26 mars 2019

Create A Graph

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Create A Graph
Via Pete MacKay's Teacher List, this site is a nifty tool that clearly illsutrates the relation between data and graphs. I would like to see something like this accept syndicated data from remote feeds. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:12 - - Permalien [#]


From E-learning to E-knowledge

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. From E-learning to E-knowledge
Some good stuff in this discussion of the relationship between e-learning and content management. For example: "knowledge-based economies are driven by a free flow and intermeshing of data, information, and knowledge, where value is created from an ever-increasing reservoir of abundance. In such circumstances where resources are themselves not scarce value must be created in novel ways." And his account of the facets of knowledge is basically sound. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:12 - - Permalien [#]

13 States Agree to Raise H.S. Standards

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. 13 States Agree to Raise H.S. Standards
Without lingering on this item, let me observe that it's like making your car go faster by sticking an extra number on the dial of its speedometer. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:11 - - Permalien [#]

Bodcasting

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Bodcasting
"The RSS Bubble is here," writes Steve Gillmor, and it's hard not to agree. While I am pleased at the long-awaited recognition of content syndication, let me assert right now that RSS is not the short-cut to easy riches, that it will not replace everything that came before it, that it is likely to get mired in lawsuits over content and use, that if you are just writing your business plan, you're too late, and that if you invest now, you will probably lose your money. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:11 - - Permalien [#]

Future of FLOSSE: Interview with Stephen Downes - Part 2

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Future of FLOSSE: Interview with Stephen Downes - Part 2
This is the second part of my interview with Teemu Arina. The sound quality is so-so, but it was the first experience for both of us recording a Skype conversation. Arina summarizes, "Stephen talks about communities and what is actually a community and what kinds of communities people belong to. The internet allows people to pick very specific communities by topic out there. Communities are not anymore tied to a place but are more like networks, clusters and clouds." Direct links to MP3s: Part 1, Part 2. Interestingly, people looking for clarification of my Northern Voice talk, which was actually given after this interview was recorded, will find it here. By Teemu Arina, FLOSSE, March 2, 2005 [Refer][Research][Reflect]. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:10 - - Permalien [#]


Unanswered Questions about Open Access

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Unanswered Questions about Open Access
The purpose of this," writes the author, "is to put the brakes on the Open Access bandwagon." But despite its being published by a professor in a published journal, the article is filled with weak argument and outright misinformation. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:10 - - Permalien [#]

'Blog People' Respond

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. 'Blog People' Respond
Facing criticism on the American Library Association Council for an article criticizing Google Scholar published in the L.A. Times and an ill-conceived follow-up about the "Blog People", ALA President Michael Gorman is now claiming to have written in jest. "The piece (LJ, February 15th 2005) was intended to be satirical," he writes on the ALA Council list server. Does anyone believe this? Of course not. This is satire. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:09 - - Permalien [#]

Concepts and a Design for Fair Use and Privacy in DRM

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Concepts and a Design for Fair Use and Privacy in DRM
I don't think this is the answer, but the reasoning in this article is worth sharing. "We propose approaching this problem by a set of new design concepts bringing access to process context information to DRM license control systems. These concepts provide privacy by separating user and product identities and by enabling distribution history tracking." All very fine, but I doubt that I will ever see "hardware locking" as an "advantage". More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:09 - - Permalien [#]

Drugs That Speak To You

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Drugs That Speak To You
I have spoken on numerous occasions of fishing rods that teach you to fish and strawberry jam that gives instructions on the manufacture and use of the product. Learning, I said, would be embedded in everyday fixtures and devices the way writing is today. The devices would use RFID and content would be located via a distributed learning resources network. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:08 - - Permalien [#]

Implementing Real-world Structured Searches

By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Implementing Real-world Structured Searches
Is this how folksonomies are supposed to work? "Hint to conference planners: If you want the blogosphere to synchronize its coverage of your event, pick a tag and promote it." No, that's just the big spike speaking again. This is better, isn't it: "there are also implicit tags - namely links - that identify items about the conference." Of course. More...

Posté par pcassuto à 08:08 - - Permalien [#]