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- Daily_Me abstract "The Daily Me is a term popularized by MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte to describe a virtual daily newspaper customized for an individual's tastes. Negroponte discusses it in his 1995 book, Being Digital, referencing a project under way at the media lab, Fishwrap. Designed by Pascal Chesnais and Walter Bender and implemented by media lab students, the system allowed a greater deal of customization than commercially available systems in 1997.Fred Hapgood, in a 1995 article in Wired credited the concept and phrase to Negroponte's thinking in the 1970s.In 2005, Eduardo Hauser, a Venezuelan entrepreneur based in Florida, founded DailyMe, Inc., and developed a proprietary, patent-pending application to create personalized newspapers and have them automatically delivered to each user's printer, fax machine, or computer.In Steven Johnson's book Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software concerning emergent properties, Johnson addresses some of Negroponte's fears with homeostasis and feedback systems in mind. He argues that a newspaper tailored to the tastes of a person on a given day will lead to too much positive feedback in that direction, and people's choices for one day would permanently affect their viewings for the rest of their lives. Since the book's release, in 2001, many customer-oriented websites, such as Amazon.com and Half.com, regularly utilize a customer's past views and purchases to determine what merchandise they believe will entice the customer's interest.The term has also been associated with the phenomenon of individuals customizing and personalizing their news feeds, resulting in their being exposed only to content they are already inclined to agree with. The Daily Me can thus be a critical component of the \"echo chamber\" effect, defined in an article in Salon by David Weinberger as \"those Internet spaces where like-minded people listen only to those people who already agree with them.\"Cass Sunstein, a law professor at the University of Chicago, analyzes the implications of the Daily Me in his book Republic.com. Daily me and echo chambers have been suggested as one of the extremes of society induced by technology, the other being Tyranny of the majority.Zite is a popular application that is similar to the Daily Me concept. It is available on iOS, Android, and Windows Phone. FeedSavvy.com is a similar service available on the web for PC and Mac users. noosfeer is addressing this issue by letting the users explore subjects with a wider range in the results, avoiding the filter bubble effect.".
- Daily_Me wikiPageExternalLink 19kristof.html?ref=opinion.
- Daily_Me wikiPageExternalLink noosfeer.com.
- Daily_Me wikiPageExternalLink www.dailyme.com.
- Daily_Me wikiPageExternalLink www.feedsavvy.com.
- Daily_Me wikiPageExternalLink www.zite.com.
- Daily_Me wikiPageID "472012".
- Daily_Me wikiPageLength "4634".
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- Daily_Me wikiPageRevisionID "612491286".
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Amazon.com.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Android_(operating_system).
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Being_Digital.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Cass_Sunstein.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Category:News_aggregators.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Category:Words_coined_in_the_1990s.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Collaborative_filtering.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink David_Weinberger.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Echo_chamber_(media).
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Emergence.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Emergence:_The_Connected_Lives_of_Ants,_Brains,_Cities,_and_Software.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Filter_bubble.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Findory.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Flipboard.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Fred_Hapgood.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Half.com.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink IOS.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink MIT_Media_Lab.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Nicholas_Negroponte.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Noosfeer.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Pascal_Chesnais.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Positive_feedback.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Recommender_system.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Salon_(website).
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Steven_Johnson_(author).
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Tyranny_of_the_majority.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Chicago.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Windows_Phone.
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLink Wired_(magazine).
- Daily_Me wikiPageWikiLinkText "Daily Me".
- Daily_Me wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Dmoz.
- Daily_Me subject Category:News_aggregators.
- Daily_Me subject Category:Words_coined_in_the_1990s.
- Daily_Me hypernym Term.
- Daily_Me type Aggregator.
- Daily_Me comment "The Daily Me is a term popularized by MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte to describe a virtual daily newspaper customized for an individual's tastes. Negroponte discusses it in his 1995 book, Being Digital, referencing a project under way at the media lab, Fishwrap.".
- Daily_Me label "Daily Me".
- Daily_Me sameAs Q5209303.
- Daily_Me sameAs Daily_Me.
- Daily_Me sameAs Daily_Me.
- Daily_Me sameAs m.02dlpn.
- Daily_Me sameAs Q5209303.
- Daily_Me wasDerivedFrom Daily_Me?oldid=612491286.
- Daily_Me isPrimaryTopicOf Daily_Me.