Banality of Heroism

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Social Networking and eLearning

Oops! I did it again. Launched on one of my long-winded ramblings about the convergence between learning management systems (in this case, Moodle) and social networking sites (in this case, Facebook).

Executive summary:

Facebook’s power’s in fluid, organic networks. Moodle’s power’s in structured but flexible learning-based groups. I personally see a marriage made in heaven.

Lounge: Moodle as New Facebook

Views and Feeds

Yep! One of those blogposts about blogging.

This is somewhat interesting. For some reason, I’m getting much fewer daily views on this blog but I’m getting a lot more feed views, a good proportion of which come from Google Feedfetcher. Maybe WordPress.com has changed its usage statistics to switch Feedfetcher to feeds instead of views or maybe it’s just a coincidence. But it’s fun to think about what happens with this blog.

Actually, I feel I’m getting more interaction with readers, which is what I’ve been missing. I still won’t constrain myself to writing very short blog entries, but I like what this blog is giving me, at this point.

OTOH, I have been posting just a bit more than I used to on some of my Blogger/Blogspot blogs:

Part of the reason I blog there more is because of ease of use. Since Google is so ubiquitous, some sites make it very easy to blog an item on Blogger. I mostly tend to use bookmarklets but I’ve been trying the “BlogThis!” buttons on some services, like Flickr and DailyMotion.

Of course, none of this should get in the way of the work I have to do (which is, in fact, quite a bit). And it still doesn’t.

I’ve also spent a bit more time on Facebook. Not much (maybe an hour a week) but it does shift my online activities a bit.

All of this relates to my notion that blogging and other participatory aspects of the online world should merge. In fact, I kind of like the fact that I can insert blog feeds in Facebook and Moodle

Humanistic Sociocentrism

There must be a common term for this and it is certainly well-known. A kind of wishful thinking of the trailblazer type. A combination of utopianism, humanism, naïveté, forward-thinking, and ethnocentrism. You wish for society to change in a given way, you predict that society will eventually switch to that direction, you wait patiently for social changes to happen, and you eventually notice that you’re in the minority.

Been thinking about “dreamers” («rêveurs», in Amélie), artists, idealists, intellectuals, marginals, elites, trend-setters. May even consider myself part of that group, somehow. A tiny minority. Running the gamut from hyper-specialist to Renaissance-type polymath. Getting jobs in different sectors but mostly in fields such as business, academia, expressive culture, or diplomacy.

Using the pattern of “ethnocentrism,” sociocentrism as social limits on thinking. Not necessarily thinking your social class to be better than others. But failing to notice that members of other social groups (in this case, the majority groups) may not think along the same lines as you do.

It might be what prevents some people to become successful politicians. Social life might be better that way.

OLPC WiFi?

Intel modifies Wi-Fi to add mileage | CNET News.com

The system isn’t designed for the U.S. or Europe. Instead, it is part of the chip giant’s efforts to bring computing technologies to people in emerging markets. The communications infrastructure in most of these countries is fairly anemic and most of it is concentrated in cities. Villages, where a large portion of the population lives, are effectively cut off from the outside world except by car, bus or footpath.

Glad to see as much emphasis on “emerging markets” from tech sectors. Either the OLPC trailblazed for this to happen or it embedded itself in a broader process of acknowledging the needs of those societies with lesser GNPs…

Brikka Notes

Brikka

26/1/05 8:10

108g water

5g grounds

96g coffee

26/1/05 8:25

96g water

6g grounds

85g coffee(26/1/05 8:30)

28/1/05 8:43

98g water

6g grounds

89g coffee

Too strong!

28/1/05 8:51

94g water

4g grounds

78g coffee

Still too strong!

29/1/05 10:21

77g water

7g grounds

35g additional water

100g coffee

29/1/05 12:46

109g water

6g grounds

42g added water

77g coffee, huge spill

29/1/05 12:57

29/1/05 15:17

95g water

6g grounds

36g added water

410-284g=124g coffee, small spill

29/1/05 15:29

31/1/05 8:10

112g water

8g grounds

42g added water

132g coffee plus small spill?

As if boiled

1/2/05 10:09

86g water

6g grounds

38g added water

97g coffee

1/2/05 10:19

1/2/05 18:43

92g water

8g grounds

23g added water

103g coffee

1/2/05 18:53

2/2/05 18:23

106g water

6g grounds

29g additional water

110g coffee

3/2/05 8:36

101g water

8g grounds

26g added

86g coffee +spill

3/2/05 8:50

3/2/05 12:18

105g water

6g grounds

31g add

huge spill

5/2/05 8:30

101g water

7g grounds

20g added

73g coffee spill

5/2/05 8:37

5/2/05 14:07

83g water

7g grounds

17g added

93g no spill

5/2/05 14:19

5/2/05 18:18

96g water

6g grounds

23g added

2g ginger

93g coffee

5/2/05 18:27

6/2/05 12:49

102g water

8g grounds

19g added

101g coffee (almost no spill when take right away)

6/2/05 13:01

6/2/05 17:12

96g water

5g grounds

13g added

91g coffee,took as was getting done

6/2/05 17:22

7/2/05 8:35

88g water

7g grounds

19g added

more heat

7/2/05 8:50 still more heat

7/2/05 8:51

90g coffee

no spill, off as ready

7/2/05 18:20

97g water

7g grounds

24g added

7/2/05 18:31

Comes up a bit

7/2/05 18:34

Taken off before

82g coffee

8/2/05 10:38

104g water

7g grounds

21g added

more heat,closed pot

102g coffee, some spill

8/2/05 10:46

10/2/05 9:06

90g water

7g grounds

17g added

+pot

285g water

10g grounds

31g added

12/2/05 12:19

100g water

8g grounds(coarse, mill weirdness, fresh batch)

20g added

100g coffee

12/2/05 12:32

good musky, some sweetness, bit “lighter roast” aroma/taste, some acidity, body fair

12/2/05 13:14

84g water

8g grounds(still coarse)

18g added

82g coffee

12/2/05 13:26

12/2/05 18:53

112g water

8g grounds(still coarse)

18g added

12/2/05 19:07

>heat

12/2/05 19:08

spill

13/2/05 11:56

85g water

9g grounds(fine)

13g added

bit > heat

13/2/05 12:08 turn up

76g coffee, right away

15/2/05 13:14

86g water

7g grounds

23g added

15/2/05 13:27

85g coffee

some spill

Moka Pot

30/1/05 16:41 (moka)

280g water

10g grounds

105g added water

327g coffee

full pot

30/1/05 16:59

31/1/05 8:37(moka)

288g water

11g grounds

79g added water

open pot

277g+(full cup)

full pot

31/1/05 8:53

1/2/05 10:27 (moka)

327g(?) water

9g grounds

56g added water

281g+ coffee(full cup)

50g remainder

5/2/05 8:52 (moka)

316g water

12g grounds

57g added

280g coffee plus(spills as pours)

34g more

kind of light but flavour

6/2/05 13:25

269g water

11g grounds

36g added

263g coffee. Long brew..

6/2/05 13:41

7/2/05 8:01(started before)

272g water

11g grounds

60g added

264g coffee

long brew

7/2/05 8:12

7/2/05 21:20 (moka)

308g water

10g grounds

35g added

>heat

7/2/05 21:30

267+25g coffee(full cup)

 
 

Getting Things Done: Messy Edition

Recent book (authors Eric Abrahamson and David Freedman) on the possible benefits of not maintaining a strictly organised working space.

Have a Messy Desk? Congrats, Youre More Productive

Yet messy people are often cast in a negative light. In one study cited by [National Association of Professional Organizers], two-thirds of respondents believed workers with messy desks were seen as less career-driven than their neater colleagues.

Haven’t read the book and, as academics, we should probably be wary of “research findings” by NAPO or by Abrahamson and Freedman. But that Reuters piece does make some insightful points about people, like me, who find alternative ways to organise their lives.

As per the quote above, there is a stigma about us. At least, there is a stigma in the “general population.” There is plenty of stigmatisation of “messy people” in advertisement, among office workers, and in popular books. The whole “reflection of your inner self” ideology. “You can’t organise your life if your desk is cluttered.” “Clear your mind by putting things in neatly labeled boxes.” “You’ll never be able to finish any project if you have such a mess on your hands.”

But such a stigma is much less prevalent among academics or, even, among many members of the “geek crowd.” Those of us who handle most of our work-related material through computers (either on hard drives or online) know that it’s extremely easy to find information very quickly without the need of folder hierarchies. Hence Spotlight in Mac OS X and Google Desktop Search on Windows XP and Vista.

In my case, a messy desktop has often been my “workspace” while folders were mostly meant as archives. The same applies to my online accounts these days. Gmail as a centralised location for some of my important data. Browser tabs as “modes.” Search replacing “filing cabinets.” Outlining as a second step after note-taking/brainstorming.

Like many others, I have “a lot of things going on at the same time” and am solely responsible for all of these “projects.” Project management strategies typically make little sense to my individual work though they can work really well for collaboration with others. In other words, I need my “desk” to be messy so that I can do the kind of work I do well.

This all relates to Jess’s points about social bookmarking, of course. I’m also reminded of Edward T. Hall’s ideas about “polychronic time” in Dance of Life. As it so happens, DoL is one of the first books I have read that was written by an anthropologist. Hall has been known for a few things in the field of cultural anthropology (mostly to do with gestural behaviour) but he has always been something of a maverick. Not that I want to rehabilitate his work but I do think there’s some valuable insight to be found in this specific book. Hall has been one of relatively few anthropologists of the time to think about the perception of time, something which many people are doing now using Schutz has their basis. It might well be that a “polychronic time” may be quite compatible with the current tendency for a “multi-tasking mode,” among human beings. In such a mode, neat organisation may be less desirable.

A bilingual blog on disparate subjects. / Un blogue disparate bilingue.