The Michicago paper is done. Its the tightest 8 and 1/2 pages I’ve ever written and I still need to find some way to cut out an additional page. Oy. For interested parties, here’s a copy for those who wish to read/provide feedback.

Now its time for sleep.

Gaiman was great. And the words are finally sorta flowing. For those who are interested a rough draft will probably appear on headnotes by tonight.

Neil Gaiman is speaking on campus tomorrow. After pulling a number of strings and a couple hair brain plots, I’ll be going to see him. More on that tomorrow.

For the moment, I’m desperately trying to open a vein and write this paper for Michicago. Unfortunately, all that is coming is air. Less than five days until it’s due. This is not good. Plus I also have a midterm due in the same time frame. So, for the moment, I draw at least some solace from this mini comic from Gaiman call An Honest Answer.

… Divine, I could you a little help here (and no cat suggestions)… read the comic, I swear it makes the last bit make far more sense.

The Pew Internet & American Life Project is a god send for those looking for quick online demographic information. Well indexed and all publicly available, its a resource that demands you pay attention to it.

For example a quick search reveals that there are approximately 77 million American Adults who go online daily. Of those 58% (44.7 million) go online daily. Of those folks who are online daily:

  • 7% read someone’s blog (3.4 million)
  • 4% engage in discussions in chat rooms or discussion board (1.7 million)
  • 2% create blog entries (.9 million)

source: Daily Internet Activities, accessed 4.14.2005

Google Scholar has been an indispensable tool in gathering research for my thesis. For those not familiar, its a google search engine that is indexing the content of academic journals (including PDF content) and websites.

Interestingly, the most powerful aspect of it, in my opinion, is that it separately categorizes citations. For example, Sherry Turkle of MIT, has published a great deal on the subject of interactions with artificial intelligence online. Her book Life on the Screen is a seminal work. Google scholar allows you to specifically search for all the papers in it’s database that cite Turkle’s work. Since that returns an ungodly numbers, you can also restrict it to the papers that cite Turkle’s work AND contain “bot” in the body of the paper.

Anyone who is doing any form of serious research and not embracing Google Scholar is, quite frankly, doing themselves a significant disservice.