Wednesday, November 23, 2011

video project

Hey all, Here is my video. My question is "How has language in networking changed for Montanans because of the changes in technology and changes in the actual networks?" And several related questions. When the project is finished, it will be a blog post containing an embedded video, the video will be more complete but I could seriously use some suggestions on it. I'm going to write a lot more about my actual research and sources in the blog post and do a sort of social commentary/opinion style approach to it, since it is a blog and let the video explain some of my main points as a sort of timeline. (I decided to keep it to Montana since it is a little smaller than "the WORLD" and I can track the progress easier -- as a sort of "learning device" or illustration, I s'pose).... Anyway, feedback would be great. I have a really solid idea of the end product :)



I'll check back to see if this whole thing worked out.... if not, a later post will follow with the embedded vid.




Monday, November 14, 2011

Algorithms in our lives

I think this idea can be really frightening to people: What if the algorithms are out of control and start to ruin our lives!? (like some sort of horror film). I don't feel the same fear, mostly because people can always rewrite the algorithm (which , by the way, are really cool). While algorithms can potentially be a bad thing, as we read about in the instance of facebook, mistakes can easily be fixed once they are brought to light and that gives a venue for more invention and ingenuity. These things can potentially be something we rely on as much as weathermen, something that could be considered voodoo or "magic" that is actually just effective and good technology, just as good or infallible as the person who designs and tests it: as years go by and adjustments are made, things run smoother and work better.

And how cool is it that people have figured out how to gather effective news from the internet and actually have little avatars report it as if they were real reporters with facial expression? I think it is really innovative of programmers to figure something like that out. To me, it seems like it would be a terrible task that would be far too difficult to begin thinking about, though I was pretty terrible at even code writing in Java so I would be quite useless in actually inventing such a thing. I'm really impressed with the abilities people have with thinking these ideas up and implementing them effectively.

I'm curious to see how people feel about this issue, I imagine the class will be split on the issue, especially considering past opinions on tech. developments.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Oh The Places We'll Go

I was really impressed with Anderson's TED talk. Mostly because it is something we haven't really talked about yet: where video and technology can take scientific research. It makes sense that scientific writing is already multimodal in that it utilizes pictures, diagrams, etc but doesn't it make even more sense that it would begin to actually visually demonstrate experiments! I was really impressed with this because I haven't even thought of it being a possibility. This, theoretically, could make advancements in scientific technology increase and hopefully make a more error-proof system. Wouldn't it be great if everything was run like this? Efficient living would be increased in every way.

I thought the other video was just as interesting but just not as new for this class.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

To everyone in class on Thursday (11/3)

So, class turned into a shitshow today. I feel bad that it got so out of hand because I know that we all deserve more from each other and ourselves but -- once pitted against each other, we ended up in a weird mob mentality. Hopefully we can all regain our senses and not do that again. I guess, on my end, I wanted to make sure that everyone knows that if I offended them in any way, I was out of line. That is not the type of argument to die on -- especially since I don't even care about it or spend really any of my time thinking about it, and it wasn't even a valid argument, as both sides were "arguing" on completely different planes. Anyway: I hope everyone recovers from that. I, for one, feel a little embarrassed about it and hope it seeps into the oblivion of the remainder of the semester (come on Christmas Break!) (and yes, Christmas... but I'll concede to it being Winter Break, as well). :)

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Death to the Author! *Pitchforks Waving* *Torches Flailing*

While I still like the idea of citation, if only in form of a "work's cited" page, or something of the sort, especially because I'm not an expert, a lot of what I've said or claimed in academic papers tends to be predominantly things I've drawn from mostly other peoples' ideas (even when I am being particularly original). This comes from stepping into a discourse community, combining other discourses I've already been a part of and deciding what could be synthesized between them all... this generally means it isn't super "creative" (which has seriously killed my grade in certain classes when I was so far out of medieval and greek/roman literature and what was and is said about it that there was no way my "originality" could have said anything, even if it was original, it was certainly always wrong). In instances where I am more "creative", I'm generally much more credible and feel much more comfortable in the discourse that I am talking in and around, I know the history and some of the other texts.

It is a really complicated (not necessarily complex, though) issue because there are few parts and a shitton of opinions, well-thought-out, on what should be considered original, "taxable", "citable", or what-have-you. And none of the opinions are "wrong" but it does seem really divided. What I write is generally what I consider relatively worthless, monetarily, because I don't trust "my" ideas to be worth citing, while I will trust the words of others' within a thesis or online intellectual journal. I have little credibility as a writer on most topics because I am not an expert.

Anyway, these ideas of textuality, articulation, authorship and intertextuality are extremely fascinating for me. I might delve more into this for my research... ...probably the articulation thing more than anything. Articulation vs. "creativity"? we'll see...