2017 and a promo video for the project promises robots, aliens and full-size space vehicles — and the latest technology to explore the offerings. In the Department of Future Stuff, Flash Gordon (that the 1930s space adventurer who got that Queen-fueled big-screen remake in 1980), could be headed for a serious remake as 20th Century Fox plans to adapt the Mark Millar Starlight graphic novel for film. Also, the Las Vegas Guardian Express newspaper reports that Disney CFO Jay Rasulo told an investor’s conference that a Han Solo origin film is in the works for 2016, with similar films exploring the backgrounds of Yoda and Boba Fett in 2018 and 2020.

And finally, as this is our last Pop Tech Jam news summary of 2013, it’s time to take a look back at the year through Google Search, as the Big G has just released its list of top 10 global trending searches of 2013. The Harlem Shake — it seems so long ago now, doesn’t it?