Posts Tagged ‘thoughts’

I’m on the cutting edge of six months ago!

Yesterday, I waffled on about versions of the web and came to the conclusion that the next *version* would be Web7.0 in which translation processes would make it easier for us to read multiple language based pages.

It seems I was right.  This page is an automatic translation of a Spanish site which even gives you the ability to suggest better translations.  They even provided the link to the google translator version of their page. (Okay, not entirely my version of Web7.0, but starting to get there.)

I love how there are people way more clever than me in the world!

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Ideas and control … how are they linked?

I was listening to something on the radio and it got me thinking. A century ago, people started being recognised as people. It took a while and we haven’t completed that task, but with the beginnings of the shift of enfranchisement to include others besides powerful men, we started down a track which has led to here. Where is here? Well, here is where we have people with (almost) equal rights. I say (almost) because there are still portions of various societies that still view members of that society as lesser members. Not as good as the powerful members. People having fewer rights, fewer options, fewer possibilities to grow.

Concurrently, we had this burgeoning of ideas. The last century has seen a flurry of intellectual growth, ideation, information. Are these two linked? I’m not enough of a historian to determine that. But, and this is my point, with the increase of both ‘rights’ and ‘ideas’ and a decrease in ‘control’ of people, there seems to have been a shift to the control of ideas.

How has this happened? How is it that the powerful people of a century ago have shifted their control of ‘others’ to the control of ‘ideas’? We no longer condone the ‘ownership of people’ but we now have this notion of ‘ownership of ideas’ and frankly, if I try to own an idea, the only way I can control it is by not sharing. If I share an idea, it’s not just mine, it’s ours. I think this means I believe that ‘intellectual property’ is a crock!

And that I gladly share with you.

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Convergence Vs Divergence

In the lecture the other day, I mentioned the idea of convergence. We often talk about technology convergence, about how a single device now has many functions. I haven’t looked at phones, but I’m pretty sure you can’t just buy a mobile phone. One that is just a phone. Even the old basic phone I had before scoring the Nokia for our project was not only a phone, but had a calculator and a game and a few other functions. But the latest one I have and many that I see have phone capabilities, cameras (both still and video), games, media players, wireless, bluetooth, webbrowsing, calendar, voice recorder and other things that I still haven’t worked out. It’s not a phone. It’s an almost complete … um … it’s a complete device. It has everything but the kitchen sink. About the only thing it can’t do is wash the dishes. We have everything coming together, converging.

But, at the same time, we seem to be railing against bloat. Software bloat. Our hardware is growing ever more compact and versatile while our software is bloating with features that just slow it down. Why is this so? There was talk years ago about modularity in software. Just picking and choosing the bits you need to get the job done. Whatever happened to that idea? I’d really like to know. It just strikes me that that everything in the software area is becoming more and more one size fits all, in much the same as technologies, but it’s more problematic. Take the dreaded M$ products. All of them are bloated. How many of us need all the features embedded there? Can we turn them off? And then there’s that typical bloatware (b)Lotus. It can actually be configured as a webbrowser. Why would you want to browse in your mail app? Although, by the same token, with gmail and other web-based products, we do use our browser for mail. But i digress.

Why do we cheerfully accept more and more features in our technology, but only accept bloat in software because there’s no other choice? It’s certainly something to think about.

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Conversing with data

So I had this really cool idea this morning to look at the activity in the teaching wiki and compare it to data from my PhD. I thought it would be interesting to see when students where working (eg time of day, day of week, etc). The biggest problem is remembering how I did all the analyses of the data. The email lists I used for my PhD had all the timestamps in a nice time format which was set to the current time. The wiki, on the other hand, uses a unix format with time set at UTC. My first analysis had most of the work occurring during the night which totally confused me until I realised that I didn’t work at any time in the wiki during the wee hours of the day. All I can say is that I’m glad I know how to use excel otherwise I’d have thrown this idea out.

Which reminds me of how much trouble I had setting up WordPress. The time setting was in UTC. And for the life of me, I could not find where to reset it to my local time. I don’t know how may times I went searching for it, only to find it directly below the UTC time setting. The page was telling me, but I wasn’t listening. How often do we not see what is on a page? Are we really listening to the web?

I’ve long suspected that we do not really take in what is on our screen, that we only scan what’s there. Someone once told me that we only see what’s in bold, particularly on blog posts. Does that mean we trivialise context?

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Writing

I went to a workshop today. It was for early career researchers. I now know what I should be doing. I have been overwhelmed by my teaching commitments and trying to work out little other things. Yes, I did get the grant to play with wikis, but I really have lost the thread of research. And writing. I haven’t done nearly enough writing. That was one of the big points today, that those who write, get published. Seems straightforward, but in the scheme of things, the writing is one of the first things that slips. There’s always another lecture to prepare, a tute to organise, assignments and exams to mark, the course profile to prepare for next semester. I have really slipped in the writing.

So, for the next few weeks, leading up to my fellowship, I’m going to read at least one paper a day and then write a critique of it here. Hopefully these little snippets will get me back into the *groove* of writing.

Then, during the fellowship, I’ll be using the space to reflect on what I’m doing. This should put me back into (or just simply into) a more productive writing process.

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