It was a technology that was supposed to bring peace love and understanding - but has the dream of
the web as a force for good died?
Not exact matches
Since 1998, the Los Angeles - based Electric Butterfly has been the creative
force behind many successful software,
web, multimedia, and marketing projects
for dozens of high profile clients, such
as Anchor Bay Entertainment, Barry Levinson,
Better Business Bureau, Capitol Records, Dreamworks SKG, Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, Gracie Jiu - Jitsu Academy, Guitar Player Magazine, Hallmark Channel, Nielsen EDI, New Line Cinema, Qello, Warner Bros..
Of my writings published online on this blog and The Huffington Post since last April 2010, the ones that have in any small way gone viral, very relatively speaking, were those in which I wrote fast enough about current hot news items or ones relating or engaging with artworld celebrities:
as one example, «My Whole Street is A Mosque,» written within 24 hours of the news cycle surrounding the proposal
for a Islamic cultural center near Ground Zero, was picked up by various
web aggregators; «Looking
for Art to Love, MoMA: A Tale of Two Egos» also did very
well because of my speculation about how or whether Marina Abramovic peed during her performance «The Artist is Present» at MoMA, a subject of much prurient curiosity (interesting speculation was illustrated online at New York Magazine and resolution of the mystery came in the Wall Street Journal's blog, «Speakeasy»); «Anselm Kiefer@Larry Gagosian: Last Century in Berlin,» where I tucked a critical response to Kiefer's recent show into a bit of reporting about how Gagosian Gallery was using the NYPD
as its private police
force, also created a spike on my Google analytics; more recently I could perceive a noticeable uptick in my readership
as well as in the number and enthusiasm of my Facebook friends» comments
for «Should we trust anyone under 30?
The policy statement «The Future of Pediatrics: Mental Health Competencies
for Pediatric Primary Care» outlined the skills pediatricians need in the area of mental health.37 The AAP Task
Force on Mental Health has developed materials to help pediatricians assess their current practice and readiness to change and to code accurately
for mental health screening and services.38, 39 The AAP also developed a
Web site providing resources and materials free of charge (http://www2.aap.org/commpeds/dochs/mentalhealth/KeyResources.html) 40
as well as «Addressing Mental Health Concerns in Primary Care: A Clinician's Toolkit,» 41 which is available
for a fee.