All those topics that i wish i had time to pursue more earnestly.
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Thu, 02 Oct 2003 21:01:14 GMT

Extinction. Lions in Africa are getting close to extinction. In fact, all the big alpha predators are in trouble. It may only be a matter of time before all the mega species disappear from the wild. [MetaFilter]

October 2, 2003   No Comments

Thu, 02 Oct 2003 18:17:31 GMT

Innovation is the turning of ideas into concrete realities. To the extent that this process is an economic one, it must also be subject political decisions and these determine which ideas are to have resources made available for their innovation.

The Politics of Innovation by William Kingston

October 2, 2003   No Comments

Thu, 02 Oct 2003 15:49:18 GMT

Why is there a Nobel Prize in Economics?. Next week, the Swedish Academy starts handing out Nobel Prizes, which guarantees for the recipients a wave of international publicity… [The Leiter Reports: Editorials, News, Updates]

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there isn't see http://www.nobel.se/economics/

October 2, 2003   No Comments

Thu, 02 Oct 2003 15:31:32 GMT

October 2, 2003   No Comments

Thu, 02 Oct 2003 15:25:13 GMT

The curriculum vs. the personal learning network. George Siemens on learning communities and learning networks:

Courses work in an environment when knowledge/information is fairly static and
developing slowly. The more rapidly information develops, the more quickly
courses cease to serve the needs of learners. The information is outdated before
the ink is dry.

[...] learning communities allow us to become knowledgeable in a specific area of
interest…much like courses teach one specific subject matter.

Most of us belong to more than one learning community. These multiple
communities form a personal learning network. If a learning community
equates somewhat with a course, then our learning network is equivalent to a
degree program.

Yes! Definitely. Precisely. Spot on. As the evolution of the different
fields of knowledge speeds up, each crosses a threshold point where it
makes more sense for most learners to give up on courses and embrace
learning networks. In IT this is already happening.
[Seb's Open Research]

October 2, 2003   No Comments

Thu, 02 Oct 2003 13:46:31 GMT

since i was reminded last night of the good old days of the internet boom, and since it is job season. I though i'd post some of what i worked on those years:

in 1998, i helped found a small company, and we never decided what we wanted to do, so we closed it shortly thereafter in 1999. The company was primarily experimental, we incorporated, etc. it was a learning experience.

i worked out some business plans:

1. Application Service Provider, server appliances, and content distribution for k-12 market. I think this could have taken off, the goal was to build an open source learning environment with tools to help manage k-12 tools and then to provide integrated learning communities that would share content, learning modules, etc. amongst schools for a small fee, thus moving the function of inservice days to the online environment. This one never made it past development. forgetful old me, this one did make it past development, i remember submitting a draft proposal of it to bruce perenss venture capital group that funded progeny linux.

2. Integrated Computers. The premise of this company was that computers don't have to be obvious, they can be ubiquitous and available without being a set of big boxes in the office or elsewhere. What i were going to do was to be a middleware supplyer of systems to high end market that would make the computer in your office disappear. It would also provide middle range conversion kits to make your computer look like books on a shelf, old wooden radios, etc. In short, the goal was to use the available technology to make the computer integrate into the office. This one was distributed to a few angel investors who thought that it was a great idea, but hardware was not where the market was going, they wanted software….. it died.

3. the modular computer. this was a plan to take all the essential parts of a computer and put them in to cartridges about 3 times the size of an ipod that could be plugged into a cartridge box which was basically a backplane with a bsd based integrated system that would identify the parts plugged in and let them communicate to each other and be optimized for whatever is installed. So if you had a 6 slot machine, you would have the boot cartridge of your favorite os, which would be more or less a virtual machine with some basic memory. Your video out cartridge which would have its own flashable drivers, your hard drive cartridge, a memory cartridge, a networking cartridge, a processor cartridge, etc. etc. The goal was to get the cost of each cartridge down to a very small cost and then let people build what they need. you need a super vector processing chip system, plug in the vector cartridge, if you need graphics, plug in a second video accelerator. Out of slots? buy a larger backplane system. Of course, this is an engineering nightmare, but in the end I still think it is a better way for the computer business to go. This never made it past the drawing board because no one else was on board

4. Card based internet servers that you could just plug into your computer like an ethernet card. This was done by many companies. My significant differences was to use firewire to do load balancing, across multiple cards. I never pursued this very far though it excited some people.

and that takes us to about 2001, which is when things sort of fell out of those dreams and i started working seriously on my ph.d.:)

October 2, 2003   No Comments

Thu, 02 Oct 2003 12:40:22 GMT

Picasso: Nearly 7,000 Images Online. The On-Line Picasso Project offers 6,893 works for your ogling pleasure, plus an obsessively documented chronological bio. I'm stunned. (please read the user's manual, inside.) [MetaFilter]

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nifty, all in one place

October 2, 2003   No Comments