Howard Rheingold speaks briefly and succinctly about his reason for doing this. I agree.
Another cool thing I found via Twitter!
Howard Rheingold speaks briefly and succinctly about his reason for doing this. I agree.
Another cool thing I found via Twitter!
I was reading a draft of a paper for Bernard about democritizing web searches. I won’t go into the details of the paper–it’s not published yet. But, I do want to mention two search tools that I had never heard about before reading this paper, and I’ll give some short quotes from Bernhard on those:
Both of these could be really useful in teaching students about searching because they offer an alternative to Google’s approach of trying to give users the most relevant (meaning most popular) results first. I think these could alleviate the concern many teachers and librarians have about students who just google everything rather than going into the library and browsing shelves–that they don’t make the same connections or experience the serendipity that can arise from looking around rather than right at the result you want.
I love Warren Ellis. He captures contemporary attitudes in such a beautifully snarky way.
The odd thing though, is that if someone made a movie as vile and violent, even if as funny, as one of Warren’s typical stories, I’d probably hate it. (well, if it was really so funny, maybe it would be ok; I liked Tank Girl after all, both comic and film.) But my point is that I seem to have no trouble with violence, perversion, or general grossness when it’s in a comic book, but in films, I don’t like most violence. I guess added abstraction really does make a difference.