Cussler’s Black Wind – 50 Book Challenge


Black Wind
Cussler, Clive

If you are a Dirk Pitt fan (I am), this newest book in the line is a pleasure and a reassurance. Classic Cussler with all sorts of bad guys and good guys (of both sexes). Dirk has moved up to management and his son and daughter are taking on the reins of most of the action. Moreover, Cussler is passing the baton to his own son Dirk in this outing which they co-authored. This looks like it’s going to be one of those attempted franchise-extenders that’s going to work. I’m looking forward to the next installment.

Lakoff’s Don’t Think of an Elephant: Know Your Values and Frame the Debate–The Essential Guide for Progressives – 50 Book Challenge


Don’t Think of an Elephant: Know Your Values and Frame the Debate–The Essential Guide for Progressives
Lakoff, George

This slim book was Lakoff’s effort to demonstrate the importance (and ultimate success) of efforts by “conservatives” to frame important policy debates in language and thought favorable to their goals. Lakoff’s point essentially is that the “facts” never speak for themselves, but depend on how they are framed and positioned. Frames tend to be set up in a “have you stopped beating your wife” kind of way so that however you respond to questions you reinforce the underlying frame. For example, if you let the argument over taxation get framed rhetorically as “tax relief,” then no matter how you argue your case you are endorsing the notion that taxation in and of itself is bad.

A series of essays on particular topics such as taxes or family values, the book suffers from a good deal of repetition across chapters. Moreover, this is a more polemical book than Lakoff typically writes. Understandable given its topic and timing, but I found it wearing after a while despite agreeing with Lakoff’s arguments and analysis. I’ve certainly bought into some of the frames that Lakoff identifies a lot more uncritically than I care to acknowledge.

Another reason to have good earphones when you fly

Fortunately, I have my Etymotic ER-6 earphones. I’ve been using them with my iPod for the past year and if the number of flight attendants who have to wave their hands at me to get my
attention is any indication, cell phones in flight shouldn’t prove to be too much of an issue.

Remind Me to Stop Flying.
Cell phones in the air are inevitable: Interesting piece from the New York Times running through the last few months of tests and proposals on putting cellular picocell stations in planes and allowing cell phone use on a broader basis. The highly quoted Paul Saffo wins the prize for summarizing the problem: “The last thing I want is a bunch of jabbering
business geeks,” said Paul Saffo, a technology industry consultant who travels 200,000 miles a year on United Airlines and said that flying was his only escape from e-mail and phone calls. “The only quiet time I get is when I fly. It’s my meditation time.”… [Wi-Fi Networking News]

BlogWalk 6 in Chicago

Definitely looking forward to having this come to Chicago. And to finally getting to meet Lilia face-to-face. Glad to see that Jack Vinson is able to take a lead role. Jack, you know where to find me for help.

BlogWalk 6 in Chicago

As Ton has announced, “It is our pleasure to announce a new edition of BlogWalk, the salon-like get togethers Sebastian Fiedler, Lilia Efimova and I are organizing.” I will have the pleasure of being the local host, but I will be getting lots of help from everyone who attends. We’re planning on the 21st or 22nd of January up in Evanston (just north of Chicago) – very convenient for me. For more information have a look at the BlogWalk wiki.

jackvinson (jackvinson@jackvinson.com) [Knowledge Jolt with Jack]

A wholehearted recommendation of Crossroads Dispatches

If you’re not reading Crossroads Dispatches by Evelyn Rodriguez, block out some time. Her blog is rapidly moving to the top of my ‘must read’ list. More importantly, it’s moving to the
top of my ‘must think about’ list. Here is one of many excellent posts littering my aggregator and clamoring for my wholehearted attention.

Our Presence Spills Onto Our Voice.
The day I met Cindy, a women’s network was milling about her artistic loft in the newly gentrified part of Salt Lake City doing what women’s network groups do. Cindy quietly and powerfully stood out from the rest of the… [Crossroads Dispatches]

In it she shares an exchange between her and Cindy Martenay of Insight Shift on the topic of presence. I’ve harped on the importance of mindfulness in navigating today’s world. Evelyn and Cindy make a great case that the better notion is that of “wholeheartedness.” Here’s one key graf to make that point:

If we cultivate — in our bodies and nervous systems — an ability to open up our lenses on the world, to become less sure of ourselves and more curious, we become more present to more of our experience as well as others’ experiences with us.

While I certainly fail more often than I succeed, it remains a worthy goal.

Buzz with an example of high-stakes word-of-mouth

Do you suppose that the people who pay Bob have the slightest clue how many early adopters and influencers and other folk that Marketing types would kill to reach are waiting for Buzz to out them so that we can safely eliminate this company from any consideration now and in the future? Or do you think their golden parachutes are such that they really don’t care?

An open letter to Bob and the guys that pay him…from a formerly happy customer….. A number of months ago I wrote a blog post about “Millie” in Manila. Millie worked for Dell, and dealing with her was such a nightmare that I basically resolved to never, ever do business with Dell again.This one will be… [buzznovation]

Blogs, tomorrow’s learning, and why I blog

I’ve been gradually trying to whittle down an extended backlog of items in my aggregator. One side effect with the aggregator in Radio is that posts begin to bump into one another in interesting ways. Patterns suggest themselves and I’m on my way to one answer to why I blog .

Halley reposted something she wrote two years ago addressing the seemingly perennial question of what is a weblog. It’s all worth reading, but the reasons that caught my attention were:

….
4. It’s telepathic training wheels — that is, it’s a very early stage on the way to the REALLY big next big thing — brain-to-brain telepathic transfer. Bye bye telephone, bye bye writing, bye bye fortune cookies, bye bye every other way you used to communicate. Blogs open up people’s minds, you travel the road with them, see it all through their eyes. It’s all we’ve got now, but soon enough we’ll all be in bed with each other, embedded with each other I mean.

9. A weblog is my head, open to you, day and night, at your convenience. Come on in. Please take your shoes off at the door, I hate having to vacuum after you leave.

10. A weblog is watching brains at work, especially watching brains with the ultimate prosthetic device — everyone else’s brain and the whole net connected. Weblogs let you watch people learning at lightning speed. Awesome to witness.

posted by Halley at 3:28 AM | link

That links very nicely to several recent posts sitting in my aggregator, all pointing to a report from Australia on the internet and self-directed learning. Here’s one quick summary and pointer from Stephen Downes:

Linking Thinking: Self-directed Learning in the Digital Age

This is a remarkable report, much more revolutionary than it may appear at first glance, and worthy of detailed consideration. The author argues, in essence, that the internet enables a great deal of self-directed or informal learning, that learning in this way is viable, that there is an increasing demand for it, that government and institutions can do little to control it, but that it serves not only an economic role but also is a foundation for civil society. In order to support self-directed learning, two major things must be in place: universal access to the internet, access that goes well beyond merely placing computers in libraries and shopping malls, and access to knowledge and information, a vast amount of which is in danger of being captured from the public domain and commercialized. Via elearnspace. By Philip C Candy, Department of Education, Science and Training, August, 2004 [Refer][Research][Reflect]

OLDaily
Today 9:23 PM

One of the compelling features of blogging tools is that they virtually eliminate the barriers to publishing and to creating a record of what you are learning on your journey around the web and through life. Their organizing principles are “just good enough” to be useful and the collective norms loose enough to help most of us get over having to be perfect or having to have the right answer. That makes them potentially powerful tools for learning.

What we each need to learn is idiosyncratic. The trappings of formal learning environments need to be approached with extreme caution. Learning needs to get back to play to succeed. The simplest possible tools, i.e. blogs and wikis, are what we most need to dip into the learning stream and take part. Explorers keep journals primarily for their own benefit, but the rest of us get to benefit vicariously from their generosity.

I want to come back to this line of thought. For now, let me end by pointing to the range of possible learning activities that become possible with a access to the net. At one end we have:

The Wiki Game

Slashdot has the scoop on The Wiki Game.

Social Media
Today 7:20 PM

Nerdish to the nth degree, perhaps, but it illustrates the learning (and fun) the becomes possible when you make the links in an encyclopedia something you can click on and follow. I know that Ted Nelson still disagrees , but this is close enough to the Xanadu he wrote about to meet my needs.

At the other extreme (along some axis), we have:

Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs.

halpicture.jpg

If you want to learn computer programming you can’t go wrong with an education provided by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s “Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science“. Unfortunately, a MIT education isn’t available to everybody.

What if you could get a MIT education from the comfort of your Aeron?

MIT’s “Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs” course is available as a series of video lectures by Hal Abelson and Gerald Jay Sussman, and it’s all online!

Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs has been MIT’s introductory pre-professional computer science subject since 1981. It emphasizes the role of computer languages as vehicles for expressing knowledge and it presents basic principles of abstraction and modularity, together with essential techniques for designing and implementing computer languages. This course has had a worldwide impact on computer science curricula over the past two decades.

The course leans towards the Lisp programming language, but the information presented in the lectures is valuable to programmers of any language.

The course requires a high level of commitment. There’s just under 22 hours of lectures spread across 30GB of MPEG video (DivX videos are also available).

Visit Site

It’s little wonder that so many institutions are flailing about trying to make sense of this world. It doesn’t take a major clue to realize that the established order is threatened from many directions.

A closing thought. One of the reasons that I have become an advocate of Personal Knowledge Management is this organizational and institutional disruption. It’s not that I disagree with Denham’s contention that knowledge is largely a product of social processes. It’s that I don’t think individual knowledge workers should simply trust that the organizations they belong to at the moment are willing and able to make the necessary investments in effective knowledge creation, capture, and exchange processes. If you happen to belong to such a farsighted organization, great. But you really need to be looking out for yourself as well.

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