342 Personal Content Experience: Managing Digital Life in the Mobile Age totypes are there, but it will take us a couple years to hone those systems such that we can start to offer Internet services with them. Then it will be a few more years before that will happen in your pocket, in your mobile devices. But it will. Because it can. “If you are sitting on a pile of interesting content, go ahead, share it. If it happens to be yours, something you made, no problem. Just grab a Creative Commons licence and put it out there for others to enjoy. If you do not actually own the content, share it anyway – but in the form of links, ratings, recommendations, not the actual content. While you are at it, attach a micro-donation scheme to your metadata and wait for those e-coins to fi ll your bank account. Or, then not. Maybe you’ll be happy with that good old currency: fame. You will get that, because there’s room for everyone in the Long Tail. “Then if you are interested in a slow but sure income, get a jockey job! Go out there into the world, get among the people, record your context, and upload it into those data mining centres. They can use everything you upload there. Better yet, start annotating the world around you with semantics. Or if you are not a computer scientist, it’s okay just to tag it. The wisdom of the crowds will sort it out. “Now, if you all would be so kind and turn on your experience engines for a moment . . . thank you . . . I want to make a statement and be sure it gets recorded. So, here’s the deal. If the complete Semantic Web will not be in your pocket in two years – that’s by the end of 2014 – I will eat my hat. Promise. “So, that’s what I have to say. And one more thing to all those jockeys running on the streets – let’s be careful out there!” 8.7 References Gemmell J., Bell G. and Lueder R (2006) MyLifeBits: A Personal Database for Everything. ACM Communications, Volume. 49, Number 1, Jan., pp. 88– 95. ACM Press, New York, USA. Picard R.W. (1997) Affective Computing. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, USA. 275 p. Rhee Y., Kim J. and Chung A (2006) Your Phone Automatically Caches Your Life. ACM interactions, Volume XII, Number 4, Jul./Aug., pp. 42–44. Weiser M. and Brown J.S. (1996) “Designing Calm Technology”, PowerGrid Journal, v 1.01, http://powergrid.electriciti.com/1.01

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