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Monday, December 13, 2004

Google Is Adding Major Libraries to Its Database. Google plans to begin converting the holdings of leading research libraries into digital files that would be searchable online. By By JOHN MARKOFF and EDWARD WYATT. [NYT > Technology]
10:13:10 PM      Google It!.

Teaching and learning online with wikis [Edubloggers Links Feed]
8:58:08 PM      Google It!.

Open Source Math Software For Education? [Slashdot:]
5:08:23 PM      Google It!.

Learning Objects, Metadata, Blogs And RSS: The Future Of Online Education According To Stephen ... [Edubloggers Links Feed]
4:01:37 PM      Google It!.

Boot Camp - Mashing for Beginners. The term "mash-up" or "bootleg" (or, more commonly, just "boot") describes the result of mixing together two or more records to create a whole new track. Though originally performed live using turntables and DJ mixers, recent advances in sequencing software have taken this art-form to a whole new level. This document outlines how mash-ups can be made using the software package Tracktion. [Edubloggers Links Feed]
3:50:39 PM      Google It!.

CITIDEL [Edubloggers Links Feed] a part of the NSDL that will serve the computing education community
3:30:54 PM      Google It!.

BeatBlog: The Two-Punch Power of Weblogs in Education [Edubloggers Links Feed]
3:27:24 PM      Google It!.

RSS Button Maker :: Kalsey Consulting Group [Edubloggers Links Feed]
3:08:12 PM      Google It!.

Are We Puppets or Free Agents?. Interpretations of the insanity plea have changed through the ages, but advances in neuroscience promise to redefine free will and personal responsibility, and change the way we think about punishment. By Rowan Hooper. [Wired News]
3:02:40 PM      Google It!.

Firm's push for students draws critics -Rob Kaiser, Chicago Tribune. Among a flurry of investigations into for-profit education firms, several are focusing on a public company based in the Chicago suburbs where so-called "admissions advisers" use the same high-pressure tactics employed by telemarketers. At offices o [Online Learning Update]
3:01:26 PM      Google It!.

Changing patterns of Internet usage and challenges at colleges and universities - Tena F. McQueen and Robert A. Fleck, Jr., First Monday. Increased enrollments, changing student expectations, and shifting patterns of Internet access and usage continue to generate resource and administrative challenges for colleges and universities. Computer center staff and college administrators must b [Online Learning Update]
3:00:23 PM      Google It!.

Issues of Interface - Karen Swan, EURODL. Although online learning no longer entails the kinds of interface barriers it once did, recent research is making very clear that interactions with interfaces significantly affect other interactions in online courses. This paper reviews the current li [Online Learning Update]
2:58:01 PM      Google It!.

Diabetes vaccine trials to begin. UK researchers are to begin testing a vaccine on people which they believe will cure Type 1 diabetes. [BBC News | Science/Nature | UK Edition]
2:56:11 PM      Google It!.

PeopleSoft Goes To Oracle [Slashdot:]
2:54:39 PM      Google It!.

The present and future value of Python.
The universal database is just one example of the kind of next-generation platform service that will be used primarily through managed interfaces. As operating systems consolidate around managed interfaces -- to data, to middleware, to graphics -- they're going to tend to prefer the Java and .NET and Mono VMs over the Perl, Python, or PHP VMs. But the agility of the dynamic languages, and the collaborative energy of their open-source communities, will matter more than ever. Injecting these qualities into the mainstream VMs is something I've always thought was crucial.

Now as many of you probably heard, Jim Hugunin made two dramatic announcements on Wednesday at the O'Reilly Open Source Conference. Jim's the guy who created Jython, which is Python for the JVM. His first announcement was that IronPython, which is Python for the .NET Common Language Runtime and for Mono, has been released. The second announcement was that Jim starts his new job at Microsoft on Monday, where he'll work on IronPython and help make the CLR friendlier to dynamic languages. I think this is a huge deal. Managed code isn't a panacea, but it's the dominant way of making programming easier and safer. Last month I wrote a blog item with the title: "It's not the J in Java Virtual Machine that matters, it's the VM." For the same reasons there aren't a dozen CPU architectures that matter, I don't think there will be a dozen mainstream VMs. There will be the JVM, there will be the CLR, and -- let's all pray -- there will be a viable non-Windows alternative to the CLR in the form of Mono. And then, maybe, there will be Parrot, one runtime to bind all the open source dynamic languages.

I don't mean to suggest that integration with the mainstream VMs is a survival issue. Python's doing just fine all by itself. BitTorrent, for example, is touching millions of lives. Users of the SpamBayes Outlook plugin have no idea they're running Python. When I was poking around in the Gmail help system the other day, a Python stack trace came spewing out. If Chandler succeeds, it'll be the first major user-facing GUI application written in Python, or indeed in any open source dynamic language, and that's something I've been wanting to see for a very long time.

What I do want to suggest is that, if we can get really good implementations of Python running on the mainstream VMs, Python will be in a position to touch many more millions of lives -- and, what's equally interesting to me -- to influence the evolution of the managed frameworks running on top of those VMs. There hasn't been anybody inside Microsoft who cares about this, but on Monday that'll change. There hasn't been anybody inside Sun who cares about this either, and I don't know when or how that might change. Still, it isn't ultimately up to Sun or Microsoft to make this happen. What they can do, and should do, is lay the foundation. It's up to somebody in the Python community -- maybe somebody in this room -- to build on top of that. So if you're looking for a project that can really make a difference, you might want to consider Jython or IronPython. Any takers? [Complete text of the speech]
This extract concluded the talk I gave this summer at the Vancouver Python Workshop. Tim Bray's item last week about the dynamic-language summit at Sun reminded me that I never got around to posting the text of my speech. ... [Jon's Radio]
2:52:27 PM      Google It!.

With Linux Clusters, Seeing Is Believing [Slashdot:]
2:44:59 PM      Google It!.

Mozilla Heading to Mobiles [Slashdot:]
2:41:55 PM      Google It!.

Canadian Teens Abandoning Radio (I Love Radio). ...just two months ago, for the first time ever, New Media (that's MP3 players, podcasts, Internet radio, etc.) outpaced Terrestrial Radio. [Edubloggers Links Feed]
2:40:25 PM      Google It!.

Special Announcement: Rollup Closing. We are sorry to announce that Rollup will be closing down in the new year. The decision to close down the site is a culmination of several factors mostly related to resources. You can read more about it on our blog. If you need a service to publicly rollup feeds in much the same way we recommend you try Blogdigger.com, and the Blogdigger Groups service. [Edubloggers Links Feed]
2:39:36 PM      Google It!.

Spreading Like Wildfire. This is a great story. A student is assigned a 'compare and contrast' essay on his exist exam. He compares 'piracy' and 'stealing' music, and concludes that they are different. He is failed on grounds of content. The teacher says he is "splitting hairs". He appeals, posting his essay and the grading sheet to his website. His cause is picked up in a big way by the blogosphere, many (if not all) of whom conclude that an injustice has been done. Did the teacher follow the rubric for a 'compare and contrast' essay? Maybe not. By Steve Mathcaddy, Dece,ber 10, 2004 [Refer][Research][Reflect] [OLDaily]
2:37:50 PM      Google It!.

The Use of Computer and Video Games for Learning - a Review of the Literature. Readers will find the usual caveats about the lack of research and conflicting results. Beyond these, this survey of literature related to the use of computer games (or video games; the report treats both) is a comprehensive look at the field over the last few years. Probably the most useful sections are 6 (examples of the use of games) and 7 (recommendations on educational game design). PDF. Via Seb Schmoller. By Alice Mitchell and Carol Savill-Smith, UltraLab, December, 2004 [Refer][Research][Reflect] [OLDaily]
2:35:48 PM      Google It!.

Why OpenOffice.org? Open Document Formats [Slashdot:]
2:32:16 PM      Google It!.

© Copyright 2005 Bruce Landon.
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