- A characteristically vague attempt to explore the baffling Venn of work, study and life -

Tuesday 10 August 2010

Market of one

Cory Doctorow, writing in the Guardian:
I have loads of little scripts, programs, systems, files and such that make perfect sense to me, even though they're far from elegant or perfect. There's the script I use for resizing and uploading images to Boing Boing, the shelf I use to organise my to-be-read pile, the carefully-built mail rules that filter out spam and trolls and make sure I see the important stuff. I am a market of one: no one wants to make a commercial proposition out of filling my needs, and if they did, your average curator would be nuts to put something so tightly optimised for my needs into the public sphere, where it would be so much clutter.
One bit that stands out for me: I am a market of one

I like that. I like it a lot. Makes me think of consumer culture and learning styles. Something to think about, definitely.

Wednesday 7 April 2010

Strangely compelling

I'm not sure what this collection of pictures has to do with Shibboleth, but I suspect it might be something.

Take a tour of European cities and their misplaced manhole covers. It's much more interesting than it sounds, I promise.

Tuesday 6 April 2010

Living in the future


Watching some 'classic' DS9 the other day something frightening occured to us. Being passed around, poked and studied, these devices are all over the space station.
They're iPads.
The same thing happens when we're travelling around London. Some tube stations have projectors which play video adverts on the walls opposite the platforms.
We're living in the future.

Tuesday 30 March 2010

A Power to Persuade | The Weekly Standard

A Power to Persuade The Weekly Standard:

When Anthony Patch, one of Fitzgerald’s failed heroes, learns that “desire
cheats you,” he refers to a phenomenon we now recognize as the power of glamour:
“It’s like a sunbeam skipping here and there about a room. It stops and gilds
some inconsequential object, and we poor fools try to grasp it—but when we do
the sunbeam moves on to something else, and you’ve got the inconsequential part,
but the glitter that made you want it is gone—.” We may demand the sparkling
surface, like a cellophane coating, yet what we are able to grasp will be of
little consequence. Glamour wields the power to capture its viewers’ attention
as if by a spell that fascinates and arrests. .  .  . Transfixed, one gazes at a
world of possibility that is foreclosed, inaccessible, yet endlessly
alluring.


Glamour, of course, can gild not only inconsequential objects but deeply
consequential ones, including political leaders, policies, and ideas. Here,
although she never discusses such subjects, Brown’s analysis offers a useful
warning: “Glamour did not emerge from human warmth, morals, and the messy
emotions that define the everyday,” she writes of Hollywood glamour photography.
“Rather, in their place was the coolly aloof and beautifully coiffed
personality, hovering over the multiple indignities of life on the ground.”
Glamour not only makes things look better than they really are. It also tends to
edit out human complexity—including, in the political realm, the complexity of
disagreements, of clashing values, of diverse wants, of technological, economic,
and moral tradeoffs.



Powerful stuff.

Thursday 25 March 2010

Time, gentlemen

This one has been bouncing around my head for a while now. Not sure why it chose this morning to fall out, but there you go.

Work-life balance, DINKs, flexi-time, paternity leave, contract work, visiting tutor...

Is full-time employment unworkable?

I'm no social historian, but I'm not so naïve as to believe that we had a perfect world where men went out to work and women stayed at home looking after the 2.4 children. That never happened. The only reason we think it happened was because society was run by the privileged few people for which that happened. Anyway...

More and more women are choosing to be in the workplace, resulting in wonderful things like maternity leave and flexible working hours. The concept of work-life balance has arisen out of this. I'm quite happy working part-time. If I worked full-time, I'm not sure I'd have enough time for all the other stuff I have to do, like ironing and baking oaty bun things and sawing bits of wood.

So, what will happen to the concept of full-time employment? I'm not so sure it's much cop any more.

Thursday 18 March 2010

Del Preston, the world's most advanced practitioner

"It's an old trick I picked up from an eLearning conference when I was tweeting with my phone... S'probably why kids can't be taught by conventional methods..."

Don't know why, but the image came to me...

Return trip

I have been approached by one of the Head of one of the Departments I work for and asked to consider joining a team of pretty high-ranking college bods on a trip to China. We're trying to set up links with a college outside Beijing who want to teach some of our Business courses.

I'm not sure how I feel about going back to China, particularly in a work capacity. It'll be weird, but good, I think. I just don't know.