Thursday, April 24, 2014

The App-Filled Future of Luxury Is Avoiding People - Ian Bogost - The Atlantic

The medium is the message, and the message is “You’re too cool to do it the low-tech way.”

Using a smartphone to rent a car is superfluous at best, annoying at worst, but its utility is beside the point. Given the personalized drop-off service, this is technology for show, produced for rhetorical effect rather than functionality. The point is to have an app, to interact with customers by text rather than voice, to be with-it and modern. When tech startups flaunt their apps, they’re often pandering to an audience that identifies with mobile and web technology, rather than one that needs to make use of it.

The App-Filled Future of Luxury Is Avoiding People - Ian Bogost - The Atlantic

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Republicans Say No to CDC Gun Violence Research - ProPublica

Alongside known unknowns and unknown knowns, we can also add we-don’t-want-to-know unknowns.

After the Sandy Hook school shooting, Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA) was one of a few congressional Republicans who expressed a willingness to reconsider the need for gun control laws.

"Put guns on the table, also put video games on the table, put mental health on the table," he said less than a week after the Newtown shootings. He told a local TV station that he wanted to see more research done to understand mass shootings. "Let's let the data lead rather than our political opinions."

More than a year later, as Kingston competes in a crowded Republican primary race for a U.S. Senate seat, the congressman is no longer talking about common ground.

In a statement to ProPublica, Kingston said he would oppose a proposal from President Obama for $10 million in CDC gun research funding. "The President's request to fund propaganda for his gun-grabbing initiatives though the CDC will not be included in the FY2015 appropriations bill," Kingston said.

Rep. Steve Womack (R-AR), the vice chairman of the subcommittee, also "supports the long-standing prohibition of gun control advocacy or promotion funding," his spokeswoman said.

CDC's current funding for gun violence prevention research remains at $0.

Republicans Say No to CDC Gun Violence Research - ProPublica

My Students Don't Know How to Have a Conversation - Paul Barnwell - The Atlantic

Remedial Information Literacy.  I ain’t got all the fancy talk fer it, so I’m gonna call it mouth-texting.

As I watched my class struggle, I came to realize that conversational competence might be the single-most overlooked skill we fail to teach students. Kids spend hours each day engaging with ideas and one another through screens—but rarely do they have an opportunity to truly hone their interpersonal communication skills. Admittedly, teenage awkwardness and nerves play a role in difficult conversations. But students’ reliance on screens for communication is detracting—and distracting—from their engagement in real-time talk.

It might sound like a funny question, but we need to ask ourselves: Is there any 21st-century skill more important than being able to sustain confident, coherent conversation?

My Students Don't Know How to Have a Conversation - Paul Barnwell - The Atlantic

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Language Log » "We're updating our novel-length Terms of Service?"

From a company hereafter known as HotAirbnb.

The Terms of Service tab  is a document comprising 28,246 words of legalese. The Privacy Policy tab comprises 8,729 words. The Host Guarantee Terms and Conditions  comprises 16,700 words. There's Guest Refund Policy tab weighing in at a mere 1,406 words, and a couple of other tabs that are merely magazine-article size.  Ignoring them, we get 28246+8729+16700+1406 = 55081 words, or about the size of a short novel, though much less readable.

I'm used to long click-through agreements that no one has the time or interest to read, but this seems to be some kind of a record.

Language Log » "We're updating our novel-length Terms of Service?"