Brenda Laurel: Design Research

Can research inform creativity? On Thursday I went to a talk by Brenda Laurel on Design Research. Some of what she says about design research is covered in the online paper, New Players, New Games. What I liked is the humanism and idealism of her approach, both for teaching and research/creation. “Market research tells you how to sell something. Design research shows you what to make” in the first place.
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Greg Crane: What Do You Do with a Million Books?

What Do You Do with a Million Books?, by Gregory Crane talks about the implications of large-scale book scanning projects like the Google Print project that is scanning tens of millions of books. He introduces an interesting term, “recombinant documents”, to describe how software (like what they have at Perseus) can add intelligent connections to documents, but also the way documents can be reorganized and combined into “concordances” or hybrid documents. This is similar, I think, to what Mark Olsen was talking about in Toward meaningful computing. Crane’s answer, drawn from the DARPA Global Autonomous Language Exploitation (GALE) project is three core functions:

  1. Analog to text (digitizing speech and print)
  2. Machine translation (from language to language)
  3. Information extraction (mining for linkable dates, names and so on)

Thanks to Mark Olsen for this link.

Podcasting Conversations: Doug Kaye

Ubiquity has an interview with Doug Kaye about, among other things, The Conversations Network, a non-profit online audio publisher. Here is a quote from the interview on content in universities,

the university situation is fascinating because most universities already have a program to record lectures. They may not be recording classwork per se, because in some cases the class work is proprietary, and they don’t want to let it out without a fee. But in any case there is a lot of stuff that is being recorded that these universities seem to be putting into vaults. They have no distribution plan.

Some universities, like Stanford, now have podcasting strategies, but the deeper problem is that lectures make boring podcasts. There is archival value in them, but they are rarely edited to be easy to listen to and are often detached from their context and slides.

Kaye has a blog called Blogarithms. This is from Humanist.

Mark Olsen: Toward meaningful computing

Mark Olsen and Shlomo Argamon have just published a viewpoint in the Communications of the ACM titled, “Toward meaningful computing” that argues, (among other things)

Current initiatives by Google, Yahoo, and a consortium of European research institutions to digitize the holdings of major research libraries worldwide promise to make the world’s knowledge accessible as never before. Yet in order to completely realize this promise, computer scientists must still develop systems that deal effectively with meaning, not just with data and information. This grand research and development challenge motivates our call here to improve collaboration between computer scientists and scholars in the humanities.

They set an ambitious, but I think, doable agenda for us.

Eugene Roman

Eugene Roman, the Group President of Bell Canada Systems & Technology, came to talk to a Communication Studies class about The Digitization of Everything: The MODern Era. In his talk and conversations after he asked us to look up and think about Holons. He asked us to think in the inverse – ie. not to ask how to make a better Google, but what an anti-Google would be like. He also talked about viral thinking and how to “infect” others. When we got talking about wireless (and he sees it all going wireless) he made the interesting observation that a barcode is a form of wireless communication, even if the distance is not great. What will we be able to do with barcodes if taking a picture of a barcode with a wireless camera-phone can trigger things?