Category — social informatics
IST Results – Do ICTs improve our lives?
IST Results – Do ICTs improve our lives?:
The project’s final report reveals that many of the assumptions about ICTs and their advantages or disadvantages are not entirely accurate.
We assume, for example, that computer skills improve our chances to find a new job, with an estimate of 60 percent of existing jobs and 90 percent of new ones requiring ICT skills, according to the SOCQUIT report. Based on these figures, PC skills should have a determining effect on people’s ability to find employment.
On the contrary, “Our study showed that it is the social contact with other people that influences if people find a job or not, rather than the level of their ICT skills,” explains Heres. Equally, ICT benefits for elderly people are not reflected in the job market. “We did not find convincing evidence that the employment issue can be solved with ICT. However we did find examples that because of ICT, the elderly leave their jobs,” he says. These people are not motivated to change, as there are younger people with better skills, according to Heres.
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they showed, once again, that social contact is very important.
August 12, 2006 1 Comment
Net Neutrality Song
Net Neutrality Song:
A new, downloadable song by Kay Hanley, Jill Sobule, and Michelle Lewis in favor of net neutrality. Nice, but the chorus sounds too much like it’s going to be “Hey Mr. Tambourine Man.”
And coming on the heels of this gloomy analysis of the congressional vote — heck, they even got Alcee Hastings to vote against it! — it does put one in mind of Tom Lehrer’s Folk Song Army (”they may have won all battles, but we had all the good songs”).
in favor of net neutrality
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i think it does sound a bit like mr. tamboruine man… but it is at least it is an interesting take on a musical protest against the powers-that -be changing the rules about the internet.
June 13, 2006 No Comments
UNESCO’s Basic Texts on the Information Society
UNESCO’s Basic Texts on the Information Society:
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some interesting key unesco texts.
April 6, 2006 No Comments
snubster – beta
snubster – beta:
the snubster difference
Aren’t you tired of all of those people out there trying to grab
all of these fake friends online? It’s all about how many people
can I pretend to be friends with to make myself feel better.
Welcome to a better way at snubster.
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solid.
April 6, 2006 No Comments
surveillance culture..
Wow, that’s creepy:
install a grid of little cameras on the ceiling of their stores that can track people as they walk around the store, starting from when they walk in the door until they leave. The grid would be self-organizing, adjacent cameras talking to each other and handing off trackees to each other. It couldn’t recognize people, although if you buy something with something other than cash, it’d know who you were from that transaction. This isn’t intended for loss control (retailese for shoplifting) but more for marketing. They could, for example, rent a rack in a prominent position to a supplier, and charge them by the number of people who stop to look at it.
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this is an interesting phenomena… it is a growing phenomena too. how many shopper cards are already rfid tagged? want to bet that you have one that is?
April 5, 2006 No Comments
bridges.org
bridges.org:
Comparison
Study of Free/Open Source and Proprietary Software in an African
Context: Implementation and Policy-making to Optimise Community Access
to ICT
The Software
Comparison research project provides
the needed background information and advice to
people who want to make
sound software choices for public computer labs in Africa.
The
final report represents the first comprehensive analysis of software
choices
in the African public-access context. The study looked at 121 computer
labs in Namibia, South Africa and Uganda, examining the range of
factors that affect software choices; the realities of the current
situation in Africa; and the long-term implications of software choices
for Africa. This
research was led by bridges.org and supported by Collaborating Partners
SchoolNet Africa, the International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
and the Open Society Institute (OSI). In addition, a number of
field-study partners provided access to computer labs for the study. A
high-level
Advisory Group, comprised of experts in the field from both sides of
the debate, was actively involved in the study on a regular
basis: reviewing project documents (methodology, report drafts etc.),
providing feedback and additional resources.
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interesting study
June 24, 2005 No Comments
i4donline.net ~ News Archive
i4donline.net ~ News Archive:
The International Open Source Network, an initiative of the United Nations Development Programme, has produced a 48-page primer on ‘Free/Open Source Software and Education’, which is now available for free public download. The primer is intended to help policy-makers and decision-makers understand the potential use of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) in education.
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this is good news
January 23, 2005 No Comments
Social Software Alliance - Social Software Alliance
Social Software Alliance
:
http://www.socialtext.net/ssa/
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i helped despam the ssa today.
January 20, 2005 No Comments
The Growth and Development of Humanities Computing – Martyn Jessop, Ubiquity
The Growth and Development of Humanities Computing – Martyn Jessop, Ubiquity: “The application of computing to research problems in the humanities is not new. One of the acknowledged pioneers in this area, Father Robert Busa, began his work on the Index Thomisticus (an index to the works of the medieval theologian Thomas Aquinas”
(Via Online Learning Update.)
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textual computing is more what this seems to focus on…. i think there is much much more. this admits more, but when you talk about projects…. they tend to center on texual or textualizing data….
December 30, 2004 No Comments
Wireless Manifesto
Wireless Manifesto. There's a manifesto proclaiming a “wireless commons” that has me just puzzled enough that I haven't signed it. It proclaims the virtues of wireless connectivity (using unlicensed spectrum, not Open Spectrum), and then commits the signatories to some type of support in the wireless build-out: Becoming a part of the commons means being more than a consumer. By signing your name below, you become an active participant in a network that is far more than the sum of its users. You will strive to solve the social, political and technical challenges we face. You will provide the resources your community… [Joho the Blog]
I'm tempted to sign this, but then i don't use any bandwidth that i pay for…. which puts me in a strange position in relation to such a proposal, can i give away that which is not mine to give?
December 30, 2002 Comments Off