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“…does not directly answer questions about Proust but rather provides textual and visual occasions for experiencing À la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time). Specifically, it is built on the recurring motif of the church…”
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from Texas A&M, “An online index to historical and critical items about science fiction, fantasy and horror”
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OMSFG! I loved KFAT during my Bay Area sabbatical year 1979-80, and it’s sort of back: “KFAT is the only dead radio station you can listen to on your computer. It doesn’t even smell up your speakers – not too badly, anyhow. “
Category Archives: Uncategorized
links for 2007-02-09
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“a free online service that lets you remix popular feed types and create data mashups using a visual editor…. Each Pipe consists of two or more modules, each of which performs a single, specific task. For example, the Fetch module will retrieve a feed U
links for 2007-02-08
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Eric Raymond’s interesting take, both feet grounded in Libertarian perspective
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the Ears of the Hippopotamus: the Third Edition in pdf, via books.google.com
links for 2007-02-07
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David Huynh at it again: “…a lightweight structured data publishing framework that lets you create web pages with support for sorting, filtering, and rich visualizations by writing only HTML and optionally some CSS and Javascript code.”
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“Click on an element to see a list of comic book pages involvingthat element. Click on a thumbnail on the list to see a full comic bookpage.
links for 2007-02-06
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a lesson in tenor and chaises, via Information Aesthetics
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5 minute music video by a Kuwaiti pop idol
links for 2007-02-04
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“The purpose of the WOZIPEDIA is to provide a heavily-hyperlinked, deep and informative collection of essays and exhibits using the persona of Steve Wozniak as its center. The core of this will be Wozniak himself and the Apple II, his masterpiece. Using t
links for 2007-02-01
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via Crooked Timber (“Cos This Is What We Do Best…Well not us. But this guy.”)
links for 2007-01-31
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from Pavel Karnaukhov, Creativelab in Ukraine
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” The G-Econ research project is devoted to developing a geophysically based data set on economic activity for the world…”
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NPR podcasts
Woolf on his formal education
Leonard Woolf spent seven years as a civil servant in Ceylon (1904-1911), seemingly a period of exile after five years (1899-1904) of intense intellectual life as an undergraduate at Cambridge. His explanation for this odd jag of career path offers a model of Education that’s worth consideration as an alternative to the conventional framework of academic success:
Compared with most scholars I did little work at Cambridge, if work means going to lectures, reading, and stuffing your head with what will give you a high place in an examination. I hate lectures and, as at Trinity the authorities did not insist on scholars attending them punctiliously, I went to few. I read voraciously both in Greek and Latin and in English and French, but it was not the kind of diet which wins you very high marks in an examination. I am quite good at exams, but the truth is that I was a really first-class classical scholar when I came up from St. Paul’s to Trinity, but nothing like as good when I took Part I of the Classical Tripos. When I took the Civil Service examination, I could read Greek and Latin fluently, as I still can, but I had forgotten all the paraphernalia of syntax and writing Greek and Latin compositions. The result was that I got poor marks in the classical papers in which I should have amassed most of my marks and so did extremely badly…
I am glad too that I lived the kind of life at Trinity which was mainly the reason why I did not do well in the examinations. It was, I think, a civilized life both intellectually and emotionally. My intellect was kept at full stretch, which is very good for the young, by books and the way I read them and by friends and their incessant and uncompromising conversation. The emotion came from friendship and friends, but also from the place, the material and spiritual place, Trinity and Cambridge. (Sowing, pp 193-195)
This reminds me of a favorite quotation from John Ciardi:
A university is a reading and discussion club. If students knew how to use the library, they wouldn’t need the rest of the buildings. The faculty’s job, in great part, is to teach students how to use a library in a living way. All a student should really need is access to the library and a place to sleep. (from Ciardi Himself, 1989)
So I find myself wondering if this path of voracious reading and conversation, in a setting that offers ‘material and spiritual’ support to the self-propelled Scholar, is still viable as a personal strategy? In retrospect, it seems a pretty good description of my own Education, in that so much of my path in undergraduate and graduate years was influenced by the riches of the locales (and especially by the bookstores of Cambridge MA and Palo Alto CA) and by the remarkable contemporaries with whom I spent so much time. I certainly remember professors and even a few courses that profoundly influenced my own development, but most of the real learning was anchored in people and places, not in curriculum and “training” as provided by institutions. Is that true for EVERYbody… and if so, doesn’t it suggest that all those committee meetings and strategic plans and disciplinary wranglings are mostly wheelspinning?
The world needs much more of this
Marc Luscher’s Mobile Theater (see more of his work at www.luscher.org and in his Flickr realm)