Penguin’s promoting some exploration of the concept of “book” in their We tell stories series , where six authors have contributed new works, each of which explores some aspect of on-line story-telling, sometimes quite distinct from more traditional printed books.
Not all of these are equally successful (I thought the idea of “The 21 steps” was better than the execution). My favorite of these is probably “Hard times” , by Matt Mason and Nicholas Felton. It’s a short, but (for me) very effective collection of data points making it clear how much things have changed and are changing, and hinting about what it might all mean down the road. Most of the info was at least somewhat familiar to me, but I love the way the details are brought together into a compact compelling argument — a sort of data poetry.
From Part VII: “Ideas are travelling faster” (crediting the data to Seth Goodin’...
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Can we please remember that M$ hasn’t completely taken over the world?From: UnhinderedByTalent.com
Post Date: 2008-05-22 04:20:59
I just had to take four on-line safety courses here at Essex in order to get money from our research grant. I’ll spare you the horrors, although I did twitter on about of some of them as I went as a sanity saving device, and will share a couple:
“Keeping your workstation and office tidy is crucial to short-term and long-term health and wellbeing.” I am doomed.
[The] Irony of spending much of an hour wading through a tedious online lesson on risks of spending too ...
more Far too many photos from DagstuhlFrom: UnhinderedByTalent.com
Post Date: 2008-05-15 14:08:58
Regular readers here will likely remember various past posts extolling the virtues of Dagstuhl , this really wonderful computing research facility in Germany. I’ve been lucky enough to attend several seminars on the Theory of Evolutionary Algorithms in the past, and have taken ( and posted ) quite a few photos from those trips.
A few months ago I had the (totally) unexpected pleasure of being contacted by Christian Lindig , a member of Dagstuhl’s scientifi...
more So much to do - so little timeFrom: UnhinderedByTalent.com
Post Date: 2008-05-03 15:51:09
Sorry for the lack of activity here - an EPSRC grant with Riccardo came through, which is big happy news. The downside is that there’s a ton of research work to be done in a very short period of time. We were lucky enough to have Ellery Crane visiting for the last two weeks, and the two of us did some pretty massive hours while he was here. We got a bucket of really good work done was he here; we built several large new systems and got some early results that suggest probably at least ...
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