Eat, Pray, Love @ Google

Eliz­a­beth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love has been on the New York Times best­seller list for 57 weeks. If you haven’t read it yet, then you may want to spend some time with Gilbert’s talk at Google. While her talk and read­ing did­n’t com­plete­ly strike a chord with me, it may well with you. So here you go (and, yes, we’ve added the video to our YouTube Playlist):

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Top 10 Amazing Chemistry Videos

Cour­tesy of Wired’s Blog, here are 10 videos dis­play­ing some rather cool chem­istry exper­i­ments at work. Below, we’ve post­ed one video that will let you answer a ques­tion that you’ve almost cer­tain­ly pon­dered for ages — can liq­uid nitro­gen neu­tral­ize molten iron? (For more videos along these lines, check out this site.)

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The iPhone and the 21st Century University

iphone2.jpgNext fall, all new fresh­men attend­ing ACU (Abi­lene Chris­t­ian Uni­ver­si­ty) will receive an iPhone (or iPod Touch) when they get to cam­pus. And, from there, the Apple gad­get will fig­ure cen­tral­ly to stu­dents’ cam­pus expe­ri­ence. The iPhone is the lat­est and great­est “con­verged mobile media device,” which com­bines in one gad­get numer­ous func­tion­al­i­ties — inter­net and email access, phone, audio, video, and maps. And once you put a gen­er­a­tion of stu­dents reared on mobile devices on this com­mon plat­form, new ways of run­ning the uni­ver­si­ty in the 21st cen­tu­ry start to open up.

The changes begin with the way uni­ver­si­ty admin­is­tra­tion gets done. ACU envi­sions stu­dents using their devices to check their meal and account bal­ances, access course cal­en­dars, receive news and spe­cial bul­letins from the uni­ver­si­ty, and tap into the uni­ver­si­ty phone/employee direc­to­ry. Not far down the line, the uni­ver­si­ty antic­i­pates that the iPhone will ful­fill cer­tain reg­is­trar func­tions — mean­ing that stu­dents can use their iPhone to scope out, and even enroll in, var­i­ous class­es. Then, they’ll add some e‑commerce to the mix and let stu­dents use their mobile device to con­duct com­merce with the book­store and uni­ver­si­ty restau­rants. Are you start­ing to get the pic­ture? The iPhone becomes a “one stop shop for infor­ma­tion and ser­vices” that can be accessed on the fly.

But what hap­pens in the class­room? I had a chance to catch up with Bill Rankin, the Direc­tor of Mobile Learn­ing Research (and also Asso­ciate Pro­fes­sor & Direc­tor of Eng­lish Grad­u­ate Stud­ies) who shared some of ACU’s think­ing about how the iPhone cre­ates new teach­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties. For starters, the device will allow stu­dents to access syl­labi, course doc­u­ments (cre­at­ed with Google Docs), home­work assign­ments and pod­casts that com­ple­ment the course. (Imag­ine stu­dents down­load­ing pod­cast­ed lec­tures from pre­vi­ous class­es, or lis­ten­ing to clips of Mozart in their music appre­ci­a­tion class, or review­ing bits of French dia­logue in the French 101 class.) From here, the ped­a­gog­i­cal uses of the iPhone start to deep­en. Accord­ing to Rankin, the Apple gad­get will give teach­ers the abil­i­ty to con­duct real-time sur­veys that gauge stu­dent per­cep­tions of the class (are they under­stand­ing the course? is it mov­ing too quick­ly?) and use the feed­back to make the class­es “more care­ful­ly tai­lored to the inter­ests and abil­i­ties.” It’s also an added perk that the iPhone will let stu­dents con­tribute to the class through their online per­sona, which, research shows, “embold­ens stu­dents [par­tic­u­lar­ly shy ones] who might not oth­er­wise share their ideas.” Then there’s this sce­nario (and oth­ers like it): With the iPhone, the “biol­o­gy class in the field will be able to pho­to­graph spec­i­mens, post their find­ings to oth­er class­es not cur­rent­ly in the field, com­mu­ni­cate with experts, and use the web to iden­ti­fy and research spec­i­mens. That’s trans­for­ma­tion­al, and we think it will offer dis­tinct advan­tages to our stu­dents.” Last­ly, the iPhone opens up the pos­si­bil­i­ty of cre­at­ing “hybrid” cours­es, which means cours­es con­duct­ed part­ly in the class­room and part­ly online. For more on the hybrid con­cept (and oth­er facets of the project), you can watch the video post­ed on YouTube that intro­duces ACU’s iPhone ini­tia­tive. We’ve post­ed Part 1 below, and you can access Part 2 here. To get more insight into ACU’s intel­li­gent think­ing about the poten­tial edu­ca­tion­al appli­ca­tions of the iPhone, you should spend some time on their “Con­nect­ed” web site.

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A New Media Scholar’s Dilemma

For a grad­u­ate stu­dent in an Eng­lish Ph.D. pro­gram, one of the big mile­stones on the road to the dis­ser­ta­tion is the Oral Exam. In my case this involves five pro­fes­sors, a list of 60–80 books, and two hours in a (rhetor­i­cal­ly) smoke-filled room. Since I’m work­ing on con­tem­po­rary lit­er­a­ture and new media, one of the chal­lenges I have to deal with is how to address nov­els, films, tele­vi­sion shows, video games and more as part of the same “list.” How does one put these things togeth­er? How can a video game be read as a text along­side Gravity’s Rain­bow or Brave New World?

One way to approach this ques­tion is to include the work of lit­er­ary and cul­tur­al crit­ics who are already look­ing at new and tra­di­tion­al media side by side. Fol­low­ing that line, I try to keep up with the aca­d­e­m­ic blog Grand Text Auto, which cov­ers “com­put­er nar­ra­tive, games, poet­ry and art.” One of its con­trib­u­tors, Noah Wardrip-Fru­in, is work­ing on a book about dig­i­tal fic­tions and com­put­er games that looks per­fect for my Orals list—and he’s pub­lish­ing it, chap­ter by chap­ter, on Grand Text Auto for blog-based peer review. It will come out next year with MIT Press, but for now, it’s a work in progress.

All fine so far—I could list it as “forth­com­ing” and direct my pro­fes­sors to the link. But what hap­pens when I start com­ment­ing on this book as I read it? What are we to do with the knowl­edge that this “text” will most like­ly change between now and next year? Does this item on my Orals list sig­ni­fy a draft of the book, the blog and its com­ments, or the expe­ri­ence of read­ing and writ­ing into the MS myself (includ­ing, per­haps, respons­es from the author)?

I find the dilem­ma par­tic­u­lar­ly inter­est­ing because it touch­es on a cen­tral con­flict in human­i­ties schol­ar­ship. Are we pas­sive observers of the lit­er­ary scene or active par­tic­i­pants in it? It’s a rare aca­d­e­m­ic crit­ic who thinks of call­ing up a poet to ask her what she meant in a par­tic­u­lar line, but that’s exact­ly the kind of con­nec­tion that our hyper-con­scious, dig­i­tal­ly medi­at­ed world offers up.

P.S. After all of this hand-wring­ing, it’s obvi­ous I’m not going to have time to read Noah’s book before I take my exam, so it’s off the list. But I can’t wait to dig in next month!

Neil Gaiman’s American Gods — Free Digital Copy

Harper­Collins has rolled out anoth­er free book — the New York Times best­seller Amer­i­can Gods by Neil Gaiman. You can read it for free here (or buy it here). For more free books by Harper­Collins, see our post from last week. And, as always, don’t for­get to see our col­lec­tion of free audio­books.

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When You Google “Open Culture”

Just a quick note: If you Google “Open Cul­ture,” you’ll now find that Google has placed “sub-links” beneath the main search results, and these sub-links give you access to some of our most pop­u­lar pages. (See real-time search results here.) If you’re look­ing for free audio­books, online cours­es and for­eign lan­guage lessons (just to give a few exam­ples), then this is one quick way to access them.

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Physics for Future Presidents

Just a quick fyi that we’ve added a pop­u­lar UC Berke­ley course, Physics for Future Pres­i­dents, to our col­lec­tion: Free Online Cours­es from Great Uni­ver­si­ties. You can down­load the com­plete course to your MP3 play­er. Just scroll down the page and look under “Physics.”

If you’d rather expe­ri­ence this course in video, you can watch the course on YouTube. I’ve post­ed the first lec­ture below, and you can find the rest of the lec­tures here.

10 Ways to Make Your iPod a Better Learning Gadget

ipodwithclass_21.jpgThe iPod can super­charge your learn­ing. But it’s often a mat­ter of find­ing the right soft­ware and con­tent. Below, we’ve list­ed sev­er­al new pieces of soft­ware that will let you suck more edu­ca­tion­al media (DVDs, web videos, audio files, etc.) into your iPod. And we’ve also list­ed some impor­tant pieces of con­tent that will make your iPod a bet­ter learn­ing gad­get. So here it goes and be sure to vis­it our Pod­cast Library and our relat­ed piece 10 Signs of Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube:

1) Put Wikipedia on Your Ipod:
Ency­clopo­dia is a free piece of soft­ware that brings Wikipedia to the iPod. Ency­clopo­dia can be installed on iPod gen­er­a­tions 1 through 4, as well as iPod Min­is. Def­i­nite­ly worth a try.

2) Watch DVDs on Your iPod: This free, open source soft­ware works on MacOS X, Lin­ux and Win­dows, and makes it sim­ple to load and watch DVDs on your video iPod. Here are some help­ful instruc­tions to get you start­ed.

3) Load YouTube Videos to Your iPod: Con­vert­Tube allows you to take any YouTube video and con­vert it to a for­mat that works on your iPod. It’s as sim­ple as enter­ing a url and click­ing “con­vert and down­load.” If you want to give the soft­ware a test run, try con­vert­ing these UC Berke­ley cours­es that were recent­ly launched on YouTube. Or these Nobel Prize speech­es.

4) Make Oth­er Video For­mats iPod-Ready: Life­hack­er recent­ly men­tioned three oth­er pieces of soft­ware that will make a vari­ety of oth­er video for­mats iPod-ready. For Win­dows, see Vide­o­ra; for Mac, see iSquint. Or more gen­er­al­ly see Zamzar. In a nut­shell, these items will turn a wide range of video for­mats into the one video for­mat (MPEG‑4) that your iPod likes.

5) Con­vert MP3 files into One Big iPod Audio­book File: Down­load­ing free audio­books can often require you to work with a series of sep­a­rate mp3 files, which can make things rather cum­ber­some. This soft­ware does you a favor and mash­es the files into one man­age­able file. And it has a fea­ture that will let your Ipod remem­ber where you stopped if you decide to take a break. (If this one appeals to you, be sure to see item # 10.)

6) Cre­ate eBooks for the iPod: This bit of soft­ware turns text files into ebooks that you can read on your iPod. After you load a text file, it will make the text read­able through iPod Notes (which you can find under “Extra Sett­tings”). Then, voila, a portable text. Thanks to Pachecus.com for point­ing this one out.

(more…)

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William F. Buckley v. Gore Vidal — 1968

William F. Buck­ley, Jr., the intel­lec­tu­al force behind the strand of con­ser­vatism that peaked with Ronald Rea­gan, died yes­ter­day. (See NY Times obit.) Here, we have some vin­tage Buck­ley. The video clip below fea­tures Buck­ley and Gore Vidal going at it, almost com­ing to blows, dur­ing the con­test­ed pres­i­den­tial cam­paign of 1968. It offers a good reminder that Amer­i­can polit­i­cal dis­course has­n’t been agree­able for quite some time. Com­par­a­tive­ly, things look down­right civ­il today.

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Not Always a Nation of Dunces

Here’s a nice coun­ter­point to our post last week cov­er­ing Susan Jacoby’s new book The Age of Amer­i­can Unrea­son and her lament that Amer­i­ca has declined into a morass of anti-intel­lec­tu­al­ism and low expec­ta­tions.

Let’s set the scene: A reporter selects a young Barack Oba­ma sup­port­er at a ral­ly and starts pep­per­ing him with ques­tions about the can­di­date. And it all feels like a staged effort to demon­strate that the mobi­lized youth has no real han­dle on the issues. He’s just blind­ly buy­ing the hype. With­out wast­ing time, the reporter leads the young man into a con­ver­sa­tion on the com­plex­i­ties of health care. It’s the per­fect set­up. But then it sud­den­ly becomes clear that the reporter chose the wrong kid (who is a nat­u­ral­ized immi­grant, by the way) to play the fool. Watch the video below (and check out this fol­low up video that gives you more of the back sto­ry).

via Think on These Things

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How to Learn a Foreign Language

We stum­bled across this video (below) over on YouTube. It offers a quick sur­vey of web resources that will teach you for­eign lan­guages for free. Among oth­er items, the video men­tions our For­eign Lan­guage Pod­cast Col­lec­tion and, for that, we want­ed to say thanks to who­ev­er put this togeth­er.

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