Record Making With Duke Ellington (1937)

We’re mov­ing back in time. Before the iPod, and before the CD. We’re going back to the ana­log age, a moment when the vinyl record reigned supreme. (That moment last­ed most of the 20th cen­tu­ry.)  The clip above, which fea­tures the great Duke Elling­ton, shows you how records were actu­al­ly record­ed, plat­ed and pressed. Alois Havril­la, a pio­neer radio announc­er, nar­rates.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 2 ) |

Tim O’Reilly: The University as an Open iPhone Platform

Both the iPhone and Face­book took off when they opened them­selves up to out­side devel­op­ers, let­ting them inno­vate and build thou­sands of unfore­seen apps for users. In the video above, tech guru Tim O’Reil­ly asks how uni­ver­si­ties can do the same. How can they let devel­op­ers (in this case, the pro­fes­sors) inno­vate and dis­trib­ute con­tent to users (stu­dents) in new and effi­cient ways? There are more ques­tions than answers here, but if you want to imag­ine the uni­ver­si­ty in the 21st cen­tu­ry, these are the ques­tions you can’t avoid.

via @drszucker via Beth Har­ris, both at smARThis­to­ry.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 1 ) |

How is the Internet Changing the Way You Think?

Every year, The Edge.org pos­es a thought-pro­vok­ing ques­tion to 150+ engag­ing thinkers, and the answers nev­er dis­ap­point. This year, they throw out the ques­tion: How is the Inter­net Chang­ing the Way You Think? In this col­lec­tion, you will find answers by George Dyson, Clay Shirky, Tim O’Reil­ly, Maris­sa May­er, Richard Dawkins and many more. Below, I’ve includ­ed an excerpt from Nas­sim Taleb (author of The Black Swan), who has a less san­guine out­look on how the inter­net is chang­ing our world. He writes:

I used to think that the prob­lem of infor­ma­tion is that it turns homo sapi­ensinto fools — we gain dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly in con­fi­dence, par­tic­u­lar­ly in domains where infor­ma­tion is wrapped in a high degree of noise (say, epi­demi­ol­o­gy, genet­ics, eco­nom­ics, etc.). So we end up think­ing that we know more than we do, which, in eco­nom­ic life, caus­es fool­ish risk tak­ing. When I start­ed trad­ing, I went on a news diet and I saw things with more clar­i­ty. I also saw how peo­ple built too many the­o­ries based on ster­ile news, the fooled by ran­dom­ness effect. But things are a lot worse. Now I think that, in addi­tion, the sup­ply and spread of infor­ma­tion turns the world into Extrem­is­tan (a world I describe as one in which ran­dom vari­ables are dom­i­nat­ed by extremes, with Black Swans play­ing a large role in them). The Inter­net, by spread­ing infor­ma­tion, caus­es an increase in inter­de­pen­dence, the exac­er­ba­tion of fads (best­sellers like Har­ry Pot­ter and runs on the banks become plan­e­tary). Such world is more “com­plex”, more moody, much less pre­dictable.

So con­sid­er the explo­sive sit­u­a­tion: more infor­ma­tion (par­tic­u­lar­ly thanks to the Inter­net) caus­es more con­fi­dence and illu­sions of knowl­edge while degrad­ing pre­dictabil­i­ty.

You can find Tale­b’s full answer here, and the entire col­lec­tion of thoughts here. If you want to tell us how the inter­net has changed the world for you, please add your thoughts to the com­ments sec­tion below.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 4 ) |

Why Open Video?

What is open video? And how does it pro­mote free speech, par­tic­i­pa­tion, diver­si­ty and a more engaged media sphere? Get the answers from Amy Good­man (Democ­ra­cy Now), Xeni Jardin (Boing Boing), Nina Paley (Sita Sings the Blues), Yochai Ben­kler & Jonathan Zit­train (Har­vard Berk­man Cen­ter), among oth­ers. This is a mis­sion to get behind. Excel­lent work by Peter Kauf­man and Intel­li­gent Tele­vi­sion. Note: You can down­load this video in OGG and MP4 for­mats.

The Future of the Internet–And How to Stop It

zittraincover2Lawrence Lessig calls Jonathan Zit­train’s book “Absolute­ly required read­ing.” Cass Sun­stein says it’s “Absolute­ly essen­tial read­ing.” And Lawrence Tribe declares that it is “The most com­pelling book ever writ­ten on why a trans­for­ma­tive tech­nol­o­gy’s tra­jec­to­ry threat­ens to sti­fle that tech­nol­o­gy’s great­est promise for soci­ety.”

The book is The Future of the Internet–And How to Stop It.  You can buy it on Ama­zon for $11.56, or, even bet­ter, you can down­load it for free from Zit­train’s web site. Vis­it the web site, and find the PDF here. Thanks for this tip goes to Tony Yet, who guest blogged TED to Chi­na: An Inside View ear­li­er this sum­mer.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Down­load Free Audio­book of Chris Anderson’s “Free”

The Future of the Inter­net: A Free Stan­ford Course

Lawrence Lessig’s Free Cul­ture: Avail­able in Text or Audio (For Free)

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 2 ) |

Technology Is Amazing, Nobody Is Happy…

A good clip that comes from Alec Couros’s 80+ Videos for Tech & Media Lit­er­a­cy. It fea­tures come­di­an Louis C.K. offer­ing his fun­ny thoughts on how our gen­er­a­tion han­dles new tech­nol­o­gy. We’ve added it to our YouTube Favorites.

Our Rapidly Changing Digital World

In case you need­ed a reminder, we’re no longer liv­ing in your grand­fa­ther’s world. This video makes that plain­ly clear. Every­thing is chang­ing in a blink, and edu­ca­tion offers you and your kids the best way to nav­i­gate it all. Don’t take it for grant­ed.

via The Dig­i­tal­Blur. Thanks Jil­lian for the tip on this one.

Remem­ber to catch us on Twit­ter.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 1 ) |

The History of the Internet in 8 Minutes

We have here a short, catchy ani­mat­ed doc­u­men­tary that explains how we get from the 1950s to the inter­net that we know and love today. Along the way, it cov­ers inven­tions rang­ing from time-shar­ing to file­shar­ing, from Arpanet to Inter­net. Have a look…

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 11 ) |

« Go BackMore in this category... »
Quantcast