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Nima Moinpour

LiveJournal: Discover global communities of friends who share your unique passions and ... - 0 views

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    LiveJournal is a vibrant global social media platform where users share common passions and interests. With hundreds of communities built around popular interests, like entertainment, celebrity gossip, music, food, travel, fashion, parenting, pets, and more, LiveJournal users express themselves through creative journaling and lively commentary.
candice eley

Keyboard College | American RadioWorks - 1 views

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    I heard this documentary on the radio this weekend and thought it worth sharing with the class - an interesting study on one type of networked environment that is on the rise (and one that we are a part of), the digital classroom.
Angelica Ramirez

Google Art Project - 1 views

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    Liza shared this site with our group today. Pretty spectacular!
candice eley

People vs. Apes: Do Social Skills Give Us an Edge? - 0 views

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    I heard this on NPR as I was driving and couldn't help but think of this week's reading from Smart Mobs. The text discusses the role that cooperation plays in human society, that if we were designed to spread out genes without regard to others, that cooperation would have been "bred out" generations ago. This story shows that cooperation, or at least social interaction based on valuing the needs and goals of others, does seem to be uniquely human. Networked collaboration isn't the result of technology - it's the result of basic humanity.
Katie Edmonds

Savage Minds Backup - 0 views

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    Savage Minds is a collective web log devoted to both bringing anthropology to a wider audience as well as providing an online forum for discussing the latest developments in the field. We are a group of Ph.D. students and professors teaching and studying anthropology and are excited to share it with you. Savage Minds was founded in 2005 and has been going strong ever since. In 2006 Nature ranked Savage Minds 17th out of the 50 top science blogs across all scientific disciplines. In 2010, American Anthropologist has called Savage Minds "the central online site of the North American anthropological community" whose "value is found in the quality of the posts by the site's central contributors, a cadre of bright, engaged, young anthropology professors." The title of our blog comes from Lévi-Strauss's book Pensée Sauvage. And yes: that is a pansy on the mast head.
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