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September 28 2010

September 27 2010

Is the Internet Making us Smarter?

As people have become more and more dependent on the Internet, some have concerns that all that information (and the devices that help us connect to it) could be doing seriously damage to the way we think, interact and learn. But Nick Bilton, lead writer for the New York Times Bits Blog, explains in his new book that he's lived his whole life connected and managed to turn out just fine. He says scientific research backs up his experience.

September 07 2010

The Value Of Ruins

Between The Alexandrian War of 48 BCE and the Muslim conquest of 642 CE, the Library of Alexandria, containing a million scrolls and tens of thousands of individual works was completely destroyed, its contents scattered and lost. An appreciable percentage of all human knowledge to that point in history was erased. Yet in his novella “The Congress”, Jorge Luis Borges wrote that “every few centuries, it’s necessary to burn the Library of Alexandria”. In his session James will ask if, as we build ourselves new structures of knowledge and certainty, as we design our future, should we be concerned with the value of our ruins? http://2010.dconstruct.org/speakers/james-bridle With a background in both computing and traditional publishing James Bridle attempts to bridge the gaps between technology and literature. He runs Bookkake, a small independent publisher and writes about books and the publishing industry at booktwo.org. In 2009 he helped launch Enhanced Editions, the first e-reading application with integrated audiobooks.

August 26 2010

August 13 2010

The Claremont Institute - Vive la Différence

Fantastic review of The Narcissism of Minor Differences: How America and Europe are Alike, by Peter Baldwin

"[D]espite our assumptions, despite a thousand op-eds, and a couple of centuries of squabbling and bickering, and even wars and revolutions, the statistical differences between Western Europe and America are trivial—in fact less than the differences between various European states. All that stuff about us Americans and them Europeans? Statistically speaking, them is us."

This is now on my "must read" list.

The Claremont Institute - Vive la Différence

Fantastic review of The Narcissism of Minor Differences: How America and Europe are Alike, by Peter Baldwin

"[D]espite our assumptions, despite a thousand op-eds, and a couple of centuries of squabbling and bickering, and even wars and revolutions, the statistical differences between Western Europe and America are trivial—in fact less than the differences between various European states. All that stuff about us Americans and them Europeans? Statistically speaking, them is us."

This is now on my "must read" list.

May 30 2010

Significant Objects | ...and how they got that way

Buy a trinket for a few bucks. Ask a writer to write a story about it. Sell both on eBay.

May 28 2010

Good Kickoff Meetings

Great companions site to Kevin Hoffman's IA Summit presentation on kickoff meetings.

April 06 2010

Cultural Usability

Interesting Danish project dedicated to understanding the impact of culture on usability testing.

December 27 2009

December 13 2009

October 16 2009

October 12 2009

Against Transparency | The New Republic

How could anyone be against transparency? Its virtues and its utilities seem so crushingly obvious. But I have increasingly come to worry that there is an error at the core of this unquestioned goodness. We are not thinking critically enough about where and when transparency works, and where and when it may lead to confusion, or to worse. And I fear that the inevitable success of this movement--if pursued alone, without any sensitivity to the full complexity of the idea of perfect openness--will inspire not reform, but disgust. The "naked transparency movement," as I will call it here, is not going to inspire change. It will simply push any faith in our political system over the cliff.

September 01 2009

May 21 2009

May 15 2009

April 11 2009

tweenbots | kacie kinzer

A tiny robot that can only go in one direction is released in Washington Square Park. The tweenbot has a flag that describes its destination. Passers-by help the robot navigate to the Southwest corner of the park.

February 10 2009

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