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links for 2008-11-20

links for 2008-11-17

links for 2008-11-16

another saturday morning of reading

Spent the usual Saturday morning reviewing texts for next semester, this time pouring through Persuasive Technology by Fogg, and having another look at Mader’s Wikipatterns. There are a couple chapters in Fogg that would be useful in making some distinctions when working with ethos (chapters 6 and 7 on credibility). I found two chapter in Mader that I’d recommend to students (chapter 3 on workflow and chapter 4 starting a pilot project). Mader’s focus on workplace limits the use of his book in a more general setting. Students new to wikis tend to take suggestions as laws, so a text more focused on principles tends to me more adaptable.

On a second front, I’m looking at the blogging app Blogo again, in part in anticipation of extra posting for Weblogs and Wikis next semester. Again, I like the interface, but there are little things missing that make life easier: tighter integration with flickr, automatic look up on amazon. Embedding an image from flickr involves a switching to html trick; and linking to amazon involved actually doing some lookup work.

On the other hand, I’m beginning to like the way Blogo handles tagging to categories and tags. While a checklist, as ecto uses, seems smart, a little drop down menu and some predictive text works, too. I won’t set aside ecto just yet, but the feel of blogo is so nice that I’m tempted to work more in it.

And just now had to revise my idea of how blogo integrates with flickr. Images can be drag and dropped from flickr on firefox to the blogo writing space. The image editor opens to allow cropping and linking to a full-sized image. This drag and drop works from any web page. Very nice.


links for 2008-11-12

home

image18915287.jpgAnother quiet evening.

back to blogo

Drinkbrainjuice released beta 1.2 of Blogo, so I’m having another look at it. I did like the earlier beta, but it had a couple of problems. I’m hoping they sorted out the typing lag at least. Having both blog and twitter access (read and write) in one app is nice. It makes for a comfortable workspace. Integration with images is pretty good, although access to Aperture and flickr via a media browser would be nice.

I’ll give it a week or so against ecto to see what features I miss and what features Blogo provides.

Blogo’s single panel interface might be particularly usable on the MacBook.


republican slur

Republican Slur I generally don’t get overtly political here, but this flyer from the Republican Party of Minnesota (who I will not grace with a link), attempting to link Obama with Ayers, is insulting to any intelligent citizen.

Never mind Palin. This kind of political speech would keep me miles away from any Republican support.

This is not something I’d work with in an undergraduate classroom - except as an example of incitement. But it sure is going to get play around campus. It pushes all the right buttons if you’re looking to anger people right across the political spectrum, and looking closely at how they do that will be interesting.

e-planning planning for spring

E-rhetoric textsIt might snow Sunday, and that means it’s time to start to select texts for spring classes.

Our campus bookstore wanted selections by mid-October, and while I’d like to accommodate the corporate giant, it will have to wait. Two courses I’m teaching in spring, E-Rhetoric and Weblogs and Wikis, benefit from using the most recent texts and addressing some of the most current ideas. And I’m still looking for the right texts, and will be right through the US Thanksgiving.

For E-Rhetoric, I’m considering a look at digital and new media poetics. Our Creative and Pro Writing BFA students don’t get much exposure to the work that’s going on in poetry and short prose in the electronic world. While an e-literature course might be best, E-Rhetoric can take a look at current electronic modes and productions. A new literature brings with it a new rhetoric: a new set of affordances, a new way of making and articulating meaning. The difficulty in this section of the course might be keeping a focus on the rhetorical dynamics of the object rather than the object as an expressive artifact. But digital products tend to be collaborative ventures, which moves us away from self-expression and towards semiotics.

Chalk art at Hagg-SauerIn the same vein, I want to look at digital- print hybrids and social- digital mapping. There are projects possible. I’m thinking of having students annotate a journey or two through the campus or sections of downtown. Students from the visual arts department have done a little of the preliminary work for this, chalking some of the academic buildings, and annotating the doors.

While it would be nice to have everyone with an iPhone or a laptop post to geo-located walls using something like graffitio, we might be able to do this as a mapping hybrid along the line of the proboscis projects. The idea of leaving text annotations at the particular site is interesting. The next move is a rhetoric of geo-cacheing.

The rhetorical angle: Look at the places students choose to define as noteworthy, the contexts they place those places in, the language they use to give them importance. If rhetoric is calling attention to something, then inscribing it with a building name or sticking a 3X5 card on it is a starting point. Annotating makes the campus into a campuscape, a gallery, a narrative, an argument.

The rhetorical choices behind social scape annotation starts to stand out when we compare citizen annotation of the campuscape with the authorized labeling: building names (former faculty and presidents for academic buildings, tree species for student residences), the Deputy Arch, the names of scientists carved into stone on Sattgast, campus maps, advertising banners, even labels on some of the benches. There’s more going on than first seen.

Mobile Learning. A lot is just about to happen with mobile technologies and learning in the field. E-Rhetoric’s interest would involve how language is used and shaped to suit onthefly learning. Perhaps by annotating the urban landscape.

Persuasive Technologies. I get blank stares when I mention captology to students. How does your car persuade you to slow down? The E-Rhetoric students can benefit from a brief look at captology, less as a field of study and more as a way of thinking about technologies in the world.

For Weblogs and Wikis: Jill Walker Rettberg has a new text on blogging (Yes!) that addresses it as a social- and professional act. I’ve been making that up-hill argument for six years, and it’s good to have back up. Students tend to view blogging more as diversion than substance; faculty at large tend to see it more as daily diaries from amateurs. Faculty with a stake in print place it as a diversion from the Real Work of writing and publishing. No editors! Certainly second-rate writing.

I’m still waiting for / writing the similar text for wikis. But I reckon I’ll be able to slide laterally to apply Rettberg’s observations on weblogs to wikis. And I’d bet I can do the same with Wikipatterns: use it to apply to weblogs, especially collective weblogs.

What’s in my bookbag?

I wait until the snow flies to make the final choice, designing a syllabus around the texts I have in mind to see how it all might fit together.

Education doesn’t need to be driven by the self-serving deadlines of bookstores.

links for 2008-10-19