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Vivian Maier Photographer
Vivian Maier Photographer
A riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma. Piecing together Vivian Maier’s life can easily evoke Churchill’s famous quote about the vast land of Tsars and commissars that lay to the east. A person who fit the stereotypical European sensibilities of an independent liberated woman, accent and all, yet born in New York City. Someone who was intensely guarded and private, Vivian could be counted on to feistily preach her own very liberal worldview to anyone who cared to listen, or didn’t. Decidedly unmaterialistic, Vivian would come to amass a group of storage lockers stuffed to the brim with found items, art books, newspaper clippings, home films, as well as political tchotchkes and knick-knacks. The story of this nanny who has now wowed the world with her photography, and who incidentally recorded some of the most interesting marvels and peculiarities of Urban America in the second half of the twentieth century is seemingly beyond belief.
·vivianmaier.com·
Vivian Maier Photographer
320-gigapixel photo of London is the world's largest panoramic photo: Digital Photography Review
320-gigapixel photo of London is the world's largest panoramic photo: Digital Photography Review
A 320-gigapixel image taken from top of London's BT Tower has set the world record of the largest panoramic photo. It breaks the previous record set by a 281-gigapixel electron micrograph of a zebrafish embryo taken in 2012. The London image was shot by panorama specialists 360 Cities and is made up of 48,640 individual frames. To get an idea of just how large this photograph is, BT says if it was printed at 'normal resolution' the photo would measure measure 98 x 24 metres.
·dpreview.com·
320-gigapixel photo of London is the world's largest panoramic photo: Digital Photography Review
Mind Your Mind
Mind Your Mind
This is a place for youth and emerging adults to access info, resources and tools during tough times. Help yourself. Help each other. Share what you live and know.
·mindyourmind.ca·
Mind Your Mind
Asynchronous Technologies - WebDevEDU
Asynchronous Technologies - WebDevEDU
This lesson starts with a comparison of Web1.0 style pages with Web2.0 style pages, and then goes into details on the two main asynchronous web technologies (AJAX and JSONP). It includes information on parsing XML and JSON.
·sites.google.com·
Asynchronous Technologies - WebDevEDU
BasicComposition
BasicComposition
Basic Composition.com is an open resource for teachers, tutors, and students of basic composition (e.g., writing, composition, basic literacy, basic writing, second-language writing, freshman composition, sophomore composition, and other lower-level English composition courses). Our mission is to meet the needs of composition teachers, tutors, and students by providing a repository of instructional materials and scholarly artifacts absolutely free of charge.
·basiccomposition.com·
BasicComposition
NewsAction.org
NewsAction.org
The Student News Action Network (NewsAction) is a collaborative, online news service where student journalists from around the world: report upon issues of local and global significance such as poverty, the environment, human rights, and politics, and highlight actions and solutions that address such issues. Contributors bring their unique voices to the discussion, representing their regions and their cultural histories in an effort to make a positive impact on their communities and the world.
·newsaction.org·
NewsAction.org
Outgrowing Your Social Media « tressiemc
Outgrowing Your Social Media « tressiemc
Just as leaving home, physically and emotionally, to embark upon the hazing rituals of academic life causes tensions for those of us from working class or minority communities, managing a public-private self on social media sites as you are growing and, yes, perhaps changing presents  a unique set of challenges. As you change does your reflection of yourself in the now omnipresent public square of social media change? And is that allowed?
·tressiemc.com·
Outgrowing Your Social Media « tressiemc
Home - Future of StoryTelling
Home - Future of StoryTelling
On October 5th, 2012, 300 inquisitive minds sailed to Snug Harbor in New York City to explore the ways stories are changing in the 21st century. The inaugural summit featured amazing performances, intimate roundtable discussions, inspiring speakers, and hands-on workshops that sparked dialogue and meaningful connections between participants.
·futureofstorytelling.org·
Home - Future of StoryTelling
EduFeedr
EduFeedr
EduFeedr is an educationally enhanced feed reader for blog-based courses. The project is currently in the design phase. This website contains information about the design and development of EduFeedr.
·edufeedr.org·
EduFeedr
Terry Hunt, Carl Lipo: The Statues Walked -- What Really Happened on Easter Island - The Long Now
Terry Hunt, Carl Lipo: The Statues Walked -- What Really Happened on Easter Island - The Long Now
Terry Hunt and Carl Lipo began their archeological work on Easter Island in 2001 expecting to do no more than add details to the standard morality tale of the collapse of the island’s ecology and society---Polynesians discovered Rapa Nui around 400-800AD and soon overpopulated the place (30,000 people on an island the size of San Francisco); competing elites cut down the last trees to move hundreds of enormous statues; after excesses of “moai madness” the elites descend into warfare and cannibalism, and the ecology collapses; Europeans show up in 1722. The obvious lesson is that Easter Island, “the clearest example of a society that destroyed itself“ (Jared Diamond), is a warning of what could happen to Earth unless we learn to live with limits. A completely different story emerged from Hunt and Lipo’s archaeology.
·longnow.org·
Terry Hunt, Carl Lipo: The Statues Walked -- What Really Happened on Easter Island - The Long Now
Scientific storytelling « Jon Udell
Scientific storytelling « Jon Udell
A story we’ve been told about Easter Island goes like this. The inhabitants cut down all the trees in order to roll the island’s iconic 70-ton statues to their resting places. The ecosystem crashed, and they died off. This story is told most notably by Jared Diamond in Collapse and (earlier) in this 1995 Discover Magazine article... This is a cautionary tale of reckless ecocide. But according to recent work by Terry Hunt and Carl Lipo, Jared Diamond got the story completely wrong. A new and very different story emerged from their study of the archeological record.
·blog.jonudell.net·
Scientific storytelling « Jon Udell
Stop pretending cyberspace exists - Salon.com
Stop pretending cyberspace exists - Salon.com
That’s what makes it necessary to state what ought to be obvious: There is no such place as cyberspace. It is not a parallel universe, coexisting with our world but in a different dimension. It is just a bad metaphor that has outlived its usefulness. Using the imagery of a fictitious country makes it harder to have rational arguments about government regulation or commercial exploitation of modern information and communications technologies.
·salon.com·
Stop pretending cyberspace exists - Salon.com
United Nations of Photography
United Nations of Photography
The United Nations of Photography is a meeting place for people who wish to share opinions, for those who are engaged with building the new image making and storytelling landscape and for those who want to know more. It is a home for the inquisitive, the informed and the passionate. It was founded by Grant Scott and Sean Samuels and is curated and edited by Grant Scott. It is also home to the United Nations of Photography’s publishing imprint created to bring experience, expertise, passion and insight directly from the world’s greatest photographers to the professional, passionate and inquisitive – a digital and analogue platform that primarily creates ebooks for the iPad and iTunes book compatible platforms and makes them available through the iTunes store as downloadable books.
·unitednationsofphotography.com·
United Nations of Photography
Big Box Reuse
Big Box Reuse
In Big Box Reuse, Julia Christensen shows us how ten communities have addressed this problem, turning vacated Wal-Marts and Kmarts into something else: a church, a library, a school, a medical center, a courthouse, a recreation center, a museum, or other more civic-minded structures. In each case, what was once a shopping destination becomes a center of community life.
·bigboxreuse.com·
Big Box Reuse
Head Like an Orange
Head Like an Orange
I didn’t know this when I started this blog, but apparently I make GIFs. Most of them are of wildlife and things I find funny or interesting.
·headlikeanorange.tumblr.com·
Head Like an Orange
Free Online File Converter, Storage, Sharing, Transfer | Cometdocs
Free Online File Converter, Storage, Sharing, Transfer | Cometdocs
Cometdocs is a highly-regarded, free, online document management system that has served over 3 million customer and counting. It began as an online file conversion service in 2009, but now offers many more free services, including document sharing, transfers and storage. Cometdocs aims to provide a complete online solution for all your document management needs. Everything is web-based and completely secure. Privacy is guaranteed. Your personal data, including files, emails and everything else is never shared with anyone. And best of all for users, Cometdocs is available free of charge.
·cometdocs.com·
Free Online File Converter, Storage, Sharing, Transfer | Cometdocs
Wrapping up #MySciStory (with images, tweets) · davidmanly · Storify
Wrapping up #MySciStory (with images, tweets) · davidmanly · Storify
Jeanne Garabino and I did a session at Science Online 2013 focusing in on the uses of first-person narrative storytelling to communicate science. Why don't more journalists and communicators uses personal narrative (namely, using "I") to discuss science? Why are they trained so stringently against its use? What are the pros and cons of using it?
·storify.com·
Wrapping up #MySciStory (with images, tweets) · davidmanly · Storify
Exercises in Style - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Exercises in Style - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Exercises in Style (French: Exercices de style), written by Raymond Queneau, is a collection of 99 retellings of the same story, each in a different style. In each, the narrator gets on the "S" bus (now no. 84), witnesses an altercation between a man (a zazou) with a long neck and funny hat and another passenger, and then sees the same person two hours later at the Gare St-Lazare getting advice on adding a button to his overcoat. The literary variations recall the famous 33rd chapter of the 1512 rhetorical guide by Desiderius Erasmus, Copia: Foundations of the Abundant Style.
·en.wikipedia.org·
Exercises in Style - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia