What's puzzling (or not so) is that those who critique those who talk about the internet ignore those who actually study the internet
Original Tweet: https://twitter.com/
Mosaic & the WWW in 1994 by Bob Frankston and Dan Bricklin: http://t.co/qhUm0Q8NCl
Original Tweet: https://twitter.com/bfeld/
'twas undermined ages ago. :) MT @mdeimann #EdX to charge for ID-verified certificates undermining "nature" of #MOOCs http://t.co/C2iGnVYJzf
Original Tweet: https://twitter.com/
@JimZbuildOn Best book I have read in a long time. Keep it up! #mustread #attorneyactionclub #walkintheirshoes
Original Tweet: https://twitter.com/
hastac annual conf: http://hastac2014.org/
UN Foundation (@unfoundation)
10/3/13 5:47 AM
"In situations where leaders fail to lead, the people can make them follow by indicating the direction." - @KofiAnnan #KofiAnnanLive
UN Foundation (@unfoundation)
10/3/13 5:49 AM
"We are living in a world where the kinds of problems we are confronted with are problems no one country can handle alone." #KofiAnnanLive
ReachScale (@ReachScale)
10/3/13 5:49 AM
#HATCH10 unites top creative thinkers w/ most promising minds-Connected 300+ mentors w/ 5000 students. @JenniferSertl hatchexperience.org/project/
kool beans.
imagine hatch 24/7. and on steroids. equity today.
danah boyd (@zephoria)
10/4/13 6:29 AM
“To the degree that we take away play, we deprive children of the ability to practise adulthood”aeonmagazine.com/being-human/
Cory Doctorow (@doctorow)
10/4/13 6:19 AM
Lessig Blog, v2: On the meaning of a political "innovation" - lessig: In The Daily Beast, I lamented a... tmblr.co/ZUhJRswlistz
Tom Peters (@tom_peters)
10/4/13 6:30 AM
Almost no comentary about "we the people." D.C. standoff all about who "wins," who" loses" ... as if it were a sporting event. Sucks!
Idit Harel Caperton (@Idit) 10/4/13 6:33 AM "DigitalLearning&MOOCs most importnt invention since printingpress" says @MIT Prez RafaelReif @TIME.Agree! We've seen it w/ @globaloria MOOC cool - but what if there's more ..to web-ness.. Alain de Botton (@alaindebotton) 10/4/13 6:33 AM Are you in a bad mood? Here are some works of art I picked out as possible palliatives:artastherapy.com Fred Bartels (@fredbartels) 10/4/13 6:34 AM Slavery didn't end by having better education for slaves. Poverty won't end by having better ed for the poor. #slavpov Adam Braun (@AdamBraun) 10/4/13 6:39 AM Great story from @sashadichter, reminds you of the good people create every day-sashadichter.wordpress.com/ Deepak Chopra (@DeepakChopra) 10/4/13 6:41 AM Where Are We Going? A Wandering Scientist Asks huff.to/GA4jwW via@HuffPostScience "Wandering" because we are all wanderers, living on top of a planet called Earth, moving through infinite space. "Planet" comes from the Greek, it means "the wanderer, the one that moves in the sky." Now let's examine the scientist part. I am by training and by profession a scientist. But foremost I am a human being. As a human being, I wander through space. As a scientist, I of course also wander through space. But being a theoretical physicist and a scientist, I also wander through the realm of thoughts. All humans do. However, scientists make careers out of thinking, not a bad thing I must say. And in the process, I wonder (pun intended) where I am going. I don't mean through space, that much can be understood and accepted. I wonder where I am "going." You had that thought I am sure, probably many times. Why would a scientist's wandering thoughts be more profound than anyone else's? Actually, I don't think they are. Since though a scientist is trained to methodically think, to consistently think when developing scientific ideas, the wanderings of a scientist thoughts might be interesting and more applicable to general situations than just individual, private thinking wanderings. That's all.or they might too be blinded by their consistency.. no? Now the word "science" comes from the Latin word scientia, which the Wikipedia tells us means "knowledge." It is a special "systematic enterprise" that can be put to tests. Science is a special kind of human knowledge (yes, it is human, after all) that always seeks to disprove itself.ah.. wikipedia.. You might think that is some sort of punishing or self-inflicted nasty activity. As humans, aren't we after all not happy when we are proven wrong? Don't we want stability, please no changes? When someone tells us that we are wrong, don't we get defensive and, often, indignant?wrongology Well, a particular scientist might not be happy when her theory is proven wrong. Science, however, progresses by many, many scientific ideas becoming wrong, upon examination, careful examination, shown to be wrong. Some that survive, at least for some time, we view them as successful ideas. In some ways science progresses over the dead ideas, which in the process become discarded and thrown out. So if you are a young person and want to become a scientist, get used to the idea that your success will most likely require you being wrong, probably many times and occasionally being right.the it is me - ness In our wanderings, we will ask how will science change, how will it evolve (we already established that by its nature, must change). We will examine some fundamental challenges facing current science today. Often progress occurs not when we carry out business as usual but when we are facing some profound challenges.calculus-ish - perpetual beta ness ..any scientific wanderings have to be relevant to non-scientists. And it is my strong world view that other humans should understand what scientists are saying. Many of my colleagues probably don't agree with me on this, holding the view that science is too difficult, too "esoteric," you need years of study to understand it, etc. Fair enough, it may not be easy. But it is the job of scientists to communicate what they are doing and making accessible what they are practicing.
|