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Wednesday, 14 March 2007 |
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Just finished reading the 19th century fable Flatland and it provides a wonderful metaphor for the changes in academia and academic publishing brought on by Web 2.0. Mr Square walks around in two dimensions and when he meets three-dimensional Mr Sphere he is utterly perplexed by how he can distort his size and appear and vanish through the plane of Flatland. Square simply can't understand altitude or the boundless spaces of volume.
Similarily academics must decide if they are squares or spheres when it comes to the wonderous interactive, participatory and conversational spaces that blogs, wikis and other online spaces provide for dissemination and analysis of ideas. Media is changing and the economies of scale must compete with the economies of small. Unlike the threat that Walmart or massive banks pose to small cornerstores or co-ops, the dots and nodes of networked communication are threatening the stranglehold of mass media and publishing. Perhaps the next superpower will not be a nation state or collection of nations but instead swarm systems of collective intelligence as millions or even billions of smalls occupy the space, the volume. Academics can choose to play a crucial spherical role by leaping from the plane and embracing a dimensional shift in how we organise, share and communicate ideas. |
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Like sands through an hourglass |
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Friday, 09 February 2007 |
These, then, are the blogs of our lives. More shifting sandscapes as the world gets on board with the independent publishing world of blogs. In China the first site using real names, not pseudonyms, has been set-up for invited academic bloggers to express opinion on social issues. In Malawi, the blogging community mourns the death of local 27-year-old pioneer Mangaliso Jere while Spain continues to celebrate the world's oldest blogger. It is getting easier and easier to find blog content thanks to recent algorithmic upgrades to both the Google Blog Search and Technorati (tag search works best). Meanwhile you can reach back in archival time using the incredible Wayback Machine to see what web pages looked like in the past. But is all this just heading for a world of "depressive lonelyhearts who substitute the artificial community of blog readers and writers for real-world relationships with actual people"? |
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Saturday, 27 January 2007 |
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Just a few tools you might not have come across for jazzing up your online media experience. Some are new and some are just still important. |
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Friday, 26 January 2007 |
The rise and rise of online publishing through blogs, ebooks and online journals continues to raise speculation that "scholarly journals and their controversial system of peer reviews may not be needed at all". The Christian Science Monitor explores the possibility. Yale's Mark Gerstein and UK freelance journalist Richard Poynder speculate about what comes next. |
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