The Walrus Magazine | Game Theories is an article about Edward Castranova, the researcher who studies the economies of online game communities like EverQuest. What is interesting about the article is that he got offered tenur on the basis of articles only published online. Is this true?
Resources for the Humanities: Brown Conference
Online Resources for the Humanities: Interdisciplinary Perspectives was a conference that was hotsted by Brown University and organized by Massimo Riva. It was one of the better small conferences I have been to in a long time (so there will be a series of blog entries on the ideas that circulated.) As Dr. Riva put it:
We are in a process of transcribing the humanities. This involves both representing the traditional evidence of the humanities in digital form and the developing new questions and techniques which we can ask of digital evidence.
One special feature of the conference was that it brought together a number of people in Italy doing Humanities Computing with people in North America. For me it was a chance to see a breadth of activities from Italy and to talk about humanities computing in Italian.
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Morphing Faces: Morphases.com
morphases.com is a site that lets you place with faces. It is a much more sophisticated version of the interactive face of me that Kathy programmed in Flash.
Thanks to Ross Scaife for this link.
Choosing a Wiki
Wiki Wiki Clones is a page by the original creator of Wikis – Ward Cunningham that lists alternative wiki frameworks. (Thanks to James Chartrand for this.)
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Meatball: Text Visualization
Meatball Wiki: TextVisualization is a good summary of the field with example images. Meatball calls itself an “intercommunity or metacommunity” and deals with “online culture, especially how people come together naturally in groups.” The authors, if one takes the Visualization article as an example, are building a solid knowledge wiki. Bravo.
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Rescue Tenure from the Monograph
“Rescue Tenure From the Tyranny of the Monograph” by Lindsay Waters in The Chronicle of Higher Education argues that we are spewing out too many second-rate books as we force new scholars to publish one or two to get tenure. His remedy is to return to a few excellent essays for tenure and to publish fewer books that are full of “gusto” (accessible and moving to a larger audience.)
The realities of the pressures to get tenure are unlikely to change, so I doubt the community can easily change course, but what if the form in which early publishing took place were changed? What if blogs, wikis, discussion list participation, and other forms of social/network writing were assessed. Early in a career is when academics should be writing with and for others in order to establish their network of ideas. Books can come later out of what has been tested in the creative common.
How would one assess quality (and quantity) for such writing? I can think of some bibliometric methods (Google as tenure tool), but they would be crude and easy to manipulate. Ideas?
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Purple Granular Addressability
In the comments to the entry on Tool and Technology I commented on the paragraph numbers in Chris Dent’s essays. He responded by pointing me to PurpleWiki Archive. Thee is also an essay on An Introduction to Purple which connects the granular addressability of Purple to Englebart.
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Many 2 Many
Many-to-Many is a wiki on Social Software by Sebastian Paquet and friends. The design and idea parallel what we are doing with a private wiki on TAPoR.
What can we learn from it?
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The Listening Post
The Listening Post is a networked installation that culls text from online and displays them and synthesizes them.
This looks anticipates a project on the sonification of text that I am working on with Bill Farkas who has developed some cool sonification systems.
txtkit – Visual Text Mining
txtkit – Visual Text Mining Tool is a Mac OS 10.3 networked application that lets you visualize and interact with texts through a command line interface and visualizations. The visualizations, if I understand them, weave the text and user behaviour together with information about other users. It produces some of the most beautiful visualizations I have seen for a while.
See also their Related Links.