Preserving the Past with Futuristic Tools

One of the projects that I have been working on this semester has been the development of an online exhibit with the museum lab class in the Historic Preservation department. As this project builds momentum, I am starting to get really excited about the work already done as well as the herculean tasks that still lie ahead. Thus far the students have uploaded over 100 images to their image gallery, which represent each of the ten decades of UMW’s 100 year history. It has has been a treat, thus far, to see this online archive of UMW’s past coalesce into the beginnings of a pictorial narrative. And while the class presently remains hard at work both scanning images and creating an “On-the Wall” exhibit, I am beginning to ramp up a content management system that will allow them to frame their images and text into an organized, cohesive and flexible format for course’s virtual museum.

Image of Ball Hall at UMWTo accomplish this I am planning on designing a site with typo3. This open-source CMS is by no means simple to work with ( a fact readily acknowledged by anyone working with this program), but it does provide an amazing amount of flexibility that has been luring me in for some time now. I have made some pretty significant strides in template design and implementation over the last couple of months (by far the most difficult tasks when working with typo3), and I feel comfortable enough to start documenting the process for creating templates with typo3 and setting up a system of permissions that will allow the students to use this program as a kind of “text-editor on steroids” to input the particular details of their webpages.

Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Simpson-ized Self-Portrait …

Gardner has been on a bloggin’ tear as of late and, as usual, providing me with something fun to do online. Like, for example, the simpsomaker self-portrait machine featured below:
Self-portrait as a Simspon character

He has also invoked Martin Luther on the iTunes U question and, quite frankly, I have seen way too much of Apple’s insidious posturing recently to argue with his astute points ..

Posted in fun | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Quotable #1

The Houston chief of police, Harold Hurtt, recently proposed placing surveillance cameras in streets, apartments, shopping malls and even private homes to fight crime. His response to reporters questions about privacy was the following quotable:

I know a lot of people are concerned about Big Brother, but my response to that is, if you are not doing anything wrong, why should you worry about it?

It alarming how the national and local levels are beginning to be of one mind on issues of public privacy, and downright scary how both make no attempt to hide their complete lack of regard for the constitution!
Read more …

Tagged | Leave a comment

Here’s the Scoop …

Tim O’Donnell, a speech professor here at UMW, has designed (with Ross Smith at Wake Forst University) a really cool tool that enables each of their classes to interact (more precisely, debate) online. The class site is called arguendo.com, and is powered by Scoop software – when going to Scoop’s site I found the following blurb:

Scoop is a “collaborative media application”. It falls somewhere between a content management system, a web bulletin board system, and a weblog. Scoop is designed to enable your website to become a community. It empowers your visitors to be the producers of the site, contributing news and discussion, and making sure that the signal remains high.

The basic logic is that the site community is centered around a blogging engine that users post to. However, only certain users (namely administrators) automatically show up on the frontpage. Whereas student and visitors posts can be easily found via the sidebar or search tools – they only show up on the portal/homepage when they make it to the “big time” (which means they are recommended often and highly enough by their fellow users -a celebrity hook built right in!). Tim took me for a quick tour and I really liked what I saw, but now its time to dig a bit deeper in the backend and see the inner-workings …

Great stuff Tim and Ross and thanks for the lead Gardner …

Posted in experimenting | Tagged , , | 8 Comments

Philip K. Dick Robot Missing!!!

Image of Phillip K Dick robotPhilip K. Dick Robot Missing!!! Boing Boing reports here. Isn’t this image really creepy.

Tagged , | 2 Comments

A DTLT Experiment

After today’s seminar with my colleagues a lot of ideas were rushing around my head -as they always are after these stimulating discussions- about “what is,” “what was,” and “what may be” for teaching, learning and technologies at UMW. This morning we were dealing with the specifics of managing and updating our webspace on the university site. It was apparent that we need to start re-organizing, re-classifying, and revitalizing our online information. Interestingly enough, many of us in DTLT seldom, if ever, visit these pages for information -these pages are more akin to an advertisement of what we do for the larger public.

What began to get kicked around is how we can go about opening up this space as a “way-in” to a more experimental, tour-like space for DTLT online which allows us to design and showcase the numerous projects we are working on by example. I have the exciting task of beginning to frame what this space may look like -and if you read my Blogs: the look of the future? post -you’ll have an idea of where we just might go!

Additionally,convergence and synergy is already beginning to build momentum – and my friend Zach, a webdesign guru and friend of the open-source cause, has sent a link for Symfony my way that may just start making sense out of this thing they call PHP 5. To quote Zach, “its like ‘Ruby on Rails’ for PHP,” (see basecamp.org for a phenomenal example of ROR in action). I understand all of this as a quick and easy way to design an enterprise-level web application framework with PHP. What might something like this mean for our experiment here at DTLT? Alternatives and possibilities of course … just what we need!

Posted in dtlt | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Dungeons & Dragons Online

Screenshot from online D&D gameThe D&D online game is now accepting pre-orders. And if you do pre-order the game you get the added value of becoming a beta-tester. Wow, there goes all my new-found hopes for the dissertation …

Posted in video games | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

UBUWEB

Image of writer Samuel beckettI found this site through Bryan Alexander’s cornucopia of great things at Infocult -who in turn credits it to Brian Lamb. And, wow, what a resource it is!!! I downloaded 10 Samuel Beckett mp3s last night – “cats in NY paying top dollar for this stuff”. Any high modernists in the house? This is a phenomenal teaching and learning resource: UBUWEB

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Augmentation, baby!

I, and everyone else in DTLT (and quite possibly the greater DC area), have been hearing a lot about augmenting the learning process from Gardner as of late. And while his enthusiasms are by no means lost on me, sometimes it takes a little bit of praxis to see how one is affected by the community that they are surrounded by. Tonight was just that kind of experience for me.

About two weeks ago Judith Parker and I had been talking about some tech issues in the hallways of Combs Hall when it got out that I was a Ph.D. candidate in English with a specific concentration in early American captivity/slave narratives (word travels fast I guess). She is currently teaching a linguistics seminar on the emotive power of narrative and was wondering if I would be interested in presenting some of my dissertation for the class. At first I was extremely excited (as I tend to get) and naively thought “this is a perfect way of rekindling an old flame know affectionately as the Diss of Dread .” But as those two weeks became just three days I got the usual anxiety and distress that goes along with presenting yourself and your ideas to a group of strangers. Moreover, things have been moving so fast and furiously on the DTLT front that I began to feel even more estranged at the prospect of engaging the ever lonely process of thinking about my “own work.”

But, “a deal’s a deal,” right? So I had to pull it together and present. Last night, around 10:00 pm certain things started to click and I began realizing that all the work I have been doing with my stellar colleagues at DTLT was by no means divorced from my scholarly work, in fact, they are only AUGMENTING my own learning process. It was at that point that Alan Levine and Brian Lamb’s ELI presentation “Beyond the Blog” (which I heard so much about from Andy and Gardner) made sense. Why don’t I turn this talk into a flickr presentation? And while my presentation is by no means as intricate, thoughtful, and evocative as Brian and Alan’s Flickr presentation- it was a real moment of discovery, realization, and invigoration for me. I was being given the opportunity to marry my scholarship with instructional technology to invoke a new way of thinking about my own teaching style. Perhaps common sensical given my position, you may say. Ahhhh, but such a “lay-up” is not always apparent to he who wants to “dunk.”

So, I loaded up my collection of found images, texts, maps, etc. to my flickr account, brought seven laptops into class (one for every two students), and ran the Narrative Captivity photoset vis-à-vis flickr. And you know what? I did get that insane high after teaching a class when you know that it worked: I learned, the class discussed thougtfully, and we worked through complex ideas together – but this time that usual teaching high was just a little bit different: augmented, some may say.  Thanks to everyone involved in an otherwise painless operation.

Posted in experimenting, Flickr | Tagged , | 5 Comments

Derecki for President!!!

Derecki for PresidentLook at our own pushy New Yorker working the angles already! I thought Cathy was the new President for a second … read the whole story on Fredericksburg.com.

Tagged | 5 Comments