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Tag: Print is dead

The Back on Track Round Up 9/6-/12

Look!  A Round-Up that’s not apologizing for skipping a week!

It looks like everyone is starting to crawl over the pile of undergrads and get back to their computers.   The blogs we’re great this week with some new faces and lots to say.  Before I dive in I’d like to pull out this little tidbit from the news this week.  Apparently Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer decided to write about his time in Afghanistan and it looks like the Department of Defense wasn’t too pleased with whatever he put in the book.

So what was the strategy to contain this information?

Buy every copy of the book in print and destroy it.

Now…I mention this here because a perennial topic that comes up around the Commons is whether print is dead, dying, or just in a coma.   I don’t think anyone really expects to see books go the way of Beta or the 8-track (for those born after say…1985 ask a friend) but this is one of those situations that highlights the advantages of online books.  You can’t go around buying up everyone’s Kindle.  I suppose you could try and destroy the master, but once that thing is loose there’s no stopping it.  Just ask Julian Assange about Iraq.  On a slightly catty note – buy every book and destroy it?  I just assumed there was some clause in the Patriot Act that allowed the DoD to send a team of commandos to the publisher.  Who says things haven’t gotten better?

Blogs!!!

Scott Voth @ScottVoth has been a long-standing Omeka advocate around the Commons.  It’s great technology and this week Scott highlighted Commons member Kwong Bor Ng @knb and Jason Kucsma’s book, featuring a chapter on how Queens College put Omeka to work.  Ever prolific, Scott also posted some useful tips for wrangling Media Wiki.  Yes…that was a pun on his blog’s name.  I’m sorry.

Upstart Beniamina Cassetta @Beniamina came back to the blogs this week.  There was some discussion of starting a dissertation followed by a grim reminder that summer is done.  I mean it wasn’t grim, the selection was lovely, but it’s a bummer digging out the quilts.

David Shapiro @DShapiro32 has returned to the blog roll after a hiatus.  I like these blogs posts – They’re quick and kind of mysterious, like lean strangers.  I feel like they’re the exact opposite of my long winded rambling.

David Rasmussen @DRasmussen did a little blogging about the Obama administration’s temperamental relationship with the brass.  With the exception of Arizona (that lady drives me nuts) I try to stay out of politics here.   Naaaaaawwww just playing – frankly I’m glad the executive branch has decided to poke around the Pentagon a little more and look for talent.  It’s been nine years.  We’ve got to get out of there.

And finally to wrap things up – I found this post digging through the forums.  There are some wonderful resources put together by Marisa Panzani @Mpanzani for the incoming class of graduate students.  All of those links are worth a read for students and faculty alike.  Thanks for finding those Marisa!

See ya next week!

Round Up! 6/7 – 6/13

Well let’s see…

Phillip Corbett, standards editor at the ole’ Grey Lady herself, finally hit his breaking point and banished the word “tweet” from the New York Times.  Now I’m not one of those people who likes to dog the Times about being behind the curve, but I do think it’s kind of funny that this decree comes down to the poor staff writers after what… 4 or 5 years of Twitter-mania.   It’s hard not to picture him sinking his teeth deeper and deeper into his red pencil every day,  finally clearing off his desk with his arm and storming out into the bull pen shaking his fist at Heaven.

I mean that’s how it could have happened.

I mention this mostly because I caught that piece of news shortly after reading our own Matt Gold’s post on leaving Facebook.  In his post he talks about using Twitter professionally while Facebook had some personal resonance and I suspect he’s not alone.  Plenty of businesses use Twitter to advertise sales and new releases while plenty of people use it to communicate professionally.  So when does technology language become, well, language.  How is the verb ‘tweet’ any different from ‘blog’?  Nobody says ‘vlog’ because a) it’s ugly and b) the ratio of vlogs to blogs is remarkable high.  Vlogs have no currency so the word doesn’t mean anything, but ‘tweet’?  Can one lonesome standards editor really put a stop to it?

But enough arm-chair semiotics.

It was a busy week here on the blogs.  Always prolific Tim Wilson @twilson wrote something in French that just makes me angry because I can’t read it (Im trying,I promise) and posted a heads up about the Eighth International Conference On The Book.  I’d actually really like to go this and see what the speakers have to say about print and the future of the book.  There’s been plenty of talk around the Commons on where print is headed, and it’s a giant issue that we’re going to have to address sooner or later.

George Otte @gotte sent out a call for an online journal this week.  Sarah Morgano is covering the spat of technology posts that were around this week so I don’t want to say too much about it here, but I do think that this looming sense that print is under siege is obviously tied to the agility and ease that makes an immodest proposal such as George’s entirely tenable and, more to the point, immediately possible.

Stepping away from books and language for a moment I want to point out something that happened on the Commons this week.

Something big:

Helldriver @helldriver confessed that he loves Rush.

I just don’t…well…I don’t know.  It’s like, you know, when you come home from work one night and find the police at the apartment next door and you realize you just never really know someone.

Let me not do the post an injustice by calling it merely a confession though.  The word ‘panegyric’ comes to mind.  Pericles and the funeral oration maybe.  I’ll just go for broke and call it epic.  Have a look yourself and after you’re done, enjoy:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPuOGaoDeIE&feature=related[/youtube]

Last week saw the debut of Michael Smith’s @msmith blog It Cannot Be Trivial, and this week’s post were fantastic.  I spend a lot of time crawling around galleries in Chelsea and Brooklyn and while I appreciate the necessity of subjectivity in encountering a work of art on its own terms, I really love the way a blog can help provide context for work that actually brings something more to it.  For example, the first post this week about the cement slab was great because it gives the work so much more depth (to me at least) to know that it was reinterpreted in light of the riots and ultimately (Spoiler) busted up, unceremoniously tossed after being broken into pieces.

To wrap up the week I want to leave you with this:

Does Professor Quality Matter? Evidence from Random Assignment of Students to Professors

I’m just going to sit this link right there right in front of you and let you decide what to do with it.

What? No song this week?

So for last week’s round up – I had York College’s blog post about the Print is Dead MagMe video contest to start things off.  Turns out that the death of print is on a lot of peoples’ minds.  Tributaries went at the subject this week by looking into Craig Mod’s thoughts on the matter.  There was also  a great article about it over at The Millions about what we lose personally when we give up on analog books that’s worth a read if you’re a romantic.

Of course this is not a blog about books – it’s a blog about the Commons.  Focus!

Earlier in the week we had a new post from Carl James Grindley’s handsome blog Poems in Progress.  It’s great seeing faculty sharing work on the Commons, even if it ‘isn’t yet fit for print.’  Plus it might have inspired this post from Timothy Wilson at Le Pitre Nu.  Even if it’s just a coincidence it’s nice seeing all this poetry around – it is spring after all, or kinda spring.  Pseudo-spring?

Adam S. Wandt had a great post up about technology in the classroom.   I’m looking forward to seeing what comments and conversations develop on that blog considering the great interest we have in technology and education here.  I know the folks at The New Media Lab and the Committee on Online and Hybrid Education at Baruch College probably have some thoughts on that.

Finally, I can tell this post is meant for a selective audience but it was a nice surprise to open.

C’mon – “Inconceivable!”

Plus Wallace Shawn has a new book out…so get it while you can still buy one.

Empire State of Mind

So I had juuuuuust about managed to get that Alicia Key’s hook out of my head when I started digging around this week’s blogs for highlights and clicked on ‘Print is Dead…Now What?’ Looks like the folks over at York College Comm Tech just gave you a way to earn $1,000 and get out of the house.   C’mon – print is dead and you could use the cash so make the ad already.

Meanwhile over at blogging politics Tamar wants to know whether state intervention is ever justified and goes on to say:

“I am unconvinced that the American, or any Western European states’ populations, are so benevolent and selfless that we can objectively evaluate the quality and necessity for intervention in areas we are completely unfamiliar with.

It is not necessary to apply a judgment to the leadership, population, and cultures that breed what we consider to be reprehensible behaviors. Humanitarianism is a vague concept; I just cannot logically separate it from any other moral crusade in history in which a state transported humanity to areas that it considered uncivilized…”

Oh snap.

That kicked off some debate in the comments that I’m going to leave alone,  but I am excited to see the Politics folks get set up at the Commons and I hope we see a lot more of these conversations!

On an only-slightly-less touchy topic, Anthony Picciano over at Tony’s Thoughts pulled out this interesting article from the New York Times on Diane Ravitch’s seeming about face on education reform in America.    She maintains her long-standing faith in the public school system as a pillar of social mobility (Go CUNY!) but seems to have gone tepid on standardized tests and charter schools.  Has she grown softer or wiser?

Our week of contentious issues wraps up with Michael over at My God, it’s Full of Macs portending the end of Flash because a bunch of iPhone  junkies apparently now dictate taste and technology to the rest of us.   Don’t mind me, I’m just jealous.

On a final note, even if you don’t speak French you should check out Le Hub for the artwork on the sidebar.  Earlier today I found this:

Danger

Dude has a sphinx climbing up his leg…

do we intervene?

Environment: Reclaim Dev

Branch: 2.5.x

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