Skip to main content

Home/ ALT Lab/ Group items matching "atlantic" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Jonathan Becker

Wikipedia Dominates Among Smartphone Users Looking For News and Information - The Atlantic - 0 views

  •  
    "Another way to look at Wikipedia's influence: Wikipedia reaches almost one-third of the total mobile population each month, according to Knight's analysis, which used data from the audience-tracking firm Nielsen. "
sanamuah

The Full-Circle Definition of 'Computer' - The Atlantic - 0 views

  •  
    ""That's our goal: To make a computer much more like a human being, in the sense that it integrates data and can make decisions," Littlewood told me. "So the future definition of computer may be like the original. It may be like a person after all.""
Jonathan Becker

What Blogging Has Become - The Atlantic - 3 views

  •  
    "But first it is about this question: What is web writing in 2015? * * * You know, web writing - that chatty, affable, ephemeral old thing. The thing that prized personality over pomp, the thing with feathers (and links). What does it look like?"
anonymous

Ev Williams is The Forrest Gump of the Internet - The Atlantic - 1 views

  • 85 cents of every new dollar in online advertising went to Google or Facebook in early 2016
  • The developers who wrote Drupal and Wordpress, two important pieces of blogging software, both recently expressed anxiety over the open web’s future. Since so many of these social networks are operated by algorithms, whose machinations are proprietary knowledge, they worry that people are losing any control over what they see when they log on. The once-polyphonic blogosphere, they say, will turn into the web of mass-manufactured schlock.
  • For all the talk of their radical openness, blogs had mostly been the domain of those with hosting space, programming experience, and the time to write them
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • If your job was to feed people, but you were only measured by the efficiency of calories delivered, you may learn over time that high-calorie, high-processed foods were the most efficient ways to deliver calories,” he says. They would be the most margin-friendly way to deliver calories. But the food still wouldn’t be good—because the original metric didn’t take into account “sustainability, or health, or nourishment, or happiness of the people.”
  • Google and Facebook, just two companies, send more than 80 percent of all traffic to news sites. (No wonder they make 85 cents of every digital-ad dollar.
Tom Woodward

The 2 Teenagers Who Run the Wildly Popular Twitter Feed @HistoryInPics - Alexis C. Madrigal - The Atlantic - 1 views

  •  
    "I'm talking about @HistoryInPics, which, as I discovered, is run by two teenagers: Xavier Di Petta, 17, who lives in a small Australian town two hours north of Melbourne, and Kyle Cameron, 19, a student in Hawaii. "
Jonathan Becker

'I Don't Want My Children to Go to College' - Stacia L. Brown - The Atlantic - 0 views

  •  
    Hmmm... "Discussions about the future of education should never undersell the social import of sitting side by side, of holding conversations with students vastly unlike oneself, and of students being able to see their peers respond to their newly acquired insights..."
Jonathan Becker

The Internet That Was (and Still Could Be) - The Atlantic - 1 views

  •  
    Read this. Then read it again.
Yin Wah Kreher

'Voice' Isn't the Point of Writing - The Atlantic - 3 views

  •  
    Not that I think there's much actual merit in the "find your voice" theory, but you've just conflated being a good (that is, literary) writer with being an employed writer, and also your "voice" with grammatical minutiae. Read any essay by Benjamin and you'll find it unmistakable, no matter what the format of publication. Perhaps it's time to stop longing for the day you find your own voice. The second-worst kind of writing is committed by those struggling to find their voice (the worst kind being by those who think they have found it).
Yin Wah Kreher

Millennials Are Out-Reading Older Generations - The Atlantic - 1 views

  •  
    Do millenials like to read? That is my question. My nephew doesn't.
  •  
    The original Pew study's worth a look; much more nuance, especially breaking down the Millennials into three distinct groups. And this interesting finding: "Millennials' lives are full of technology, but they are more likely than their elders to say that important information is not available on the internet."
sanamuah

Learning How to Practice Medicine-Virtually - The Atlantic - 0 views

  •  
    "virtual students will visit the campus on occasion for "intense immersions" to learn skills such as, say, suturing wounds. Online students would visit the campus during the first week or two of the program as well as at the end of their first year to learn clinical skills-training that for on-campus students happens over the course of the year. The online students would also visit the campus at the end of the clinical year to do testing and have the option of doing a rotation at the Yale New Haven Hospital, according to Van Rhee."
sanamuah

Are Colleges Invading Their Students' Privacy? - The Atlantic - 1 views

  •  
    "as technology advances, and students' offline and online lives become more intertwined, data analytics-particularly, predictive analytics-may raise more ethical questions."
Tom Woodward

Things You Can't Talk About in a Coca-Cola Ad - The Atlantic - 0 views

  •  
    "When Daniel Joseph, a York University doctoral student studying labor and technology, found out about Coca-Cola's GIF the Feeling promotion, he knew exactly what he wanted to make with it: a Coke-branded critique of capitalism."
anonymous

Penn & Teller's Teller on How to Be an Effective Teacher - The Atlantic - 1 views

  • From the moment a teacher steps into the classroom, students look to him or her to set the tone and course of study for everyone, from the most enthusiastic to the most apathetic students.
  • The first job of a teacher is to make the student fall in love with the subject. That doesn’t have to be done by waving your arms and prancing around the classroom; there’s all sorts of ways to go at it, but no matter what, you are a symbol of the subject in the students’ minds.
  • As that symbol, Teller argued, the teacher has a duty to engage, to create romance that can transform apathy into interest, and, if a teacher does her job well, a sort of transference of enthusiasm from teacher to student takes place. The best teachers, Teller contended, find a way to teach content while keeping students interested. “If you don’t have both astonishment and content, you have either a technical exercise or you have a lecture.”
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • What I have, however, is delight. I get excited about things. That is at the root of what you want out of a teacher; a delight in what the subject is, in the operation. That’s what affects students.”
  • It’s easy to disregard the entertainment of your students as pandering, but it’s not,
  • When I go outside at night and look up at the stars, the feeling that I get is not comfort. The feeling that I get is a kind of delicious discomfort at knowing that there is so much out there that I do not understand and the joy in recognizing that there is enormous mystery, which is not a comfortable thing. This, I think, is the principal gift of education.
1 - 20 of 20
Showing 20 items per page