Tag: Network

Mixed Media Essay Masterpost

Rebecca Bozin
Mitchell Pirera

Preface

Introduction

Montage

YouTube

Hypertext & Hypermedia

Professionalism

Conclusion

Referencing

Mixed Media Creative Critical Essay

 YouTube: The Ebb and Flow of the Sea of Video

Rebecca Bozin
Mitchell Pirera

Preface:
This Mixed Media Essay exploring the ways in which YouTube has influence both the production and viewing of video content has been presented as series of blog posts. In doing so we hope to reveal our abilities as Network literate content producers whilst focusing the actual content of the piece upon YouTube its and the discourse which surrounds the platform’s presentation of the video. Presented as individual blog posts this essay will explore a different subject, in doing so we allow the reader to traverse the essay at will. This allows the reader consume particular posts in isolation or as a part of a larger work. The feed nature of a blog in which time order dictates post’s position eludes to only one of many combinations the piece can be read in. The decision to present our essay is influenced both by the content of our writing and also the platform itself. Discussing YouTube in relation to hypertext is something that fits within the Media Factory platform on wordpress allowing peers to read and interact with hopefully discussing ideas they find relevant to their own research. The blogging platform allows for us to add categories and tags to the post, so that the post can exist as an identified group but aren’t isolated on an external web server and can be easily located. We have grouped all posts under the category of “YouTube: The Ebb and Flow of the Sea of Video” and then each post has individually tagged to reflect the content of the post. This tagging allows for people outside of the RMIT to find our assignment and for readers to discover other pieces of writing exploring the same subject.

Hypertext & Hypermedia

When discussing the ways in which hypermedia and hypertext writing has extended beyond the confines of purely writing text we can begin by looking at the writing of Ted Nelson, the man who coined both terms. In his discussion of Project Xandu system (an alternative to the World Wide Web) Nelson discusses the freedom the consumer has to navigate between documents and pieces of text to gain a greater understanding. Although his ideas a discussed in relation to his system which rivals that of the internet we interact with today, many of the ideas are transferable. Existing within a networked exists are collection of information is no longer a linear reading of a particular text. We know assimilate smaller pieces of information from a variety of sources of a variety of formats that coexist with video, images and music. Instead of gleaning our understanding from a single document before moving our attention to another we are more likely to shift between ‘series of text chunks connected by links which offer the reader different pathways (Nelson, 1992),’ ensuring our knowledge encapsulates countless viewpoints.

In this discussion it is important to note that although information is now presented in smaller packages of information linking to other packages which explore similar information, these packages exists within a stream of information. In relating ideas of hypertext to the YouTube platform it is clear that the accumulation of information is essential in it’s design and use. Within the platform of YouTube every video in itself is a packet of information, conversely each user is themselves another source of information. This information is then embedded in the stream of information that is YouTube. Like the ideas explored within Nelson’s writing the viewer is empowered and free to follow their interest whilst the producers themselves are also free to present their content in a way which ‘better reflect the structure of what [they} are writing about; and readers, choosing a pathway, may follow their interests or current line of thought in a way heretofore considered impossible (Nelson, 1992).’ The consumer is able to navigate content by following the suggested videos, consume videos within a predetermined playlists or by accessing the work of a particular user. Here they are able to tailor their experience to their needs typically consuming videos and content within a stream that is constructed both by the platform’s interface but also their own discretion. For the producer, they are able to shape their work by dividing content into an episodic nature, released periodically revealing the information over time. Alternatively the information presented within a YouTube video could be introductory with the body of work existing on an external platform. The networked nature of YouTube places both the consumer and producer in a heightened position of importance, the viewer has in themselves become an editor of their own narrative of information where they dictate the way in which they traverse this stream. The creator then also has a freedom in the ways in which they present the work within this stream, finding the ideal way in which content should presented as a reflection of the content that it contains.  

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