(You normally shouldn't see this. Dang.) Cafe Scientifique Orlando is a gathering of scientifically-inclined people in Central Florida, who meet at a cafe, coffee house, pub, or nonacademic location to discuss events and ideas in the world of science. We enjoy beer and wine, and we use plain language to talk about extraordinary ideas.

Digital Ethnography

Full Title: 
The Art and Science of Digital Ethnography
Presenter: 
Underberg, Natalie
When: 
Wednesday, 1 August 2012 - 7:00pm - 8:30pm
Venue: 
Taste
Where: 
Taste
Street:
717 W. Smith Street
City:
Orlando
,
Province:
Florida
Postal Code:
32804
Country:
United States

Digital ethnography can be understood as a method for representing real-life cultures through storytelling in digital media. This kind of computer-based storytelling lets audiences to go beyond absorbing facts and allows for immersion in the experience of another culture. This talk explores the extraordinary potential for enrichment offered by technological resources, and reminds us that the study of culture is as much about affective traits of feeling and sensing as it is about cognition—an approach facilitated (not hindered) by the digital age.

Dr. Natalie Underberg is an Associate Professor of Digital Media and Folklore in the UCF School of Visual Arts and Design. She has established a reputation as a leader in the application of digital media to ethnographic studies, focusing on the digital adaptation of cultural materials and the social impact of new technologies, with the goal of responsibly integrating technology into cultural representations. In 2007, she founded and became Director of the Digital Ethnography Lab Currently, she is working with colleagues to develop a model for Collaborative Interactive Media Design based on the principles of Digital Ethnography, Visual Language, and Human-Computer Interaction. Her ethnographic focus is on Peruvian, Puerto Rican and African-American folklore and cultural heritage in Florida and Latin America. Dr. Underberg has published in a wide range of journals including: American Folklore, Visual Anthropology Review and International Digital Media Arts Journal.  Forthcoming in 2013 is a book on Digital Ethnography. Her research has been funded by many organizations: Florida Humanities Council, Florida Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs and the National Endowment for the Humanities. She is the past-President of the Florida Folklore Society and active in many professional organizations. At the national level, she served as a Library of Congress Veterans History Project workshop facilitator. She is a sought after speaker and teacher in the US and internationally.

Future Café Scientifique Events

Our next scheduled topic is…

Space-Faring Civilization

Full Title: 
The Urgent Need to Become a Space-Faring Civilization
Presenter: 
Metzger, Philip T.
When: 
Wednesday, 5 June 2013 - 7:00pm - 8:30pm
Venue: 
Taste
Where: 
Taste
Street:
717 W. Smith Street
City:
Orlando
,
Province:
Florida
Postal Code:
32804
Country:
United States

Kardeshev classified civilizations in terms of energy: a Type-I civilization is one that uses all the energy of a single planet, a Type-II uses all the energy of a single solar system, and a Type-III uses all the energy of a single galaxy. These energy levels represent barriers in the sense that we cannot grow a civilization beyond those levels unless we make radical changes in the very nature of the civilization. For example, at the limit of a Type-I civilization, we suddenly discover that we must bring the rest of the solar system into our economic sphere. Unfortunately, the distances between the space resources and the Earth are vast, the transportation costs are high, the environment is harsh for human bodies, and the technologies that are needed to accomplish this have not been developed for any prior economic purpose. Compared to expanding across the globe, even across the oceans, it is much more difficult to expand across interplanetary space. Thus, the Kardeshev classification represents natural barriers that we will hit, waypoints in civilization that require unusual sacrifices, new investments, and extraordinary political will. Business-as-usual driven by the familiar forces of economics will not work — by definition — when we reach one of these barriers. This puts humanity’s global challenges into the correct historic perspective as well as suggesting how they must be addressed. We are presently concerned about global warming, peak oil, resource depletion in general, overpopulation, resource wars, and so on. Rather than thinking of these as separate problems, we should recognize them as elements of the first Kardeshev barrier. If we want to address any of these global challenges effectively, we need to recognize them for what they are and address the basic problem behind them. We need to bring the solar system into Earth’s economic sphere. This talk will discuss the challenges and provide a strategy for getting over the first barrier affordably within our generation. This strategy incorporates the OASIS concept developed by this year’s International Space University plus the Affordable Rapid Bootstrapping concept for lunar and asteroid industry, developed by the speaker.

Philip T. Metzger, Ph.D. works at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center as the lead research physicist and founder of the Granular Mechanics and Regolith Operations (GMRO) Lab, part of the Surface Systems Swamp Works.

Phil has worked in the space program since 1985. He was a part of the Space Shuttle launch team and later with the International Space Station Program testing and assembling spaceflight hardware. For the past 10 years, he has performed research and technology development for solar system exploration (Moon, Mars, asteroids, etc.).

He earned a B.S.E.(electrical engineering) from Auburn University in 1985, a M.S. in physics from the University of Central Florida in 2000, and a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Central Florida in 2005. His doctoral work focused on the theoretical statistical mechanics of granular materials with applications to the mechanics of lunar and planetary soils.

…and after that,

Science Experiments in Microgravity 11 June, 2013 - 18:00 downtown library
(physics topic TBA) 9 July, 2013 - 18:00 downtown library
More on Nanotechnology 7 August, 2013 - 19:00 Taste

Past Café Scientifique Events

Skulls of Our Ancestors 14 May, 2013 - 18:00 downtown library
After the Maya Apocalypse 1 May, 2013 - 19:00 Taste
Nanotechnology Is Already Here 3 April, 2013 - 19:00 Taste
New National Wildlife Refuge 6 March, 2013 - 19:00 Taste
Teamwork 6 February, 2013 - 19:00 Taste
Asteroids, Water, and Life on Earth 9 January, 2013 - 19:00 Taste
Poor and Homeless in Florida 5 December, 2012 - 19:00 Taste
Seeing cancer before it's too late 7 November, 2012 - 19:00 Taste
Marine Ecosystems In Peril 3 October, 2012 - 19:00 Taste
A Theory of Everything 5 September, 2012 - 19:00 Taste
Digital Ethnography 1 August, 2012 - 19:00 Taste
Mastodons in Daytona 6 June, 2012 - 19:00 Taste

Topics We'd Love to See

What are some topics you’d like to have? Tell us in your comments below. See our full schedule to know what we’ve had and plan to have, before adding something new.

Additionally, if you are a scientific expert interested in presenting a topic, please email us.

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