The Language of Imperialism. The Language of Imperialism I am finding it fascinating to learn the Dutch language. Especially fascinating is how perfectly bi-lingual so many Dutch people are. And amazingly, there are so many Americans who seem to think than's just fine and why shouldn't they be? And these same folks would figure, why […]
Read MoreThe Imperialism of Language. The Imperialism of Language I got some interesting email responses to my post yesterday, “The Language of Imperialism” that got me thinking. I have no problem with people disagreeing with me, or making me look at any issue from a different point of view — Tom from Denver wrote: > [After […]
Read MoreA bit of irony. My grad school advice must have picked up some serious Googlejuice lately, because I am getting a ton of email about it. Much—all right, all—of this email asks my advice. Er, this is, to put it mildly, slightly strange. Guys? Gals? I’m the one who crapped out, remember? Failed? Crawled… [Caveat […]
Read MoreJust Build It. Wise words from Duncan Mackenzie:Stop debating this issue; pick a language and build something… you'll feel better…. [Incessant Ramblings] this is frequently my approach. Today i was talking with Len Hatfield about the CATH's watermark project and i told him, you know it doesn't matter who has done what before, if you […]
Read Morethe glue factory. From today’s dive into mark: In the future, there will be so much open source software available, programmers will be… [mamamusings] teaching this isn't teaching programming, it is teaching philosophy and understanding. more or less it is 'all i learned about data i learned from wittgenstein'
Read MoreThe Blake Archive's Archive. The Blake Archive's internal project records, now on file at the amazing Charles Babbage Institute: The bulk of the collection is comprised of the blake-proj messages (entire contents of Boxes 1-3, and Box 4, folders 1-17, Box 5, folders 7-12,… [Matthew G. Kirschenbaum] if i understand this correctly, this is moving […]
Read MoreThoughts from my first day of work. 1. I miss my iBook. 2. But I also missed Homesite. For my purposes, BBEdit is usable, but HomeSite kicks its ass all over the place. 3. Where to start with Outlook. I got so used to the many fantastic features of Entourage that Outlook (at least the […]
Read MoreKoïchiro Matsuura, the Director-General of UNESCO, …. Koïchiro Matsuura, the Director-General of UNESCO, spoke at the recent Paris conference on Open Access. He has now put a summary of his UNESCO remarks online. Excerpt: “The new economic and technological environment is raising concerns about the erosion of access to certain information and knowledge whose free […]
Read MoreComputers, Freedom, Privacy. I'm off to New York for the annual Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference, one of the most important gatherings of… [Dan Gillmor's eJournal] if you can go, you should go, this conference has a fine reputation.
Read MoreColin Steele, Phoenix rising: new models for the r …. Colin Steele, Phoenix rising: new models for the research monograph? A preprint in the ANU E-Press Archive, forthcoming from Learned Publishing, 16, 2 (2003) pp. 111-122. Abstract: “There is significant evidence that traditional university presses are continuing to face financial crises. Outlets for research monographs […]
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