February 2004
Monthly Archive
General29 Feb 2004 01:53 pm
Sun, 29 Feb 2004 17:53:07 GMT
OA for cultural heritage archives. Klaus Graf, Open Access fŸr Archivalien, Archivalia, February 17, 2004. Reflections on OA for cultural heritage archives, including reflections on copyright issues. Read the original German or Google's English. [Open Access News]
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Cultural heritage is a significant area of effort that OA can support and should support
General29 Feb 2004 01:51 pm
Sun, 29 Feb 2004 17:51:45 GMT
Property Tax Windfall. Property Tax Spells Windfall For N.Va. The booming real estate market and skyrocketing home assessments in the Washington area have created a fountain of tax… [Outside the Beltway]
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lots of money in hand, means lots of money wasted, but if they invest in infrastructure, they might actually make a difference.
General29 Feb 2004 01:50 pm
Sun, 29 Feb 2004 17:50:13 GMT
New Paltz.
As you no doubt know, on Friday, Feb.27, the mayor of the village of New Paltz, New York, conducted marriage ceremonies for 21 gay couples in front of a cheering crowd. (Click here and then click again to enlarge the glorious picture.) He was quoted as saying, “Absolutely, I’ll be doing this again.” (For more on the mayor, look here - tip to Kevin Drum.)
So, today (Saturday, Feb.28), my wife and I packed up our 3-1/2 year old to drive the hour south, hoping to be part of the celebration. We were going to have our daughter pass out flowers. Alas, the village offices were quiet. Still, we had a pleasant day – the town seemed to be buzzing, and we overheard bits of several conversations along the lines of: “Wasn’t it great how everybody turned out together in support.”
The legality of the marriages is not obvious – the New York State Consolidated Laws on Domestic Relations are surprisingly unclear on the issue of gender. I found what I would consider to be an implicit assumption that marriages are between a man and a woman in several places, such as article 4, section 50: “Property, real or personal … owned by a woman at the time of her marriage … shall not be subject to her husband’s control or disposal nor liable for his debts.” I’m no lawyer, but this hardly seems definitive.
Stonewall was over 30 years ago. I don’t know how these particular cases will eventually be decided, but here’s hoping that in 30 more years, we’ll look back at these past few weeks as another turning point.
[Crooked Timber]
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Why does it seem that only minor and local officials are willing to lead this issue? I think they are doing the right thing.
General28 Feb 2004 12:23 pm
minor point of order for the world at large….
as i was walking home last night, i put two heavy metal covers back into place because someone had removed them and hadn't put in the effort to carry them more than a few feet. so my point of order here is, if you are going to try to steal something and carry it away, either make sure you have the will to carry it away, or better yet, choose something you do have the will to carry. I don't mind putting things back the way they belong, but i find the lack of effort people put into these things highly irritating.
the other thing is, learn what the right of way is for your locale and yield appropriately, of late I've had several people not yield appropriately when driving, and it is just bad form, not to mention illegal, so kindly learn to drive and follow the rules if you are going to drive.
those are my minor points of order today, just had to get them off my chest.
General27 Feb 2004 03:19 pm
Fri, 27 Feb 2004 19:19:40 GMT
Two new game studies faculty at Tech. I'm happy to announce that two new games studies faculty, Ian Bogost and Michael Nitsche will be joing us at Georgia Tech this Fall. Some of you already know Ian from watercoolergames and as a frequent commentor here. Ian is… [grandtextauto.org]
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Cool, Ian has a job at GT:)
General27 Feb 2004 10:57 am
too many topics, too little time
migrating, oh yes, tmttlt is migrating to a new domain, so switch and go to http://www.tmttlt.com for your future reference. there will be no more updates to this , the archival site
General26 Feb 2004 04:05 pm
in more way sthan one

You're Catch-22!
by Joseph Heller
Incredibly witty and funny, you have a taste for irony in all that you
see. It seems that life has put you in perpetually untenable situations, and your sense
of humor is all that gets you through them. These experiences have also made you an
ardent pacifist, though you present your message with tongue sewn into cheek. You
could coin a phrase that replaces the word "paradox" for millions of
people.
Take the Book Quiz
at the Blue Pyramid.
General26 Feb 2004 03:34 pm
interesting site akma points to
On Heterotopias.
Back in October, I promised Chris Locke I would point him to this short essay by Michel Foucault, “Of Other Spaces.” It originally appeared in English in diacritics 16 (Spring 1986), 22-27; Foucault had been tussling with the topic since the time of The Order of Things, where he introduces the utopia-heterotopia distinction. Good thinky thoughts, and now I finally fulfilled my promise.
[AKMA’s Random Thoughts]
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foucault.info has several texts which should still be under copyright….
General26 Feb 2004 03:23 pm
things to read when i have time….
- Chubin, Daryl E.ÊÊ(1976).ÊÊThe Conceptualization of Scientific Specialties.ÊÊSociological Quarterly 17: 448-476.ÊÊ
- Gardner, H.ÊÊ(1999).ÊÊThe Disciplined Mind: What All Students Should Understand.ÊÊ New York:ÊÊSimon & Schuster.Ê
- Hull, D.L.ÊÊ(2000).ÊÊThe professionalization of science studies: Cutting some slack.ÊÊBiology and Philosophy 15: 61-91.ÊÊ
- Johann GštschlÊÊ(2001).ÊÊTransdisciplinarity: Dynamic interrelations between disciplinarity, interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity. in: E. Mariani (ed.).ÊÊUnity of Knowing and Doing: A Transdisciplinary Solution.ÊÊ
- Klein. J. & al. (eds)ÊÊ(2000).ÊÊTransdisciplinarity: Joint Problem Solving among Science, Technology, and Society Society.ÊÊ Basel:ÊÊBirkhŠuserÊ
- Nowotny, H., Scott, P., Gibbons M.ÊÊ(2001).ÊÊRe-Thinking Science. Knowledge and the Public in an Age of Uncertainty.ÊÊ Cambridge:ÊÊPolity PressÊ
General26 Feb 2004 12:09 pm
Thu, 26 Feb 2004 16:09:22 GMT
Creative Technology programs and transparency in academia. Geoffrey Rockwell made up a very cool “Creative Technology Curriculum”. I'd have loved to get a degree in that if it had been available when I got into college!
Geoffrey also points to a fascinating (if you're interested in the dynamics of academia) document in which the Faculty of Information Studies of the University of Toronto attempts to redefine itself. As Geoffrey writes,
In the paper the dean, Briank Cantwell Smith raises questions about
what is the subject of information studies (we all study information.)
He argues for an issues oriented, interdisciplinary centre that looks
at documentary practices and performances.
What is exciting about the process is that it is open (I can look at
it) and openness is also one of the issues (as in Open Source as an
issue.)
Perhaps what we need is a clear philosophy of open source research as a practice.
[Seb's Open Research]
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two interesting documents from seb today, well worth thinking about. the first is somewhat like the software arts degree, the latter is somewhat interestingly about the reformation of a major information school.
General26 Feb 2004 10:30 am
well, it had to happen sooner or later
the roanoke times is reporting that units from the 1/116th infantry will be activated and added to the the 3rd battalian in its activation. This is the storied stonewall Brigade, the spearhead of the d-day assault, some parts of which haven't been activated since WWII. Back in the day, I served in one of those units, though it looks like my old unit isn't being activated. They are all good soldiers, I'm sure they'll do fine.
General25 Feb 2004 10:12 pm
everyone's there…. and a pic of mia in the nyt
The Ivy-Covered Console. Following on the heels of last week's AP news article about game studies is a new NYTimes article that interviews several researchers, including Grand Text Auto's own Nick Montfort. New to grandtextauto? Our URL managed to make it into the… [grandtextauto.org]
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and to think that all i had was a lousy one line quote in circuits last year:( anyway, this is a great introductory piece for a growing field.
General25 Feb 2004 08:12 am
Wed, 25 Feb 2004 12:12:26 GMT
More proof satire is becoming impossible to do
In case you missed this:
Education Secretary Rod Paige called the National Education Association a “terrorist organization”
[
Politics in the Zeros]
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yes, this is pretty much how the bush administration sees everything that doesn't go their way…. it is like electing a bunch of three year olds. mine mine mine mine , my way, my way, my way, etc. etc.
General25 Feb 2004 08:09 am
Wed, 25 Feb 2004 12:09:56 GMT
Top 10 Rules of Debugging. In the comments to a Very Serious discussion of debugging at Slashdot, appear the Top 10 Rules of Debugging: 10. Code is always Beta. It’s never done until it’s no longer in use or support no longer exists. 9. The better the SDK, the more sophisticated the bugs. 8. There’s always more bugs in the other guy’s (girl’s) code. 7. Declaring code bug-free is asking for it to fail at the worst possible time with the greatest visibility. 6. A good design is as likely to have bugs as a bad one. Bugs are equal opportunity. 5. Debugging time is inversely proportional to coding time. 4. If it works the first time, there’s a bug, but you won’t find it until you roll it out. 3. Debugging is fun. Really! It’s when you run out of bugs that you should wonder if you got them all, that’s not fun. 2. The most difficult bugs to find are in the most straightforward looking code. 1. That’s not a bug, that’s a feature…. [Discourse.net]
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everything is beta, unless it is alpha, nothing is really gold except gold and then you shouldn't drop it on your foot.
General24 Feb 2004 08:45 pm
the world around
Paul Bevan is blogging. He's written some great papers and has interesting ideas on cybergeographies in relation to humans in time and space.
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