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fashion.at - magazine search articles get the trendletter

Video: The Vienna Circle and Logical Positivism.
Thoughts from the Vienna Circle (founded by Moritz Schlick, professor at the University of Vienna) influence our lives still today. What scientists such as Rudolph Carnap, Otto Neurath, Kurt Gödel, or Ludwig Wittgenstein have studied about in the 20ies and 30ies, can be found - for example - on the internet and in museums: the mathematical logic and semantics at search engines and behavioural targeting for ad- and content delivery, the abstraction of popular culture at the style guides by Jason Salavon or the art on the visualisation of the 'universe' from statistical data at Aaron Koblin in the video below. Not to forget to mention in this context the thoughts about the usage of words and meaning of text such as William S. Burroughs worked about in his 'Cut Ups'.

Most of the members of the Vienna Circle had to flee during National Socialism from Austria. Many emigrated to US and taught on universities.

News from the Fashionoffice research desk According to Alexa.com, 40% of Fashionoffice's main domain traffic comes in October 2009 from Pakistan. Alexa's measurement method with tools installed on computers of users are a good mean to control the usage of a website in addition to Quantcast or Google Analytics (tags installed on Fashionoffice's webpages). For example: the abuse on domain level (contrary to a hacked server) can not be pursued by analyzing server data because domain abuse does not happen on the server.

The significant expansion of user traffic from Pakistan on the domain fashion.at (fashion.at and Fashionoffice.org are directed to the same webspace) was reported as suspected domain abuse on 30 October 2009 to Globat.com (Hosting Provider), Nic.at (Austrian Registry), and CERT.at (Computer Emergency Response Team Austria). On 3rd Nov, the Austrian CERT has affirmed that the technical premises for the measurements are reliable. The domain fashion.at is free of abuse. CERT mentioned some reasons for the domain's popularity boom in Pakistan...

The ‘Memorized-Data’-hypothesis Fashionoffice's statistics of the most viewed articles from July to September and high ranking keywords verify the hypothesis that memorized data gain more attention. Publishers and advertisers have to calculate the impact of editorial content as well as online-campaigns with a new factor: the unprogressive data...

Style guides made of the abstraction of popular culture The American artist Jason Salavon’s work ‘Field Guide to Style & Color’ (2007) and ‘374 Farben’ (2007) is on view on occasion of the exhibition 'Fenomen Ikea' from 6 Nov 2009 to 28 Feb 2010 at the MKG (Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe) in Hamburg (Germany). The title '374 Farben' means ‘374 Colors’; the artist has named it referring to Gerhard Richter’s abstract paintings ‘Color Charts’ of the late 60ies/early 70ies. For his analytic work, Salavon has simplified each page of the IKEA catalogue into pure color and arranged 374 pages into charts. The Columbus Museum of Art-documentary gives insight into the artist's analytic view on trends in popular culture.

“You in yourself have the whole of the universe. When I cut you up in a certain way, I cut up the universe.” William S. Burroughs Video: William S. Burroughs cuts pages of books, newspapers and brings the words into a new meaning; in the documentary Burroughs says: “When I cut you up in a certain way, I cut up the universe.” By cutting up texts, he creates gaps in time and space. William S. Burroughs’ experimental writings, the ‘Cut Ups’, are on screening during the exhibition ‘Rip It Up and Start Again’ about five artists with influences on the international art scene of the 1970s and 1980s (William S. Burroughs, Charles Henri Ford, Ray Johnson, Arthur Russell, Philippe Thomas) from 10 Oct to 22 Nov 2009 at the Kunstverein München. In official art historical discourses, however, they received little attention and remain virtually unrecognized to a wider public till today.

Video: In 'Flight Paths' Aaron Koblin visualizes the air traffic over North America. The statistical data are from the U.S. Federal aviation administration. Watch the video: Aaron Koblin, Google Creative Labs, speaking about art on statistics at the Creativity and Technology Conference CaT 2009 'The Wizard of Data Art'.

Fashionoffice.org, Media Information:

Nov 2009
40% of Fashionoffice's main domain traffic comes from Pakistan 
New statistics about Fashionoffice's traffic show that in October 2009 most of the fashion.at-users (approximately 40%) come from Pakistan. 

Oct 2009
PRO Academic Research

The NPO & NGO Fashionoffice.org opens its academic research program for supporting partners.


Oct 2009
The ‘Memorized-Data’-hypothesis

Fashionoffice's statistics of the most viewed articles from July to September and high ranking keywords verify the hypothesis that memorized data gain more attention. Publishers and advertisers have to calculate the impact of editorial content as well as online-campaigns with a new factor: the unprogressive data...

Sept 2009
The attention of web users
Fashionoffice has collected traffic data delivered by Google Analytics to find out how much influence the RSS Feeds, Trendletters, online and offline advertising etc. have on the virtual consciousness of web users....

Aug 2009
Measuring editorial content and its effects on search engines
Fashionoffice publishes the top ranking editorial pages on the magazine’s main URLs through July 2009. The statistical data are delivered by Google Analytics...

FASHIONOFFICE INSIGHT
by publisher Karin Sawetz

November
2009



Academic research has one great benefit
against commercial research: it surprises long-lasting!

Pro Academic Research!

Successful economies know that they benefit from independent research with a long-lasting effect that holds on over generations. The reason? That's easy: commercial research's aim is to boost the sales of one company immediately. Academic research investigates without the main aim to gain money (albeit, to earn money : academic research is no contradiction) in short time, but with the premier aim to deliver interesting results for the community; included are surprises.

Probably it's the 'surprise-factor' that makes academic research interesting for successful fashion companies such as H&M in Sweden or Benetton in Italy.

Simultaneously with the globalisation of the fashion business, academics became curious about the language of fashion and its messages. With the globalisation and consequently its interactive culture exchange, the development of trends and trend research has changed. Studying fashion became an academic discipline with research methods adapted from cultural studies and social sciences.

In 1994, the Italian manufacturer and store chain Benetton opened its communication research centre 'Fabrica' in Treviso. In Fabrica, talents can explore new ways of communication.

In 2006, the Stockholm University has established the Centre for Fashion Studies with the support of the Erling-Persson Family Foundation (H&M).

In late October 2009, the NPO & NGO Fashionoffice.org opened its academic research program for supporting partners. fashionoffice.org/press/
2009/mediainfo10-2009-2.htm

Trends of society reflected in luxury fashion The Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo presents new views on luxury in times of a challenged world (financial markets, ecology, etc.) from 31 October 2009 to 17 January 2010. Some 100 fashion creations from the collection of The Kyoto Costume Institute (KCI), dating from the 17th century to current times, document our changing times and values from the perspective of luxury, through fashion - a field that sensitively reflects human desire and the trends of society.


FASHIONOFFICE INSIGHT:

Oct 2009
Sept 2009
Aug 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
Apr 2009
Mar 2009
Feb 2009
Jan 2009
Dec 2008
Nov 2008
Oct 2008
Sept 2008
Aug 2008

Karin Sawetz is journalist, media researcher and fashion scientist (Mag. Dr. phil.). > sawetz.com



© since 1996 sawetz