Posts from — September 2004
cheerleaders gone wild…..
penn state students behaving badly…..
September 23, 2004 No Comments
THE GLOBALIZATION OF PRIVATE KNOWLEDGE GOODS AND THE PRIVATIZATION OF GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODS
interesting paper…..
September 23, 2004 No Comments
interesting story
nicely crafted too
September 22, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 22 Sep 2004 14:54:09 GMT
Librarians Ruled “Brainiest” in Britain
“In a credit to the library profession, The British Library's team on the BBC2 show 'University Challenge – The Professionals' won out as the brainiest of the brainy professionals.” [Katonah Village Library 125th Anniversary]
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oh…. not that surprising really, in terms of professionals, i'd put librarians as the brainiest.
September 22, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 22 Sep 2004 14:49:54 GMT
Advice for Graduate Students Giving Conference Papers. Four of “my” graduate students (never quite sure what the academic possessive actually implies) are giving conference papers in the near future. Here's some general advice. Feel free to add on. The rule of thumb is one double-spaced page will… [Matthew G. Kirschenbaum]
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my advise…. be prepared and keep it short.
September 22, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 20 Sep 2004 14:02:39 GMT
Who's Better in the Driver's Seat?. THE ECONOMY
Who's Better in the Driver's Seat?
Under Democratic presidents, the engine hums along
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/commentary/la-op-blaustein19sep19,1,6555082.story?coll=la-sunday-commentary
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By Arthur I. Blaustein, former chairman of the President's National Advisory Council on Economic Opportunity under Jimmy Carter
BERKELEY ÷ A businessman who voted for President Bush four years ago and Bill Clinton in 1996 told me that John F. Kerry's social-program goals “seem good, but I'm worried the Democrats can't manage the economy as well [as Republicans], and they'll get into my wallet.” Many voters agree, according to pollsters. But are Republicans better economic managers than Democrats? [Greater Democracy]
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most voters are deluded. democrats have done it better post-1950.
September 20, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 20 Sep 2004 14:01:13 GMT
Outsource university administration to India or China?.
Nearly all American universities have experienced tremendous growth in administrative staff in the last 30 years. At most schools the ratio of admins to faculty has doubled. As this trend continues necessarily tuition prices continue to outpace inflation. Within our lifetimes it is likely that the cost of a college degree will exceed the cost of a twin-engine business jet airplane (in the 1950s four years of tuition cost about the same as a new Chevrolet).
If colleges cannot get by without adding more labor per student why not do as for-profit corporations do and add that labor in China or India? As noted in a December 1, 2003 entry, MIT has had great success outsourcing OpenCourseware programming and editing to India. Think about all the jobs at a typical university that are done primarily via phone and email. Obviously the entire IT department could be in India. Why not the registrar? How about most of the coordinating and tracking functions of the alumni office?
American labor is wonderful but it is a luxury that most American families can't afford.
Business idea for the young readers: Start a university ”back-office” service bureau in India or China. The folks who've done this for Wall Street have been very successful (New Yorker magazine did a great article this summer on Office Tiger, started by two Princeton alums). Most university administrations lack the initiative to manage staff overseas (or do anything innovative, actually) but they would all appreciate the potential cost savings. So they'll need a contractor to do it all for them.
[Philip Greenspun Weblog] [A blog doesn't need a clever name]
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while i can see something like universitas 21 doing this, i doubt most universities would have any interest in putting more than the menial tasks into this sort of thing. there is just too much that actually goes on with these people. things that are not discussed nor made public, they form a critical mass that stabilizes things and provides for interesting opportunities in non-obvious ways.
September 20, 2004 No Comments
Sun, 19 Sep 2004 22:26:57 GMT
Economics of Love. [Mopsos][via ScaleFree] Anu was hooked by this quote “Ultimately, the economics of knowledge have something to do with the economics of love.”
What's lurve got to do with it ? Well it's the extreme end of implicit trust, and we all know trust is the number one item in information at the moment. Top level of the W3C model, FOAF and the bozo-bit to name a few examples. Without it there is no knowledge worth sharing. [Psybertron Knowledge Modelling WebLog]
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well, this is one of the big questions of all time i think. what is the motivation for these social infrastructures to really work, beyond the original cool factor.
September 19, 2004 No Comments
Sun, 19 Sep 2004 22:25:21 GMT
New Cybersecurity Bills Introduced in Congress. Reps. Thornberry and Lofgren introduce the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2004 [Link] See H.R. 5068… [beSpacific]
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interesting reads, somewhat misled in their target though…..
September 19, 2004 No Comments
Sun, 19 Sep 2004 22:22:55 GMT
Arrr, Matey!. Today is “Talk Like a Pirate Day” (at least in the blogosphere). Here a link to the iPatch. [Dan Gillmor's eJournal]
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weeeee!
arrrrrg! die matey, you scum
weeee!
September 19, 2004 No Comments