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Michelle Calhoun

Rebooting the Cosmos: Is the Universe the Ultimate Computer? - 0 views

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    Digital physicists try to explain that computation is not just for approximating reality but might actually be reality itself. The use examples such as bits instead of elementary particles or computer algorithims instead of physics. An interesting view on the computer world.
John Salem

Digital Agency - 1 views

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    The article by Rob Blades analyzes the role and value of computers from the perspective of a historian, particularly in relation to the shifting notion of agency and history. Much like movements in the field of History pertaining to the reintegration of marginalized groups, such as women or the working class, Blades argues that computers should be seen as having some measure of agency in our handling of them in research. He points to the number of programs coming close to matching Humans in the Turing Test, a test for determining "humanness," and delivers a counter argument to the claim that computers "dumb down" the population in general, and in particular historians who rely on them.
Michelle Calhoun

Harnessing Quantum Computers - 1 views

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    Quantum computers, argue many skilled MIT professionals, are the new, revolutionary way to perform advanced parallel quantum equations. They harness the use of particle, instead of bionary, which allows for a fast, multitaking, more advanced computer.
aakash singh

Humanities Computing as Digital Humanities - 1 views

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    This article presents an examination of how digital humanities is currently conceived and described, and examines the discursive shift from humanities computing to digital humanities.
Karissa Lienemann

What does a "cloud" data center look like? - 0 views

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    This site explains the components of cloud computing and the scale of the data centers where all of the information is stored. This article also has videos attached to give you a video tour of the Microsoft Datacenter. The scale of these datacenters is ridiculously large. Only a few companies are setting up these centers and allowing people to see them.
Michelle Calhoun

Human Trust vs. Cyber Trust - 0 views

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    With computers, we give up alot of face-to-face trust when we begin to engage in a more technology driven culture. So what steps need to be taken when we hand over the trust we give or revoke from human to human and hand it from human to computer. How can we build a safe and trustworthy relationship with this technology that we use everyday.
Michelle Calhoun

Alex Wright: Premonitions of the Internet - 0 views

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    The Creator is a film that personifies computers in the future to ask where it is they came from and trace their lineage back to a man named Alan Turing, who first asked the question, "Can Machines Think?" After the viewing of the film top computers scientist will have open discussions concerning the questions and concerns this film brings up.
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    This article attempts to survey the history and turn up the evidence of who actually invented the internet. Who were its' pioneers? And what was the driving force behing it all, what is the history here?
Michelle Calhoun

What in the World is a Quibit - 2 views

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    This article describes a quitbit. It juxtaposes the new quantum computer with its quibits to the current ones we have now that une the simple bit and byte mode of operation. Basically a quibit is a much more deeply complex for of the 0 and 1, yes and no unit that computers use traditionally.
Michelle Calhoun

Genius Across Cultures and the "Google Brain" - 1 views

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    This article discusses the theory of "the evolving brain" arguing that due to our environmental and cultural influences our cognitive skills and neurological giftings will constantly be different. For example, one of the men mentioned in the article never learned long division but argues he doesnt have to develop that skill when a computer can do it for him. At the same time, the arguement comes about that he will possess a different set of skills (like harnessing computer lioteracy) that are more applicable to himself and his surrounding enviorment.
aearhart

Exploring the humanities with digital tools | news @ Northeastern - 0 views

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    This article focuses on the limitations of the traditional method of studying literature. David Smith, assistant professor of computational social science in the College of Computer and Information Science, and Ryan Cordell, assistant professor of English and digital humanities in the College of Social Sciences and Humanities at Northeastern University hope to mend the gaps and limitations to the traditional method by encouaging a digitial humanities project for their school.
Percila Richardson

No Computer Left Behind - 1 views

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    In his blog, Dan Cohen decided to revisit a topic that was cover in the Chronicle of Higher Education. This data-mining related article discusses the issues with educational testing and growing technology in the humanities field. Devices that can browse an entire database of knowledge pin pointing specific facts. This device is then compared to the relationship between the calculator and math to this device and history. Just as the calculator has made memorizing certain mathematical principles pointless in testing, this device is said to make multiple choice test irrelevant for history. Similarly, cell phones, pdas, and tablets have been able to fill this gap already.
Karissa Lienemann

Alan Liu ยป "The Meaning of the Digital Humanities - A Paper in Progress&... - 6 views

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    This site is designed to organize the writings and events that are done by Alan Liu. Alan Liu is an English Professor at the University of California is Santa Barbara. His new media projects have been centered around digital humanities and the progress that it is making in technology. Other projects have focused on the cultural implications of humanities computing and our society as an information technology society. Also, Alan Liu is the founder on the UC New Media Directory that handles text encoding and human computer technology.
Andrea Verner

XML/TEI in the First-Year Writing Classroom - 2 views

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    This blog is over a first year teachers proposal to teach a writing course that is digitally based. By teaching this way allows for students to focus more on analyzing, archiving, and transforming into a more modern method. Instead of composing through a word documents, students will use the XML program which does not tell any computer what to do with the information. This program requires students to describe what they are doing as they do it. It also allows students to see all of their editing work and has other advantages that Word does not.
Ryan McClure

Teaching and Making Digital Archives - 4 views

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    A professor used her Women's Studies class as a way to test out the use of digital humanities in the undergraduate classroom. The assignment was to create an online archive of every issue of the feminist magazine "Conditions" as well as a presentation over the issue they chose. In doing so, they were required to scan in every page of the magazine and edit them on computer to fit together uniformly. At the end of the assignment period, she submitted the archive into the "Lesbian Poetry Archive" for public viewing and use. Through working on this archive, she became convinced that the PDF format will continue to be the main format for converting physical documents into the digital medium. This is due to the format being almost universal in digital humanities and the likelihood of it continuing to be a relevant file format for many years to come.
Michelle Calhoun

Can Machines be Programmed to Feel? - 0 views

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    Can emotions be replicated by a machine? Yann LeCun, a computer scientist at NYU, discusses the importance of emotions being prevelent in intelligent machines.
Michelle Calhoun

Can Intelligence Be Programmed? - 0 views

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    This post attempts to discuss and explor the possibility of the "thinking machine." Could computers become so smart as to function on a human level: think, feel, act, etc. as if it were really human? A panel discusses these phenominons and the reality behind the questions.
Andrea Verner

Course Description: 21st C Literacies (Ph.D. Lab in Digital Knowledge) - 0 views

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    This future course at a University wants to show how the human and the new machine are used for research and teaching. Their online learning method is used to incorporate different learning styles that are used in research with computational tools and networks that are connected throughout the world. This class is designed to prepare students in the humanities and social sciences that use new ways of thinking, teaching and learning. Their hoping with showing how online learning better educates students that it transforms higher education making it more meaningful to the present and future. After students have finished this course they will leave with many e-portfolio projects, public online writing, multimedia and collaborative productions.
Michelle Calhoun

Quantum Biology and the Hidden Nature of Nature - 0 views

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    Eitan Grinspun walks us through the wonderful world of computers and physics and how they contribute, no how they make or break, a movie. This topic is so interesting because I feel like it embodies the term digital humanities. It is actually intertwined to make an inhuman thing human with the characteristics of movement, communication, etc.
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    How intricately is physics intertwined with nature: flight patterns or birds, photosynthesis, etc? How is the subatomic realm affecting the real world that we see taking place all around us each day, or is it? This posting talks about the correlations between the two and if there really is a correlation at all?
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