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Tag: math

The Mad Men Round Up

That’s a misnomer.  I’m actually going to have to avoid all media this week in a futile effort to not hear spoilers about Mad Men.  I’m in Boston and it just felt a little, I don’t know, wrong to watch it here.  My Mad Men crew has selflessly agreed not to watch it until I get into New York Thursday so keep it down and don’t ruin anything for me.

Some weeks I feel like I really have to hunt to find some news to mention and other weeks these little gems practically fall right into my hand.  In case you missed it Dick Cheney has finally had his entire heart replaced.  Yes – the man who shot his friend in the face has managed to kidnap a stranger’s heart and have it put in his chest.  I feel bad for the heart.  Can you imagine?  One minute you’re there pumping blood, hanging out with your friends in the neighborhood and then suddenly you’re in a vast cavern of bats, darkness and ghosts.  Eeeesh.  Elsewhere around the internet I stumbled across LessWrong and their community-compiled list of the best textbooks on everything. (Special thanks to Metafilter for that one!)

Here on the Commons there was plenty to catch up on.  I’m sure many of you saw the PSC/Pathways email that went out.  Tony Picciano posted PSC President Barbara Bowen’s email  on the Commons outlining why the Union has taken CUNY to court over Pathways.  Court! It’s about to get real.

Mari Watanabe-Rose threw down a challenge over at Math Matters: Can you recognize the sidewalks?  The Cairo Tessellation post from last month had Mari seeing patterns everywhere.  She makes a great point at the end too –  Do math folks go crazy seeing math everywhere?  I am admittedly math-phobic but I know that when the kerning is off on fonts I tend to go a little mad.  That’s close right?  I feel like the quotidian answer to Mari’s question is going to let me down a little so would the math-gifted just pretend like everything they see has formulas swirling around it with Phillip Glass playing?  Awesome.

Over at ‘Did We Break It’ Scott Voth posted a phenomenal list of tools to take your good blog all the way to amazing.  So. Much. Hyperbole.  I know, I know, but the list really is superb and there’s so much you could be doing to your blog that you just haven’t found yet.  Many thanks to Scott for pulling together so many resources.

Speaking of amazing blogs – check out ‘Collaborative Seeing Studio,’ a new blog on the Commons with an emphasis on visual research.

Finally this week on the Commons Joseph Ugoretz rolls up his sleeves and solves the headache of sorting through digital submissions of all kinds.  Be sure to check out the demo version of the reviewing site and then head over to the comments for feedback!  Thanks for sharing Joe and building this out!

 

Till next week!

Behold Math Lovers…

…a page that converts Latex equations to images so you can text or insert them easier.

Maybe this is old news but thought you might like it.

Also – mathjax.org

The Last Round Up of July!

Hello Commons!

I can’t tell if I’m having more fun now while we wait for the impending debt ceiling explosion or back in May when we had that eschaton party.  To their credit, the end of the world folks in May had awesome vans and folks running around with clip boards.  This particular Newscycle of Doom ™ has its own bright spots as well.  My favorite so far is John Boehner suggesting that he “didn’t sign up for going mano a mano with the president.”  Yes John, I’m sure it just feels terrible doing the bidding of some Koch brothers hacks when all you really want to do is sit back and let those tobacco checks roll in.  Tea Party indeed.  Anyhow, you don’t need me to point out the absurdity of Washington so we’ll keep it local, like, Commons local.

First up, as near as I can tell we picked up 3 new blogs in the last week or so and all of them hit the ground running.  Catherine Lewis @CLewis has a really sharp blog up at Design+Popcorn.  I missed the Big Bambu exhibit at the Met!  The worst part is that I didn’t even know it was running.  In her post on the exhibit she ties it back to working with her students and trying to drive their creative interests.  I think Catherine picked up on a interesting thread that I’d love to hear more from the Commons:  How does the city inspire your pedagogy?

William Ashton @billashton has a great new blog up.  Calling to mind that ever-vigilant gargoyle Orwell, William’s latest is called ‘The Sound of the Stick’ and looks to drum up some conversation about advertising.  Can’t wait to watch this blog grow.  I’m also oddly excited about the return of MadMen all of the sudden. Also – bonus points for the Biggie Smalls reference.  Ill.

Florian Lengyel @Lengyel has an eponymous blog up working out some serious math business.  I actually have no idea if that’s hard math or just what the calculus kids eat for breakfast but I love seeing a blog here on the Commons for it.  Over the last year we’ve had a big influx of math faculty and they have a few robust groups going.  My hope is that in the coming year we’ll see more meta-math blogs pop up talking about some of the difficulties and joys of teaching math at CUNY.

For all you new blogs – Welcome to the Thunderdome!

It wasn’t all green blogs last week though.  Allie Verbovetskaya @alevtina posted about what she’s learning from her students about their research abilities.  The post asks some tough questions about what we should teaching students about research and how tools like Google are something of a moving goal post when it comes to integrity.  I think it’s safe to say this is something we’re dealing with institutionally and a forum like the Commons is good place to keep that dialogue up.

The Games folks were on a roll this week.  Andrew Boyarsky @ABoyarsky shared a great TED talk and pointed out some surprising numbers about how ‘games’ of all stripes are out in the world.   Carlos Hernandez @carlos, writing for the CUNY Games Network looked at the passionate debate surrounding Jane McGonigal’s book Reality is Broken.

Finally this week we salute our devoted systems admin André Pitanga.  He’s the guy with the bucket throwing the water overboard while the rest of us link to youtube videos.  Thanks for keeping us afloat!

Till next week.

 

 

Environment: Reclaim Dev

Branch: 2.5.x

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