Grad Student Deconstructs Take-Out Menu

"Realizing he hadn’t eaten since lunch, the Ph.D candidate picked up the Burrito Bandito menu. Before he could decide on an order, he instinctively reduced the flyer to a set of shifting, mutable interpretations informed by the set of ideological biases—cultural, racial, economic, and political—that infect all ethnographic and commercial ‘histories.’" —Grad Student Deconstructs Take-Out…

Crunched by Numbers

"[W]omen have been systematically misled into overestimating their chances of dying of breast cancer in order to prepare them to accept mammography." [A review of the book Reckoning with Risk.] —Crunched by Numbers (The Spectator) Similar:Books Come Alive! Catalina Magdalena Cast (Stage Right Greensburg)  The cast for “Catalina Mag…BooksBeatrix Potter-pinching and Žižekian swipes: the strange…

2002 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest Winner

Bulwer-Lytton wrote a novel that infamously began, "It was a dark and stormy night." His name lives on in the title of an annual bad fiction contest. This year’s winner: "On reflection, Angela perceived that her relationship with Tom had always been rocky, not quite a roller-coaster ride but more like when the toilet-paper roll…

Folklorist Alan Lomax Dies

"Mr. Lomax was a musicologist, author, disc jockey, singer, photographer, talent scout, filmmaker, concert and recording producer and television host. He did whatever was necessary to preserve traditional music and take it to a wider audience." (Jon Pareles) —Folklorist Alan Lomax Dies (NY Times) Similar:The Naked Now (Season 1, Episode 2: ST:TNG Rewatch) When a…

Weblogs: Put Them to Work in Your Newsroom

“Weblogs are growing up…. They’re not yet fully utilized in the news industry, but elsewhere weblogs are a common and widely used new piece in the Internet publishing puzzle.” Weblogs: Put Them to Work in Your Newsroom (Poynter Inst.) The social and literary importance of the weblog phenomenon extends far beyond commenting on the news,…

Becoming a Usability Professional

“Usability expertise is mainly an issue of talent and experience rather than theory. Much of usability work requires pattern matching, which is why it’s so dependent on brain power and past experience: Once you observe slight traces of a usability issue in users’ behavior, you must deduce the underlying implications for design.” Jakob Nielsen —Becoming…

Yahoo Admits Mangling E-Mail

Yahoo has admitted that it has been changing some of the words inside attachments accompanying messages sent to users of its web-based e-mail system. —Yahoo Admits Mangling E-MailBBC) Similar:Watched "Apollo 11" at local library with my son today50 years ago today, three humans were on…CultureYouTube distortion after the same clip is re-uploaded 1000 timesIn theory,…

Point. Click. Think?

"The Internet makes it ungodly easy now for people who wish to be lazy," says a librarian in this article about the pitfalls of relying on the Internet for research. —Point. Click. Think? (WashPost) You can often find good information online, but novices should know how to recognize a peer-reviewed journal. Similar:Violations (#StarTrek #TNG Rewatch,…

No Bells, No Whistles: Just Games

"In an age of big-budget titles and state-of-the-art technology, Skotos wants to revive the old text genre." Brad King [See also the sidebar: "Games Started Off Without a Bang."] —No Bells, No Whistles: Just Games (Wired) Similar:A Beginner's Guide to HTML & CSSFiling this wonderful resource for the n…CybercultureChildren struggle to hold pencils due to…

Why is Software So Bad?

"In an amazingly short time, software has become critical to almost every aspect of modern life… Yet much software simply doesn’t work reliably."  Charles C. Mann —Why is Software So Bad? (MIT Tech Review) Similar:Haiku'da Been a Spam FilterLatest weapon against junk e-mail: poetr…Cyberculture4 Skills to Help You Stand Out In Any Job InterviewAn employer…

Blog to Cope With Alzheimer's Fog

"Seniors in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, with mild to moderate memory loss, are writing Web logs to help them make sense of their daily lives. And the activity, they say, is slowing the onset of their symptoms." Mark Baard —Blog to Cope With Alzheimer’s Fog (Wired) Similar:Detailed Articulation of Feet in Unity3DI’m following…

Half the World

"The phrase ‘Half the world has never made a phone call’ or some variation thereof has become an urban legend, a widely believed but unsubstantiated story about the nature of the world." Clay Shirky —Half the World shirky.com) Similar:Dr. Bobby Teaches Ferris Bueller as RhetorMy former student, Bobby Kuechenmeister,…AcademiaWe don’t need more STEM majors. We…

Do Not Enter!

"This site is a repository for pictures of do not enter signs. Since this is one of many international roadsigns the collection is diverse in geographical context." James Canavan —Do Not Enter!donotenter.com) Similar:New infographic to help our graduating English majors make sense of their capstone project…AcademiaYou can be a Trek fan without loving TOS. But…

The QWERTY Myth…

(The Economist) “…goes roughly as follows. The QWERTY design (patented by Christopher Sholes in 1868 and sold to Remington in 1873) aimed to solve a mechanical problem of early typewriters. When certain combinations of keys were struck quickly, the type bars often jammed.” But the real problem is that “economists seem to adopt bogus anecdotal…

Good Definition of a “Realistic” War Game

"[T]hey ship 45,000 copies, and only 15,000 of the games allow you to proceed past the beach. That’s it. No refunds, either. You get off the landing craft; your screen goes black; your computer seizes up and cannot be rebooted. Game over, man." James Lileks —Good Definition of a “Realistic” War Game (The Bleat) Similar:The…

Approximating Life

Richard S. Wallace has created Alice, an artificial life form that gets along with people better than he does.  —Approximating Life (NY Times — registration req’d) Similar:The Masque of the Red Death, by Edgar Allan PoeSo, who else is taking advantage of curr…Current_EventsEmily Dickinson Manuscript for "The Chariot"A new Emily Dickinson archive is online….CultureA Beginner's…

One researcher’s unlikely crusade: to overthrow the on/off button.

"[U]sers—confounded by too many choices—fail to take advantage of their office equipment’s power-saving features."  —One researcher’s unlikely crusade: to overthrow the on/off button. (Technology Review) Similar:In-person classes heighten age-related hearing problems (opinion)My family tells me I’m starting to speak…AcademiaModular support craft from the #neovictorian #steampunk bedtime stories I used to tell my …Modular support craft…