All posts by dispar

LinkedIn

LinkedIn

Recently, a friend from Switzerland invited me to join his LinkedIn network. I joined in but didn’t add any contact. Another friend, graduating MBA from the University of Notre-Dame, was talking about LinkedIn with fellow MBA graduates and I decided to flesh out my network a bit. Not that I might benefit directly from this type of contact but I like to put people in touch and the very concept of a social network is quite important for me.

Un ami m’a invité dernièrement et je me suis inscrit. Plus tard, un autre ami en parlait lors d’une discussion avec des collègues d’université. J’ai donc pensé agrandir mon cercle de connaissance. Pas que j’aie vraiment besoin de ce type de contact mais j’aime bien mettre les gens en contact et le principe de réseau social est assez important pour moi.

Wired News: The New Old Journalism

Wired News: The New Old Journalism

Because whether we’re talking today or 10 years ago, it’s not the medium, it’s the reporter.

And if “we’re talking 10 years from now,” it won’t be the reporter either.
Penenberg’s other Wired “Media Hack” contributions have tended to be much more insightful. So either he’s getting defensive (“we’re still relevant as we teach journalism students to write the same way as we did 10 years ago”) or he was a bit lazy in his critical thinking. No, not the buzzword. The actual reflection.
I’m sure Penenberg and others see the implications of people’s appreciation for the convenience of skipping “reporters” to get critically at the writing itself, whether the author has been trained at NYU’s journalism department or did a dissertation in molecular biology in Madrid.
It’s this thing with journalists: they tend to think that they’re better than people at processing information. So instead of helping people use their own variety of perspectives, they delude themselves in the notion that they’re the closest thing to “objectivity” that the world can get. Not to mention the fact that they think “objectivity” is an absolute value, in and of itself (they probably never appreciated a tasty old cheese!). Well, the other problem (that we see in blogs, including my own blogging activities) is that people focus on “releasing early” instead of seeing the broad picture. No, it’s not about “depth.” It’s about taking a step back. Very few things are extremely time-sensitive and none of them is covered particularly well by journalists.
Hey, it’s not their fault. They’re trained like that. So I wouldn’t ever blame journalists. But I think journalism is more of a problem than a solution.
Once in a while, I get the impression that there’s hope and that journalists will finally see the light. But then, even the most “enlightened” act reactively.

Ah, well…

(US) National Homebrew Day

National Homebrew Day

In 1979, the American Homebrewers Association originally claimed National Homebrew Day to be the first Saturday in May. On May 7, 1988, Congress officially recognized National Homebrew Day. Homebrewers around the world use the day to celebrate beer and brewing and attract attention to their hobby.

No idea Congress had recognized it. Wasn't 1987 the year homebrewing was made legal again?

(Spoof) Early Chapters

The Onion | Area Man Well-Versed In First Thirds Of Great Literature
You know, not such a bad idea, actually. I like this idea of going against the notion of a book as a complete form. Multiple readings, voices, interpretations, which run against the canon by using the canon. Nicey!
Yeah, yeah. It’s intended to show that you can’t be well-read if you haven’t read the whole works. But what’s fun with a book is partly that we can do whatever we want with it. If I want to start with the final chapter, so be it. If I want to peruse and browse, catching glimpses of thought-provoking notions, who’s preventing me. Let’s break free of the narrative structure! Let’s go back to excerpts of Greimas, Guattari, Bakhtin, Propp, Genette, Barthes, Gramsci, and Derrida to fight linearity, hegemony, discourse, and dialogue!
😉