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Sunday

Literacy as an apparatus


Gregory Ulmer:


Literacy is an "apparatus," which is not a neologism but a common term given specialized meaning in media studies.

I borrowed it from media studies to name the matrix of a language machine, partly social and partly technological, that operates in a given epoch. An apparatus is not only a technology (e.g. the alphabet, paper, ink etc) but also an institution and its practices developed along with the technology (Plato founded the Academy, the first school, and invented "method" -- the PHAEDRUS is the first discourse on method in the Western tradition -- and pedagogy -- the dialogue form -- and of course the categorical system of "concept.").

One of Plato's inventions was to take the verb "to be" which served only as a copula at the time (helping verb to link subject and predicate: "Achilles is angry"), and add to it the function of ontology: asking after the "being" of a thing ("What IS justice?"). Aristotle gave the title METAPHYSICS (a neologism) to the book he wrote after his PHYSICS, in which he developed further this practice of defining entities in terms of their properties.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -



Tuesday

New relationship between orality and literacy

Gregory Ulmer:

The EmerAgency is a virtual consultancy, testing a practice of deliberative reason for the Internet.

This practice allows netizens (capable of egency within electrate subject formation) to participate in decision-making on public policy issues. Deliberative (practical) reason decides at light speed within the apparatus of electracy, supported by the invention of an image metaphysics that is to digital media what the categories introduced by Aristotle are to literacy.

Policy debates until now have been structured by an impasse — the confrontation between the modalities of thought (metaphysics) created within each of the previous apparati: Religion, faith, obedience (Orality) / Science, knowledge, proof (literacy).
The key to understading the aporetic character of policy problems in modernity is to note the incommensurability of these modalities, and their respective institutionalizations. Another version of the impasse, more revealing of its irreducibility, is the pair Pain/Fact.

Electracy proposes the possibility of a third institutional practice, based in an image metaphysics native to digital media, capable of mediating, negotiating, bridging the aporia organizing the relationship between orality and literacy. The dimension of thought institutionalized and therefore brought to the table of policy debate supported within electracy is expression.

One purpose of this blog is to design and test a practice of expression that is to the Internet what belief is to Religion and knowledge is to Science. The expression equivalent is affect and its political stance concerns well-being (wellness). The premise to be tested is that electracy augments the dimension of human motivation.

Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -

PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Friday

New consultancy

According to Ulmer, subjects formed in an electronic apparatus will not be constructed in terms of self.
The emerAgency is a virtual organization dedicated to using the Internet for a new kind of ‘consulting’. Consulting is one of the principal ways specialized knowledge is delivered to public policy issues. The present state of cognitive jurisdiction restricts the assignment of expertise to problems, reflecting a prejudice favoring empirical, positivist sciences and social sciences as being the only ones relevant and practical to community problem solving. The emerAgency is a deconstruction of this mode of consultancy. The "new consultancy" is not a direct critique of positivist expertise, but is an experimental application of arts and letters methods and practices to policy formation.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -
PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Tuesday

Relevant hyperlinking

Poor quality hypertext is a usability disaster causing annoyance, confusion, and anxiety. Users expect links, and that the links will be relevant and useful.

A good hyperlink is relevant to the surrounding text and provides enough information for the user to make an informed decision about whether to leave the current page they’re on and follow.

Here’s an example of a useful hyperlink:

1 For excellent examples of finely crafted hypertext
2 look no further than kottke.org,
3 the online home of Jason Kottke
.

For excellent examples of finely crafted hypertext
look no further than kottke.org,
the online home of Jason Kottke
.


The linked text must have relevance, as it’s the first hint the user will receive as to the nature of the link. The test of good link text is whether it can stand alone on a page, outside of the hypertext of which it’s a part, and still make sense.

Links must also be styled differently to the surrounding text. They can be another color than blue, as long as it’s different to the normal text, and that all the links in the page are the same color, so they’ll be clearly visible.

A title attribute is optional, but should be used independently from providing a context because the tool tip only appears when using the mouse. If the link text is sufficient, it’s unnecessary anyway.

Well-crafted hypertext is simple to read and use, and frankly, simple to create! Are you guilty of crimes against hypertext?


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -



Monday

Web and basic knowledge

In a direct challenge to the conventional school syllabus, Tapscott argues that although it is still important that children have certain basic knowledge, the details, such as the date of the Battle of Hastings, are less important when they can be accessed instantly on the Web.

This is controversial thinking with far-reaching consequences for the way young people are taught and employed. But the book aims to tackle Internet prejudices head on. His conclusion is that "the kids are all right." The best managers and educators will understand that there is much they can learn from this cohort, as well as the other way around. His seven guidelines for managers include a recommendation to "rethink authority," giving feedback where it is needed but remaining open to learning from young employees.
Other guidelines include encouraging employees to blog and avoiding bans on access to social networking sites. Instead, managers should work on ways to harness these technologies to promote better collaboration.

The book is a thoughtful antithesis to entrenched and sometimes alarmist managerial opposition to Internet-influenced behaviors. Read it next to the computer, scanning, flicking through and annotating it as a valuable addition to the Internet knowledge that is revolutionizing our world.

Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -
PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Sunday

Cursing DRM


I curse DRM

DRM Screws Users Again: eBooks About To Disappear Due To DRM Provider Shut Downfrom the don't-buy-anything-with-DRM dept.


Around here, it's basically preaching to the choir, so most of you probably recognize this already, but buying anything with DRM on it is basically asking for trouble down the road. The latest example? An eBook seller named Fictionwise has realized that one of the companies that provides DRM for some of its books has announced that its shutting down at the end of the month. Because that DRM has to check in with an authentication server that's no longer going to be there, everyone who "bought" (really: incorrectly thought they bought) eBooks that used this DRM will discover that the books they paid for no longer work (Update: as noted in the comments, this DRM doesn't authenticate every time -- just any time you try to move the content to a new device. Also, Fictionwise is working to get replacements and has done so for many of the eBooks impacted already).It's as if a publisher could retroactively erase the text from within a physical book that you bought. Since Fictionwise is just passing on the eBooks from third party aggregators, it has no means of replacing the "disappeared" eBooks. Has anyone found any thing that DRM is actually good for yet?


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -

Friday

Books for iPhone


If you’re looking for some books to read on your iPhone, you might be interested to know that an online bookstore called BooksOnBoard has just released over 30,000 eBook titles for the iPhone.


iPhone owners can now get most new books released on their Apple iPhone or iPod Touch with direct downloads to the device through the wireless network. These 30,000+ books include titles by Gena Showalter, Nora Roberts, Michael Connelly, David Baldacci, Stieg Larsson, Susan Mallery, and Harlequin’s One Click Buy January Blaze Bundle.


Users currently require the free Stanza application found in the iPhone apps store in order to download and read the books, while BooksOnBoard plans to work with additional iPhone eBook readers developers to allow its customers to read popular new titles from the publishing community.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -


Saturday

Golden apple



In Troy, Hollywood’s recent retelling of an ancient fracas, Orlando Bloom, who plays Paris, gets to keep his prize — Helen played by Diane Kruger.


In this version the playboy prince is not killed by Philoctetes but is shown leaving the burning city of Troy with Helen. He lives to fight another day. The ending may seem unexceptionable for our ‘liberated’ times. But earlier versions all had Paris getting his ‘just deserts’. However, was Paris really to blame for his alleged crime of passion? Didn’t Goddess Aphrodite promise him the love of the world’s most beautiful woman in exchange for the golden apple? (The Goddess of Discord Eris originally created the golden globe inscribed with the words ‘to the fairest’ out of pique for not having been invited to a marriage party on Mount Olympus! She then tossed it into the party and watched the fun as three powerful goddesses fought over the fruit. Rather than risk the ire of the losing parties, the gods passed the potato to Paris who was known for his artless honesty.) It’s another matter that the shepherd-turned-prince was so besotted by beauty that he did not bother to read the fine print — Helen was already married to the powerful King Menelaus who had the backing of dozens of warrior-princes. So would Paris have been better off in choosing brains instead of what the Goddess Athena promised along with skill in war in lieu of the apple?


Or should he have been more impartial and chosen Hera, arguably the most beautiful of the three goddesses, who promised him kingdom of Asia and Europe for the apple? A bigger question relates to binary stereotypes and puritanical mind-sets that tend to pit beauty against brains or pleasure versus duty and virtue. Why couldn’t Paris have the option of choosing beauty with brains? That is the thesis of AC Grayling’s latest book The Choice of Hercules which starts with the Greek hero who said ‘no’ to a life of ease and chose the greatly harder life of a lion-killer mercenary and stable-cleaner. Grayling argues however that in the original Epicurean ideal, pleasure and virtue are not at all mutually exclusive.


Nastily effective religious propaganda separated the two. In fact, the ‘good life’ should involve both, and by identifying one’s strengths and behaving in a sensible, courteous fashion, you can get onto that ‘middle path’. Have the flashy Ferrari along with the freedom of the monk.



Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor



Thursday

Net Geners

The generation that grew up with the Internet is derided by employers as ill-informed, Web-addicted, unfocused, poorly read and narcissistic.

But in a long-running, $4-million research project involving thousands of interviews with 16- to 19-year-olds in 12 countries and comparative interview programs with earlier generations, Tapscott and his team reached a different view. The Net Generation, he notes, was raised on a much more varied media diet than its parents who, in the United States at least, watched an average of 22 hours of television a week in their youth.

The "Net Geners," he says, have access to so much competing media that they are more likely to spend their home time on computers, simultaneously interacting on several screens, while talking on the phone, listening to music, doing homework and reading.This all-in-one generation cannot be defined as passive learners. "They are the active initiators, collaborators, organizers, readers, writers, authenticators, and even strategists. . . .

They do not just observe, they participate. They inquire, discuss, argue, play, shop, critique, investigate, ridicule, fantasize, seek and inform."Technology is shaping their minds in a different way, he writes. Unlike their predecessors who absorb information sequentially, Net Geners "play" with information -- clicking, cutting, pasting and linking to interesting material. "They develop hypertext minds," in the words of William Winn, learning center director at the University of Washington's Human Interface Technology Laboratory.Such behaviors, Tapscott writes, mean this new generation is well equipped for handling information. He quotes research by father-and-son brain scientists Stanley and Matthew Kutcher, who argue that the scanning practices of young people are developing their potential for analytical thinking. Henry Jenkins, director of the comparative media studies program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is also cited. He believes so-called digital immersion may be encouraging a new form of intelligence that is strengthened through collaboration with other people and machines. In a direct challenge to the conventional school syllabus, Tapscott argues that although it is still important that children have certain basic knowledge, the details, such as the date of the Battle of Hastings, are less important when they can be accessed instantly on the Web. This is controversial thinking with far-reaching consequences for the way young people are taught and employed.

But the book aims to tackle Internet prejudices head on. His conclusion is that "the kids are all right." The best managers and educators will understand that there is much they can learn from this cohort, as well as the other way around. His seven guidelines for managers include a recommendation to "rethink authority," giving feedback where it is needed but remaining open to learning from young employees. Other guidelines include encouraging employees to blog and avoiding bans on access to social networking sites. Instead, managers should work on ways to harness these technologies to promote better collaboration.

The book is a thoughtful antithesis to entrenched and sometimes alarmist managerial opposition to Internet-influenced behaviors. Read it next to the computer, scanning, flicking through and annotating it as a valuable addition to the Internet knowledge that is revolutionizing our world.

Richard Donkin is a columnist for the Financial Times of London, in which this review first appeared.

Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -

PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Wednesday

Today print service provider

To become a 21st century print service provider, two key recommendations are suggested.

The first is for providers to recognise that no one printing process can economically produce all applications that customers demand. The most profitable print service providers (PSPs) place jobs on the most appropriate presses for the job, based on factors such as run length, turnaround times, number of colours and added-value processes such as variable data printing (VDP) and finishing.

The second recommendation is to consider other factors such as the provision of end-to-end services, including aspects such as digital asset management and fulfillment which drive potential growth for printers. Consider new technologies and toolsOnce these recommendations have been factored in, new technologies and tools need to be considered that will have the capacity to identify jobs more suited to a digital press, and as they become more profitable, to run on conventional presses.

These technologies should also enable the calculation of the production cost for each job and also be able to compare the estimated profit the user will make for each press. By using job-by-job comparisons, PSPs can use the model to build a profile for a typical month's production and increase profitability on all jobs.The Internet is deemed one of the major contributors that has facilitated digital printing, with web-to-print applications being adopted by organisations wanting to reduce overall process costs. Through digital presses, organisations are able to combine the benefits of print on-demand while maintaining a consistent look and feel of printed products with offset materials.For example, it would be more cost-effective to print a generic holiday brochure that is distributed to travel agents on traditional offset presses, but this could be complemented with a personalised web-to-print solution. Visitors to the website are enabled to specify the places that they are interested in visiting and the type of hotels they want to stay in, then order a digitally printed brochure containing the personalised information they require. The brochure, based on a template, can be tailored to contain a number of variations in pictures, text, languages and URLs. Some travel companies will even include pictures from people's previous holidays.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -

PHONEREADER Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Monday

iPhone's eBook offering

Jorge Pinto of PintoBooks weighs in on the iPhone's new eBook offering.

He says he's selling more eBooks for the iPhone than the Kindle (which may have something to do with the lower price).

Enjoyed reading Dan Frommer's article describing the iPhone as a viable challenger to the Kindle. As a small niche publisher with more that 50 titles in print (all copyright protected), I have been looking at ebooks for a long time. I try to get from my authors / agents electronic rights to use them at the right time.
I currently have 5 titles in Kindle and in the iPhone. Printed editions are between $15.95 and 19.95, in Kindle are $9.99 and in iPhone $5.99 and some in future titles $7.99.
Sales in iPhone have been great. If you are interested you can look for these titles in Apps or

iTunes search:

1. Irvin Yalom: On Physiotherapy and the Human Condition (non-fiction)2. Nigel Holmes: On Information Design (non-fiction)3. Alan Siegel : On Branding and Clear Communications (non-fiction)4. Manual of Contemporary Art Style(non-fiction)5. The Conversation (fiction)
Soon: The Witches of Tepoztlan (and Other Unpublished Operas) (fiction)
Sales in iPhone have being great and steady. Kindle no so good.I look forward to a larger size iPod or eReader from Apple since I have many copyright works to be published.


See Also: Look Out, Amazon Kindle: Here's Come Apple iPhone eBooks

Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -PHONEREADER
Library - - Jean-Philippe Pastor

Sunday

Well done the paper


The biggest reason I hope newspapers survive is that they preserve the simple ceremony of morning: sipping coffee in the growing light while you riff on the fate of the world with a loved one. We give so much of ourselves to computer screens and clocks already.


I would hate to lose another tool for savoring the moment.


Download ebooks on http://www.frenchtheory.com/ - See that post with different algorithms in metabole - See the journal French Metablog with today different posts -