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Lifelogging, a very detailed form of personal blogging


by Leigh Andrews on 7 January 2010

ImageBy Leigh Andrews

There’s a new form of blogging clogging up many RSS feeds – lifelogging. Instead of merely tracking the interesting happenings in your life, you track EVERY single detail, keeping a log of your life. This is like extreme journal-keeping, for the whole world to see. Early lifelog (or ‘flog’) equipment from the 1980s included the use of separate apparatus to send and receive the happenings they log. The DARPA Lifelog project, cancelled in 2004 due to privacy implications of the system, had more of a sociological and even anthropological bent, aiming to “trace the 'threads' of an individual's life in terms of events, states, and relationships."

Steve Mann is hailed as the first person to lifelog in the sense of capturing continuous physiological data, together with live first-person video from a wearable camera. His experiments with wearable computing equipment are said to have led to the rise of streaming video and webcam communications, such as Skype.

Blogger, Steve Rubel, comments that parents are now embarking in lifelogging for their new born babies. Wired magazine adds that many parents use their iPhones to access certain websites that let them track each nappy changes and hours slept by their infants. I wonder whether these ‘tracked’ kiddies will continue the trends, logging each kiss; each cup of coffee, each time they log on to Facebook? The mind boggles. :)

For more on lifelogging, click here.

What’s your opinion of lifelogging – entertaining or monotonous? Leave your comments below.




Comments:

com  qwerty said on 28 September 2010:
Ayikho lento eniyi programme apha
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