| Guests: Welcome! · Sign Up · Log On | ||
b.cognoscoWhere leaping to conclusions is my primary form of forward motion. |
||
| Home · Identity · About b.cognosco · Archive Index · Book Store | ||
Most Popular
Book ReviewsRecently
Civics Lesson
Powerline Distribution Laws Looting with Iraq Loon-fest in Augusta The Ultimate Blogger Correction and Clarification Atlanta Hax0r's Conference Hit by DMCA First Audio Blog Entry Easy News Topics 1.0 PURL TIA - the New ESP Research Interactivity and Access Workflow Embeds eLearning Tools Virtual Team Resources RadioPoint Presentation Tool Theme Design
IT Support
Hosting
|
Monday, April 14, 2003Civics LessonA recent Columbia Law School survey found that only 31% of adult Americans were sure that Karl Marx didn't help write the U.S. Constitution. I wonder how this happened?
[...] This lack of proficiency [in civics] leads to some serious misconceptions, as a recent Columbia Law School survey showed. Although the Founding Fathers wrote the U.S. Constitution to protect individual rights and property, one-third of adult Americans think the document contains the Karl Marx maxim that negates all rights to property: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs." Only 31 percent of respondents were sure Marxs words werent in the Constitution, while the remaining third didnt know. [...] [The Heartland Institute] Powerline Distribution LawsC/Net News is reporting that FCC Chairman Michael Powell is showing some enthusiasm for powerline-based Internet services. As Jeremy points out, powerline distribution combined with wireless gives us four legitimate connectivity options -- two of which have almost nothing to do with Telcos. One upside to the powerline model -- power utilities are highly unlikely to get into the content business and therefore have little incentive to restrict access or connectivity to pre-determined "consumer" uses.Personally, I would love to get a hi-speed Net connection from my local electrical coop. It's a member-owned organization that provides a perfect model for how bandwidth should be distributed. Hope this little experiment gets rolled out to other areas.
Powell on Powerline. Looting with IraqIt's tax time, that time of year when we all celebrate the privilege of American citizenship by opening our wallets and giving deeply. But this year we have a war to distract us from the annual rite. (Any of you conspiracy theorists out there claiming the timing of the Iraqi incursion was fixed to keep our minds off Tax Day?) At any rate, here's a little Iraqi conflict list of looters -- a list of "riders" attached by patriotic congressmen to the $80 billion war finance bill -- courtesy of your friendly Libertarian watchdogs:
[...] According to an estimate by Rep. Ron Paul, R-TX, the bill contains $20 billion in "wartime pork," or spending that has no connection with the war in Iraq or the battle against terrorism. Loon-fest in AugustaHere are just some of the wackos represented at the off-site protest over the Augusta National Golf Club. The protest, started by professional fem-wack Martha Burk, turned into a non-event but still drew a cast of characters:
If you have a cause, and the best you can do is gather 50-100 loons like those above, and you even have to bus those in from somewhere else, shouldn't you, maybe, find a better way to spend your time? Has anyone ever seen Hootie Johnson? Ever met a woman who would want to hang out with Hootie? Smoke a few stogies, maybe have a shot or two of scotch? Yeah, that's the life. I can see golf babes signing up for that one. A better cause celebre' would be getting more female sales clerks in the power tools section at Lowe's. Burk Rallies Against Masters. 11 Alive Apr 12 2003 1:02PM ET [Moreover - Atlanta news] Sunday, April 13, 2003The Ultimate BloggerErnie points to a brief summary of the key success strategies for the world's most economically successful blogger -- Matt Drudge.
Pioneer weblogger makes 800k a year. Correction and ClarificationIn a recent post on the TIA I incorrectly credited words by David Reed to Bob Frankston. Reed was the author of the source material at SATN. I discovered my error via The Doc Searls weblog. Thanks, Doc.Atlanta Hax0r's Conference Hit by DMCADoc Searls has posted a lengthy excerpt from a Cease and Desist letter sent by BlackBoard, Inc. to the organizers of interz0ne II in Atlanta. I have not looked into this enough to verify the claims made regarding published information on the web site, but I suspect it would be difficult to prove any economic damage to Blackboard as a result of this scenario.Blackboard, Inc. can't really be blamed for responding. I would do the same. But once again the preemptive power of the DMCA, and its severe penalties for previously minor infractions, weights the legal argument so heavily in favor of the copyright or patent holder that even legitimate discussion becomes a completely one-sided game of legal "chicken".
DMCA vs. Free Speech, cont'd. First Audio Blog EntryI am behind the curve on this -- the typical late adopter. Most of the audio blogging hoopla seems to have passed and it now seems a bit passe'. But no matter, I still wanted to understand how it was done, how I could do it, and how I might use the technology to begin making multi-modal presentations. All in the hopes that I can, at some point, create useful learning object. This goes along with my earlier query about the RadioPoint presentation tool.So here is my first audio blog entry. I just added an MP3 file to an entry I made earlier. I may have to change my item template around a bit to get the audio enclosure icon to be more noticeable. But it's a start. I want to thank Hugh Madison of American Invisible for patiently guiding me through the process and offering "sound" advice (pun intended). Like everything else in technology, getting sound recorded and into the computer the first time is utterly counter-intuitive. I couldn't have done it without some help. I'm far from proficient, but it's a start. We'll see how it goes from here. Saturday, April 12, 2003Easy News Topics 1.0 PURLEasy News Topics (ENT) is an RSS 2.0 module for extending topical metadata management to RSS feeds. I'm really pleased to see Matt and Paolo expanding the metadata structure outward from blogs to RSS. I really can't grasp the more technical aspects of this specification, but I can certainly grasp the possible benefits. And I eagerly await some aggregator support so I can begin playing around with it.Thanks guys. Nice job.
The ENT URL. TIA - the New ESP ResearchBob Frankston on the value of statistics and more reasons to fear the DARPA TIA program.
TIA - the new ESP research? Interactivity and AccessSebastian refers to a Tim Berners-Lee quote from Weaving the Web and asks why so many people see the Web as merely a distribution and retrieval system, with creators/distributors on one side and consumers on the other.
It's because we seem to inherently think of ourselves as consumers, except in some narrow area we call a job where we get paid to produce. I don't know if it's cultural or biological in origin (it seems to cross cultural boundaries), but we seem clearly predisposed to act, think, and respond like "consumers" most of the time.
Hence we end up with a 1-way Internet, brain-dead technologies like ADSL, and user-hostile service agreements that preclude the actual use of connectivity for anything other than "consuming". We get media conglomerates who see masses of consumers at the other end of broadband.
Sebastian also notes that this 1-way dichotomy is prevalent in schools. He's right. Our schools do little to embed in us the belief and understanding that we are all creators -- not just for our jobs, but for ourselves.
We can all create. We can all produce. We can each add something of value to the global collection of consciousness, even if it is of value only to a small group. And we are entitled to access to make that happen. But we won't get access until enough of us understand the equation. And that understanding can come only from grasping, at a fundamental level, the power of interactivity over the network. Workflow Embeds eLearning ToolsSam Adkins has made an interesting observation over on Learning Circuits Blog regarding the convergence of e-learning and business process/workflow tools. The idea of managing business processes is increasingly important, but the task is increasingly complex as we are inundated with ever more information. I've never been comfortable with the jargon and IT-centric nature of business process/"workflow" solutions.For one, workflow is a broadly used, ill-defined, catch-all term that can mean almost anything. I often wonder when someone is going to try selling workflow by the slice -- like pizza; or in a box -- like laundry detergent. In the world of business process management (BPM) it has almost always meant some computer-to-computer interaction managed and controlled by some IT geek. Not the sort of thing that can get the support of a typical manager or knowledge worker. But Sam points to a variety of new BPM offerings that are embedding learning tools into their structure, and are making it easier for normal people to see and understand a business process. This is, to me, the most important change that can happen. In order for any BPM solution to truly optimize a process it must address the human component. A process must be visible to those who perform it, changeable by those who rely on it, and logical and helpful to those affected by it. Until the IT component becomes invisible BPM will never move into the mid-market space, where it is desperately needed.
Workflow Displacing Courseware-based eLearning. I continue to be blown away by new learning technology hitting the market. These innovations are now displacing courseware-based eLearning... [Learning Circuits Blog] Virtual Team ResourceseLearnspace Blog has posted a short list of links to good resources on the virtual team/group environment. A quick survey of the links shows some promising papers, books, and discussions. No time to delve deeply into them at the moment, but they are well worth noting.
Excellent groupware/virtual team links. I came across some excellent links for groupware/collaborative tools on the Evaluating Elearning group: RadioPoint Presentation ToolBack when I first started with Radio there was some interest in the RadioPoint presentation tool, but it sort of faded and I no longer see much activity around it. Many of the files and templates listed on the Docs page are now gone. So I'm looking for anyone actively using RadioPoint. Is Dave using it at Harvard? Is Paolo still using it for presentations? Have there been any further developments in using OPML to create presentations?Just wondering... |
SyndicationContactPresence |
|
This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
Disclaimer: This is a personal website. The views expressed here are those of the author and no one else. This is also an experiment in thinking out loud, so there are no warranties as to the reliability or accuracy of anything presented here. Source material -- references, citations, quotes, photos, and other elements -- are gathered from publicly available materials and some of it may be restricted. Any trademarks used are the property of their respective creators or owners. All are reproduced under the principle of Fair Use.
|