Computing and Media Technologies begin as two separate entities
converging together overtime through, film, photography and binary
information. These technologies are developing through experimentation
and the format in which the cultural collective forms for the needs
of mass.
New media can be broken down into two distinct layers, Cultural
Layer and Computer layer. The understanding of the cultural layer is to be known
as the input information (user generated), whereas the computer
layer is generated from the input information through automation and
variations of the same. This transition from the user generated information to
the media form and the transcoding for computer or digital
information.
During the text of 'Language of New Media' as Manovich speaks of
transcoding he states that "computerization turns media into
computer data" (Manovich, 2002, p.63). The computer storing and re distributing the media that it has been given. "In new media lingo,
to “transcode” something is to translate it into another form."
(Manovich, 2002 p.64)
Transcoding doesn't happen without another 4 principles of new
media such as numerical representation, modulation, automation,
variability. Each of which cross one path or another. Computerization
requires numerical or coded information, binary or otherwise,
Modulation through mixed mediums being digitized, automation, the
process of creating the binary and coding into a visual or piece of
spectral information. Variability the changing of the medium e.g.
photograph into a video format. Although suggesting that all within
the cultural layer has to be of human origin Manovich states a
database "originally a computer technology to organize and
access data, is becoming a new cultural form of its own"
(Manovich, 2002 p.64), can be consequence of the principle
transcoding.
Manovich suggests that the "computer layer and media/culture
layer influence each other" (Manovich, 2002 p.64) rather than
have computer layer overpowering the cultural layer, they converge to
develop each other further. With the development of computer and
digital technology, new media continues to grow along side rather
than being the technology. Is it suggestible that transcoding is
changing the development of software and the skills required?
Bibliography
Manovich, L., The Language of New Media (Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 2001)
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