"While visiting my local health food store, I noticed how many non-food products are labeled "All-Natural." Toothpaste. Dog biscuits. Deodorants. Some of them, like those Carrot-Honey-Ginger soaps, sound good enough to eat. Is it a soap, I found myself asking, or a salad? Recently, I decided to find out....|Grandma's Old-Fashioned Oatmeal Soap. Oatmeal adds a nice texture to oatmeal cookies and oatmeal bars -- would it do the same for oatmeal soap? To find out, I took a giant bite of this crunchy beige bar, chewing thoughtfully. The taste was not entirely unpleasant, with a mild creaminess delicately balanced atop the solid earthy flavor of oatmeal. As the soap interacted with my saliva, however, my mouth began to fill with suds..." John Hargrave --The All-Natural Prank: Eating All-Natural Soap Cat Food and Aphrodisiacs
Technology: June 2003 Archive Page
"The easier it is to find places with good information, the less time users will spend visiting any individual website. This is one of many conclusions that follow from analyzing how people optimize their behavior in online information systems." Jakob Nielsen --Information Foraging: Why Google Makes People Leave Your Site Faster (Alertbox)I'm guessing Nielsen has noticed that lots of people have been writing and thinking critically about Google lately. This article isn't really about Google at all -- it's an introduction to information foraging, and uses "cute" subheadings that extend the metaphor.
I think it's great that Nielsen has provided such a useful introduction to the concept, but people who clicked on the link in order to read what Jakob the Usability Guru has to say about Google will probably be a disappointed. Maybe he should have written two articles instead -- one that offers the introduction to information foraging, and another that begins with the assumption that reader already knows about information foraging, and thus is able to appreciate the following (which is buried deep in the article):
Information foraging predicts that the easier it is to find good patches, the quicker users will leave a patch. Thus, the better search engines get at highlighting quality sites, the less time users will spend on any one site.
Master of Design
"We?re quite good at remembering when things happen. That has meaning for us. But imagine creating an individual document around every one of those individual blog entries and just having them there on your desktop or in a folder. It would be completely meaningless to you. And that's how we treat e-mail now. But imagine keeping e-mail a bit more like a blog. Then suddenly, you?ve got instant messaging qualities and e-mail qualities happening at the same time. So I' m guessing that we?ll start to see that sort of timeline become more and more important." Tim Brown --Master of Design (Technology Review)
Frankfurter Converter
"The fun, simple and safer way to turn ordinary hotdogs into exciting to cook and super fun to eat... OCTODOGS!" --Frankfurter ConverterOctodog)You know it's a slo-o-o-w weekend when this site reaches #21 on Blogdex, with only 4 links.
Note the weasel word "safer". Safer than what?
Yahoo blocks FTC do-not-call mail
Hurrah for the National Do Not Call Registry website. But wait..."A person who wants to be included on the list will receive an e-mail from the government, then must send back an e-mail reply as confirmation. But a problem's arisen, as at least one major processor of e-mail -- Yahoo -- is blocking the confirmation e-mail..." Bambi Francisco--Yahoo blocks FTC do-not-call mail (Marketwatch)
Google Toolbar 'BlogThis!' Disappoints Fans
"Google Inc., want to know how to compete with Microsoft? Endear yourself to us all. Listen to the likes of us the little people of the Internet. Make the toolbar cross-platform and you will endear yourself to all of us. Change the 'BlogThis!' to enable us to blog to whatever blog tools we use. When Microsoft pushes us all into using a Microsoft Operating System, the Microsoft Search Engine, the Microsoft Word Processor, the Microsoft Weblog Tool, the Microsoft Password System, and the Microsoft Telephone through which we blog to our Microsoft Blogging site, we (all us bloggers, the 3 million of us and the other 10 million who are taking up blogging in the near future) will use the Google Search Engine that has cross-platform support to all the blogging companies." Elwyn Jenkins --Google Toolbar 'BlogThis!' Disappoints Fans (Microdoc News)
NASA Planetary Collage
No image of Pluto? I'm outraged! Disney's copyright protection schemes have gone too far!NASA Planetary CollageAFP/NASA)
Update: I found this image on the AP newswire feed. There was no link or credit, but Rosemary Frezza writes:
http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2000-000454.htmlUpdate 2:![]()
This is the closest thing I could find on a NASA site so far.I wonder who tweeked the image you found?
Rosemary submits this URL, which includes data on each separate photo (when it was taken and by what probe): http://europa.la.asu.edu/gallery/2001/apr01/asu-ipf-1620.html
Pope Moves against Hackers
"The Vatican has revealed it has taken on a team of experts to protect the Pope's website which is attacked by some 10,000 viruses a month and at least 30 mainly American hackers every day." --Pope Moves against Hackers (ABC - Austrailia)
Microsoft and the New Google Toolbar
"In the light of Microsoft rumblings about creating its own search services, we need to ask just where Google is going with a toolbar built only for a Microsoft product. Microsoft are shaping up to take Google out!" --Microsoft and the New Google Toolbar (Microdoc News)Elwyn offers his usual thoughtful critique of all things Google. Lots of contextualized links to relevant info elsewhere on the Internet.
Treasure Box
A package from Amazon invokes this lustful passage regarding the New Media Reader:I ordered my copy a few months ago, and gave Seton Hill as the address, since at that time I was too busy to take on a reading project. I imagine it's somewhere on campus, waiting for me."I have been leafing through the book, and I already know it solved the problem of texts and examples for the little course I have promised to plan and teach in Media Theory this fall. But most important, it promises to sate for a while my hunger, my insatiable desire for more, more answers, more thoughts, more ideas. Sometimes, I think this hunger comes from a childhood of poverty, intellectual as well as material: starved for books I would spend what little money I could get on bus-tickets to the library and return with huge bags full, and then hide in all kind of inventive places in order to read in peace, without guidance but also without restrictions, anything that caught my fancy. My reading is still like this, driven by desire, and while Noah and Nick have organised their book neatly, chronologically and with nice links and suggestions to further reading, that book is dominated by the random nature of the writing. And as such it is chaos contained in one volume, a writing driven as much by desire as is my reading, and on topics as whimsical and complicated to harness and control as my own reading habits."Toril Mortensen --Treasure Box (Thinking with My Fingers)
"This study provides an exopolitical analysis of the policy dimensions of an historic extraterrestrial presence that is pertinent to Iraq and a US led preemptive attack. It will be argued that competing clandestine government organizations are struggling through proxy means to take control of ancient extraterrestrial (ET) technology that exists in Iraq, in order to prepare for an impending series of events corresponding to the 'prophesied return' of an advanced race of ETs. The Columbia Space Shuttle may well have been a high profile victim of such a proxy war intended to send a message to US based clandestine organizations over the preemptive war against Iraq." --An Exopolitical Perspective on the Preemptive War against Iraq (Exopolitics)Via Gallwoglass, where Harry observes that the author of the above paper seems to have once been a respected academic.
Microsimulation of Road Traffic
Rosemary Frezza writes:It's not really a "game," but it comes close. See also my own "York Corpus Christi Pageant Simulator".I can run this program and have a "virtual commute" on those days when I work from home.--Microsimulation of Road TrafficWWW)
Old Country Wisdom: Secret of the Soup Bowl
Old Country Wisdom: Secret of the Soup BowlLiteracy Weblog)Yesterday, my son Peter won a free dinner for participating in the library's summer reading program, so my parents took us to Old Country Buffet (an all-you-can-eat restaurant).
While I was making myself a small bowl of ice cream, the older gentleman in line behind me looked around conspiratorially and whispered, "Go get a soup bowl instead. They're much bigger!"
You may have noticed that in salad bars, the bacon bits and ham cubes are always in the back row... you have to reach over the crutons and other less expensive ingredients. I can only assume that the Old Country Buffet wants to save money on its ice cream, so it puts tiny bowls near the ice cream and hides the larger bowls far away.

And yes, I did get a few odd looks as I pulled out my digital camera and snapped these shots. But two of the people who glared at me were talking on their portable telephones.
Maybe they were talking to each other. "This is Old Country Special Agent Zebra," one of them was probably saying. "We've got another one who's on to us."
Google *is* the OS
"the new google toolbar not only blocks popup ads, it comes with a 'blog this!' button for blogger integration." mecran01 --Google *is* the OS (KairosNews)Is this the first sign of what happens now that Google has purchased Blogger? I don't use Blogger, so I won't be able to experiment with that feature. Anyone want to share their experiences? Until I get my comments feature activated on this home-grown website, you can post your comments on KairosNews (free registration required). Or, you can post on WebWord (no registration required.)
"The move underlines how desperate the music industry has become to staunch the flow of illegal downloads, which are beginning to devastate compact disc sales. In 2000, the 10 top-selling albums in the US sold a total of 60m copies. In 2001 that dropped to 40m, and last year it was 34m." David Teather --US Music Industry to Sue Individuals in Drive Against Net Piracy (Guardian)When the subject of illegal file-sharing came up in a recent class, one of my freshman smirked and said, "They [i.e. the recording companies] should get over it." In the long run, they will... but history is full of examples of innovation delayed by powerful institutions that feel threatened. In the early 20th century, local musician unions prevented radio stations from playing recorded music, on the grounds that doing so took jobs away from professional musicians. But pre-recorded music won out over live bands, and today it's a lot harder today to make a living as a professional musician.
I don't really feel like I am a stakeholder in the file-sharing issue, but I do like watching the fur fly.
We're All Gonna Die!
"Omigod, Earth's core is about to explode, destroying the planet and everything on it! That is, unless a gigantic asteroid strikes first. Or an advanced physics experiment goes haywire, negating space-time in a runaway chain reaction. Or the sun's distant companion star, Nemesis, sends an untimely barrage of comets our way. Or ... " Gregg Easterbrook --We're All Gonna Die! (Wired)
Wearable Tech... Clothing that Changes Color
"The world in which clothing, paint, lighting, rugs, and curtains all change colors to match (or influence) our mood is coming, but it's some time away -- a lot of technology has to be made affordable and durable before then. In the meantime, IFM and other companies are working on ways to weave touch sensors into fabrics. Orth built a musical jacket with a small keyboard woven into the sleeve." Rafe Needleman --Wearable Tech... Clothing that Changes Color (Business 2.0)
Innovative Uses for a Computer Classroom
"I will be teaching a Freshman English class at a medium sized public university, in a computer classroom for next semester. Every student has their own machine with an internet connection. I am thinking about using a weblog for them to post their work and critique each other. Do you guys have any other cool ideas on what to do and what NOT to do?" flard --Innovative Uses for a Computer Classroom (SlashDot)Replies to this post on Slashdot range from flame-bait to rather interesting. I didn't see any brilliant new suggestions in the comments I read, but it is interesting to see how these Slashdotters construct the "computers in the writing classroom" issue.
At UWEC, my fresh comp students were in the computer room three hours a week, and in the regular classroom two hours. But the room was a public lab that we had to reserve for teaching. Students who weren't in the class had a habit of marching in and taking a seat. A few students who sat in the back this year said they were distracted by the interlopers, and certainly whenever for a few moments I wanted to stop the keyboard clicking in order to have a brief discussion, or asked a student to read from his or her paper, the presence of strangers in the room was really disruptive.
Another huge problem with teaching in the UWEC labs is that the students were completely isolated from everyone except the people to their right and left. They couldn't see around their monitors (and reguarly tried to hide behind them in order to avoid being called on), and they couldn't hear each other over the whirring fans.
The classroom where I did my teaching demonstration at Seton Hill has recessed computer monitors, and I found it much, much easier to interact.
Because students are human, they will occasionally zone out and goof off. They will IM each other, check their mail, and play games. I really didn't mind that -- I learned to be generally tolerant of a certain amount of background noise (since some students used their computer during lectures to keep notes or to review the assigned readings). And the absence of clicking was generally a good sign that I had their attention... when the material was not riveting, even the most dedicated students started clicking just a little bit... and that would be a good sign that we needed a change of pace.
There were some weeks when I didn't really require three hours in the lab, so the presence of computers was distracting; and some weeks when the students wanted more lab time.
The Missing Future
"Build great, innovative software, sell it to the users at a reasonable price, make millions of dollars, benefit humanity, retire young. And if you mistreat your users, you'll loose them, because you have a hundred competitors. The old Silicon Valley was built on this dream, and it worked for two decades.|But this dream is nearly gone. It's getting crushed between the awful power of Microsoft, and the onrushing juggernaut of open source. A 30-person company can't compete with Microsoft. And a 30-person company will have a hard time competing with 300 open source contributors giving software away for free..." --The Missing Future (Random Hacks)
Pale Fire: Bloggers are both Kinbote and Shade
Pale Fire: Bloggers are both Kinbote and Shade (Literacy Weblog)“Jerz's Literacy Weblog” has been classified as a “research blog,” even though I think of it as a teaching tool and memory aid.
My blogging sometimes reminds me of the obsessive behavior of Professor Charles Kinbote, the protagonist in Vladimir Nabokov’s Pale Fire. Kinbote compulsively catalogues every minute environmental detail, not in his own life, but in the life of poet John Shade, whose work is the subject of Kinbote’s research.
I should say more precisely that Shade’s environment is the subject of Kinbote’s research; spying through the window of Shade’s study, Kinbote records exactly when Shade composes each line of poetry, indexed against exactly what was happening in Shade’s life at the time.
In keeping a blog, I am both my own Kinbote and my own Shade; I peer over my own shoulder at my work, and occasionally catch glimpses of myself.
Usability Test Data
"People often throw around the terms “objective” and “subjective” when talking about the results of a usability test. These terms are frequently equated with the statistical terms “quantitative” and “qualitative”. The analogy is false, and this misunderstanding can have consequences for the interpretations and conclusions of usability tests." Philip Hodgson --Usability Test Data (User Focus)
World's Smallest Political Quiz
"Take the Quiz now and find out where you fit on the political map!" --World's Smallest Political Quiz (Advocates for Self-Government)I enjoyed taking this little quiz, then I played with it a little to see how it works. My own score was centrist with libertarian leanings, but I can see too many weaknesses in the design of this quiz to consider its results as accurate. This survey is a persuasive tool, not a measurement instrument. The poll would be more fair if it had several different versions of each question and served them up randomly. Of course, I'm glad that self-gov.org has the right to put up on its website any kind of survey or persuasive document it wants. But this survey raises a lot of interesting questions about the power hidden in an interface.
If you answer "Y" to all 10 of the "Smallest Political Quiz" survey the questions, you get the highest "libertarian" score, and you are told:
Libertarians are self-governors in both personal and economic matters. They believe government's only purpose is to protect people from coercion and violence. They value individual responsibility, and tolerate economic and social diversity.You are also provided a link to "free information about libertarian ideas". Note that the logo on the site is an arrow pointing towards a red dot indicating the highest possible libertarian score.
If you answer "no" to all questions, this is what you get:
Authoritarians want government to advance society and individuals through expert central planning. They often doubt whether self-government is practical. Left-authoritarians are also called socialists, while fascists are right-authoritarians.And guess what... not only is there not a parallel link to "free information about authoritarian ideas," but the authoritarians are not invited to partake of the "free information about authoritarian ides" (that line is missing in the results).
I remind my students that when they do usabilty testing, they shouldn't ask loaded questions that encourage their subjects to praise them: "Is this website clear? Do you like the navigation?" Instead, they should ask neutral questions, "What strikes you most about this website?" or at least ask an equal number of questions that seem to be fishing for negative answers: "Is the website confusing?"
"TV3 has apologised after a graphic labelling US President George W. Bush a 'professional fascist' flashed up during its primetime news. | The baseline graphic, which was supposed to have promoted an upcoming weather bulletin, was aired to 360,000 viewers halfway through Wednesday night's news." --New Zealand Newscast Accidentally Labels Bush 'Professional Fascist' (NZ Herald)
Google Calls in the 'Language Police'
"In fact, our language is littered with words that once used to be brands. Escalator, pogo, gunk and heroin are all examples, as is tabloid, which was originally registered by a drugs company in 1884 and came to mean 'small tablet'." --Google Calls in the 'Language Police' (BBC)This is a light-weight riff on the observation that widespread use of the verb "google" may threaten Google's trademark. Note those quotation marks in the headline... who, exactly, is being quoted? The picture of the roller-skating police officers looks like a psychological scare tactic, but the caption ("Definitely not Rollerblades.") makes it almost defensible.
Incidentally, the term "hoovering" is popular in the UK but not in the US.
It's pretty easy to think of coke, kleenex, band-aid, xerox, etc.
Gold Dust and James Bond
The ancient ossuary ("bone box") marked with an inscription identifying the occupant as "James, brother of Jesus" has been officially declared a fake:Note to self: If ever planning forgery of important document likely to draw the attention of scholars from around the world, try to get the grammar right."The varnish covered large areas of the ossuary surface and the patina had burst through the varnish in many places. Both varnish and patina coated a rosette inscribed on the other side of the ossuary. But Goren and Ayalon's meticulous microscopic analysis showed that the letters of the entire Aramaic inscription "James, Son of Joseph, Brother of Jesus" were cut through the varnish, indicating that they were carved long--perhaps centuries after--the varnish-covered rosette."Also declared fake was a reputed record of repairs made to the Temple in Jerusalem nearly 3,000 years ago. --Gold Dust and James Bond (Archaeology)
I previously blogged the Temple record as an example of ancient technical writing, so I'd better set the record straight.
Talk about PHP or Writing?
"To some, a blog is the software and the user's experience with the software, and because of that they focus on the technology that makes blogs possible. | To others, blogs are experiential in terms of an individual's relationship to a blog as relationship, whether as an individual or one of a community." --Talk about PHP or Writing? (Weeblog)This post advocates thinking about blogs as a rhetorical space rather than a user experience. I agree completely that focusing on software instead of what people are trying to accomplish while using that software is a mistake, but the activity of blogging is very different from the conventional writing our students have been asked to do. You have to spend some time letting students familiarize themselves with their new tools, and set a number of milestones that let students see their progress and gauge the amount of effort they will need to invest in order to keep up.
My own enthusiasm about various forms of cybertext sometimes makes students feel that learning the form is easier than it really is; or, they may feel that simply learning the form (that is, simply getting a web page to "work") ought to be enough for a good grade. Asking students to learn a new tool, construct something with it, and also to learn how to think critically about the whole process is not something that easily fits into a one-semester course -- particularly when similar courses are being taught in more vocational settings on the other side of campus.
"Who would have guessed, when this New Hampshire YMCA camp was founded in 1905, that anyone would even have to think about an electronics policy?| But in today's world, where some teens are more tech-savvy than their parents, and they often won't leave home without their electronic toys, that's reality. And camp directors are having to respond to this new reality and decide how much they will let the wired world into their simpler, far more rustic communities." Jennifer Wolcott --Welcome to Summer Camp! Now Hand Over Your Cell Phone (CS Monitor)
Google is Already Spidering my New Site
Google is Already Spidering my New SiteLiteracy Weblog)My digital move from UWEC to Seton Hill is happening much faster than I had anticipated. My UWEC weblog, which changed several times a day, seems to have encouraged Google's spiders to check out a good chunk of my website on a regular basis. The cache was rarely more than a day behind the pages that updated most frequently, and if I made a minor change to a web page that didn't change frequently, the change was usually in Google's system within a few days.
I've been working on my Seton Hill website for about two months now; it's been "live" all that time, but Google didn't find it because I wasn't linking to it, and nobody else was, either. Now, just a few days after my farewell post to my UWEC blog, Google has found this one, and has so far indexed about 150 pages on the site. That's pretty darn efficient.
While my UWEC site had been dormant for about three weeks, I started posting on it again, in order to encourage the bots, spiders, and real human beings to start visiting it on a regular basis again, and thus perhaps have a bigger audience when the move took place.
I posted the announcement on my old weblog, posted to a pair of interactive fiction news groups, pinged weblogs.com, and e-mailed about four webloggers to inform them of the link change. I really haven't spent much time publicizing the new site, but the response was tremendous.
Now I'd like to watch to see what PageRank does to some pages where my UWEC website was the top hit.
- One of my UWEC pages is the top Google hit for "blurbs," but my Seton Hill site (which has the same content but no off-site publicity) is nowhere in sight.
- I just changed my York Corpus Christi website (another top Google hit) to redirect to the new page, and since Thursday is the day the medieval church would have celebrated the Feast of Corpus Chisti, and this Sunday is the day the modern church will celebrate it, I plan to Google for Catholic and Medieval blogs and send a handful of them a brief note.
- There are already a few links to my new "Literacy Weblog," and at the moment my Seton Hill site is the eighth listed in a Google search. [Update 30 June: Now the Seton Hill version is second.]
- A Google search for "Dennis G. Jerz" brings my UWEC site up first, but my Seton Hill site up fifth. [Update 30 Jun: Now the Seton Hill site is third, but it's not my new home page -- it's the index page for my writing subdirectory.]
At the moment, while Google does seem to be paying some attention to category listings (which at the moment aren't actually filtering things... sorry about that), it hasn't seem to be searching any of the permalinks.
For the record, in my last month at UWEC, the stylesheet I use on my weblog was getting about 1500 hits per week, but my website as a whole was getting just under 50,000 hits per week. So, as far as the rest of the Internet is concerned, the value of my website far overshadows the value of my weblog, but the bots visit my site far more often than it would be necessary to index an archive of online teaching aids.
Microsoft Takes Spammers to Court
"Microsoft, which has been talking tough on spam, is putting its money where its mouth is. The company revealed Tuesday that it has filed 15 civil suits in the United States and the United Kingdom against spammers who it says have sent more than 2 billion unsolicited messages to users of Microsoft's MSN and Hotmail E-mail services." Tony Kontzer --Microsoft Takes Spammers to Court (Information Week)Would it be over-reacting to say that I'd prefer to give random strangers free reign in my in box than to let Microsoft do something that would force me to thank them? Is this a PR ploy from Microsoft? Or am I just hunting for another reason to hate the makers of Clippy the Annoying Office Assistant?
It's alive!!!!
Will Gayther, the CS student who has written the weblog sofware I use, writes:For the moment, I don't seem to have full access to my Seton Hill e-mail account, so if you have comments, drop me a line at "pr0f_jerz at yah00 d0t c0m."Holy !@#!, it actually works! It's actually alive! The blog actually works! And gives decent performance! ("gives decent performance", I bet Dr Jerz will love that english!...need to get to sleep...) Wow!--It's alive!!!! (Will Gayther)
PS: I, Will Gayther, am of course the author of this entry and of the blogging software powering this blog.
If you would like to learn about the boundary waters canoe area (bwca) in Minnesota, please visit my boundary waters website. If you're looking to hire someone to write a dynamic website, especially using java, jsp, etc, please consider me. :-) M
Down and Out in White-Collar America
"Like automakers that moved production from Michigan to Mexico or textile firms that abandoned the Southeast for the Far East, service firms are now shifting jobs to cheaper locales like India and the Philippines. It's not just call centers anymore. Indian radiologists now analyze CT scans and chest X-rays for American patients in an office park in Bangalore, not far from where Ernst & Young has 200 accountants processing U.S. tax returns. E&Y's tax prep center in India is only 18 months old, but the company already has plans to double its size. Corporate America is quickly learning that a cubicle can be replicated overseas as easily as a shop floor can." Nelson D. Schwartz --Down and Out in White-Collar America (Fortune)
Why Europe Still Doesn't Get the Internet
"Eurobloggers who wish to use their real names may be out of luck. For better or for worse, Europe lacks a First Amendment and the respect for limited government, private property and free enterprise that America still enjoys. And Europe sure doesn't have a Judge Stewart Dalzell, who correctly predicted seven years ago that 'the strength of our liberty depends upon the chaos and cacophony of the unfettered speech the First Amendment protects.'" Declan McCullagh --Why Europe Still Doesn't Get the InternetNews.com)So.. blogs are so powerful now that a legislative body is considering enforcing the right of the fisked to fisk back.
BloggerCon -- Harvard, October 2003
"I'm looking for people who support people who use weblogs, in a context that is not about weblogs, if possible. For example, a history class where each student keeps a weblog. Teachers who manage classes with a weblog. My goal of course is to learn from them, and then figure out what the next steps are. What do they need from other educators. What software is missing? We've already got some famous universities, I want to get connected with some not-so-famous universities. Who is leading in use of weblogs in education? Who do you look to for insight and inspiration? That's who I want for BloggerCon." Dave Winer --BloggerCon -- Harvard, October 2003Scripting News)The response was a little snarky when I cross-posted this news to KairosNews, which is, of course, why blogging is so much fun.
Fast Forward into Trouble
"In June 1999, Bhutan became the last nation in the world to turn on television...Bhutan's isolation has made the impact of television all the clearer, even if the government chooses to ignore it. Consider the results of the unofficial impact study. One third of girls now want to look more American (whiter skin, blond hair). A similar proportion have new approaches to relationships (boyfriends not husbands, sex not marriage). More than 35% of parents prefer to watch TV than talk to their children. Almost 50% of the children watch for up to 12 hours a day. Is this how we came to live in our Big Brother society, mesmerised by the fate of minor celebrities fighting in the jungle?" Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy --Fast Forward into Trouble (Register)
WebWasher Jumped the Shark?
WebWasher Jumped the Shark?Literacy Weblog)For about five years, I've used WebWasher -- a free program that blocks ads from web pages. Since then, it's probably saved me several days of time that I would have spent waiting for ads to download or trying to figure out how to close an annoying pop-up without accidentally clicking through. But it seems the last 2 or 3 versions have started garbling the HTML as it tries to filter out the ads. Is this something the ad people are doing deliberately, to annoy people like me? Maybe the developers of WebWasher are running out of steam and not able to keep up with the evil marketers. I can't really complain, since WebWasher was a free service.
Darknet Nostalgia
"I nonetheless found the darknet command line calm and comforting. Not threatening at all. I suppose it had something to do with the rhythms of the interaction, for while I knew the machine was capable of unleashing unthinkable power, I also knew it would sit dormant forever, waiting for my fingers to hit the keys. There was a kind of deep, deep patience in that prompt and cursor, those courier incantations whose art I've now lost. And that deep patience--that sense of time, of scale, of sustainable rhythm--also seems lost now, bulldozed under by the broadband blast of streaming screaming everything." Matthew G. Kirschenbaum --Darknet Nostalgia (Kirschenbaum)Reading Stephenson's "In the Beginning Was the Command Line" was almost a religious experience for me. Elsewhere, Matt acknowledges that using the term "nostalgia" to refer to the preservation and study of the cybertexts of just a few years ago trivializes this important cultural archaeology.
For some reason, the text of his permalink seems to be black on black -- hit CTRL-A to select all the text on the page.
Teaching New Media
"The instructional methods that help students learn technology ('Do X or else undesirable Y will result; don't do A or else undesirable B will happen; you must do Z first and then C, or else you will have to start over again') are so alien from the paradigms of humanities pedagogy ('Everybody's opinion matters; the instructor's voice should not dominate the classroom; don't damage anyone's self-esteem') that not only students but colleagues who might be observing your teaching may have a hard time adjusting to what you're accomplishing." Dennis G. Jerz --Teaching New Media (KairosNews)This is from a post I made on KairosNews. Just trying to clear the cobwebs out of my brain after spending two weeks packing, moving and trying to unpack.
Young
"[T]he younger people are, the more likely they are to text. | More than eight out of ten people under the age of 25 are more likely to send someone a text message than call. | But, at the other end of the scale, just 14% of those aged over 55 said they preferred to text." --Young BBC)This article summarizes a report issued by a mobile phone company -- take both the article and the report with the appropriate caution, since people are notoriously inaccurate whenit comes to answering pollster's questions about their own behavior.
NASA Planetary CollageAFP/NASA)