Contents contributed and discussions participated by Ed Webb
Soaring Above India's Poverty, a 27-Story Home - NYTimes.com - 1 views
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Blade Runner-meets-Babylon
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even here in the country’s financial capital, where residents bear daily witness to the stark extremes of Indian wealth and poverty, Mr. Ambani’s building is so spectacularly over the top that the city’s already elastic boundaries of excess and disparity are being stretched to new dimensions
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Blade Runner-meets-Babylon
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Stephen Downes: A World to Change - 0 views
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we need, first, to take charge of our own learning, and next, help others take charge of their own learning. We need to move beyond the idea that an education is something that is provided for us, and toward the idea that an education is something that we create for ourselves. It is time, in other words, that we change out attitude toward learning and the educational system in general. That is not to advocate throwing learners off the bus to fend for themselves. It is hard to be self-reliant, to take charge of one's own learning, and people shouldn't have to do it alone. It is instead to articulate a way we as a society approach education and learning, beginning with an attitude, though the development of supports and a system, through to the techniques and technologies that support that.
Mechanical Brides of the Uncanny - 0 views
Star Trek cited by Texas Supreme Court - 0 views
FastFiction - Intravenous Electric Fire - 7 views
Google admits cars collected email, passwords - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corpo... - 0 views
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Google said collecting the additional data was a mistake resulting from a piece of computer code from an experimental project that was accidentally included.
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Google has acknowledged a fleet of cars, equipped with wireless equipment, inadvertently collected emails and passwords of computer users in various countries, and said it was changing its privacy practices. The company said it wants to delete the data as soon as possible. Google announced the data collection in May, but said at the time the information it collected was typically limited to "fragments" of data because the cars were always moving. Since then, regulators in several of the more than 30 countries where the cars operated have inspected the data. "It's clear from those inspections that while most of the data is fragmentary, in some instances entire emails and URLs were captured, as well as passwords," said Google's vice-president of engineering and research, Alan Eustace, in a post on Google's blog.
Personas - a critique of data-mining - 0 views
What Are You Doing for Open Access Week? - 1 views
Virginia 4th-grade textbook criticized over claims on black Confederate soldiers - 1 views
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Masoff defended her work. "As controversial as it is, I stand by what I write," she said. "I am a fairly respected writer."
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When Masoff began work on the textbook, she said she consulted a variety of sources -- history books, experts and the Internet. But when it came to one of the Civil War's most controversial themes -- the role of African Americans in the Confederacy -- she relied primarily on an Internet search. The book's publisher, Five Ponds Press, based in Weston, Conn., sent a Post reporter three of the links Masoff found on the Internet. Each referred to work by Sons of the Confederate Veterans or others who contend that the fight over slavery was not the main cause of the Civil War.
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. Five Ponds Press has published 14 books that are used in the Virginia public school system, all of them written by Masoff. Masoff also wrote "Oh Yuck! The Encyclopedia of Everything Nasty" and "Oh Yikes! History's Grossest Moments."
Angle takes heat for remarks to high school Latinos - News - ReviewJournal.com - 0 views
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Angle's campaign had asked that the meeting not be recorded, but Barron said many students secretly videotaped the discussion on personal cell phones.
As sharing replaces surfing, great content trumps all.: The Social Path - 0 views
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“Awesomeness” doesn’t necessarily have to mean “life-changing wisdom from the fountain of genius.” Sometimes it just means holding yourself to a higher standard in your day-to-day content and avoiding getting into a rut just for the sake of consistency. And wherever you produce content — videos, podcasts, blogs, ads, Facebook — it’s more important than ever that you focus on what you have to offer instead of searching for widgets and plug-ins and toolbars to help you offer it slightly better. The days when people would idly surf the Web, grazing on what they could find, are largely over. Today, we've largely surrendered the discovery process to our social networks, feeding off the great links our friends have found and liked enough to share. Which means that consistency and audience loyalty aren't going to be enough anymore. You're going to need to make sure that everything you create is erupting with potential to be shared. Then you'll find the process is all around a heck of a lot easier.
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a medium without a message is little more than static
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