The SUSTE-IT project reflects the increasing importance of ICT-related energy and environmental issues, in the [higher education] sector and elsewhere. For example, there is ever growing consumption (and even more rapidly increasing costs) of electricity in data centres, and in computers and peripherals; legislative and other pressures are requiring reductions in ICT-related carbon emissions, and … Continue reading Sustainable IT In Tertiary Education (SUSTE-IT) report and tools #jiscssbr
Implications of @benwerd on Twitter DoS and single points of failure
The only model that makes sense is a distributed one: it’s a fundamentally harder problem to bring down a decentralized network, because there isn’t a single point of failure. via benwerd.com Ben's got it about right (http://bit.ly/zn868). I have been thinking down these lines, too, "mesh networks, distributed databases and natural language processing": - More … Continue reading Implications of @benwerd on Twitter DoS and single points of failure
A support project assembly? #jiscssbr
Yesterday the JISC convened a meeting of people and projects providing support to JISC programmes. I attended with our colleague Patsy Clarke. Paul Bailey was at the meeting, too, balancing his JISC hat with his Institutional Innovation Benefits Realisation hat. via assemblies.inin.jisc-ssbr.net This is a note to cross-reference and link to a piece I wrote … Continue reading A support project assembly? #jiscssbr
Jock Coats, local Lib Dem activist, wants private rubbish collection?
Time to open up waste collection to proper competition I'd say. These people are your servants not your masters. via jockcoats.me Jock Coats writes in Refuseniks (http://jockcoats.me/refuseniks), objecting to the council trying to maintain city-wide standards of service for rubbish collection. He says, with some contempt, that "These people are your servants not your masters" … Continue reading Jock Coats, local Lib Dem activist, wants private rubbish collection?
“You+” Can we get smarter? via http://bit.ly/16Xc7T For cyborg babies’ sake I hope not
I have not the faith in the "Nöosphere, a collective consciousness created by the deepening interaction of human minds" that Jamais Cascio has. I still prefer to rely on Donna Haraway, "A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century," in Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York; Routledge, 1991), pp.149-181.
The Equality Trust
We believe that in order to gain substantial improvements in the real quality of life of the populations of developed countries it is necessary that differences in income and wealth are greatly reduced. via equalitytrust.org.uk OK, so we joke about how we have the randiest teenage liggers in Europe, can out-belch the Belgians and who … Continue reading The Equality Trust
Glad to be led back to DBpedia;
DBpedia is a community effort to extract structured information from Wikipedia and to make this information available on the Web. DBpedia allows you to ask sophisticated queries against Wikipedia, and to link other data sets on the Web to Wikipedia data. via wiki.dbpedia.org Strikes me this is a route worth following for anyone interested in contemporary epistemological questions. Posted via web from George's posterous
Love the Faviki approach to restricted vocabulary & wish posterous and Diigo did the same
Faviki is a tool that brings together social bookmarking and Wikipedia. It lets you bookmark web pages using Wikipedia's terms. In Faviki, everybody uses the same names for tags from the world's largest collection of knowledge! via faviki.com I do think this is a neat idea, addressing one of the big problems of folksonomies. In … Continue reading Love the Faviki approach to restricted vocabulary & wish posterous and Diigo did the same
Can a PeopleWeb be built on restricted vocabularies? @andypowe11
Andy Powell (@andypowe11) shared the text of Ramakrishnan & Tomkins (2007) "Toward a PeopleWeb". According to the authors, "Attentional metadata is increasingly sought after and is beginning to accumulate in significant volume, suggesting a paradigm shift - and simultaneously raising serious questions about user privacy." (63) A shift from what to what, I wonder? They … Continue reading Can a PeopleWeb be built on restricted vocabularies? @andypowe11
@eframework technical model: a key enabler of open education dialogue? #jiscssbr
e-framework.org The eFramework people have published their technical model here: http://www.e-framework.org/Resources/TechnicalModel/tabid/1008/Default.aspx The model depends on continuing feedback from the community. Their aim is to develop "... a common approach to the description of service-oriented design and analysis," and provide "... a neutral means to articulate the design of software services" in order "...to assist international … Continue reading @eframework technical model: a key enabler of open education dialogue? #jiscssbr