Month: September 2018
👓 Suggestion: Dealing with Information Overload · Issue #280 · feedbin/feedbin | GitHub
I sometimes talk to friend about using RSS and I've heard repeatedly them abandoning it for the following reason. At the beginning everything is great, they love it. They don't have too muc...
That was such a depressing exhibit wasn’t it?
📖 Read pages 79-92 of 288 of Linked: The New Science Of Networks by Albert-László Barabási
📖 Read pages 79-92 of 288 of Linked: The New Science Of Networks by Albert-László Barabási
He’s continuing the evolving story of network research following along some of his own research and that of others. There’s something unsettling or missing here in the jump to preferential attachment. What is causing preferential attachment to occur? This may be a factor of the individual settings in which things are happening, but it feels like a major missing piece from an otherwise organic feeling mathematical/theoretical perspective.
👓 The Garden and the Stream: A Technopastoral | Hopgood
Opening keynote for dLRN 2015. Delivered October 16th @ Stanford. Actual keynote may have gone on significant tangents… 1 | a year in the garden A week or so ago, I was reading about the Oreg…
A fantastic read. This makes me want to supplement my commonplace book here on the web with a wiki instance.
👓 Think About Capabilities, Not Permissions | The Piraeus
I suggest we can move OER forward by shifting the conversation from permissions to capabilities.
Reply to Think About Capabilities, Not Permissions
Thanks for this Nathan. I did write a somewhat longer response to a few critiques late last week that clarified my position. In some sense I wanted to raise the idea of version control and it’s power/value more so than to just add on another “requirement” on the permissions side.
👓 This Is a Constitutional Crisis | The Atlantic
A cowardly coup from within the administration threatens to enflame the president’s paranoia and further endanger American security.
👓 I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration | The New York Times
I work for the president but like-minded colleagues and I have vowed to thwart parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations.
I catch myself thinking for a moment that it would be an entertaining joke on Trump if they published this without such a source existing. The end of this week’s news cycle is going to be consumed with this piece…
👓 Here are the four Trump staffers most likely behind the anonymous New York Times op-ed. | Weekly Standard
It’s only been online for a few hours, but the anonymous New York Times op-ed penned by a “senior official in the Trump administration” has set off a frenzy of guessing about who is claiming to be one of the people “working diligently from within to frustrate parts of his agenda and his worst…
📺 “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan” Inshallah | Amazon Prime
Directed by Daniel Sackheim. With John Krasinski, Wendell Pierce, Abbie Cornish, Ali Suliman. Jack and Greer fear Suleiman's next attack could be on U.S. soil. They must figure out how to stop him or risk enormous costs.
Overall, not a horrible series or even a season. It wasn’t quite as gripping as I’d hoped it would be. There was something missing that I can’t quite put my finger on though. Perhaps it was that the series wasn’t so much about Jack Ryan as it was about terrorism and humanity? The show did a good job of humanizing the “foreigners” in this piece, so there wasn’t as much antagonism as typical stories like this would otherwise have. The “heavy” was a bit too sympathetic which deflated some of the tension. You’re almost rooting for him at times and the rest is all just process.
Jack Ryan wasn’t a lead in this so much as it was a solid ensemble of people. In fact perhaps the lead was “Suleiman” himself and the rest floated around him?
👓 The Verge at work: backing up your brain | The Verge
The Verge at Work is a series about process. We’re not scientists, and we’re not gurus, we’re just trying to get some work done. The solutions presented here are highly personal, and highly personalized. Not the only way, but our way. Writing about the history of commonplace books in The New York Review of Books, Robert Darnton notes that readers in early modern England, from the layperson to famous minds like Francis Bacon and John Milton, “read in fits,” moving from book to book, grabbing bites, consuming and rearranging them. They’d transcribe and revisit notable passages in their commonplace books as a way to further comprehend the written word. Darnton writes, “[Reading and writing] belonged to a continuous effort to make sense of things, for the world was full of signs: you could read your way through it; and by keeping an account of your readings, you made a book of your own, one stamped with your personality.” Sixty years ago, Vannevar Bush imagined a hypertext information machine (a memex) in his essay ‘As We May Think’ that would act as an “intimate supplement” to memory. Bush imagined a desk-sized machine for keeping track of a user’s books, records, and communications, tracking what you read and your notes like a modern day version of the commonplace book. Years after reading a book or writing down a note, the user would be able to return to it, tracing written thoughts in “trails” that can be recalled, shared, and stored. “Thus science may implement the ways in which man produces, stores, and consults the record of the race,” Bush wrote, surely unaware of where hypertext would take us.
👓 The mysterious case of missing URLs and Google’s AMP | sonniesedge
When I saw a speculative article about Google wanting to “kill” URLs appear in my news feed, I didn’t think too much about it. Trying to hide “ugly” URLs… well, that feels like a natural thing for an app to try and do. Designers of apps often (erroneously) assume that users cannot cope with “technical” things like URLs and try to hide them away, lest the user start bleeding from their eyes.
🎧 This Week in Google 470 Sparkle Vamps | TWiT.TV
Social Media Bad, Hot Chips GoodPicks of the Week:
- Data and Society's Joan Donovan tells us how to stop online hate.
- Leo explains why Google's location history tracking policy is a big deal.
- Google is working on its own Amazon Show competitor.
- NYU is giving Facebook 10,000 anonymized MRI scans to help train its AI systems.
- At the Hot Chips conference, Google's Pixel Visual Core and AMD's chip roadmap are all the rage.
- Facebook wants to rate how trustworthy you are to fight fake news
- Changelog: new Google Fit and some good news
- Everything you ever wanted to know about the Pixel 3 XL - in Russian!
- Google's Shortwave could change podcasting forever.
- Joan's Stuff: Antisocial Media by Siva Vaidhanathan and Custodians of the Internet by Tarleton Gillespie
- Stacey's Thing: Capitalism without Capital: The Rise of the Intangible Economy by Jonathan Haskel
- Leo's Pick: Apple History on Triangulation