Clippings

Open Attribute

April 8th, 2011 by Graham Attwell
I have been looking for something like this for ages. If you use Creative Commons materials – and most bloggers do – this is a ‘must have; plug in.
clipped from openattribute.com

The problem: Creative Commons licensed content is awesome, but attributing it properly can be difficult and confusing. The first rule for re-using openly licensed content is that you have to properly attribute the creator. There are specific requirements for what needs to go into that attribution, but those requirements can be confusing and hard to find.

The solution: A simple tool everyone can use to do the right thing with the click of a button. That’s why we’re building Open Attribute, a suite of tools that makes it ridiculously simple for anyone to copy and paste the correct attribution for any CC licensed work. These tools will query the metadata around a CC-licensed object and produce a properly formatted attribution that users can copy and paste wherever they need to.

  blog it

The future of universities

April 8th, 2011 by Graham Attwell
Another challenging post by Richard Hall about the future of universities and whether they offer any longer any spaces for dissent and resistance or have become merely “a functionary of neoliberalism within the social factory.”
clipped from www.learnex.dmu.ac.uk
Is it now only beyond the University, in the multitude, in the autonomous collective, in the social science centre, in the really free school, that we are free to resist and dissent and re-imagine? Do we have to become dissident? Do we have to re-imagine higher education as higher learning beyond the institution, dissolved into community? In the face of the crisis, where do we find hope?
  blog it

Breaking the silence

April 7th, 2011 by Graham Attwell
Interesting article by Sarah Amster asking why more academics are not speaking and acting against the destructive policies being enacted in higher education in the UK. She ends on an optimistic note – I hope she is right but am not so sure
clipped from www.socialsciencespace.com
Academics have already relinquished many vital opportunities to remake universities into institutions for learning and human development. But as the first new budget cuts materialise and universities begin enforcing changes to accommodate and legitimise the government’s policies, there will be other openings for organising new, not-yet-imagined forms of collective resistance to the agenda. We are learning from our students that such work is neither easy nor impossible. We are also learning that such serious attacks on public education, critical disciplines and research, non-hegemonic epistemologies and democratic life, can only be met with equally as serious acts of resistance – which may of course take a plurality of different forms.
  blog it

Apps overhyped? – I think so

March 14th, 2011 by Graham Attwell
I wonder if the current App craze has been overhyped. And as better mobile browsers come out – plus increased bandwidth and html5 – we may return to the open world of the web as the way of seeking and suing information and sharing knowledge. This report tends to suggest that the use of Apps and especially paying for information – may not be so popular as the mobile and media industries would like us to think.
clipped from pewinternet.org

One of the newest forms of on-the-go local news consumption, mobile applications, are just beginning to take hold among mobile device owners. Just 13% of all mobile device owners report having an app that helps them get local information or news, which represents 11% of the total American adult population. Thus, while almost half of adults get local news on mobile devices, just 1 in 10 use apps to do so. Call it the “app gap.”

According to the survey, just 10% of adults who use mobile apps to connect to local news and information pay for those apps. This amounts to just 1% of all adults. Overall, 36% of adults report paying for some form of local news, the vast majority paying for local print newspaper subscriptions.

  blog it

Journalism and blogging

March 13th, 2011 by Graham Attwell
This quote from the Guardian newspaper is of Jay Rosen talking at SXSF. I am not sure if it really gets to the point. It is not to me so much of a competition between blogging journalist or traditional journalists (surely we have convergence taking place) but rather of the existence of multiple information and knowledge flows through he ability of anyone to publish – even if they do not have the patronage of a newspaper proprietor.
clipped from www.guardian.co.uk

Mainstream journalists’ antagonism towards bloggers, he suggested, was sustained by the huge stress they find themselves under, which stems from five developments:

1. The collapsing economic model of newspapers.

2. Journalists having to face new kinds of competition.

3. A shift in power to the audience.

4. New patterns of information flow in which information moves horizontally from citizen to citizen as efficiently as vertically.

5. Erosion of trust and related loss of authority.

Sneering at bloggers was a way journalists avoided confronting these developments. In short “this is fucking neurotic.”

  blog it

Open Data from Southampton University

March 8th, 2011 by Graham Attwell
Great step forward – lets hope more public bodies follow!
clipped from data.southampton.ac.uk

For more on Open Data and it’s benefits see
these presentations
by Southampton’s Nigel Shadbolt and Tim Berners-Lee. They helped establish data.gov.uk the UK Government’s Open Data site and are members of the Coalition Government’s Transparency Board.

The executive summary: There’s data we have which isn’t in any way confidential which is of use to our members, visitors, and the public. If we make the data available in a structured way with a
license which allows reuse
then our members, or anyone else, can build tools on top of it without needless bureaucracy. That’s common sense.
We call it “Open Data”.

We publish our data in RDF format and link our identifiers to other sites in the Linked Open Data Web. This makes it much eaiser to merge data from multiple sources and other sites can link their datasets up with ours. Like the HTML Web, the whole is much greater than the sum of its parts, that’s “Linked Data”.

  blog it

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