june 16, each year, every year. bloomsday.
Today is the 100th anniversary of the day on which stately, plump Buck Mulligan came down the stairs of the Martello tower, razor, mirror and washbowl in hand. [Crooked Timber] snipped.
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it is best to put a few guiness away today, just to maintain appearances. but i won't be doing a great wander.
June 16, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 16 Jun 2004 12:36:38 GMT
ICANN's legitimacy questioned. Jonathan Zuck, president of the Washington-based Association for Competitive Technology, writes about “ICANN's Crisis of Legitimacy” over at eWeek…. [InternetPolicy.net]
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interesting… i doubt it will have any effect. but it also seems very much in harmony with verisign's language….
June 16, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 16 Jun 2004 03:25:39 GMT
OA journals in the humanities. Sometimes a blast from the past is required to shake things up. I've gotten into a bit of a rut highlighting free and/or Open Access ejournals in the sciences. Here is a gem from the humanities which has been doing fine for a few years now.
Philosophers' Imprint – Fulltext v1+ (2001+); ISSN: 1533-628X
I would be remiss if I gave the impression that humanists were newly arrived on the Open Access front. Postmodern Culture has been blazing a trail in online only publishing seemingly forever, now past the mid-point of its second decade.
Postmodern Culture – Fulltext v1+ (1990+); ISSN: 1053-1920 [Open Access News]
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guess i need to get some work done on the social science and humanities publishing model that we're putting forth in august….
June 15, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 16 Jun 2004 02:44:19 GMT
George asks the right question and links to an int …. George asks the right question and links to an interesting article from the BBC: Is a Degree Still Worth Having?. An insight from the UK that applies equally well over here:
“The report found that the real skills shortage was not for degree-qualified workers but for skilled technicians in construction, engineering and information technology. It criticised the government's target of 50% of young people going to university as 'arbitrary' and said it reflected the needs of neither the economy nor young people.”
Doug often wades into this one and he wrote eloquently about the same topic this week:
“The status of any given educational credental provides little value when it's in abundant supply. There are an increasing number of highly educated, debt-laden, unemployed young people who are quite unhappy with those of us who implied that a college degree was a ticket to a healthy, self-reliant life. Those days are gone.”
I know, I'm starting to sound like a broken record on this stuff. [Jeremy Hiebert's headspaceJ -- Instructional Design and Technology]
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ask the wrong questions and get the wrong answers…. degrees are meaningless outside of the persons life. sometimes in a few circumstances they may indicate certain things about the human that possesses them, but never do they indicate anything past that. you can't ask if it's worth it, you have to ask is educating students worth it? do students find value in their education? etc. those are the questions that lead you to some understanding.
June 15, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 16 Jun 2004 02:25:03 GMT
Reuters. The US trade deficit hits a record monthly figure: $48.3 b. [John Robb's Weblog]
I am sure someone has this all rationalized, just like the 'budget deficits do not really matter.' But it seems to me that money we do not really have is going to other countries, leaving us with even less money we do not have. [A Man with a Ph.D. - Richard Gayle's Weblog]
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look, it is all perfectly clear, the sole question for the u.s. economy in the bush administration is 'did daddy's friends make money?', if you can say yes, you are fine. if you say no, then evil is afoot.
June 15, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 16 Jun 2004 02:22:42 GMT
Coors vs. Coors. Politics1: The Coors Brewing Company distanced itself last week from the political views expressed by US Senate candidate and former company chairman Pete Coors (R-CO). The company issued a formal — and very “politically correct” — written statement expressing sharp disagreement with candidate Coors’ recent endorsement of the proposed constitutional… [Outside the Beltway]
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now, if they would change their union policy and make good beer, they'd have something going.
June 15, 2004 No Comments
father in 'under god' case lacks standing
or so the supremes say…. i don't agree that 'under god' is alright though.
June 14, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 14 Jun 2004 17:56:05 GMT
Military Describes Interrogation Process to Reporters. Reporters were given a grand welcome at Guantanamo this week. Here's how the military described the interrogation process: it's just a mental chess game with no torture or confrontational attitudes–they try to earn the prisoners' trust. One interrogator even brings… [TalkLeft: The Politics of Crime]
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sweet, not that they'll get him, but that he is clearly implicated.
June 14, 2004 No Comments
actor network theory is popular today….
i've had two hits from it from Mentor's blog. as some people know, i'm less a proponent of normal actor-network theory, than radical de-objectified actor-network theory, where the nodes are just new networks in which the differences between nodes and networks is the categories of analysis of the flows. nodes are just networks operating in different ontological categories, and thus so are actors comprised of networks, and in fact, actors and nodes sort of disappear for the version that i perpetrate on the world:) it is informed by a guattarian ontology.
June 14, 2004 Comments Off
Mon, 14 Jun 2004 13:36:35 GMT
basic morning workout for today was:
2 superset deltoids, each includes, 1 reverse grip curl x10, 1 military press x 10, 1 upright row x 10.
1 set bent over rows
1 set deadlift
mornings are a light workout, 10-20 minutes + cardio
evenings last longer
June 14, 2004 No Comments