Tag Archives: Wiley

Wikipedia Headings as a Cross-Temporal Data Set

Many Wikpedia entries contain headings and sub-headings that have temporal connotations. Due to the 2.0 and cross-temporal character of Wikipedia, these headings and sub-headings are ripe for data mining. The question I have is what can we learn from these type of datasets about how humans understand time.

Yeah, yeah, time is a social construct. So is everything. The point is to understand that social construct and how it is constructed. Wikipedia offers a great way of doing so, because the temporal markers are adjusted as extra-Wikipedia time marches. In other words, even as we grow older at a “constant” rate, the temporal markers for a Wikipedia adjust and re-adjust. For example, the Wikipedia article about Wiley has several headings include:
* 1997-2003: Early Years
* 2004-2010: Solo Success
* 2011-present: Recent Work

It’s not difficult to imagine how these three breakdowns of the temporal landscape of his career has evolved since his debut (i.e., it is unlikely that these headings appeared as soon as he made it). So how do these headings evolve over time and what events lead us to impose such periods?

I don’t have an answer, but I sure would like the answer.

Three Mixes of Three (or Two)

I hit a period of listening to some incredible singles and wanted to share them with friends, so I whipped together a couple of elementary mixes of the songs. The tracks aren’t as fresh since I’ve sat on them for a minute, but they are still excellent (and one or two are old but I just keep digging them). Here they are:

He Gets the Women (15MB)
(1) Hazard – Machete
(2) Mistabishi – No Matter What (Jason’s Re-Edit)
(3) Unknown (from the 50 minute block of the 20080524 Futuredub Radio One-Year Anniversary Show with FSTZ)

It’s Sometimes Easy (9MB)
(1) Trim – Liar Liar (Part 1)
(2) Soulja Boy – Booty Meat (Jason’s Re-Edit)
(3) Wiley – Gangster

Prayers for Hoods (12MB)
(1) J. Rawls and Middle Child – Useless
(2) Roger Robinson and Charlie Dark – Prayers for Angry Young Men