Category Archives: Web/Tech

Grad school stuff

I’ve been working on a number of grad school projects. I’ve been blogging about them here.

One of those projects involves a video highlighting my father’s expertise as a transit-industry consultant. Here, he talks about building strong client relationships.

Office Space

At work last week, we moved into our new office area. It evolved from this:

To this:

It’s in the basement of the Harre Union. We like it so far. Our former space was bursting at the seams. What we have now is much more friendly to creativity and collaboration. You can see more photos here.

Tennis via social media

I had an excellent time playing tennis on Monday night with my good pal Ron Garcia. We played together in high school, and he went on to play at the collegiate level. I hit the ball well, especially since I haven’t played much in several years (although I have a blister on my thumb to show for it).

It was more or less dumb luck that we got together. Ron and his wife Denise happened to be in the area (they live in New England), which I learned after I spotted him on Twitter. We had a conversation through the microblogging platform and planned a get-together. Score one for social media.

Ron, Denise, and the Garcia family are the force behind Team Tobati, a nonprofit that is dedicated to improving the lives of disadvantaged young people in Tobati, Paraguay, in central South America.

Cue the theme music from “Dallas”

I spent last week in Dallas at a conference.

At said conference, we paid a visit to a small, obscure, out-of-the-way football stadium.

It has an unobtrusive big-screen display.

I learned a lot at the Emerge conference’s seminars, and it was a fun trip all around. More photos here.

Valparaiso University president for a day

Today, a Valparaiso University student switches places with President Heckler. We’re streaming it live here via ustream. Since the student, Nathan Kellams, is a physics major, while attending Nathan’s classes the president will get to brush up on quantum mechanics and nuclear physics. Nathan will navigate a presidential-style meeting schedule.

On the Frontline documentary “Digital Nation”

My latest paper for COMM 601 Social Networking:

Disconnect

In March 2009 I went on a service trip to Tobati, Paraguay, in central South America. For nearly two weeks, we worked on projects such as building schools and medical facilities, distributing clothing and other items to people in need, and interacting with civic leaders, educators, and all sorts of folks.

What we, 20 American chaperones and 100 American high school students, didn’t have were smartphones or high-speed Internet connections. There was one Internet café in Tobati that offered a super-slow dialup connection (for a dollar a half-hour). In Paraguay’s capital city of Asuncion, we had access to a better-connected Internet kiosk, but nothing close to the speed of your typical Comcast broadband link in the United States.

On three occasions I used those Internet connections to check e-mail and read a bit of news. I wasn’t connected to the World Wide Web as I usually am, and I curiously found that I didn’t miss it a whole lot.

Constant pulse


I thought about my time on that trip as we watched the Frontline documentary “Digital Nation,” which explored a number of topics related to how we use technology today, and what exactly the rampant multitasking, Web surfing, texting, and video watching and recording that up-and-coming generations favor is causing them (and older people, too) to gain and lose in terms of learning, development, and focus.

The documentary was very interesting, and entertaining, but I think it tried to cover too much. It lacked depth. We got a lot of sound bites and frankly alarmist perspectives (particularly on segments covering secondary and higher education, the military, and at the South Korean Internet “detox” camp), without the sort of back-and-forth arguments that might have put those segments into better perspective. Those interviewed for the documentary make declarative statements, opinions really, that were just sort of allowed to dangle. I found this most prominent in the comments on how students today are missing out by focusing so much on digital communication.

But wait: There’s more

Fortunately, the Frontline Web site offers much more nuance than the documentary itself did. I found a “roundtable” bulletin board-style discussion of the participants to be particularly useful. In that discussion, James Paul Gee, a professor of literacy studies at Arizona State University and author of “What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy,” described a blind spot in the documentary that I noticed as well:

“There is also an important issue missed by the show and that is the question of how people from different social and economic groups use and benefit (or not) from digital media,” Gee writes. “I guess it is not surprising that American TV does not much deal with class issues, but there is little doubt that digital media are leveraged by some families to great benefit for their children in school as part of a larger learning and literacy ecology that includes digital media and print. Other families use digital media in quite different ways. Indeed, there are many different uses with many different outcomes — my simple dichotomy really will not do, but it raises the issue of equity and outcomes for diverse people in our society (and, indeed, world).”

That’s an accurate criticism and points out a huge issue that goes largely unaddressed in the documentary (we never see the homes of the students at the tech-heavy New York school profiled, for example). Socioeconomic status affects a young person’s access to technology in the home and at school. And that brings to mind my trip to impoverished South America, and how that digital divide is felt in places that don’t have easy access to the Internet.

Links

Frontline “Digital Nation” site.

My knoxnews.com story on trip to Tobati, Paraguay.

JoeBlog review: I wrote a paper

This is actually the second paper I’ve written for my Social Networking class. We were tasked with reviewing a blog that we don’t regularly read. Submitted for your perusal:

JoeBlog

Whenever I come across something written by Joe Posnanski in Sports Illustrated or the Kansas City Star, I always say to myself, “I need to check out more of his stuff.” And for some reason I never get around to it. That’s why I picked his blog to review. I know that he’s a good writer, but I’ve never read his blog, and yet I’ve heard that it is well-constructed and very popular.

It is indeed quite popular. He doesn’t post every day, but he does update several times a week (at http://joeposnanski.com/JoeBlog/). The comments on his posts are always at least in double-digits, and frequently number well more than 100.

The good

JoeBlog is strongly written. Posnanski is inventive, often very funny, and articulates his thoughts and positions well. He’s a sportswriter, and so most of his posts are about sports, mainly baseball. His recent entries include a comparison of the steroid-linked admissions and apologies of Alex Rodriguez and Mark McGwire, an explanation of his voting in the recent Baseball Hall of Fame election, a discourse on Brett Favre’s critical interception in the NFC championship game, and an evisceration of Carlton Fisk’s recent comments on performance-enhancing drugs, comments that mangled several sets of statistics.

Posnanski writes: “So, the point he wants to make is based on entirely faulty information. Whatever. I guess the thing I wish is that old ballplayers — especially great old ballplayers like Fisk — would look a little bit deeper rather than falling into the ‘In my day, we had to walk uphill through the snow’ act. Can’t we have a conversation? Can’t we talk about this without constantly expressing our own moral superiority?”

He also gets away from sports and writes about his family and other subjects, most entertainingly in an occasional, riotously funny series on “infocos” — infomercials.
Design-wise, the blog is clear and simple, which I like, with a plain white background. It even includes a brief glossary.

The not-as-good

JoeBlog’s posts are occasionally a bit long and drawn out, which is by design (its subtitle is “Curiously Long Posts”) but can cause reader fatigue on occasion. The comments are plentiful, but don’t always contribute a lot, and since they’re not threaded it can be easy to lose track of who is saying what to whom when the number of comments runs into the hundreds.

But on balance, it’s a fine blog-reading experience. Joe should be proud.

Links:
Posnanski on Carlton Fisk’s comments: http://joeposnanski.com/JoeBlog/2010/01/19/iron-fisk/
JoeBlog glossary: http://joeposnanski.com/JoeBlog/glossary/
The Latest in Infocos: http://joeposnanski.com/JoeBlog/2010/01/21/the-latest-in-infocos/

I just bought an iPad

Not really. I have been following the post-announcement hype, though, and it’s pretty interesting.

Gizmodo is all over it, of course.

Since I do a fair amount of freelance work that requires a remote Internet connection and the need to compose quick dispatches, this might be something in my future, but with the base price, 3G add-on, extra $ for the plug-in keyboard and so forth, it might be in the distant future — too expensive for now, looks like.

Office Space(s)

I like photos and stories about work spaces, like this look at Gawker Media’s New York offices.

Here’s where I work. Not quite as steampunk as Gawker.

Office

Yes, I’m YouTubing

I’ve gotten into the video thing a bit with my new iPhone, which seems to have a decent recorder. I’ve got three videos posted on YouTube, two of them from just after Notre Dame’s football victory over Washington on Saturday.