Seb's Open Research
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and social software, collected by Sébastien Paquet

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Seb's Open Research

Friday, February 06, 2004
 
Automated archive.org queries?

By any chance, is there a Mozilla Firebird add-on that will make it automagically query the Internet Archive when a link does not work?

What do you think? []  links to this post    2:32:00 PM  
Using a blog for self-help?

Seb Fiedler (via Aaron Campbell) points to John Stone, a guy who used a blog to track his progress towards fitness. Apparently, documenting his efforts and results worked well for him. Check out the pictures and animations. In a similar vein, Michael uses his "emerging success" blog to document his efforts to shake off his apathy. Not sure how it's turning out - that blog's been dormant for a few months now.

Related post: An Internet way of self-knowledge

What do you think? []  links to this post    2:27:54 PM  
Open-source CMSes, pros and cons

Very clear article written from a corporate perspective on open-source content management systems (CMS), by James Robertson. (via David Gammel)

What do you think? []  links to this post    11:35:58 AM  
Scholars who blog

Scholars who blog at the Blogalization Conspiracy Wiki. Eventually, the Crooked Timber blogroll, Jill's list, PhDweblogs, the research blogs page on my wiki, my delicious list of research bloggers and this ought to be merged together...

What do you think? []  links to this post    9:51:38 AM  
Silence

Peter Merholz: "if you return to this site, and there's nothing new, I ask you to reflect upon that, appreciate that silence, before you continue through your bookmarks."
What do you think? []  links to this post    9:27:57 AM  

Thursday, February 05, 2004
 
Community Chest

I've decorated an earlier post with this card. Let's see if it comes on the picTuner...


What do you think? []  links to this post    10:47:42 PM  
Internet Research 5.0 conference

The Association of Internet Researchers' 2004 conference will take place next September at the University

of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, England. They've extended the deadline for submitting papers to February 15. (via Kaye)

This post also appears on the open channel calls for papers

What do you think? []  links to this post    8:55:58 PM  
Free Coelho downloads

lafeuille tips us to the fact that Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho makes some of his writing available for free online.

What do you think? []  links to this post    8:10:38 PM  
Rigor vs. Relevance

Michael Watkins: On Not Getting Tenure/Academic Parasitism at HBS. Jim McGee comments:

"As a product of the system (DBA 1991) who chose to go the entrepreneurial route instead of the academic one, I can certainly agree with your assessment of the situation. If you are interested in interdisciplinary issues and systems problems, I don't believe there is any academic institution that is relevant.

Sadly, of course, those are the problems most in need of disciplined thought."

Related : search Seb's Open Research for "irrelevance".

What do you think? []  links to this post    11:46:23 AM  
Technorati jobs

David Sifry : Technorati is hiring! Quite a few positions.

What do you think? []  links to this post    11:30:52 AM  
Google ~Guide

Terrific guide to using Google by Nancy Blachman. I especially recommend the sections "interpreting queries" and "evaluating results".

(Why the ~, you ask?  "Putting a tilde in front of a search term (with no space in between) effectively turns that term into any of its synonyms. The tilde is known as synonym operator. So, if you search for "Google ~Guide," Google will find Google Guide as well as other Google tutorials." )
What do you think? []  links to this post    9:44:00 AM  

Wednesday, February 04, 2004
 


"Feel the fear and do it anyway."
- Susan Jeffers (via D. Gurteen)


What do you think? []  links to this post    11:57:31 AM  
Weak ties strengthen innovation

Although it doesn't deal with politics, this item connects strongly with the post below. Guess what, turns out cultivating diversity in your network is good for you if you're seeking to innovate. This is actually the insight that guided a good part of my thesis work, in which I asked, "what kinds of web technologies would best enable innovators to create and cultivate weak ties?"

What do you think? []  links to this post    11:49:49 AM  
Dean, the net, and echo chambers

Clay's recent post-mortem on Howard Dean emphasises one of my favorite themes, collective delusion. Required reading for anyone who wants to change the world through a group effort.

"The size of the MeetUp in NYC was as much a testament to MeetUp as to Dean — it’s a wonderful tool for turning interest into attendance, but it created a false sense of broad enthusiasm. Prior to MeetUp, getting 300 people to turn out would have meant a huge and latent population of Dean supporters, but because MeetUp makes it easier to gather the faithful, it confused us into thinking that we were seeing an increase in Dean support, rather than a decrease in the hassle of organizing groups. [...]

You can ring doorbells and carry signs and donate and stay up til 4 in the morning talking with fellow believers about the sorry state of politics today, and you still only get one vote. If you want more votes than that, you have to do the hardest, most humbling thing in the world. You have to change someone else’s mind."

Granted, the net and social software enable ridiculously easy group-forming, but in most cases, if you want to see real effects in the world at large your group has to expand to include many, many people - especially in an election setting.

Retrospectively, Deanspace comes across as having been an echo chamber. No one is used to having so much supportive conversation flying around them, as these people were experiencing. Their fundamental mistake was to think that the exalted atmosphere they were breathing resulted from a generalized enthusiasm rather than from the newly lowered cost of communication with like minds. I'm sure the mistake will be made again by other groups, and I'm wary of falling prey to it myself.

So does the net really trap us inside echo chambers, or merely enable (and tempt) us to get inside? How easy (or hard) is it to encounter discourse that challenges our beliefs?

You know what? My overall feeling is that the net doesn't really have that much to do with it. Online we use technological filters; offline we use behavioral and cognitive filters. What happens to you, online or off, mostly depends on your personal dispositions.

If you want to read more about the topic, here are links to a few pieces on echo chambers and the Net that I've been collecting over the past week. They make different but equally interesting points.
  • Cass Sunstein, in "MyUniversity.com?" (pdf): "Unanticipated encounters, involving topics and points of view that people have not sought out and perhaps find quite irritating, are central to education, democracy, and even to freedom itself."
  • Steven Johnson: "The reason we have so many filters and personalization tools is because the web has created a veritable Cambrian explosion of diversity, funneled directly to your home -- social, political, sexual, ethical, you name it." (don't miss this comment)
  • Kevin Werbach: "Communities overlap."
  • Kaye Trammell: "It is my firm belief, & something that I am empirically testing, that the more exposure you have to a blog the more likely you are to identify with the blogger. This identification can serve as the "sneak attack" that Ms. Kramer hasn't thought about."
  • and Rebecca Blood, who gave (in my opinion) the best keynote at BlogTalk one: "We can make it a point not to rely on those who think like we do--but to find those who think about the same things from another angle. It can take time. Breaking out of our usual round of sources can take a substantial time investment. And there is little that is less comfortable than challenging our own assumptions and beliefs."
If I had time, I'd try and brew you a nice, tight essay out of all this. Hmm. Maybe I will.

What do you think? []  links to this post    11:40:51 AM  
My slides online

I've put a few recent sets of presentation slides online, including those from yesterday's talk: Sébastien Paquet's presentation slides. (Apologies for the large size of the files.)

What do you think? []  links to this post    9:52:04 AM  

Tuesday, February 03, 2004
 
Test post for TeleEd presentation

I'm giving an audiovisual presentation right now - this is a demo post to show how weblog tools work.

Voici un court billet que j'écris pour montrer comment on édite un carnet Web...

What do you think? []  links to this post    12:16:14 PM  

Monday, February 02, 2004
 
Number twelve

Peter Suber has just pinned a twelfth declaration of independence from a costly publisher on his list. This time it's coming from France. Resignation letter (in French) here.

On January 27, 2004, Editor in Chief Dominique Boullier and the entire editorial board of Les cahiers du numérique resigned from the journal and released an open letter explaining why. They point to CduN's high price and limited online access policy which "contradict our objectives as researchers".

What do you think? []  links to this post    11:59:49 AM  
Rating profs

"Unfortunately Homely" Prof. AKMA's thoughts on professor evaluations.

"Ideally, I would like to hear from students five years or so after they graduate; any impression that stuck with them for five years would mean a lot."

What do you think? []  links to this post    10:30:56 AM  
I'm the gap in your network

I sense that I'm on the verge of attaining fame for being the only one who hasn't set foot on planet Orkut. After letting a wave of invitations fly by, I've now started getting mail asking me why I'm not there. In two words: no time.

And if there is any truth to what Mark wrote about it ("there's one thing it doesn't have... soul. For all the effort that has gone into it, Orkut is a remarkably boring place... about as exciting as Stanford University on a Monday night before midterms.") - and I've read other similar testimonials - I had better stick to good ol' Ryze and LinkedIn for now.

I'll see you outside.

What do you think? []  links to this post    10:22:21 AM  


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