Categories
Digital Culture

Still at Falls Creek

Still holed up at Falls Creek Falls, at the IT Symposium. Last night = Bingo and an open bar. Today = presentations, vendor swag, and a trail walk around the lake.

All in all, not a bad way to get paid. Learning a bit, which is nice…really good presentation this morning regarding smart classrooms, which had tips I really hadn’t thought of. So there is learning going on.

Categories
Digital Culture

Falls Creek Falls

Currently sitting the lobby of the Inn at Falls Creek Falls State Park, mooching a very small, and nearly useless, wireless signal.

Get this: I’m at the 2005 IT Symposium for the state of TN. The State puts in a small wireless network for conference goers….and then blocks all traffic except port 80.

Which means no Thunderbird or other POP email, no IMAP, no IM, nothin’. Webmail works, but JEEZ…we’re at an IT Conference, right? You’re throttling our ports? For what possible reason?

I plan to get to the bottom of this ASAP. I can’t imagine why this is being done, and the organizers here blame it on people upstream of them…so I’ll check with them. More news as I get it.

Categories
Library Issues

I fight authority…

So in a recent entry, Jessamyn talks Wikipedia and how librarians are going to have to get over their love affair with authority:

The debate we’ve seen happening over the authority, or lack thereof, of collaborative information systems such as Wikipedia is just scratching the surface of the debates we’ll be seeing in the years to come. Librarians ignore Wikipedia, and by extension the new face of information, at their peril. Keep in mind I’m not saying that we all have to run to the Internet to answer our questions, just that if we fail to see the impact these systems are having, and the openness and transparency they bring with them, then we fail to learn something crucial about the downsides to the inflexible authority of print.

Indeed…in a talk I gave the other day, I discussed a lot of new hip and trendy things in LibraryLand, but it never fails that I get gasps of astonishment when I show academics the Wikipedia. I’ve never been fond of authority as the answer to our information instabilities, but I’m even less so now with the living antithesis of authority on hand (and so remarkable!).

I blogged a bit ago about an academic paper I’ve got rattling around in my head having to do with new ways of viewing information sources as relating to the Coherence Theory of knowledge. Spoke briefly with Jeff Pomeratz from UNC regarding my idea via email, who said:

I agree, librarians are too hung up on authority as a criterion. It reminds me of the story I remember reading about early Renaissance scientists trying to discover how many teeth horses have. After checking all books that might have a reference to horses’ teeth & coming up with nothing, it was decided that it was an unanswerable question! That said, I don’t think authority as a criterion can be dismissed: I’d trust the accuracy of a statement on a topic from an expert on that topic over a statement from a non-expert any day. But why? That I leave to you to answer in a philosophically principled way. So I’d argue that authority has to be positioned relative to other criteria.

Authority as a criterion may not ever go away completely…as I said to Jeff, when I’m sick, I go to a doctor, after all. But as an end point for deciding validity or truth, it is clearly not the only answer that should be given. In libraries, we have the concept of a “subject expert” who is responsible for things relating to that subject…selecting books, answering tough reference questions, producing research guides. That’s an authority concept that I don’t really mind. Would it be better if they did this work in concert with other “experts?” I would argue yes…the more brains on the problem, the better.

When making arguments for a position, I think that examining the web of interconnections to that position is a better form of support than simply a reference to authority.

This all seems so self-evident to me, that sometimes it is difficult to present well. I’m re-reading stuff on coherence theory now, and hopefully can more fully form some actually arguments at some point. I’d love any thoughts that anyone might have to spur my brain in the right direction.

Categories
Digital Culture

Get Perpendicular

One of the strangest flash animations I’ve ever seen, and as a bonus it includes the phrase “Super Para Magnetic Effect.”

Get Perpendicular

Categories
Digital Culture

Indy custom radio

Via BoingBoing, Indy Custom Radio from Ian Clarke (the designer of Freenet). A music client which downloads freely-available MP3’s, plays them, and allows you to rank them. It takes these ranks, and (much like Amazon and Netflix progressive suggestions systems) the more you rank, the better the match for what you like.

I’m trying it out, and we’ll see how it goes. It will be interesting how quickly it can learn my preferences, as well as what sorts of music will actually pop up. Right now it doesn’t require any login or anything, so I’m guessing that the “preferences” are stored locally to the computer. Would be nice to be able to carry those prefs from one computer to the other, either via a login or some other authentication setup. Would also be interesting to increase the “folksonomic” quotient by making the preferences more transparent, and being able to actually view others “tags” or rankings. Also be interesting to see which songs are getting 5 stars, etc….could very easily to a top 50 from the data, using #’s of people who are ranking each song, combined with the actual 1-5 ranking.

Categories
Personal Sewanee

Weekend

Had a phenomenal weekend, working a lot but enjoying some of the great weather. Got to go on a good hike on Sunday with Indy and Bets along Shakerag Hollow…the wildflowers are unbelievable. There must be a dozen species blooming along the trail, and there are entire hillsides of trilliums. Pictures will follow soon.

This week = Stress and things of which we may not speak. We’ll see how it goes.

Categories
Digital Culture

AAAAaahhhhhh!

aye aye

Doesn’t this look like it eats souls? Or like Yoda’s evil cousin?

Categories
Digital Culture

EPIC 2014

Very cool news report from the future, chronicling the rise of our ‘net overlords, and the subsequent social issues. Choose a mirror:

EPIC 2014

WARNING: Flash needed.

Categories
Digital Culture

So very cool

From BoingBoing, I so want one of these. I don’t even wear a watch, but I’d make an exception for any one of these:

radiation watchCyberpunk watchPIMP watch

From TokyoFlash, home of incredibly cool watches from Japan. Who knew such watches even existed? For reference, $1US = roughly 100 Yen….so you’re looking at from just over $100 to nearly $200 depending. That’s nuts, but they are beautiful.

Categories
Music

Noticed something odd while listening to Metallica

So I was riding in to work, listening to a little Metallica, and noticed that James stole lyrics from himself in order to write the theme to their latest album, St. Anger. I give you:

Lyrics from Damage, Inc., off the album Master of Puppets (1986)

Fuck it all and fucking no regrets
Never happy ending on these dark sets

Lyrics from St. Anger, off the album St. Anger (2003)

Fuck it all and fuckin’ no regrets
I hit the lights on these dark sets

Have no idea why I only just noticed that. Or even why it is particularly interesting. 🙂