Juan Cole, who blogs at “Informed Comment” above, has a sharp analysis of the recent IAEA vote censuring Iran.
Juan Cole, who blogs at “Informed Comment” above, has a sharp analysis of the recent IAEA vote censuring Iran.
Aiden Dillard must be Harry Novak's bastard love child. Either that or he's obviously spent time shovel sawdust for Dave Friedman on the carnival circuit. If there hadn't already been an exploitation...
It should have been the blockbuster battle royale of 2009, a cinematic smackdown between two toy-based action adventure popcorn epics. One the one side was Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,...
If Your Kid Eats This Book, Everything Will Still Be Okay: How to Know if Your Child's Injury or Illness Is Really an Emergency (Lara Zibners):
Apart from a terrific title, the book has plenty going for it. Basically, Even if Your Kid Eats This Book is a detailed guide to everything you don't have to worry about. It has an orifice-by-orifice guide to detecting and removing Lego! A list of things under the sink that won't poison your kid! Sensible advice about how to get rid of dry skin! (Hot bath, then anything greasy from Crisco to Vaseline, then time).
Full review | Purchase
Reset: How This
Crisis Can Restore Our Values and Renew America In 96 pages,
Kirk Anderson describes the United States' previous boom and bust
cycles and explains why the bust cycles are essential for innovation
and improvement of living standards for everyone. Times of crisis, he
says, open new opportunities for making positive changes.
Full
review | Purchase

The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite (David Kessler):
Kessler delves into the psychology and neuroscience of our junk-food cravings, seeking an explanation to the conundrum of the person whose "will-power" is strong on many fronts, but who finds it hard to resist unhealthy foods (I class myself among those people). He concludes that we're extremely susceptible to reward-conditioning when the reward consists of foods that combine fat, sugar and salt, and that the food industry has evolved to deliver extremely efficient, super-sized portions of fat-sugar-salt bombs in a variety of satisfying textures and presentations.
Full review | Purchase

The Dog Who Was a Cat Inside: Pretty much what the title says.... Except the the title doesn’t say just how incredibly lonely and charming and sad and sweet it is. Nor does it express how beautifully designed it is. (3:13 minutes)
Going West: Get lost in a book. Incredible cut paper work. Just amazing. What starts as a straight forward reading becomes abstracted and emotive as the movie goes on—making you feel the source material rather than simply follow the plot. (2:11 minutes)
[Heartbreak and thrills after the jump]
The Dog Who Was A Cat Inside
Siri Melchior
(Watch larger and higher resolution here.)
Going West
Andersen M Studio
More animation in the Saturday Morning Cartoon Index.
Irene Gallo is the art drector for Tor, Forge, and Starscape book and Tor.com.
This mornings must read work is an article in the Sunday Washington Post by none other than Ben Bernanke, titled The right reform for the Fed.
It is a rational pushback against the like of Ron Paul and Chris Dodd’s programs to either hamstring or completely get rid of the Federal Reserve.
As I have previously noted, being the only country with out a Central Bank would be like unilateral disarmament.Its a nice theory, but you will eventually be destroyed by your enemies.
Here’s helicopter Ben:
“These matters are complex, and Congress is still in the midst of considering how best to reform financial regulation. I am concerned, however, that a number of the legislative proposals being circulated would significantly reduce the capacity of the Federal Reserve to perform its core functions. Notably, some leading proposals in the Senate would strip the Fed of all its bank regulatory powers. And a House committee recently voted to repeal a 1978 provision that was intended to protect monetary policy from short-term political influence. These measures are very much out of step with the global consensus on the appropriate role of central banks, and they would seriously impair the prospects for economic and financial stability in the United States. The Fed played a major part in arresting the crisis, and we should be seeking to preserve, not degrade, the institution’s ability to foster financial stability and to promote economic recovery without inflation.
The proposed measures are at least in part the product of public anger over the financial crisis and the government’s response, particularly the rescues of some individual financial firms. The government’s actions to avoid financial collapse last fall — as distasteful and unfair as some undoubtedly were — were unfortunately necessary to prevent a global economic catastrophe that could have rivaled the Great Depression in length and severity, with profound consequences for our economy and society. (I know something about this, having spent my career prior to public service studying these issues.) My colleagues at the Federal Reserve and I were determined not to allow that to happen.”
The key line in Bernankes impassioned (or is that dispassionate?) defense is simply this: Independent does not mean unaccountable.
If he can sell that to the public, the White House and just a few Congress critters, he will avoid seeing the Central Bank neutered . . .
>
Source:
The right reform for the Fed
Ben Bernanke
Washington Post, Sunday, November 29, 2009
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con
Comment
As the first chart shows, Dubai’s sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) are soaring in the wake of the news that Dubai World wants a standstill agreement on roughly $60 billion of debt. Even though Dubai World is a corporation seeking the agreement, the markets are clearly treating this as a sovereign debt issue.
As the second chart shows, this is causing a “contagion” among the credit worthiness of other gulf soverign debt.
<Click on chart for larger image>
<Click on chart for larger image>
Comment
It appears this is the first credit crisis since financial markets began their recovery. So while many are trying to dissect the particulars of this case (Dubai gets its money from Abu Dhabi who will eventually bail them out), they are missing the larger issue. As we have been arguing for months, markets have been rallying non-stop on the back of cheap money. This carry trade has led to many bubbles in the markets. A solvency issue causes the dollar to rally (not good for the carry trade) and investors to “blink” from risk markets. This is not good when financing your entire position at 0%.
This is more about the timing of the issue than the issue itself.
In fact, it was a 15-year-old who turned me on to the game in the first place—one of my SAT students. He was funny, smart, and sensitive and lived with his family in a wealthy community on Long Island where I’d recently started to work as a tutor to keep my writing habit afloat. I taught my student how to look for patterns on the SAT test, and how to spot the usual errors people made when answering questions. He liked learning how to outsmart others. But he was a teenage boy, and didn’t always want to concentrate. He wanted to talk about his Xbox, which my live-in boyfriend had coincidentally just given me for Christmas. My student wanted to know if I had played the video game Knights of the Old Republic. It was set in a mythical version of the Star Wars universe, and would train me in the ways of the Jedi: a private universe where I could build my own light saber, even have my own Wookie sidekick, and become that enviable thing—a cross between Han Solo and Luke Skywalker—all while still remaining a girl. Or a boy. I could mold my features to look like anyone I wanted. There were instructions I could follow in case I wanted my character to look like Halle Berry. It was January and I was bored. The low sky and constant snow made the cramped city borough where I lived even more claustrophobic. But out here in the neighborhood I visited twice a week, wide windows looked out over an icy lawn and Manhasset Bay. It was doubtful that any residence I ever owned was going to have the luxury of a vast, scenic view outside the dining room window. But now there was at least the allure of becoming a Jedi to pass the winter months. My boyfriend thought we ought to give the game a try.more from Marie Mutsuki Mockett at The Morning News here.
There is a bull market these days in Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek (1887-1975) and his wife, Soong Mei-ling (1897-2003), usually called Madame Chiang Kai-shek. When I was studying in Taiwan in the late 1950s, then-President Chiang was regarded by most of the Western students on the island — and many of the Chinese as well — as the remote, cruel man who lost China; his wife was the austere, once-glamorous Dragon Lady who had helped him lose it. Although Chiang alone, or both Chiangs, had appeared numerous times on the cover of Time magazine, those illustrious days seemed over. But now that Jay Taylor has written his comprehensive book “The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China,” we are able to see Chiang as a man of considerable cunning, brutality and patience who skillfully played a weak hand against the Japanese and Mao’s forces while extracting huge sums from the Americans. Similarly, in her latest biography, “The Last Empress,” Hannah Pakula presents Madame Chiang as far more complex, awful and brilliant than we had imagined.more from Jonathan Mirsky at the NY Times here.
Photo credit: Michael Brown
Inside this Media Literacy Digest:
Wall Street Journal (motto: we have never met a URL we cannot complicate) looks at the trend for More Scientists Treat Experiments as a Team Sport. I do not think team is the right term.
If you have spent time in higher education, you are likely aware that the only team that exists is between a prof and the students involved in her research interests. Higher education research is a highly individualistic endeavour (note, for example, the "Principal Investigator" status on grants). It would be more accurate to say that scientists now treat experiments as networked.
From the article:
"Around the world, scientists are cutting across boundaries of place, organization and technical specialty to conduct ever more ambitious experiments. Inspired by such cooperative enterprises as Linux and Wikipedia, they are encouraging creative collaborations through networks of blogs, wikis, shared databases and crowd-sourcing. Once a mostly solitary endeavour, science in the 21st century has become a team sport. Research collaborations are larger, more common, more widely cited and more influential than ever, management studies show."
University of Oslo has posted a video recording of my talk last week on Directions in Education and Learning.
If you would like to get up to speed fairly quickly with the state of Stephen Downes' thinking on education, technology, and learning, have a listen to his presentation on New Tools for Personal Learning - slides and audio are available.
I am surprised at the resiliency of concepts (complexity, ecology, mesh networks, connectivism, etc) that the edutech network has been fleshing out over the last decade. To me, it is an indication that we are moving in the right direction…
HASTAC is running a series of forums related to education / media / society. A current topic - Grading 2.0: Evaluation in the Digital Age - is being actively discussed.
The introduction to the discussion states:
"As the educational and cultural climate changes in response to new technologies for creating and sharing information, educators have begun to ask if the current framework for assessing student work, standardized testing, and grading is incompatible with the way these students should be learning and the skills they need to acquire to compete in the information age."Grading is a waste of time. We only do it in schools and universities. It is a sorting technique, not truly an evaluation technique. Iterative and formative feedback is what is really required for learning. This is achieved through active engagement with and contribution to networks of learners. On a side note, William Farish is credited with creating "grading" in the first place… and it is a recent addition to education. How did educators evaluate competency before grading? Sustained participation and engagement with networks of learners and educators. But, of course, the authors of the HASTAC post are not trying to do away with grading (as I would suggest we should). They are trying to use technology to make grading more "modern" or "in line" with society's needs today. I think that is exactly the wrong way to go about it. Question the model, do not modernize it.
During our LearnTrends conference last week, I experimented with the Cormier Live Slides method. Dave would say I went a bit soft - I had an established structure for the slides, instead of free flowing. However, it did generate a fair bit of discussion and contributions from the audience.
Kristina offers comments and reactions from her experience as a participant in the session. As Tony Karrer states, it is about learning from others in the room.
I have been reading a combination of Tocqueville and the Federalist papers over the last few weeks. I am fully convinced that these two documents need to be recast in terms of the web.
While I am a huge fan of openness, personal choice, democracy, and rights of individuals, a brief run through YouTube comments or a typical Twitter conversation calls into question the ideal that humanity aspires to the greater good.
In order for democracy to flourish, appropriate constraints are required. Danah Boyd shares her painful experience in using a back channel during a conference. I posted on a similar back channel issue recently, arguing that speakers need to accept the reality that audiences now speak back. However, effective feedback should not be mob-like… and it certainly should be respectful.
From late 2009, George Siemens holds a position at the the Technology Enhanced Knowledge Research Institute in Athabasca University. He was former Associate Director in the Learning Technologies Centre at the University of Manitoba. George blogs at www.elearnspace.org where he shares his vision on the educational landscape and the impact that media technologies have on the educational system. George Siemens is also the author of Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age and the book "Knowing Knowledge" where he developes a learning theory called connectivism which uses a network as the central metaphor for learning and focuses on knowledge as a way to making connections.
Since the Kindle was made available in Canada less than two weeks ago, readers, writers, and the publishing industry have been speculating what -- if anything -- the device means to the future of books. I've spent the past week with Amazon's e-reader, not only using it myself but bringing it with me to book launches, literary award ceremonies, publishing houses, author interviews, and bookstores, asking those who make their living from books how the tiny device will change the game. No one gave the same answer.
Click here to read the story.
[Mark Medley and his Kindle. Photo by Dave Chan/National Post]
In this modern age of light pollution, cities that never sleep, 24 hour streaming TV and addictive RSS feeds, regulating one’s own circadian rhythms can be, well…difficult. And for those of us who have a computer strapped to our torsos at all times, watching a sunrise or sunset (somewhere other than Youtube) is a luxury that we are lucky to experience once in a blue moon. Luckily, the Whitney Museum of Art has developed a way for us to check out more sunsets – on their website. That’s right – EcoArtTech’s Cary Peppermint and Christine Nadir have programmed the WMA site to dim and illuminate, corresponding with New York’s real-life cycles of light.

Read the rest of Online Sunsets: A Virtual Dusk and Dawn for the Internet Addicted
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Post tags: EcoArtTech, faux sunrise, landscape, online, sunrise, Sunset, whitney, whitney art
Right here! It'll be up until Dec. 4 and has an opening bid of $29.
There was supposed to be an essay thing to go along with this post, but it's still under construction. Blame Drupal. I'll drop it into this space down the road once I'm no longer Drupal Distracted and finish it.
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