📺 “Kids Baking Championship” Bite-Sized Birthday Party | Food Network

Watched "Kids Baking Championship" Bite-Sized Birthday Party, Season 5 Episode 6 from Food Network
Valerie Bertinelli and Duff Goldman love birthday parties at the park so they're taking this inspiration to the Big Bake Challenge. The kid bakers are tasked with creating bite-sized birthday party desserts for an outdoor birthday party and serving them on mini picnic tables!
Macrons are apparently the thing (or probably were a year ago, since it’s percolated to this level) when kids this age are so heavily specialized into making them.

👓 40 Years Later, Talking Heads’ Most Valuable Member Is Still Its Most Under-Recognized | Paper Mag

Read 40 Years Later, Talking Heads’ Most Valuable Member Is Still Its Most Under-Recognized (PAPER)
Bassist Tina Weymouth contributions are some of the band's most iconic.

📺 “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” Carmen Electra | CW

Watched "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" Carmen Electra from CW
With Aisha Tyler, Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, Wayne Brady. Guests: comedian Brad Sherwood, plus actress Carmen Electra. Games performed: Let's Make a Date, Duet, Scenes from a Hat, Living Scenery, Hoedown.

📺 “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” Jeff Davis 6 | CW

Watched "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" Jeff Davis 6 from CW
With Aisha Tyler, Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, Wayne Brady. Guest: comedian Jeff Davis. Games performed: Let's Make a Date, Irish Drinking Song, Sound Effects, Props, Greatest Hits.

👓 Article 13 makes it official. It’s time to embrace decentralization | Ben Werdmüller

Read Article 13 makes it official. It's time to embrace decentralization by Ben WerdmüllerBen Werdmüller (Ben Werdmüller)
Today the EU passed Articles 11 and 13 of its new Copyright Directive in a 438 to 226 vote. This has, rightly, been widely painted as a complete disaster for European internet businesses - and the internet industry as a whole. Here's the first clause of Article 13 in its entirety: Information societ...

👓 Eric Trump’s ugly ‘three extra shekels’ attack on Bob Woodward draws accusations of anti-Semitism | Raw Story

Read Eric Trump’s ugly ‘three extra shekels’ attack on Bob Woodward draws accusations of anti-Semitism by David Badash (Raw Story)
Eric Trump is lashing out at veteran Watergate journalist Bob Woodward, and his remarks are drawing accusations of anti-Semitism. Wednesday morning the president’s son charged the author of “Fear” – the latest bombshell book exposing the Trump administration as inept and corrupt – with writing it “to make 3 extra shekels.”

🎧 The Pack Horse Librarians Of Eastern Kentucky | NPR

Listened to The Pack Horse Librarians Of Eastern Kentucky from NPR | Morning Edition

In 1930s Kentucky, in coal country, books made their way to remote and isolated regions of the state through The Pack Horse Library Project.

I just heard this story on NPR this morning and though “Modern Little Free Librarians have it so easy…”

🔖 Theory Of Self Reproducing Automata by John Von Neumann, Arthur W. Burks (Editor) | 9780252727337

Bookmarked Theory Of Self Reproducing Automata by John von Neumann (University of Illinois Press)
Waiting for the price of some of these to drop.

Digital copy available on Archive.org.

👓 Add yourself to the #UnboundEq map | Equity Unbound

Read Add yourself to the #UnboundEq map by Catherine (Equity Unbound)
Zoom in, out, and around the map below to see the locations of #UnboundEq participants… and then add yourself. Before you add your pin to the map, think about the location you wish to share — would you like to share your work/study location, your home, your birthplace? There are privacy implica...
Done and done

👓 Equity Unbound Webcomic: Amplification Effect | Kevin’s Meandering Mind

Read Equity Unbound Webcomic: Splintered Digital Identities by dogtrax (dogtrax.edublogs.org)
I am dipping into Equity Unbound, a new online course/collaboration with Mia Zamora, Maha Bali and Catherine Cronin. They will be working with university students as well as opening things up to other spaces where folks, like you and me, can jump in. (The Twitter tag is here...

Reply to Equity Unbound Webcomic: Splintered Digital Identities | Kevin Hodgson

Replied to Equity Unbound Webcomic: Splintered Digital Identities by Kevin HodgsonKevin Hodgson (dogtrax.edublogs.org)
I am dipping into Equity Unbound, a new online course/collaboration with Mia Zamora, Maha Bali and Catherine Cronin. They will be working with university students as well as opening things up to other spaces where folks, like you and me, can jump in. (The Twitter tag is here: #unboundeq)  I am always interested in seeing how new offerings can be riffs off previous open learning networks, such as NetNarr, Rhizo, Digiwrimo, CLMOOC, and others.
Kevin, your comic really resonates, particularly for someone who’s got over 200 social media related accounts and identity presences in various places on the internet.

It reminds me of a line I wrote a few months back in an article about the IndieWeb idea of Webmentions for A List Apart entitled Webmentions: Enabling Better Communication on the Internet:

Possibly worst of all, your personal identity on the internet can end up fragmented like so many horcruxes across multiple websites over which you have little, if any, control.

Inherent in this idea is that corporate interests and others who run social sites can disappear, delete, or moderate out of existence any of my writing, photos, audio, video, or other content into the memory hole at any time and for almost any reason. And just like a destroyed horcrux, their doing so takes a bit of my soul (identity) with it each time.

A few years back, I decided to take back my own identity on the web and post everything of interest to me on my own website on my own domain first–a digital commonplace book if you will. Only then do I syndicate it into other communities, websites, or areas as needed. (Even this reply is on my own site before I syndicate it to yours.) As a result, I own a tremendously large part of my online identity (though even at that, a lot of it is published privately for myself or select small audiences).

I hope that as Equity Unbound continues and we explore the ideas of identity, public/private, and related topics, people might consider some of these ideas and implications and potentially work on expanding solutions for students, teachers, and the rest of the world.