Corpus Tex2all
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Three Years in an Educational Doctorate
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08 Jul 10 Can Social Networks provide Emotional Wealth?

Can Social Networks provide Emotional Wealth?
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27 Nov 09 SNS Revolution?

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    • "gateways" to the Web,

    • unique visitors.

    • a shift is under way

    • Other players are becoming gateways, too, in a kind of evolutionary advance that will change the way we use the Internet–and alter advertisers’ behavior.

    • social networking sites

    • new tools will allow members to take their social-media identities with them when they go to other Web sites

    • users increasingly will be able to define themselves by their social network of origin.

    • Content, communications, commerce, and search have already ceased to be the unique province of the Big Four. Until recently, only "portals" offered free Web mail. Now MySpace, with its 300 million users, is gearing up to offer e-mail. It also has introduced a toolbar that lets members see "feeds" from friends–accounts of what they’re seeing or buying on other Web sites. As for Facebook, having recently surpassed 200 million active users, it offers e-mail, instant messaging, photo posting, and video sharing. Members can also shop online without leaving the site and in some cases (with amazon.com, for instance) communicate with "friends" from their social network about what they’re buying. Consider it a social variation on the news feeds provided by Google, Yahoo, and MSN. According to technology blog TechCrunch, such features enabled Facebook to add 40 million users in February alone. It now has 276 million unique monthly visitors–double the traffic of any of the Big Four portals, including Google.

    • a social overlay is spreading across the Web

    • Facebook Connect and MySpaceID

    • Friend Connect

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

04 Apr 09 Whimsley: Online Monoculture and the End of the Niche

    • So there it is. Individual diversity and cultural homogeneity coexisting in what we might call monopoly populism.

      But don’t think this is just about automated recommender systems, like the ones that Amazon and Netflix use. The recommender "system" could be anything that tends to build on its own popularity, including word of mouth. A couple of weeks ago someone pointed me to this video of Madin, a six-year-old soccer prodigy from Algeria, and the next day my son, who moves in very different online circles to me, was watching the same one. I know who Jim Cramer is even though we don’t get CNBC in Canada because everyone is talking about him and helping his disembodied head to shoot down Jon Stewart. More people watched Tina Fey being Sarah Palin online than on Saturday Night Live, and Fey is now famous in countries where no one watches the TV show. Clay Shirky writes an essay and I get five different links to it in my Google Reader feed in one morning. Our online experiences are heavily correlated, and we end up with monopoly populism.

      A "niche", remember, is a protected and hidden recess or cranny, not just another row in a big database. Ecological niches need protection from the surrounding harsh environment if they are to thrive. Simply putting lots of music into a single online iTunes store is no recipe for a broad, niche-friendly culture.

16 Feb 09 Vanguard Bookmarks andNotes 02/16/2009 (a.m.)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of academic_workflow group favorite links are here.

04 Feb 09 Vanguard Bookmarks andNotes 02/04/2009 (a.m.)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of academic_workflow group favorite links are here.

02 Jan 09 Vanguard Bookmarks andNotes 01/02/2009 (p.m.)

  • After talking with a dozen or so colleagues, he concluded that “filling a gap in the literature” was not really how anyone went about choosing a research problem. There were four main “lessons” he gained from his collegial conversations:

    * Future research arises from current research. Things are never really finished, and many projects don’t work out as we’d planned. All that cleanliness in the literature is misleading!
    * Future research can be autobiographical. On this one, I’d like to quote the author at length:

    Research is often “me-search,” a friend of mine likes to say. Ideas for research topics can stem from brief personal experiences from childhood or threads that run throughout their professional lives. For example, gender equity in science education has riveted a colleague since she majored in chemistry in college. Another colleague’s passion is the give-and-take of arguments, “so I think that’s why I’m studying fifth graders’ persuasive writing.” What “voice” means for minority scholars fascinates an African-American academic who feels that the traditional norms of scholarly discourse stifle her own creativity. For those colleagues, their lives are inspiration, but not evidence — in other words, they are not autoethnographers.

    Sometimes a good project arises from family life. A child psychologist extended her work on infant communication when her 14-month-old son was pointing incessantly to the refrigerator. “I’d take one thing out after another, and he finally seemed to find what he wanted,” she said. “So I got excited and found three families, studying how kids make their ideas known and how they correct your misconceptions when you’re wrong about what they want.”

    * Future research often arises from conversations. You know this one. Have lunch with your colleagues, visit them in their offices, hobnob at conferences. I don’t care if you’re shy and you don’t like talking to people. Get out there and circulate!
    * Future research can derive from what others want and might pay for. This isn’t just the obvious – grants and contracts. It can also be solicitations for a special volume (this is more likely in the humanities and social sciences than in the biological and physical science and engineering).

    Tags: research, ideas, generating

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    • Lovely quote from Nikos Kazantzakis “What a strange machine man is. You fill him with bread, wine, fish and radishes, and out come sighs, laughter and dreams.”

Posted from Diigo. The rest of academic_workflow group favorite links are here.

31 Dec 08 Vanguard Bookmarks andNotes 12/31/2008 (a.m.)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of academic_workflow group favorite links are here.

26 Dec 08 Scholarly Journals – New Free Service Makes Keeping Up-to-Date Easy – PR.com


    • Keeping up-to-date with the scholarly literature just became much easier, thanks to a new service called ticTOCs – Journal Tables of Contents Service.
    • http://www.tictocs.ac.uk

      ticTOCs is a new scholarly journal tables of contents (TOCs) service. It’s free, its easy to use, and it provides access to the most recent tables of contents of over 11,000 scholarly journals from more than 400 publishers. It helps scholars, researchers, academics and anyone else keep up-to-date with what’s being published in the most recent issues of journals on almost any subject.

      If I get any information richer I am going to scream. This is, however, a grand addition to zotero and diigo in my dissertation work. Plus, I can keep up with scholarly work now much more readily. – post by tellio

18 Dec 08 Vanguard Bookmarks andNotes 12/18/2008 (a.m.)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of academic_workflow group favorite links are here.

17 Dec 08 Vanguard Bookmarks andNotes 12/17/2008 (a.m.)

Posted from Diigo. The rest of academic_workflow group favorite links are here.