flowerGarden

flowerGarden by greg judelman is a “web-baed software application, produced in Flash, for real-time soica network and conversation visualization.” It produces a TextArc like visualization of people in conversation and concepts they discussed. Judelman uses a flower of petals for people in a way that makes the visualization look like a garden of words with flowers blossoming. This is thanks to Bethany Nowviskie.

TagCloud

TagCloud is both a way of showing word or tag frequency and tool for content analysis. TagCloud.com has a tool that I think will give you a tagcloud for placing in your blog. The words are sized by importance and link to lists or related entries. A cool idea of content analysis interface that provides a dynamic folksonomy.

TagCloud.com links to a good article on Folksonomy in the Wikipedia.

Web Crawler: Nutch

Nutch is “open source web-search software. It builds on Lucene Java, adding web-specifics, such as a crawler, a link-graph database, parsers for HTML and other document formats, etc.” There is a Nutch Wiki with links to news, presentations and articles on it.

Nutch is basically a open Google-like engine that indexes an intranet (or the web) and gives you search capability. This sort of tool could be useful if there were ways to adapt it to discipline specific crawling.

Coté: the Dispositif

My colleague Mark Coté is working with an interesting idea borrowed from Foucaut, the “dispositif”. He has a short paper/abstract in the Proceedings of the GENEALOGIES DE LA BIOPOLITIQUE. He defines dispositif as,

The dispositif’s something literally “lost in translation” with English-language interlocutors’ a grid of intelligibility; a heterogeneous ensemble of discursive and nondiscursive elements that come together in response to an urgent need, a combinatory machine that allows us to ‘see’ and ‘speak’ and in the process producing not ‘ideology’ but their own ‘truths’. (Coté, Mark, “The Soft Revolution”,
Conference Proceedings : Genealogies of Biopolitics, Oct. 18, 2005)

How is a dispositif a machine? How is it different from a tool? Does it give us a way of understanding the limitations of tools?
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High Performance Computing in the Humanities

High Performance Computing and Grid Computing are two terms used to describe new approaches to the use of computing in research, primarily in the sciences and engineering. These terms refer to trends at the high end of research computing where often unique systems are put together to solve computationally complex problems faster. Supercomputing, as it used to be called, is focused both on certain grand challenge problems like protein folding and weather modeling where computation can make difference, but is also concerned with computation and processing speed in and of themselves, developing new ways of solving problems quickly through parallel processing on grids and clusters of often off-the-shelf PCs.

Why is this of interest to literary and linguistic research? What is literary about quest for computational speed?
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Harrison: Light

Light by the British author M. John Harrison is a dark and sometimes violent meditation on how we encounter the incomprehensible. Three strands follow the protagonists weaving the novel.The three twisted characters, including one who brutally murders women to escape his fate, never meet but are responding in different ways to a massive trench of alien artefacts that cannot be understood, just pirated. One of the best of that strain of dark Brit sci-fi/fantasy that includes Ian M. Banks and China Mieville.

There is a decent interview with Harrison at, m. john harrison interview – for zone-sf.com.

Gibson: Mona Lisa Overdrive

Mona Lisa Overdrive is the last in the sprawl trinity that made William Gibson famous. It follows Neuromancer and Count Zero. Like his other novels it plays with reality and virtual reality or “cyberspace” (the word Gibson coined.) The title character is vintage Gibson, a smart street girl who is picked up and altered to look like a star so that her body can be used in a kidnapping. In the end Mona Lisa replaces the star when she goes virtual (into the aleph, a biochip holding the/a world) and then takes off to meet another distant alien AI she might marry(?). It is a very old form of swapped reality, the peasant and king trading places. There are other ways Gibson plays with the varieties of altered reality. One character, the young daughter of a Japanese ganster, has a digital ghost only she can see who comforts and advises her. Another character builds robotic sculpture to exorcise his penal ghosts. Gibson is reminding of all the virtualities, including that enigmatic painted smile by Leonardo.
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Majoring in Games

The New York Times has an article on the growth in university computer game programs titled, Video Games Are Their Major, So Don’t Call Them Slackers (Seth Schiesel, Nov. 22, 2005.) This is part of a series on the training of artists across disciplines.

Traditionalists in both education and the video game industry pooh-pooh the trend, calling it a bald bid by colleges to cash in on a fad. But others believe that video games – which already rival movie tickets in sales – are poised to become one of the dominant media of the new century.

Certainly, the burgeoning game industry is famished for new talent. And now, universities are stocked with both students and young faculty members who grew up with joystick in hand. And some educators say that studying games will soon seem no less fanciful than going to film school or examining the cultural impact of television.

Continue reading Majoring in Games

Wireless Lecture Halls

Wireless browsing in classes has mixed benefits, CU research finds (Bill Steele, Cornell Chronicle) reports on a study of wireless use at Cornell in 2000. The study isn’t conclusive, but its clear a lot of students are using wireles to chat, surf, and do other tasks. Not that we didn’t do the same, but with paper.

This link came from an article in Slate Goes to College – A week of articles about higher education. Of interest is also the article about Attack of the Career-Killing Blogs – When academics post online, do they risk their jobs? By Robert S. Boynton.