Digital Pedagogy, Empowered Choice, and Personal Domains

It’s been a bit of a whirlwind the last week or so. I flew back to Virginia from University of Pacific Saturday morning and then dropped the family off at JFK in NYC on Sunday for our extended Italian sojourn. When it was all done and they were safely away, it felt like the end of that scene in Empire Strikes Back when the convoy from Hoth gets past the imperial fleet:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UN8YIR60Ij0

Thank god for those ion cannons!

I meant to write briefly about my presentation at Pacific, which I was lucky enough to be invited by Terri Johnson and Carrie Schroeder to give to a lecture hall full of students. It was the first time my audience was predominantly students, and I was really loving the energy in the room. The idea of owning the trace of your learning and pushing forward on the ideas of Personal Learning Spaces and Personal APIs continues to drive the work we are doing at Reclaim Hosting. Tim and I are fortunate enough to be heading out to BYU next week to further hone this vision and start imagining how Reclaim Hosting can help support these personal learning spaces.

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Much of my recent thinking has been pointing towards the idea of empowerment as not so focused on ownership, but also the opportunities for deep pedagogical transformation —inspired by the deep, sharp thinking of Andrew Rickard. I also pull heavily from Mark Sample’s brilliant post framing how they’re rolling out year 2 of Domain of One’s Own at Davidson College. I’m also able to start exploring work happening at other universities beyond UMW, such as this brilliant blog post by Cody Alan Taylor at University of Oklahoma that captures the spirit of narrating your learning which is the key to the transformative spirit of Domains that could prove radical. Projects like Adam Croom’s awesome feature blog highlights the best around OU Create—which is how you build community, momentum, and a broader culture shift! This stuff matters, and there are great examples of amazing people making a difference at their schools.

I had fun with this presentation. It marks a bit of a departure from some of the talks I’ve been giving recently, It has enabled me to focus on the wider world of the Reclaim universe, and I can see already it is so vast and rich. I’m about return to some old school bava blogging about sites, projects, and people that inspire. Is there a better job for me? The video is 45 minutes, and it is interesting that I have become somewhat of a veteran presenter. I have “goto” moments and stories I bust out to bring the audience in (“Civil War current event in Freddy”) to connect with them and then get to the larger ideas across. I love to present, when I am feeling it I almost feel like I could pull off a full blown edtech comedy routine, and one of these times I just might 🙂

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Click image to be taken to a recording of the talk

Here’s some slides in the unlikely event you’re interested in following along.

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Reclaim Support

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Tim Owens tweeted out the above image that graphs the ramp-up of support at Reclaim Hosting as the semester gets rolling. According to our ticket system Intercom, we’ve had 365 conversation over the last few weeks with an average respond time of 8 minutes. Pretty proud of those numbers, and it has a lot to do with the insane expectations Tim set early on for Reclaim support. I love the challenge, and I have no question we’re up to it. The only issue I have is all the people clamoring for Tim and Lauren Brumfield over yours truly in their tickets—not so goof for my self esteem. [I’m looking at you Maha! :]  Not to mention that since I’ve gone full time I’ve easily add 2 minutes to the average Reclaim response time.

One of the most interesting things about the transition From DTLT to Reclaim has been the way we’ve been able to operationalize and scale much of the experimental work we did at UMW. I was talking with Martha Burtis about this a bit when we were in Puerto Rico, and it’s interesting how I associate our work at UMW with a loose, creative think tank and Reclaim with a broader rollout of those ideas. I have written already about the tools we use to run Reclaim, and I think one of the differences is the distributed nature of our work. At DTLT we shared the same space and we bounced ideas and issues off each other. That provided a unique sense of familiarity, play, and collaboration, at the same time, the physical space also meant we didn’t necessarily have the same impetus to organize our work in the same ways.

Lauren has started an awesome series about the applications she uses to work at Reclaim. I’m really compelled by reflecting on this element of working at Reclaim, and that’s one reason Tim and I were so excited about bringing Lauren on. We understood early on how crucial having someone to help us operationalize Reclaim would be—and we were well aware of what Lauren was capable of during her time at UMW. Joe McMahon, who is doing contract work for us currently, is operationalizing and automating our server environment. In the near future we will be trying to transition all of our servers to a virtualized environment, and Joe’s post about learning to love DevOps is an excellent take on how we are trying to think about our infrastructure.

It’s been an interesting semester so far, and we’re proving we can scale slowly and thoughtfully with good people and an awesome community without sacrificing the personalized support that is the backbone of what we do.

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Repo Edtech


It was pretty cool to see this recent post by Adeline Koh on ProfHacker sharing her experience with Reclaim Hosting. I particularly liked this bit:

It’s been four months since I’ve switched to Reclaim Hosting and I cannot say better things about the service and the people running it.

Tim and I aren’t “businessmen” (though I joke about it), we’re edtechs who have an intimate understanding of higher ed. We have a strong sense of where technology and teaching converge in interesting ways, and remain committed to augmenting what we’ve helped build at UMW and share it far and wide.

Jim and Tim discussing the Reclaim Code

Tim and I at work

We don’t advertise. We don’t use our interface to play psychological games. We don’t hate-sell through fear and uncertainty as so many in the web hosting world do. We don’t and won’t take VC funding. We won’t be bought, which means we won’t sell you out.  And while we do have the best service and cheapest prices around, more than anything we have an ethos that is rooted in the vision of helping people understand how the web works and use that knowledge to return teaching and learning to the scale of the individual—the only way it can be done right. That is what education is, and that is what we are all about.

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Reclaiming State U

Earlier this week we rolled out State University at Reclaim Hosting. What’s State University? It’s Tim Owens‘s latest project to showcase just how elegant and painless he’s made the whole process. What’s more, the site demonstrates the experience we have created for the 22 schools running the Domain of One’s Own institutional package. We set the site up as a trial space that provides inquiring minds a 30-day trial to experience the service.

We did something similar last year when we rolled out http://reclaim.host, but that didn’t highlight the institutional experience, nor did it provide a simple, elegant login system for folks who want to try it out. That has all changed now. One of the coolest elements of this new space is the fact that anyone with a Facebook, Google, or LinkedIn can automatically authenticate through those services and get up and running with their trial account immediately. It literally takes seconds to setup and account, install an application, and start creating. This accurately represents the environment we have created for schools by hooking into a wide range of single sign-on environments.

I inaugurated this site for a faculty workshop at the Universidad del Sagrado Corazón designed to introduce them to the power of managing their own web hosting space. We had a great turnout, and everyone in the room had either a Facebook, Google, or LinkedIn profile, so getting them up and running literally took seconds. I’ve never had such a smooth on-boarding experience during a workshop. But once we started installing applications things slowed down a bit because we were running State U on Linode server with 1 GB of RAM (fine for a few folks, not so much for a room full). So while Martha Burtis worked her magic explaining the form and function of WordPress, I called back to the Reclaim mothership (Tim) and he scaled the server by 8x in less than 10 minutes. Virtualization is a powerful thing. By the time Martha was done, the server was lightening fast and we finished up the workshop which entailed getting them all up and running with a WordPress instance within a subdomain of their account.

I had also put the call out on Twitter leading up to the workshop, and a few folks tried it out. I was particularly pleased to learn that John Johsnton had given it a spin and was thoroughly impressed.

What I really love about State U is how well it showcases the fact that managing your own webhosting space does not have to be painful. By making it increasingly easier and more user-friendly we’re empowering students and faculty everywhere to start reclaiming their piece of the web.That’s why we did this whole thing in the first place. State U reinforces the fact that our mission is firmly in tact, and it’s quickly becoming more and more difficult to refute the fact that becoming the sysadmin of your digital infrastructure is within the realm of possibility for everyone—and it need not be expensive either. That’s the reclaim mission we envisioned two and a half years ago with Kin Lane and Audrey Watters—and it’s alive and well. Don’t believe me? Try it out for yourself. Go to http://stateu.org and explore the control panel or try installing your own WordPress. You’re mind will be blown.

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Re-ordering Pizza in 2015

Back in early June of this year I had the good fortune of listening to Phil Windley talking about digital identity, sovereign source identity, block chain, and much more at BYU’s The University API event. I deeply respect the caliber of thinking around these questions the BYU IT team bring to their approach to APIs and Domain of One’s Own, and I am getting ready to head out to Provo at the end of the month to talk about just this. One of the things Phil showed off during one of the sessions that stuck with me was the 2004 video created by the American Civil Liberties Union titled “Ordering a Pizza in 2015.”

The video provides a view of what the unregulated collection of our personal data by corporations could mean in 2015. It’s an brilliantly executed quotidian dystopia story. It all starts off very normal: man orders pizza. But quickly spirals into ab absurd, Kafkaesque world of surveillance and control. A satirical play that highlights how quickly the unchecked harvesting of our personal data erodes some basic tenets of a free society. I love the way this video walks the fine line between the everyday and the fantastic. And what’s even crazier 11 years later through this piece is that the chilling future possible of 2004 has become status quo in 2015.

So, yesterday I borrowed this page from Phil Windley’s book during a presentation Martha Burtis and I did at the Universidad del Sagrado Corazón about Domain of One’s Own and digital identity (more on that in a forthcoming post). The video was well received, and it is a testament to the fact that the worst kind of clean, well-lighted dystopias can come true. The clip provided a simultaneously comic and horrific view of our current moment.

After this video I went on to discuss the above clip featuring Edward Snowden, a bit frightening how well the two worked together. The protection of our personal data online is first and foremost a civil liberties issue!

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Anna Rinko is a Great Mind

At some point soon I might stop writing about UMW, but that won’t be today. Damn you, UMW! You gotta give the devil it’s due, and the students at UMW I have come to know there have ruled. There are many, many  great ones, and I’ve written about a number of them on the bava over the years. A new first for me was having the unique opportunity to work with Anna Rinko as she was finishing her Freshman year in high school. I taught what I refer to as the Breakfast Club edition of #ds106, a group of ragtag high schoolers destined for greatness 🙂 It was two weeks long and they were a total blast.

Anna was part of that cadre, and she continued to make and share mashup trailers (her newfound passion that summer) with me for the next couple of years. During her senior year of  high school she asked me to be a faculty advisor for her research focused on the psychology of film trailers. Just this past Spring—between receiving her associates degree at a local community college and graduating valedictorian at her high school (in that order!)—she presented her research to a room full of professors at UMW who were exploring their own course movie trailers. She’ss a wunderkind!

When I learned she was coming to UMW a few months ago I was thrilled. For me she represents exactly the perfect combination of humility, geek, and awesome that I have come to associate with UMW students. Earlier this week Anna and I finally caught up after her first two weeksof university to talk about how things were going. Classes? No problem. Friends? Core group already forming. Entertainment? Watching Xena: Warrior Princess. She then proceeded to school me on the series, detailing creator Robert Tapert’s early work with his college roommate Sam Raimi’s on Evil Dead. And Raimi’s contributions to Xena, etc. Love. It.

She also shared thoughts about Xena, suggesting the show is in many ways as much about Xena’s “sidekick” Gabrielle as the main heroine—a character development arc the six seasons trace through the coming of age of this innocent farm girl to her status as war-weary warrior. I’m sold, and Tess and I will be watching this shortly.

So it was very cool to see the recent Great Minds piece “Movie Mania,” written by UMW’s Erika Spivey, featuring Anna. They highlight her 50 mashup trailers, as well as her remarkable academic achievements to date. Anna is exactly the kind of student this school should be courting. UMW has struggled some with it’s identity to say the least, but framing a future around students like Anna is a very, very good idea. And the fact she has made a trailer for humanity titled “Absolute Peace” just highlights her awesome talent and unlimited abilities. I wish you the very best, Anna, and I have no doubt you will make UMW, and everyone you come into contact with there, a bit better and happier. #4life

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The Horror of Dolls

https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=251&v=-rK1WyAIvps

This week in Tales from ds106 Paul Bond and I discussed a couple of classic horror stories focused on dolls: The Twilight Zone’s “Living Doll” and Richard Matheson‘s episode “Amelia” from the TV movie Trilogy of Terror (1975). One of the questions we wanted to explore is, “Why the hell dolls are so creepy?” I’m no sure we got answered it, but one of the things that surfaced when talking about these two doll episodes was how freudian the subplots were. Both episodes are remembered for their dolls, one a lovable department store staple turned revenge killer.

And the other a racist curio that comes alive as a savage hunter:

Zuni-fetish-doll

But what I forgot about, which dovetails beautifully with the focus of week two in ds106, is the artful ways in which these killer dolls might actually be understood as part of the psyche—the manifestation of some deep dark id. This is particularly apparent with the character Erich Streator (Telly Savalas) from “Living Doll.” I was struck by the subtext this time around wherein he believes his wife (Annabelle) and step-daughter (Christie) are using the doll to taunt him because apparently he is unable to reproduce. He is haunted by the fact, and Talky Tina has transformed into the child he can never have. There’s a moment in the middle of the episode wherein Erich lays this out:

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Annabelle: She’ll be a good playmate for Christie.
Erich: Mm-hmm. Lacking a brother or sister, you mean?
Annabelle: I didn’t say that.
Erich: But that’s why you bought the doll, isn’t it? Sort of a reminder?
Annabelle: It hadn’t occurred to me, but if that’s what you want to think.

And the Freudian themes are by no means a stretch, at the very beginning of the episode when Erich is interrogating Annabelle about the cost of the doll he says as much:

Erich: All right, how much did it cost?
Annabelle: I told you
Erich: I know, you charged it, but how much did it cost?
Annadelle: Erich, that’s enough.
Erich: How much did it cost, Annabelle?
Annabelle: Erich, I don’t think it’s the price of the doll that’s upsetting you.
Erich: Now we’ll get more of that freudian gibberish you’ve been getting from her doctor, huh?
Annabelle: It isn’t Dr. Lubin’s fault she feels rejected.

The father’s lack, the child’s rejection, the mother’s persecution: it’s right out of Greek tragedy. And the doll becomes the horrific representation of this family triangulation of insecurity, longing, and rejection. It was such a different experience for me this time around. The horror was the father’s inability to cope with his perceived lack, and the sadistic way in which he wanted others to suffer for it. Crazy. And as you can see from the extended quotes above, this is all captured through good writing. The set and effects for this show are about as minimalistic as they come, the genius is in the story. It’s the writing that carries this.

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When I watched “Amelia” I was ready for something totally different. I had seen this episode when I was a pre-teen, and the Zuni fetish doll is one of those figures that has been burnt on my imagination. I was thinking this episode would be far less artful, and I guess you could argue that given how over-the-top the doll is, but as with “The Living Doll” the horror of this episode is embedded in the subtext that plays out when Amelia (Karen Black) is talking to her mom on the phone. It becomes quickly apparent she has left home temporarily to sublet an apartment in the city. It’s Friday night and she is trying to tell her mother she has a date with a man, and that she won’t be able to spend the evening with her. The apparent reply—we can’t hear the mother on the other side of the phone—is not happy. The mother accuses her daughter of abandoning her, trying to escape, etc. Amelia is visibly shaken, and ultimately calls her boyfriend to tell him she won’t be coming, and he lays it on as well. The calls are fascinating because they setup the horror of the story. The fetish doll is a representation of the frustrations driving Amelia’s life: her frustration with her mom’s refusal to let go, her sexual anxieties/frustrations with her boyfriend (she slips when talking to her mother about spending the night—not the evening—with him and quickly corrects herself), as well as her guilt about abandoning them both. It a taut, one woman show about the horrors of familial dependence and personal relationships. The doll becomes the manifestation of all this and more.

And unlike “The Living Doll,” where Erich is killed by the doll, Amelia is transformed by the doll into monster. And the last scene is of her telling her mother to come over as she is crouching down driving a machete into the carpet. And the final close-up seals it, she has given way to the darker impulses to finally stand up to her mother and devour her lover? The teeth say it all.

Interesting final point about “Amelia” that ties it back to “The Living Doll.” Richard Matheson wrote many, many classic episodes of The Twilight ZoneHe wrote Amelia for The Twilight Zone, but they kyboshed it because it was way too dark and violent. Although when I think about the TZ episode “The Invaders” the two seem pretty similar. Regardless, I think Talky Tina certainly gives the Zuni doll a run for his money when it comes to dark and violent horror—but both do a brilliant job of mining the real horror of our emotional fears, insecurities, and frustrations.

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A Decade of Class Presentations

On Tuesday night I did what will most likely be my last class presentation/workshop for Domain of One’s Own at UMW. I was helping Gwen Hale’s Writing for Nursing students get up and running with their own domain and web hosting. I started with a 15 minute presentation about what UMW Domains is and why it matters. Then we had a 30 minute workshop to get them to create their domain, provide an overview of CPanel, and have them WordPress in a subdomain. It’s remarkable to think about the fact that 9 years ago it took me the same amount of time to get students to join a group blog.

I really love the class visits, and I have had a blast over the years. I visited many a class in my 10 years at UMW, and I never really got tired of them. Part of that is because, admittedly, I am a ham. But the other thing that has kept them fresh for me is that I rarely do the same thing twice. It’s a kind of personal tech jazz mediated by what I am reading, watching, thinking about, etc. That helps keep it fun, at least for me. What’s more, I always imagined at least part of my role at UMW was to make an impression upon the people I work with when it comes to technology. I don’t want them to think about this as just another thing to do, I want them to think about Domains or UMW Blogs or ds106 as THE thing to do. I want them to feel a sense of immediacy and importance, and that often takes equal parts enthusiasm, entertainment and storytelling.

So, during this last class visit I went on a bit of a rant about corporate silo sites, data as the new oil, and the veneer of privacy. It was pretty awesome. What fueled it was the following bit from The Power of Habit I came across on Twitter via Tumblr recently.
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The highlighted text underlines the fact that companies like Target (and I imagine Amazon, Google, Apple, etc.) are mindful that they now have way too much data about us. So much so that they need to make it look like they aren’t spying on us. They need to start tricking us to think they don’t know as much as they do so we aren’t fooled. It’s like the Matrix. And it is spooky!

Domains are the red (or is it blue) pill. It’s a way if pulling back the curtain to start to understand how this stuff works. That was the conceit, that was the thing that drove the 15 minute information session about Domain of One’s Own. I believe a tight, focused argument around this one idea goes much further than a pitch for a portfolio solution—despite the utility of the latter.

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Using Rsync to transfer files between servers


We’ve been getting a lot of migration requests from folks who want to moving their existing accounts over to Reclaim Hosting. We offer to migrate over anyone’s hosting account for free, which means you get to see the inner workings of a lot of web hosting companies. When a hosting company doesn’t use CPanel, that often means a manual migration of files and databases which, depending on the account, can take a lot of time. It’s when you are in a situation where you want to be fast and have more control that you realize why people use the dreaded command line.

Despite the server work I’ve been doing over the last few months I’m still relying heavily on the GUI interfaces of WHM and CPanel. But more recently that has started to change. Here and there I’ve been asking Tim for quicker ways to get stuff done, and one came up yesterday that was an insane timesaver. While moving the great Jonathan Worth‘s Phonar empire over to Reclaim, I was faced with a manual file move because his host isn’t using CPanel. This was daunting because he as a fairly hefty file load. While preparing for the move I realized his host provides SSH access which means I could login via terminal and rsynch all his file to his account on the reclaim server. It literally took about 2 or 3 minutes to move everything with one command:

rsync -avz . [email protected]:public_html/

Note that jonathan is both the username and the folder name for his CPanel account, that’s the identifier CPanel uses to create accounts. So the command above is run in the public_html directory of the web hosting account I want to transfer stuff off of. In terms of the rsync variables, you can see a list of the arguments that will explain the -avz.

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So I am filing this away as yet another sysadmin trick I need to remember so that the next time I come up against a hosting company that doesn’t use CPanel I can at least transfer all the files with a single command. #sysadmin4life

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A 5 Terabyte Shark

Screen Shot 2015-08-28 at 9.50.21 PMI’ve been trying to consolidate and archive the last 10 years of images, videos, documents, site backups, etc. It’s a daunting task, but I am finding uploading everything on old computers and backup disks to Amazon S3 is an approach that is working fairly well. I still need to organize S3, but for the moment I feel fairly comfortable I won’t lose my personal digital archive.The thought of accidentally deleting my history or learning my backup drive(s) corrupt fills me with tremendous dread. I have accumulated about two and a half terabytes of data over the last 10 years, which seems like a lot, right?

I thought so too until I saw the new upload limits for a single file for Amazon;s S3: 5 terabytes each! 

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Crazy! This is kind of mind boggling, a 5 TB file? Is that like a partial dump of an online movie store? We’re already well into the terabyte/petabyte age. GBs are what MBs where ten years ago….not nearly enough. Funny how the shift kinda snuck up on me until wham, I start saying to myself, “5 TB uploads? maybe that’s not that much in the end.” The simultaneity of devices shrinking and space and storage endlessly expanding remind me of the famous zoom shot from Jaws.

Jaws-1

An endless regression from and forward marching towards the rapture  of a moment. A 5 TB shark on Amity Island? We have to close the beaches!

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