Comments for THATCamp CHNM 2010 http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org The Humanities and Technology Camp Tue, 08 Mar 2011 21:52:08 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Comment on Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation by thuyanh http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/#comment-14468 Tue, 08 Mar 2011 21:52:08 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=529#comment-14468 A friend and I have actually made a video response that defends the “dumbest generation” and we make points that Baeurlein overlooks:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHw716ptwBg

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Comment on Project "Develop Self-Paced Open Access DH Curriculum for Mid-Career Scholars Otherwise Untrained" by Steven Hayes http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/project-develop-self-paced-open-access-dh-curriculum-for-mid-career-scholars-otherwise-untrained/#comment-13606 Wed, 02 Mar 2011 01:07:51 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=404#comment-13606 Hi, just read your “project retrain” description as part of my background reading for THATCamp 2011 in Melbourne. Have you considered certifying existing professionals (like me…) who have no formal training but have picked up hopefully a great many of the skills you describe on the job over many years. This would be like a recognition of prior learning process and would – as a nice side effect – identify gaps in knowledge. One of the reasons I want to go to THATCamp is to fill gaps in my personal fairly “perforated” knowledgebase as it is almost impossible to find appropriately configured formal courses that will allow me to undertake professional development in any kind of structured, strategic way.

Regards

Steven Hayes

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Comment on Reimagining the National Register Nomination Form by Peter http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/reimagining-the-national-register-nomination-form/#comment-10299 Wed, 26 Jan 2011 13:59:26 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=261#comment-10299 Just curious: Is there a version of the National Register Nomination Form in some kind of database format, such as MS Access? One that could be used for data entry to create new nominations?

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Comment on Project "Develop Self-Paced Open Access DH Curriculum for Mid-Career Scholars Otherwise Untrained" by Learning DH the DIY Way | THATCamp Virginia 2010 http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/project-develop-self-paced-open-access-dh-curriculum-for-mid-career-scholars-otherwise-untrained/#comment-6667 Thu, 16 Dec 2010 19:24:50 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=404#comment-6667 […] Meloni on the Camper list – it would be great to get her thoughts on the best approaches, given her project to “Develop self-paced open access DH curriculum for mid-career scholars otherwise […]

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Comment on Modest Proposals from a Digital Novice by THATCamp New England » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/modest-proposals-from-a-digital-novice/#comment-4051 Thu, 11 Nov 2010 22:11:26 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/modest-proposals-from-a-digital-novice/#comment-4051 […] absorb the spirit of things while the content soared over my head.)  Overall, I observed much, contributed a little and came away inspired by the different models of digital scholarship that I’d encountered—in […]

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Comment on Modest Proposals from a Digital Novice by Six Months Later: Another THATCamp « Clarissa J. Ceglio http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/modest-proposals-from-a-digital-novice/#comment-3905 Tue, 09 Nov 2010 19:46:30 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/modest-proposals-from-a-digital-novice/#comment-3905 […] absorb the spirit of things while the content soared over my head.)  Overall, I observed much, contributed a little and came away inspired by the different models of digital scholarship that I’d encountered—in […]

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Comment on soft circuits by an R&D agenda for embodied interaction in DH? | THATCamp Virginia 2010 http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/20/soft-circuits/#comment-3706 Sun, 07 Nov 2010 18:30:03 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/soft-circuits/#comment-3706 […] e-textiles at THATCamp Great Lakes, we had fun with this stuff at the #pastplay symposium, and I gave away freebies at the last THATCamp […]

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Comment on Project "Develop Self-Paced Open Access DH Curriculum for Mid-Career Scholars Otherwise Untrained" by Samuel Teshale Derbe http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/project-develop-self-paced-open-access-dh-curriculum-for-mid-career-scholars-otherwise-untrained/#comment-196 Wed, 28 Jul 2010 17:13:14 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=404#comment-196 This is excactly what I have been looking for.I have been recently invited to contribute to a web based teaching program at the Amsterdam Network University. But, I am quite a newbie to technology for education, though I have been a college lecturer for many years- in the traditonal way,of course. I am keen on learning the tools and share my expereince in teaching adults. It requires a lot of ingenuity to teach adult students using new technology.

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Comment on Who Wants To Be A Hacker? by plr articles http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/16/who-wants-to-be-a-hacker/#comment-40 Fri, 16 Jul 2010 10:55:17 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=122#comment-40 Just added more knowledge to my “library-head” 😀

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Comment on Who Wants To Be A Hacker? by Libby Thompson http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/16/who-wants-to-be-a-hacker/#comment-39 Mon, 12 Jul 2010 09:25:49 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=122#comment-39 I have been coding for a few years now in C+. It is a hard language but once you get to grips with it, you can easily master it and code what ever you need. I have made a small hacking framework with a GUI which was pretty good. As I am a pentester, I count on my own tools to work for me.

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Comment on Project "Develop Self-Paced Open Access DH Curriculum for Mid-Career Scholars Otherwise Untrained" by Lisa Spiro http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/project-develop-self-paced-open-access-dh-curriculum-for-mid-career-scholars-otherwise-untrained/#comment-195 Wed, 07 Jul 2010 19:30:37 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=404#comment-195 I’m late to the party and was not able to make it to THATCamp, but I think this is a terrific idea. If you’re looking for a publishing for the modules, check out Connexions (cnx.org/), an open platform and repository for educational content. I’d be happy to pitch in however I can.

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Hacking the Academy – od Twittera do książki « Historia i Media http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-282 Tue, 15 Jun 2010 06:24:13 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-282 […] Hacking The Academy, zainicjowanym przez Toma Scheinfeldta i Dana Cohena z CHNM w ramach kolejnego THATCampu. Inicjatywa miała dość prosty schemat, ale raczej radykalny charakter: w ciągu jednego tygodnia […]

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Comment on THATCamp-in-a-Box by Participating in the Bazaar: Sharing Code in the Digital Humanities | ClioWeb http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/10/thatcamp-in-a-box/#comment-119 Thu, 10 Jun 2010 22:57:14 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=185#comment-119 […] any Omeka or WordPress themes, plugins, just about anything we develop that we can share. (Expect THATCamp-in-a-Box to be up there in some form sometime this summer!) So if anyone wants to use the Hacking the […]

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Comment on Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation by Cactus Acide » » L’observatoire du neuromancien 06/07/2010 http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/#comment-265 Mon, 07 Jun 2010 22:31:42 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=529#comment-265 […] THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive […]

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Comment on Project "Develop Self-Paced Open Access DH Curriculum for Mid-Career Scholars Otherwise Untrained" by Judith Tabron http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/project-develop-self-paced-open-access-dh-curriculum-for-mid-career-scholars-otherwise-untrained/#comment-194 Wed, 02 Jun 2010 20:32:42 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=404#comment-194 This is a compelling-sounding project, so I’m said to say I disagree with its aims. As a person who can claim to be both a tech geek and a teacher, I really don’t think teaching faculty to bootstrap technology themselves will ultimately do them any good. Teaching them HTML a decade ago didn’t do them any good; it didn’t stick for most of them and now it’s obsolete. Teaching them how to integrate online discussion into their classes, now; that’s a task that never gets old, and it doesn’t much matter whether the tool in use is a VMS bulletin board, a mailing list, or a blog.

Is the purpose to help faculty invent the university of the twenty-first century? Or is it just to close a gap in technology skills that every other type of knowledge worker had to close years ago? I think the two goals would have two different agendas.

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Comment on About THATCamp by THATCamp: Digital Storytelling, Local History, Social Media « …and this is what comes next http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/about/#comment-7 Tue, 01 Jun 2010 15:14:01 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/?page_id=2#comment-7 […] gathering based on a particular theme or purpose, and on the weekend of May 22-23, 2010 I attended THATCamp, an un-conference at the Center for History and New Media in Fairfax, […]

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Comment on About THATCamp by SAMPLE REALITY · Haunts: Place, Play, and Trauma http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/about/#comment-6 Tue, 01 Jun 2010 13:59:43 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/?page_id=2#comment-6 […] recently participated in a geolocation session at THATCamp that helped me refine some of these ideas. We had about fifteen historians, librarians, archivists, […]

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Comment on About THATCamp by THATCamp: Digital Storytelling, Local History, Social Media « …and this is what comes next http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/about/#comment-5 Mon, 31 May 2010 23:20:04 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/?page_id=2#comment-5 […] gathering based on a particular theme or purpose, and on the weekend of May 22-23, 2010 I attend THATCamp, an un-conference at the Center for History and New Media in Fairfax, […]

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Comment on THATCamp Prime Collaborative Documents by Priya Chhaya http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/24/thatcamp-prime-collaborative-documents/#comment-297 Mon, 31 May 2010 22:17:54 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=606#comment-297 The on Social Media and the History Non-Profit

bit.ly/dhBX2m

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Comment on All Courseware Sucks by Jeremy Vest http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/all-courseware-sucks/#comment-234 Sun, 30 May 2010 20:43:19 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=445#comment-234 I love this topic and think that it’s not just courseware that sucks, Online Education in general currently sucks.

We need to rethink the next generation LMS and online course. I do believe that online education can be better than classroom education for many reasons. Mostly because we all learn at different speeds and engage at different times. I’m very interested in WordPress and Buddypress. I think a very light simple elegantly designed courseroom can be created using WordPress.

Think about how the smart phone looked before the iphone came out. The same opportunity exists with the typical old school LMS.

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Comment on documentation: what's in it for us? by André http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/documentation-whats-in-it-for-us/#comment-168 Sun, 30 May 2010 00:52:23 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=272#comment-168 “Improving our communication with our IT system administrators ensures that we can meet as equals, moving away from handshake deals and hopeful bribery with baked goods as a means to attempting get the support our projects require.”

Yes! This is the way forward. As a stereotypically beleaguered University SysAdmin, I seriously appreciate the courtesy and professionalism expressed here.

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Comment on Hacking ethics for edupunks by Hacking our Conferences | ClioWeb http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/22/hacking-ethics-for-edupunks/#comment-82 Sat, 29 May 2010 15:55:34 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=139#comment-82 […] Hacking in the Humanities a group-edited syllabus on ethics in hacking for digital humanities, a session proposed by John M. Jones at […]

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Comment on Hacking ethics for edupunks by Why “Hack the Academy”? « The Leisurely Historian… http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/22/hacking-ethics-for-edupunks/#comment-81 Sat, 29 May 2010 03:53:58 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=139#comment-81 […] when a group of us at THATCamp 2010 attempted to put together the beginnings of a syllabus on "Ethical Hacking for the Humanities." The more we discussed what should be included, the more amorphous the whole endeavor began to feel. […]

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Comment on What THATCampers have been tweeting about (pre-camp) by coffee001 http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/twitterstat/#comment-292 Wed, 26 May 2010 19:09:53 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=565#comment-292 Hi there,

I’ve put my archive of #THATcamp tweets into a zipped CSV file: blog.ynada.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/thatcamp-all.zip
You can also get the version maintained by Twapperkeeper (www.twapperkeeper.com/hashtag/thatcamp), which also includes tweets made since after the camp, but (I think) doesn’t go back as far.

Cheers,

Cornelius

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Comment on What THATCampers have been tweeting about (pre-camp) by Post-event Twitter stats for #THATcamp http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/twitterstat/#comment-291 Wed, 26 May 2010 12:10:15 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=565#comment-291 […] thought I’d post an updated version of the simple stats on Twitter activity presented here. The data in the older post was collected before THATcamp took place, the graphs below show the […]

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Comment on THATCamp Prime Collaborative Documents by Alex Jarvis http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/24/thatcamp-prime-collaborative-documents/#comment-296 Tue, 25 May 2010 18:41:40 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=606#comment-296 Add this to the list – the “Digital Rights Manifesto”, born out of the Data Liberation session (still in progress). bit.ly/cb8BEN

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Comment on From Scratch by Some THATCamp Reflections « parezco y digo http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/from-scratch/#comment-159 Tue, 25 May 2010 18:17:36 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=239#comment-159 […] here you can find the blog post I put up the week before we all met. And, while I didn’t get all […]

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by bowerbird http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-281 Tue, 25 May 2010 01:50:54 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-281 the distressed typewriter look
is already overplayed. you can
use it this one more time, but
then please retire it. thanks.

-bowerbird

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Comment on ARGs, Archives, and Digital Scholarship by Alex Leavitt http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/args-archives-and-digital-scholarship/#comment-248 Mon, 24 May 2010 23:40:45 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/args-archives-and-digital-scholarship/#comment-248 Hey Zach,

Just looking over some post-THATcamp documents (I was set to go but had to pull out last minute). I’ve had some similar thoughts (www.convergenceculture.org/weblog/2010/05/post-story_post-promotion_post.php) if you’re interested in reading.

Alex

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Comment on Geolocation, Archives, and Emulators (not all at once) by The “digital humanities” term and the clowns who usurpated it. | Jean-François Gariépy's blog http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/05/geolocation-archives-and-emulators-not-all-at-once/#comment-100 Mon, 24 May 2010 20:13:26 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=170#comment-100 […] they did mention emulators. Let’s see what Mark Sample had to say: And finally, I’ve recently realized we need to think more critically about the use of […]

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Comment on Geolocation, Archives, and Emulators (not all at once) by The “digital humanities” term and the clowns who usurpated it. | Jean-François Gariépy's blog http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/05/geolocation-archives-and-emulators-not-all-at-once/#comment-101 Mon, 24 May 2010 20:13:26 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=170#comment-101 […] they did mention emulators. Let’s see what Mark Sample had to say: And finally, I’ve recently realized we need to think more critically about the use of […]

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Comment on Geolocation, Archives, and Emulators (not all at once) by The “digital humanities” term and the clowns who usurpated it. | Jean-François Gariépy's blog http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/05/geolocation-archives-and-emulators-not-all-at-once/#comment-102 Mon, 24 May 2010 20:13:26 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=170#comment-102 […] they did mention emulators. Let’s see what Mark Sample had to say: And finally, I’ve recently realized we need to think more critically about the use of […]

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Comment on Audiences and Arguments for Digital History by The “digital humanities” term and the clowns who usurpated it. | Jean-François Gariépy's blog http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/19/audiences-and-arguments-for-digital-history/#comment-63 Mon, 24 May 2010 20:13:11 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=132#comment-63 […] history”, it’s basically traditional historical artifacts that are digitized. Take Rob Nelson’s talk for example. Now that is not a problem; it’s a fact: there’s not much digital […]

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Comment on All Courseware Sucks by Bruce http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/all-courseware-sucks/#comment-233 Mon, 24 May 2010 14:24:04 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=445#comment-233 Ditto dancohen on Sakai 3. As for his question “I suppose the larger question is: do we need courseware at all?”: yes, I think we do. There are all kinds of issues with privacy (really hairy, legal, issues here for edu) and grading and so forth that are really awkward to deal with absent courseware software. We just need an LMS that doesn’t suck. Sakai 3 promises just that in my view.

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Comment on What THATCampers have been tweeting about (pre-camp) by mdb http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/twitterstat/#comment-290 Mon, 24 May 2010 13:27:30 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=565#comment-290 Would you post the R dataframes after the conference?

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Hello Worlds « Matthew G. Kirschenbaum http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-280 Mon, 24 May 2010 01:36:45 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-280 […] paywall since. Now seems like a good time to make it available again as a contribution to the Hacking the Academy volume and collection Dan Cohen and Tom Scheinfeldt announced this past weekend at THATcamp. I […]

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Hello Worlds « Matthew G. Kirschenbaum http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-279 Mon, 24 May 2010 01:34:45 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-279 […] paywall. Now seems like a good time to make it available again as a contribution to the Hacking the Academy volume and collection Dan Cohen and Tom Scheinfeldt announced this past weekend at THATcamp. I […]

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Comment on All Courseware Sucks by Teleogistic / A distributed, multi-client LMS http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/all-courseware-sucks/#comment-232 Sun, 23 May 2010 23:33:32 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=445#comment-232 […] Courseware Sucks”. You can read the blog post that served as the inspiration for the session at the THATCamp blog. Steve started the session by framing the issue in a way that ended up being quite helpful: he had […]

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Comment on Sharing the work by THATCamp 2010 « A Magpie Historian http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/sharing-the-work/#comment-166 Sun, 23 May 2010 22:52:07 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=266#comment-166 […] which are well worth Yaking about (should that have 2 ks?). I didn’t propose a session for my blog post (tl;dr is “academics/faculty need to engage with non-acads because everyone will […]

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Comment on All Courseware Sucks by Boone Gorges http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/all-courseware-sucks/#comment-231 Sun, 23 May 2010 22:33:39 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=445#comment-231 Jana – This consideration was at the center of our discussion yesterday. I’m working on a blog post where our ideas will be revealed 🙂

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Larry Cebula http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-278 Sun, 23 May 2010 20:30:52 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-278 I am not a camper this year but would like to submit my recent blog post, “How to Read a Book in One Hour” to the volume. I would be glad to expand it somewhat: northwesthistory.blogspot.com/2010/04/how-to-read-book-in-one-hour.html

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Comment on All Courseware Sucks by Jana http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/all-courseware-sucks/#comment-230 Sun, 23 May 2010 19:37:22 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=445#comment-230 In my experience managing Bb for a SLAC, the problem with implementing anything other than Bb is that faculty are terrified of the software. They don’t want to look stupid in front of their students, and they often need a hand to hold as they do the simplest of tasks within the LMS because they afraid that they’ll mess it up. Most faculty don’t hate Bb for its lack of flexibility, they hate it because they don’t know how to do the most basic of fxns within it (and I don’t blame Bb’s interface for this, it’s all abt the faculty’s fear of tech).

While I’d love to see a more dynamic and customizable LMS system, it’s got to take into account the fact that few faculty can handle anything more than a basic dropdown menu interface.

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Comment on Visualizing text: theory and practice by Code and brief instruction for graphing Twitter with R http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/18/visualizing-text/#comment-175 Sun, 23 May 2010 18:54:45 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=315#comment-175 […] a Twitter graph (=who you are following and who is following you) that I briefly showed at the session on visualizing text today at THATCamp and that I wanted to share. My comments in the code are very basic and there is […]

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Trevor Owens http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-277 Sun, 23 May 2010 17:21:09 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-277 I am submitting this annotation of this Wikipedia page, as well as the Wikipedia page itself, to the volume for the section on educational technology.

The Wikipedia page about Ivan Illich’s 1971 book Deschooling Society illustrates a vision for the future of educational technology. Illich rejected the institutional nature of schooling, and hoped for destructured, de-instutionalized future for education. The article not only explains Illich’s vision for a new educational system and it’s presence as an entry on the Wikipedia demonstrates the way his idea of decentralized, interest driven, “learning webs” are now a core part of internet culture. This presentation of his argument is itself a representation of how his vision has become a central feature of internet culture. Informal online learning communities like Flickr groups, fan fic sites, game forums, and DIY and crafting sites, offer further evidence of how unstructured, self directed “learning webs” are now some of the most important sites of learning in 21st century society.

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by David Rieder http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-276 Sun, 23 May 2010 17:20:53 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-276 Rewrite of the final par:

Dan alludes to the scarcity of attention. In his book titled _The Economy of Attention_, Richard Lanham argues that an excess of information demands a new way of generating value. Since information is plentiful, the new role of the scholar is to help us focus, to create attention-getting structures. Lanham doesn’t offer the following examples, but the wide range of works developed by DHers can be valued as scholarship for an age in which information is plenty. Like silhouettes on a bright, white screen, an attention structure limits the flow in order to create value. Whereas the traditional scholar is confronted with a dark screen that needs to be enlightened, the DH scholar is confronted with a white screen on which she needs to introduce some contrast.

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Jackie Gerstein http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-275 Sun, 23 May 2010 17:20:40 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-275 I am making a motion for a category on grading and assessment #assess ?

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by David Rieder http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-274 Sun, 23 May 2010 17:09:24 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-274 Attention, or the Exigence of Excess

>> One potential solution on the demand side might come not from the scarcity of production, as it did in a print world, but from the scarcity of attention. @dancohen <<

The information economy has upended the scarcity model on which traditional scholarship has been based. Traditionally, the lone scholar must add to a scholarly universe that is incomplete. The corpus of ideas with which a traditional scholar is identified is finite. S/he is expected to have read it all, to known it all. New ideas and perspectives are hard to find. It takes genious to create or envision them. Someone with singular vision is needed to help bridge the gap between the known and the unknown, the near past and the distant future. What the scholar is a creater, a producer—someone who shine some light ahead of us.

The information age has turned that traditional relationship on its head. Digital scholars today do not face a future in which the existence of great ideas and novel perpectives are scarce. In an information age, there is an excess of great ideas and novel perspectives. Like a 24-hour gas station on the highway, the road ahead is well lit. The gap between the past and the future has been reduced to little more than a speed bump. From the standpoint of the web, the scholar is surrounded by so much information that s/he lives in an eternal present. S/he can’t possibly know everything about her field, and there are so many great ideas and novel perspectives from which to choose that s/he is confronted with a new scholarly exigence: how to deal with an excess of knowledge.

Dan alludes to the scarcity of attention. In his book titled The Economy of Attention, Richard Lanham argues that an excess of information demands a new way of generating value. Since information is plentiful, the new role of the scholar is to help us focus, to create attention structures. Lanham doesn't offer the following examples, but the wide range of works developed by DHers can be valued as scholarship for an information age. The growing number of ways in which to filter, connect, and visualize information are attention structures. They are forms of scholarship tailor-made for an age of informational excess. Like silhouettes on a bright, white screen, they are a model of production that turns the traditional model of scarcity on its head.

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by jane fleming http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-273 Sun, 23 May 2010 16:57:08 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-273 Include H-Net newsletters and reviews/ h-net.msu.edu

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Lynne Goldstein http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-272 Sun, 23 May 2010 14:50:04 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-272 I will second the motion for a category on public engagement. It seems to me that what you’re doing isn’t quite complete or valid without it. #public

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Comment on Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation by Jeffrey McClurken http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/#comment-264 Sun, 23 May 2010 03:16:14 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=529#comment-264 UPDATE: Rough notes from this session (co-led by Tanya Clement, Ethan Watrall, Brian Croxall, Jeff McClurken and many others) can be found at docs.google.com/Doc?id=ddz3r8kz_65ggjm74f3

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Comment on Audiences and Arguments for Digital History by THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/19/audiences-and-arguments-for-digital-history/#comment-62 Sat, 22 May 2010 23:14:56 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=132#comment-62 […] collaborative learning, and the extra question Rob Nelson asks at the end of his post about what we should be teaching students in undergraduate DH classes).  I want to talk more broadly about what are the (digital) skills that we think people need to […]

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Comment on Reimagining the National Register Nomination Form by THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/reimagining-the-national-register-nomination-form/#comment-169 Sat, 22 May 2010 22:56:57 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=261#comment-169 […] publishing a very specific proposal on the National Register nomination form a few days ago and then writing a whole new title up on the whiteboard this morning, I wanted to […]

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Comment on New session: The THATCamp Movement by Jon Voss http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/22/new-session-the-thatcamp-movement/#comment-293 Sat, 22 May 2010 21:25:27 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=594#comment-293 Dan mentioned in the opening that THATCamp is a movement, and I think that’s worth exploring in more depth. I also asked for this session to get more feedback and thought on the idea of expanding digital humanities out of the confines of the academy? Is that heretical/possible? Does it/can it include libraries, archives, museums? How about developers and technologists working on commons projects related to the humanities? What about commercial entities? Is there room for everyone at the table, or does it take the focus off of digital humanities in a strictly academic context?

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Comment on Design Patterns for DH Projects by karindalziel http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/14/design-patterns-for-dh-projects/#comment-141 Sat, 22 May 2010 19:31:34 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=196#comment-141 Here are my abbreviated notes for the session, ideas to help with project preservation:

* use virtualization for older platforms
* design site as static as data allows from the beginning
* limit the number of platforms, esp. ones with data export
* design sites that degrade gracefully in loss of technology
* create a video/screenshots, etc of a site as a form of documentation – it records the site’s functionality which can be ephemeral
* think of the site as layers – separate, for instance, map stuff (KML) from presentation
* make your site available for lots of copies
* available for spidering (e.g static HTML version)
* clonable repositories
* open licensing
* Documenting – white paper at the end of a project, talking about the idea behind the project. Should be a joint effort between scholars and coders
* Use standards
* Create content people care about 😉

Also, group discussed whether every project needs preservation & why there is no digital humanities version of Yelp for projects/tools and what would have to change in order for that to change (it comes down to solving the “social capital problem”).

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Comment on Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation by burmamusic http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/#comment-263 Sat, 22 May 2010 15:10:11 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=529#comment-263 new undergrad program at Arizona State: ame.asu.edu/

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Comment on Who Wants To Be A Hacker? by Frank Bennett http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/16/who-wants-to-be-a-hacker/#comment-38 Sat, 22 May 2010 14:47:56 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=122#comment-38 Great to see this. While it may not be appropriate to integrate into the demo/dev materials for the session, you should give a good solid plug for the importance of testing frameworks, for anything larger than a hundred code lines or so.

Tests are liberating. Code is like any other form of writing; it may need heavy revision after the first draft. Solid tests makes that revision work easier and more certain, and they allow you to work more quickly. Tests are actually more important, in the long run, than the actual application; as a general rule they far outlast the code that they support.

Wish I could be there with you guys — but on the other hand, I’d probably bore everyone in earshot to tears with talk along these lines … 🙂 Have a good session!

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Comment on Text Mining Scarce Sources by Lincoln Mullen http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/27/text-mining-scarce-sources/#comment-90 Sat, 22 May 2010 11:44:03 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=154#comment-90 Great—I was hoping someone would be more familiar with Winiarski’s work than I am. The Haverhill relations that Winiarski has written about and the East Windsor relations that I’m looking at differ in ways that should make for an interesting comparison in text mining methods.

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Comment on Teaching Students Transferable Skills by Jeffrey McClurken http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/teaching-students-transferable-skills/#comment-260 Sat, 22 May 2010 09:53:35 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=520#comment-260 Like Rob, see my comment on Tanya’s Post. Bottom line, we have a strong core of teaching DH people here that want to talk about these issues.

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Comment on Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation by Jeffrey McClurken http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/#comment-262 Sat, 22 May 2010 09:51:24 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=529#comment-262 I’m with Rob. This is an essential conversation for us to be having at a place like THATCamp.

I wonder if a session or sessions related to DH teaching/classes/curriculum might produce a document (or if that’s too grand an idea, a list) of what we see as the core competencies/content areas for an undergraduate DH class/curriculum. Such a document could then be submitted to Tom and Dan’s Hacking the Academy volume.

Beyond what you (and Rob and I) proposed, we need to link this with the other sessions proposed in this area, including those by Dave Parry, Bill Ferster, Brian Croxall, as well as the work done by Amanda French at NYU.

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Comment on Modest Proposals from a Digital Novice by Clara Trapalis http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/modest-proposals-from-a-digital-novice/#comment-257 Sat, 22 May 2010 09:48:53 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/modest-proposals-from-a-digital-novice/#comment-257 Yes! thought your post is a very interesting + informative !

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Comment on Who Wants To Be A Hacker? by Patrick Murray-John http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/16/who-wants-to-be-a-hacker/#comment-37 Sat, 22 May 2010 09:40:34 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=122#comment-37 Here’s a link to a starter html file. You might want to download your own copy to hack on.

devel.patrickgmj.net/thatcamp/hackingTemplate.html

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Comment on Analogizing the Sciences by Jeffrey McClurken http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/analogizing-the-sciences/#comment-268 Sat, 22 May 2010 09:37:11 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=440#comment-268 I’d like to explore this further as well. I think there are really useful things for DH to learn (how to assess collaborative work, for example), but I also think there are some real limits to these analogies if they suggest that there’s nothing new or transformative about DH.

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Comment on The (in)adequacies of markup by bowerbird http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/the-inadequacies-of-markup/#comment-286 Sat, 22 May 2010 08:06:01 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=544#comment-286 there’s another choice — zen markup.

it’s light markup that is so “light” that
it’s nearly invisible.

it converts out to .html and .pdf, but
its simple structure also means that
viewer-apps and authoring-tools can
be programmed for it quite easily…

-bowerbird

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Comment on what have you done for us lately? by cwillifo http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/18/what-have-you-done-for-us-lately/#comment-182 Sat, 22 May 2010 03:55:53 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=265#comment-182 The Digital Library Federation has recently been brought back in to the Council on Library and Information Resources as a new program. I’m lucky to be spending part of next week with our brand new DLF Program Officer, Rachel Frick. I’d be happy to pass along anyone’s best ideas for what you think this program’s top priorities should be.

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Comment on The (in)adequacies of markup by LucidWanderer http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/the-inadequacies-of-markup/#comment-285 Sat, 22 May 2010 03:50:08 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=544#comment-285 I’m actually in favor of the standoff markup system for the reason that as long as the text itself is versioned and stable, then having markup actually necesitates copying the source to layer in multiple different markups. The initial purpose of markups is to create a very specific kind of typographical data — the way the original was typeset, any page breaks.

I think the standoff markup approach has the following advantages:

1. It can be generalized to media which cannot be edited with xml. You can add a timecode and thus attach metadata to a video. You can attach a logical code and somehow cite/analyze/encode an interactive work.

2. It allows for violations of nested hierarchy. Properly formatted XML files are trees; not all ideas or classifications in documents can be modeled by a tree.

3. It allows for maintenance of sources in a central location, and allows for only the most important (i.e. the extra data) to be kept in a database. A similar xml database would contain a great deal of redundancy.

4. Offsets into a text file are simple, and can even be used to handle changes between different versions by the utilization of references to stanzas or paragraphs.

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Comment on Hacking ethics for edupunks by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/22/hacking-ethics-for-edupunks/#comment-80 Sat, 22 May 2010 03:44:37 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=139#comment-80 This sounds like a really productive session idea. A lot better than making iPad users run the gauntlet, as had been previously suggested.

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Comment on The Future of Interdisciplinary Digital Cultural Heritage Curriculum (oh yeah, and games as well) by Anastasia Salter http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/the-future-of-interdisciplinary-digital-cultural-heritage-curriculum-oh-yeah-and-games-as-well/#comment-201 Sat, 22 May 2010 03:15:18 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=411#comment-201 You definitely caught my attention at “games”: your Egypt project looks fascinating. I’m particularly interested in how you plan to overcome the problem of contextual knowledge–that is, a lot of studies on using Civilization for teaching history note that even as students retain the information they don’t necessarily translate it over to their ancient history courses or to a larger understanding of civilizations. The same problem perhaps arises in the literature context, as while I first encountered game studies in an English department I don’t think that is yet the norm despite the potential of games for exploring the nature of text itself.

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Comment on Late to the Stage: Performing Queries by JenServenti http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/late-to-the-stage-performing-queries/#comment-288 Sat, 22 May 2010 02:23:22 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/late-to-the-stage-performing-queries/#comment-288 You may be interested in a recently-funded Digital Humanities Start-Up Grant project at the University of Virginia titled the ARTeFACT Movement Thesaurus.

Here’s the description from the NEH Office of Digital Humanities Library of Funded Projects: is.gd/cjP7U .

I’m happy to provide additional information if you’d like. Just find me in hallways at THATCamp– I’ll be the one with chocolate.

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Comment on Creative data visualizations by Christa Williford http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/creative-data-visualizations/#comment-256 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:59:54 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=511#comment-256 Intriguing idea. I’m wondering if any campers have incorporated teaching visual fluency into a writing class. There are a number of parallels between infographic elements and logical or grammatical ones; cause/effect, generic/specific, and chronological relationships, for instance, can be expressed in both ways. Wouldn’t the ability to identify and construct effective infographics improve students’ ability to identify and construct effective written arguments?

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Comment on The Future of Interdisciplinary Digital Cultural Heritage Curriculum (oh yeah, and games as well) by ethan.watrall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/the-future-of-interdisciplinary-digital-cultural-heritage-curriculum-oh-yeah-and-games-as-well/#comment-200 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:40:33 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=411#comment-200 Brian – a good example of a more literary inspired game, I would suggest looking at Arden (mypage.iu.edu/~castro/arden.html)

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Comment on Visualizing text: theory and practice by coffee001 http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/18/visualizing-text/#comment-174 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:32:39 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=315#comment-174 Thanks for the responses, guys!

@John: there’s a growing number of tools out there, both toolkits (i.e. programming languages such as Flash, PHP, Python, R, Processing etc) and ready-made solutions that don’t require programming but are consequently more limited in their capabilities. When it comes to the type of visualizations we can currently do I feel like we have a chicken-egg problem: we need to combine an understanding of humanities data with a solid grasp of visualization (and, if we want to do quantitative stuff, statistics) to build meaningful visualizations.
And yes, combining subjective tagging with structural characteristics is a challenge. Kinda ties in with Hugh Cayless proposal for markup:
thatcamp.org/2010/the-inadequacies-of-markup/

@Brian: I’d definitly like to hear more about geospatial and temporal vis.

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Comment on The (in)adequacies of markup by Hugh Cayless http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/the-inadequacies-of-markup/#comment-284 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:27:08 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=544#comment-284 Hi Adam,

I really only care about what’s practical. The theoretical arguments are interesting but weighted down by ideology. Maybe it’s worth taking another look at where we are technically though.

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Comment on Design Patterns for DH Projects by THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/14/design-patterns-for-dh-projects/#comment-140 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:25:21 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=196#comment-140 […] and standards remain a topic of interest to me: Hugh Cayless proposes that we take a serious look at how new design patterns could help digital humanists […]

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Comment on Teaching Students Transferable Skills by mebrett http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/teaching-students-transferable-skills/#comment-259 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:22:35 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=520#comment-259 As a public historian, I’d enjoy being part of the conversation.

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Comment on The (in)adequacies of markup by A. Soroka http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/the-inadequacies-of-markup/#comment-283 Sat, 22 May 2010 01:09:25 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=544#comment-283 Hugh–

Are you suggesting a practical discussion about how to overlay and weave commentaries and supercommentaries in an egalitarian fashion, presumably using markup tech? I’m not inclined to wade into any kind of debate over the “purity of the turf”, but I’d love to play with some ideas about how we could bum-rush the privileged position of the encoder of digital text.

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Comment on What THATCampers have been tweeting about (pre-camp) by THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/twitterstat/#comment-289 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:37:08 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=565#comment-289 […] I’m on California time and wide awake, figured I’d add to the great Twitter visualizations posted by @coffee001.  The first visualization shows the relationships between Twitterer/THATCampers coming this […]

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-270 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:36:05 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-270 Awesome.

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Comment on Geolocation, Archives, and Emulators (not all at once) by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/05/geolocation-archives-and-emulators-not-all-at-once/#comment-99 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:19:42 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=170#comment-99 I too have been interested in the notions of ephemerality and digital preservation for a while now. To what degree do we need to interrogate the drive to capture everything? One can certainly say that if we have the storage space then we’re better of preserving things than we are in letting them fade into graceful degradation. But on the other hand, what does it mean to preserve something like William Gibson’s Agrippa in the UCSB project, The Agrippa Files. The amazing technical achievement notwithstanding, preserving the text changes its very nature. There’s a bit of a gap–an emulation gap–then between what we are reading on a screen and the original object.

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Comment on Teaching Collaboration by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/06/teaching-collaboration/#comment-109 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:17:55 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=177#comment-109 Count me in as well.

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by Sharon M. Leon http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-269 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:13:10 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-269 Interestingly, no category for public engagement…. Can I make a motion? #public

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Comment on Cultivating Digital Skills and New Learning Spaces by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/cultivating-digital-skills-and-new-learning-spaces/#comment-154 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:10:35 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=213#comment-154 I feel badly that I didn’t have time to read Jeff’s or Rob’s posts before I wrote my own (very late) post about wanting to talk about how we teach our students transferable skills. But I’m glad to discover so many of us are barking up the same tree.

Classroom design seems like a potentially interesting conversation, and I’d love to see what gets brought up beyond the predictable: reconfigurable/movable furniture, wi-fi access, white boards, projectors, and the like. Moreover, how can we best encourage people–ourselves included–to not simply reproduce old patterns of pedagogy within the re-oriented spaces (since, after all, movable chairs can be placed in rows as easily as anything else).

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Comment on Finding a Successor to Paper and Print by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/finding-a-successor-to-paper-and-print/#comment-161 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:08:55 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=251#comment-161 I think Alex has a good point about the problematics of e-reader design. But there’s a reason for the “near-ubiquit[y]” of the iPad: it’s because it’s metaphorically closer to what we are used to using. One of the problems for adopting Google Wave was that there was no immediate metaphor for working within the system. The problem for e-readers, then, is to find some middle ground that makes things as familiar as possible while trying to flesh out the possibilities of the new textual medium.

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Comment on One Week, One Book: Hacking the Academy by THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/one-week-one-book-hacking-the-academy/#comment-271 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:07:34 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=536#comment-271 […] in culture will influence academic practices within and outside the classroom: projects like Hacking the Academy and open journals are at the forefront of restructuring academic publishing, but they face a number […]

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Comment on Digital Humanities Now 2.0 and New Models for Journals by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/digital-humanities-now-2-0-and-new-models-for-journals/#comment-163 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:06:23 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=250#comment-163 I agree with Matt that there is some value in improving the process by which DHNow selects or organizes its material simply because improving it means that all of us will have better access to the best of what’s thought and said (a canon in DH? oh noes!) about digital humanities projects and theory. I love the idea of fixing things at particular intervals, and that might help with legitimizing the work that people are doing in DH. On the other hand, I’d like to resist the idea of human editors–if only because I think the current iteration is such a cool idea, and I’d love to see it work well or be optimized.

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Comment on Citing a geospatial hootenanny by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/18/citing-a-geospatial-hootenanny/#comment-170 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:04:47 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=293#comment-170 This sounds like it could be a potential preview of what we’ll be talking about at #geoinst, but I’m all for that. Perhaps this discussion could be part of a larger Omeka discussion / bug mash. Not all of us were able to make the play date, so there could be plenty of interest around these concerns.

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Comment on Visualizing text: theory and practice by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/18/visualizing-text/#comment-173 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:03:28 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=315#comment-173 Thanks for this handy list of tools that I’ll have to look into. I would be very interested in this conversation and can certainly talk some about geospatial and temporal visualization.

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Comment on Project "Develop Self-Paced Open Access DH Curriculum for Mid-Career Scholars Otherwise Untrained" by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/project-develop-self-paced-open-access-dh-curriculum-for-mid-career-scholars-otherwise-untrained/#comment-193 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:00:52 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=404#comment-193 This is a great idea–one that suggests a possible solution to the sometime problem of unconferences: you’re going to leave with something tangible (a group of people) and a project that has clear goals. As someone who is hovering between the world of academia “proper” and the library and who has been tasked with getting Emory’s librarians more digitally savvy, I’d be very excited to play a part in this project. (Plus, like Kathleen said, I’m sure I’ll learn more than I bring to the table.)

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Comment on The Future of Interdisciplinary Digital Cultural Heritage Curriculum (oh yeah, and games as well) by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/the-future-of-interdisciplinary-digital-cultural-heritage-curriculum-oh-yeah-and-games-as-well/#comment-199 Sat, 22 May 2010 00:00:35 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=411#comment-199 I’m all for exploring the uses of games in learning opportunities. At the risk of outing myself as someone who doesn’t know the field or scholarship of serious games very well, I’d be inclined to say that more of the work in this field seems directly applicable to history than it does to literary study. I’d like to think through how games can be used more effectively in literature departments. (Ivanhoe notwithstanding.)

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Comment on Surveying the Digital Landscape Once Again by briancroxall http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/surveying-the-digital-landscape-once-again/#comment-151 Fri, 21 May 2010 20:13:14 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=230#comment-151 I love the thrust of this last question and the problem it brings up of, for lack of a better term the Ivies of the DH community. I know that the upcoming Humanities Gaming Institute at the University of South has the specific goal of working to bring in scholars from less established, less funded institutions. The hope is that the cohort of scholars who attend the HGI will stay in contact and help one another while at their own, underfunded institutions.

I see some commonalities between this idea and Julie Meloni’s proposal to begin a an open-access DH curriculum for mid-career scholars otherwise untrained. How, in other words, do we build digital humanists out of those who haven’t attended UVa, UMD, or UCI? We shouldn’t have to wait for a whole new generation of scholars to grow up to begin pushing further.

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Comment on Humanist Readable Documentation by joanna http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/humanist-readable-documentation/#comment-287 Fri, 21 May 2010 19:59:46 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=551#comment-287 As a point -and -click enthusiast from way back, I appreciate your project. As a community college professor, I am always trying to convey usability in a much simpler way than many programs allow.

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Comment on ARGs, Archives, and Digital Scholarship by Mark Sample http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/args-archives-and-digital-scholarship/#comment-246 Fri, 21 May 2010 18:10:53 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/args-archives-and-digital-scholarship/#comment-246 I don’t know why it didn’t occur to me earlier, but Omeka as an ARGHive platform is worth investigating. It’d be possible to collect all sorts of items and documents, and then every student/scholar could curate their own path through the ARGHive that reflects their experience with the ARG.

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Comment on Teaching Students Transferable Skills by Rob Nelson http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/teaching-students-transferable-skills/#comment-258 Fri, 21 May 2010 17:55:35 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=520#comment-258 There’s a strong connection, I think, Brian, between this and Tanya Clement’s post on digital humanities curricula (thatcamp.org/2010/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/). I posted a comment there asking a number of questions–and providing no answers–about what precisely in terms of critical reading skills a student might get from cultivating digital literacy in the digital humanities that she wouldn’t get from cultivating (generic) literary in the (generic) humanities? I wish I’d read your post first as you provide a concrete answer to my perhaps-too-abstract and perhaps-too-yakky question: they get some practical skills not just in reading new media texts but in authoring them. All of which to say is count me in on one or more sessions on digital humanities skills for undergraduates, digital humanities curricula, and designing and teaching a digital humanities course.

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Comment on Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation by Rob Nelson http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/digital-literacy-for-the-dumbest-generation/#comment-261 Fri, 21 May 2010 17:38:30 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=529#comment-261 This is a great topic. A number of people–including myself–have expressed interest in having a session to exchange ideas about designing a digital humanities course. I’d definitely be interested in a companion session on digital-humanities or digital-humanities-“inflected” curricula. Being an active, engaged, and critical reader of texts rather than a passive consumer of information is (obviously) very much at the heart of the humanities and the liberal arts. Given the ubiquity of new media, how central is the digital humanities to that aim of the humanities more generally? After reading your post I’m wondering how much the “dumbest generation” is a challenge for humanists and the humanities generally to teach general skills of critical interrogation of texts and how much that poses a challenge and an opportunity for digital humanists and the digital humanities specifically. Is talking about “texts” too general and generic, and a digital humanities “inflected” curriculum necessary to teach students to engage particular kinds of texts–i.e. new media texts–or to approach conventional texts using new techniques and tools like text mining?

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Comment on soft circuits by tclement http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/20/soft-circuits/#comment-252 Fri, 21 May 2010 16:37:32 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/soft-circuits/#comment-252 This is so cool. I think there is a pretty active community of folks in DC who do this work. I’ve got an email out right now asking about it. Man, I would love to find some time in my life for this. Please, life, please?

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Comment on HTML5 by Joe Gilbert http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/html5/#comment-214 Fri, 21 May 2010 16:37:00 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=229#comment-214 Sounds great, Jeremy. I’ve been working some HTML5 into recent efforts and would love to talk more or show short examples of my initial work with the new elements and attributes. Of particular interest to me are the new event attributes and effective ways to leverage them.

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Comment on Audiences and Arguments for Digital History by rbthisted http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/19/audiences-and-arguments-for-digital-history/#comment-61 Fri, 21 May 2010 15:42:51 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=132#comment-61 This sounds like a terrific idea for a session. My experience with projects at the AHR and Gutenberg-e is that the problem lies with the lack of rich and standardized tools to create born-digital arguments. This significantly limits the number of historians who can develop an argument that makes both a rich use of the media and novel contribution to the historiography. I’ve seen a number of projects wither and die because the authors had to fit their vision for the article to the available software, or got lost trying to develop (and get funding for) custom software to fit their vision.

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Comment on ARGs, Archives, and Digital Scholarship by Zach Whalen http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/19/args-archives-and-digital-scholarship/#comment-247 Fri, 21 May 2010 15:11:01 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/args-archives-and-digital-scholarship/#comment-247 @Mark Sample – Yeah, I’ve thought of that too. What would be awesome is a straightfroward Zotero->Omeka export, since the beauty of Zotero is its ease in capturing web resource.

So as a hacking project, some kind of Omeka-as-ARGhive process would be cool, or even just a conversation about an Omeka-fied workflow for ARG play.

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Comment on documentation: what's in it for us? by THATCamp 2010 » Blog Archive http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/17/documentation-whats-in-it-for-us/#comment-167 Fri, 21 May 2010 14:47:22 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=272#comment-167 […] Grizzle has already posted about the importance of generating basic documentation for maintenance of projects.  Perhaps those […]

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Comment on OpenStreetMap for Mapping of Historical Sites by Eli http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/20/openstreetmap-for-mapping-of-historical-sites/#comment-253 Fri, 21 May 2010 14:36:52 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/2010/library_item/thatcamp-prime-2010/posts/openstreetmap-for-mapping-of-historical-sites/#comment-253 This is a really interesting proposal. I’m particularly curious for how the research necessary for National Register Historic Districts can be organized and fed back into OSM. For example, I have a block by block account of date of construction and builder for about three neighborhoods in West Baltimore but right now that data only exists in a narrative form. I think there is also great potential for urban historians and architectural historians to use DIY aerial photography (following on the really interesting work on Grassroots Mapping by Jeffrey Warren at the Center for Future Civic Media. Higher resolution imagery of historic places could definitely make it easier to trace existing buildings into OSM.

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Comment on Analogizing the Sciences by nowviskie http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/05/21/analogizing-the-sciences/#comment-267 Fri, 21 May 2010 14:36:38 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=440#comment-267 I’ve been noticing some related conversation happening over the past two days at the MIT humanities visualization conference. Hashtag #hdigital.

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