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anonymous

History Magazine - The Impact of the Potato - 0 views

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    Thist talks about how important the potato was in the industrial revolution
anonymous

ecology.com | The Industrial Revolution and Its Impact on Our Environment - 0 views

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    An article discussing the negative consequences of the industrial revolution
Bri Zabriskie

Thoughts on education and creativity - 0 views

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    YOU GOTTA WATCH THIS VIDEO ABOUT THE NEED FOR AN EDUCATIONAL REVOLUTION!!!
Gideon Burton

The Internet? We Built That - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • it’s impossible to overstate the importance of peer production to the modern digital world.
  • What sounds on the face of it like the most utopian of collectivist fantasies — millions of people sharing their ideas with no ownership claims — turns out to have made possible the communications infrastructure of our age.
  • Peer networks laid the foundation for the scientific revolution during the Enlightenment, via the formal and informal societies and coffeehouse gatherings where new research was shared. The digital revolution has made it clear that peer networks can work wonders in the modern age.
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  • We have an endless supply of folklore about heroic entrepreneurs who changed the world with their vision and their force of will. But as a society we lack master narratives of creative collaboration.
  • what the Internet and its descendants teach us is that there are now new models for doing things together, success stories that prove convincingly that you don’t need bureaucracies to facilitate public collaboration, and you don’t need the private sector to innovate
anonymous

The Herald - 0 views

    • anonymous
       
      View on capitalism as the cause of economic down turn. Brief talk on history of communism and socialism and why it failed. Seems to support socialism
  • Third, it wasn’t because communist countries rejected markets that they failed. It was because they backed off of Marxist-Leninist principles, and conciliated with capitalism, that they collapsed.
  • Second, communism had not a moment’s rest from attempts by the capitalist countries to destroy it.
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  • communism arose under inauspicious circumstances.
  • apitalism being too weak to block the rise of revolution meant that the revolution would have to take hold in a country where the working class was small and the industrial base — necessary to progress toward a communist society of plenty — was rudimentary at best
  • gainst the far right’s explanation that immigration is the cause of joblessness, the left could point out that insecurity is caused by the failure — indeed refusal — of capitalism to offer secure employment to all; that the solution is to transcend the capitalist system; and that where it has been transcended in the past, secure employment has been made available to all, along with guaranteed healthcare, security in old age, subsidised housing, free education, and a raft of other mass-oriented reforms
  • There is no freeloading in a socialist society. Work is an obligation
  • capitalism is the cause of your problems
  • Sweden, often celebrated as a social democratic paragon and held out as an attractive alternative to Marxist-Leninist-style socialism, has proved no less vulnerable to outbreaks of recession-induced xenophobia than bastions of neo-liberalism have
  • Attributing the demise of really-existing socialism to internal failings, and ignoring seven decades of efforts to exterminate the communist challenge — a practice of both the right and left — is a peculiar form of blindness.
Megan Stern

Pepe Escobar: Don't Mess With My Burqa, Monsieur - 0 views

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    One of the great virtues that the French Revolution promoted was tolerance. If the French society was to follow through with its contractual obligations, it would be rising up in rebellion against its government about now.
Kristen Nicole Cardon

Education, Social Media, and Ethics: Howard Gardner, Harvard Graduate School of Educati... - 1 views

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    Part of our new mindset in the digital revolution
Shuan Pai

Industrial Revolution in America - 0 views

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    Concise description of the IR in America.
Shuan Pai

Lowell Mill Girls - 0 views

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    Gives some specifics of the lowell mill girls and their contribution to the industrial revolution in America.
Katherine Chipman

Charles Dickens, Hard Times (1854), excerpts - 0 views

    • Rhett Ferrin
       
      I think the supreme irony Dickens illustrates is that people in the idustrial revolution had to work under attrocious conditions in mines and factories in order to get money to live, yet it was that same work that eventually killed them. Either through years of compounded coal dust in their lungs or accidents in the mines or facotries.
  • It was a town of red brick, or of brick that would have been red if the smoke and ashes had allowed it; but as matters stood, it was a town of unnatural red and black like the painted face of a savage. It was a town of machinery and tall chimneys, out of which interminable serpents of smoke trailed themselves for ever and ever, and never got uncoiled. It had a black canal in it, and a river that ran purple with ill-smelling dye, and vast piles of building full of windows where there was a rattling and a trembling all day long, and where the piston of the steam-engine worked monotonously up and down, like the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madness. It contained several large streets all very like one another, and many small streets still more like one another, inhabited by people equally like one another, who all went in and out at the same hours, with the same sound upon the same pavements, to do the same work, and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and to-morrow, and every year the counterpart of the last and the next.
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    Powerful imagery. I can picture the town!
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    Wonderful imagery. My favorite is The Old Curiosity Shop. I love Dickens. =]
David Potter

Coparative study between the French and Industrial Revolutions - 1 views

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    Talks about how capitalism to led Industrial and French Revolutions
Margaret Weddle

The Atomic Revolution: A Nuclear Comic Book from 1957: Scientific American Slideshows - 0 views

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    A Non-Fiction comic book of the history of the Atomic Age
Brandon McCloskey

BBC NEWS | Technology | Learning to love Web 2.0 - 0 views

  • Impressive services
  • Only last week Google splashed out on Writely, a web-based word processor that requires no downloads or installation and just runs in a browser window.
  • They are just the tip of an iceberg
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  • Maybe Web 2.0 is a transitional phase, and once we get used to interacting with online tools in a more natural way and dispense with static web, we will move to a world of true distributed computing.
  • We'll need to make sure that the successful Web 2.0 companies don't just sit on progress because it doesn't serve their business plans, like so many other computing companies have done in the past and continue to do today. If Web 2.0 is the first stage in a revolution, we need to make sure it's a permanent revolution.
anonymous

Twitter, Facebook, and social activism : The New Yorker - 2 views

    • anonymous
       
      Do you agree with this?
  • This is in many ways a wonderful thing. There is strength in weak ties, as the sociologist Mark Granovetter has observed. Our acquaintances—not our friends—are our greatest source of new ideas and information. The Internet lets us exploit the power of these kinds of distant connections with marvellous efficiency. It’s terrific at the diffusion of innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, seamlessly matching up buyers and sellers, and the logistical functions of the dating world. But weak ties seldom lead to high-risk activism.
  • The evangelists of social media don’t understand this distinction; they seem to believe that a Facebook friend is the same as a real friend and that signing up for a donor registry in Silicon Valley today is activism in the same sense as sitting at a segregated lunch counter in Greensboro in 1960.
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  • Boycotts and sit-ins and nonviolent confrontations—which were the weapons of choice for the civil-rights movement—are high-risk strategies. They leave little room for conflict and error. The moment even one protester deviates from the script and responds to provocation, the moral legitimacy of the entire protest is compromised.
    • anonymous
       
      But it was just a phone.
  • A networked, weak-tie world is good at things like helping Wall Streeters get phones back from teen-age girls.
  • These events in the early sixties became a civil-rights war that engulfed the South for the rest of the decade—and it happened without e-mail, texting, Facebook, or Twitter.
  • “It is time to get Twitter’s role in the events in Iran right,” Golnaz Esfandiari wrote, this past summer, in Foreign Policy. “Simply put: There was no Twitter Revolution inside Iran.”
  • The cadre of prominent bloggers, like Andrew Sullivan, who championed the role of social media in Iran, Esfandiari continued, misunderstood the situation. “Western journalists who couldn’t reach—or didn’t bother reaching?—people on the ground in Iran simply scrolled through the English-language tweets post with tag #iranelection,” she wrote. “Through it all, no one seemed to wonder why people trying to coordinate protests in Iran would be writing in any language other than Farsi.”
  • What mattered more was an applicant’s degree of personal connection to the civil-rights movement.
Brian Earley

The Project Gutenberg eBook of Burke's Writings and Speeches, Volume the Second, by Edm... - 0 views

    • Brian Earley
       
      Irish born English conservative approves of the American Revolution
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    The gutenberg project is an amazing source for online books and I just happened to find a compilation of Edmund Burke's works online.
Megan Stern

Free Classical Music For Everyone? Why That's Just Plain Old-Fashioned Communism! - 0 views

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    Do you believe the new digital economy is leading to worldwide Communism?
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    This was probably a rhetorical question, but I don't. I believe that our economy will adjust accordingly. Just because the media industry is changing dramatically, doesn't mean people are giving away free food, free houses, free services. I feel this is just an adaptation, not a complete economical revolution.
Megan Stern

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert. - 0 views

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    Still remains an excellent critique of the bourgeois lifestyle that developed in the Industrial Revolution.
Gideon Burton

"Why the Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted" Twitter, Facebook, and social activism : The N... - 0 views

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    Two of my colleagues recommended this contrarian view of social networks from the famed Malcolm Gladwell
Jake Corkin

China's growing middle class - 0 views

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    TIME article about china's rapid growing middle class.
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