Tue, 04 Feb 2003 03:54:03 GMT
Mapping thoughts. Joe has a string of very interesting posts on cognitive maps and topic maps. [Seb's Open Research]
This is so similar to one of my many projects, which is to create conceptual maps of papers, and information relationships within them.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 04 Feb 2003 03:42:33 GMT
Everything is old… but we forget.
Mitch Ratcliffe: David Weinberger cites one of my favorite philiosophers, Richard Rorty, who nicely deconstructs the argument that everything is new at the forefront of history. In fact, everything is old and only newly considered.
This is an important point of humility that “visionaries” and “revolutionaries” conveniently forget, leaving the rest of us to pick up the pieces. Pragmatic thinking about the whole of history, instead of just the recent changes, places society, individual life, business, investments, all of it, on a much firmer foundation.
This is somehwat interestingly compared to my argument that social forms are fairly fixed and even reflexively repeatable throughout human history, whereas the objects that they form around or perhaps even concepts they form around develop in interesting and rhyzomatic ways, creating alternatives to the old systems which are in fact nothing other than the old system with new objects and subjective relations….
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 04 Feb 2003 03:34:16 GMT
Blackboard alternatives. Cribbed from messages to BBAdmin-L (see link).Ê All open-source I believe.
- Bodington ( http://bodington.org/index.html )
- Claroline ( http://www.claroline.net/ )
- ClassWeb ( http://classweb.ucla.edu/ )
- Eledge ( http://eledge.sourceforge.net/ )
- Fle3 ( http://fle3.uiah.fi/ )
- Jones e-education ( http://www.jonesadvisorygroup.com/standard.php )
(not open source but “free”)
- Manhattan Virtual Classroom ( http://manhattan.sourceforge.net/ )
- MimerDesk ( http://www.mimerdesk.org/ )
- Moodle ( http://moodle.com/ )
- Whiteboard ( http://whiteboard.sourceforge.net )
For a number of these, there's a feature comparison at
http://www.edutools.info/course/
A few more at
http://www.bris.ac.uk/is/projects/violet/opensourcevles
http://www.stanford.edu/group/ats/coursework/tools_features.html
[Serious Instructional Technology]
This is a handly list to have around. End User LInux and schoolforge have similar lists underway.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 04 Feb 2003 03:31:49 GMT
The RDF data that I have available since yesterday, is now put to good use. Take a look at the archive page of January 26. At the bottom you see two referrers with excerpts. This information comes from the RDF data for that page. The XSL stylesheet for this site converts the RDF data to HTML.
This is a really nice thing about using XML/XSL for your weblog: the possibility to use several data sources at once. That I'm using XHTML 2.0 is hardly relevant. It's just the format I use for the textual content. The next datasource on the list to use is the OPML file I have for the sidebar. This would finally make it possible to change the sidebar without having to republish all the weblog pages.
Each page now also has a <link>
element that points to the RDF metadata for that page. I used rel="meta"
as suggested in the RDF/XML Syntax Spec. Does anybody know an application that might do something with this link?
very interesting.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 04 Feb 2003 03:26:35 GMT
I'm trying to get back into the blogging spirit, so why not do it with something fun. My cousin Susan sends along the following:
“Sunday, February 9, 7:00 p.m. CST, Bravo TV
In anticipation of the landmark 300th episode of The Simpsons, James Lipton sat down with the series' accomplished ensemble to meet the actors behind the voices in order to discover how they have managed to create such a wealth of believable and beloved characters.”
Sorry, but that link above is as close as I can get you to the episode information because the site is done as a separate browser window, with all of the content done in Flash. I really hate that. Personally, I'd love to see Matt Groening do a follow-up episode where James Lipton interviews the characters themselves, a “very special episode” like the Behind the Laughter one.
doh, i meant to post this earlier, but i didn't everyone loves the simpsons except those that don't of course.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Mon, 03 Feb 2003 20:08:24 GMT
The architecture of data-rich public spaces.
I looked out the window this morning and was greeted by a six-story-high image of George Bush. I was in Times Square, on the 19th floor of a hotel, facing the brobdingnagian information display that ascends and wraps around the Reuters building. Movies like Blade Runner conditioned us to expect these displays. Minority Report updated the concept with aggressive personalization. But the Reuters display is about something different, and far more interesting, than the advertising techniques imagined in those movies. Its designer, ESI's Edwin Schlossberg (yes, that Edwin Schlossberg), has profound ideas about public information display as a focus for interaction. From Wired 10.12:
Schlossberg's next big thing is the Reuters News Index, an addition to the sign that debuts in 2003. Roughly every hour, a 304-foot thermometer will appear onscreen measuring how “hot” the news day is on a scale of zero to ten. Schlossberg hopes it will inspire people on the street to turn to each other and say, “Did you see that? The News Index just shot up to 6 degrees — what have you heard?”The Index is calculated using Satran's Algorithm – developed by Reuters and R/GA, and named for veteran Reuters editor Dick Satran. Every 15 minutes, the formula crunches four data points: the total volume of stories filed from Reuters' 200 offices in 97 countries; the number of priority one and priority two stories filed (editors assign a priority code to each report coming off the Reuters wires); and the total number of Reuters.com hits logged in the previous 15 minutes. At one early meeting with Reuters editors, ESI design manager Gideon D'Arcangelo recalls, “one of them said that if we really wanted to make the index true to life, we ought to factor in the blood pressure of Reuters editors, too.” [Wired]
… [Jon's Radio]
the postmodern megalith of information is upon us, falling from the sky into our vision daily, at least someone is having ideas about it.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Mon, 03 Feb 2003 20:05:45 GMT
Monk update. Monk has discovered the basic concepts of multiplication. This is amazing to me (although it should not be, considering what… [Full Bleed: Confessions of a Zine Girl]
children are amazing, and unschooling is quite important, i am consistently amazed at what some people think they know from school….
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Mon, 03 Feb 2003 19:19:45 GMT
Towards open services. SOA (service-oriented architecture), we agree, is the way of the future. We'll build loosely coupled Web services now and wire them up into composite systems later. The benefits are clear: scalability, OS and language neutrality, easy integration. But as “later” starts to resolve into a date like 2003, or 2004, it's also becoming clear that SOA raises challenging issues. How, for example, do you monitor, test, and debug a distributed system when only some of its components are under your direct control? [Full story at InfoWorld.com.]
… [Jon's Radio]
the transformation of the web is forthcoming, again.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Mon, 03 Feb 2003 18:59:01 GMT
Stephen's Guide to the Logical Fallacies: “The point of an argument is to give reasons in support of some conclusion. An argument commits a fallacy when the reasons offered do not, in fact, support the conclusion. ” [From the Desktop of Dane Carlson]
While knowing all of these probably would not have helped me in any of my teenage discussions with my father, they are useful to understand. It often seems that the majority of arguments used by people quoted in the media fall into one of these items. At least you can now understand what you mean when you say 'post hoc ergo proctor hoc', as I do in casual conversation every day
This is very important material for most people to know and understand.
February 3, 2003 No Comments
Mon, 03 Feb 2003 18:57:44 GMT
TIPPING POINT CRIB SHEET: For those of us that only manage to read the first 100 pages of important books, Robert Paterson's weblog has a FANTASTIC overview of the Tipping Point. [Michael Helfrich's Radio Weblog]
A very good book and a nice synopsis. [A Man with a Ph.D. - Richard Gayle's Weblog]
Hmm, this is interesting, have to go nab the notes for future reference….
February 3, 2003 No Comments