Archives for category: personal

Part of my goal for this blog is to begin to get more and more of my research work up here as an early review system. So while I still will be writing about my daily goings on (and including the occaisional photo or two), there will be a bit of a shift towards longer, more scholarly posts. My hope is to take advantage of the categories feature and present different views of the blog based on the content that you are interested in.

In the meantime, let me tell you that trying to import word documents into WordPress sucks. It took me more than an hour yesterday to get the post rendering correctly. That’s mainly due to Microsoft’s wonky specialized HTML tags. Bleh. Any suggestions on streamlining that process are greatly appreciated.

As promised, here are a few pictures I took yesterday:

Lessig Lecturing at RIT

Professor Lessig presenting in Ingle Auditorium.
This was taken during an animated Q&A session.

 

Ralph Nader lecturing at RIT

Ralph Nader in Web Auditorium.
Note how he towers over the interpreter:

Documenting Ralph Nader's Physical Stature

Like I said, a very tall man.
Yes, I realize he’s slightly upstage.
Still, there’s a pretty big height difference —
especially considering that he’s sorta slouching.

Today was full of lectures at RIT. Lawrence Lessig rocked my friggin’ world. — he???s a brilliant man and a phenomenal speaker. I have a lot of thoughts on the lecture, but I???m reserving them for the moment as they need more time to peculate. Ralph Nader was on campus too. I poked my head in for a moment, but opted not to stay. So all I can say about Nader is that he is a very tall individual (and it looked like he had slept in his suit).

In addition to all of that, I also sat in on a large group discussion on new forms of writing and how various new media affect the pedagogical process and two panel discussions. The latter one, on Intellectual Property and Authorship, was quite interesting. Especially since it brought up questions about who owns characters created in online games (a question I find quite interesting). The prior one, on Pornography, sucked (that really wasn???t intended as a pun). The positions taken were pretty simplistic and just not satisfying (again, no pun). I had hoped the speakers would problematize the relationship between pornography and the development of various communications mediums (from the Printing Press to the Internet). Instead they retread the simplistic ???objectification argument??? without dealing with the more complex problems inherent in that argument (in particular, if you are saying that pornography is bad because it reduces participants to performance objects ??? which are commoditized based on their physical features ??? then you need to acknowledge all of the other aspects of the culture/entertainment industry ??? professional sports being the best example ??? that engage in exactly the same behavior). Don???t get me wrong, I???m not all ???rah-rah, go porn!??? I???m simply saying that I think that is a much more complex situation, especially on the college campuses of today.

Today went smoothly. I taught a lab where I tackled both a new peice of software and conditional logic (if … then … else). Tonight I’m hoping to get ahead on research and take a pass at finally writing my Bleecker response (which will be hosted both here and on Conduit — an interdisiplinary web publication at RIT).

The title makes more sense if you sing it to the refrain of the Bangle’s Manic Monday. Wednesday continues to throw me for a bit of a loop. But today is filled with good news as I just found out that Tina and Chuck’s daughter came home from the hospital yesterday!