TechEBlog » Techno Privacy Scarf
Reminds me of those books about crazy Japanese inventions.
TechEBlog » Techno Privacy Scarf
Reminds me of those books about crazy Japanese inventions.
http://wowace.com/wiki/Main_Page
Their site is a little hard to navigate, but to make things easier, just click on the WoW Ace Updater on the left there… or actually, to make it even easier, just download it here. Then run it and see all the cool addons you can pick!
Must haves are FuBar, Cartographer, either agUnitFrames or PitBull, and, if you do raids, oRA2 and Big Wigs.
What’s funny is that two different people recommended the Ace Updater on the same day. Hooray for viral networks!
Hallmark Scientists Identify 3 New Human Emotions | The Onion – America’s Finest News Source
One of the best Onion articles I’ve ever read… not that I read a whole lot of them past the headline, but still….
MySpace Photo Costs Teacher Education Degree – Offbeat
(From slashdot.org)
Hmmm… What is most troubling to me is that people are being punished for being more open and honest about their lives now.
Whereas in off-screen life what and how you say things at a bar would be completely different than what and how you say things in a meeting at work/school, is the web to be considered one gigantic singular space? The problem with the line “don’t put stuff online you wouldn’t want a sexual predator, your boss, or your school to see” is that it neatly compacts the whole of the web into one discourse. Is it unreasonable to expect that you can have multiple ways of being online just like you do offline? Is it unreasonable to expect people to know that how you act at a party might have absolutely nothing to do with how well you’d teach grade school?
Is the appeal of blogs, social networking sites, and Web 2.0 also the biggest reason not to participate–that you can share things about yourself?
How does one share things about their life while still being able to deal with people out there who would take advantage of those things?
Well, I started a month-long written exam yesterday. I have to write 3 papers answering 3 questions. Basically, 1) list pros and cons of games and games culture, 2) describe what others have said about games and learning so far, and 3) design a study on communication in and around MMOGs.
I think the second question will be the most difficult since it’ll mean I have to refresh my memory with a lot of reading. The first one should be much easier as it’ll be more of a persuasive argument essay. (It’s easier to say something than it is to correctly say what others are saying, I think.) The last one was confusing at first since it sounded like what I did last year with the WoW paper, but I’ll be expanding the research agenda in a few ways, so it is still a good exercise.
After I turn in my essays to my committee (which is made up of 4 profs), I will have an oral defense… probably first thing in the Fall, if not this summer. Then, I will finally be on the last step, writing a dissertation.
All this is complicated by the fact that this year my interests have dramatically shifted to an area I feel ill-prepared to write about just yet. That is, I want to look at how groups of people or individuals in MMOGs or games culture, in general, are being marginalized by a dominant culture (which happens to generally be the same dominant culture in off-screen life).
Before I start writing, I’m brainstorming possible ways to tie the last idea into the essays.
And, of course, I still have other obligations to attend to, including classes (and lots of reading for one of them called Educators as Intellectuals–a book a week) and 3 raid nights a week. 😛
So, I went to Las Vegas this past weekend for a mini-con or gathering of some of my guild members. 🙂
It was great to meet some of them for the first time. We stayed at the Excalibur (which features tons of dragon-themed paraphernalia even though I don’t remember a single dragon in the Arthurian Tales) and, of course, we checked out the Tournament of Kings show which featured armored dudes jousting and fighting each other with swords, maces, flails, and shields. DRAGON! DRAGON! Huzzah!
The rest of the time was spent eating (breakfast buffet at Mandolay Bay was pretty good), gambling (I just watched mostly, but Craps and Roulette looked fun), playing card games (San Juan and Lost Cities), watching a pilot for a TV show called Chuck (about a directionless nerd who is sent an email that imprints on his brain the totality of the CIA’s secrets and actually pretty good in how it parodies at popular culture), going to an arcade (Gameworks, where almost all the shooter games had broken guns), and hanging out at the pool (where it was 3 feet deep everywhere which makes it rather difficult to actually swim and means that the 4 lifeguards were just there to make sure the drunkards didn’t do something made only possible by being drunk).
Anyway, fun all around!
Joystick101 » Wonderville: A Viable Model For Online Educational Games?
It would have been great if OMSI had money enough to take on a project like this (plus the narrative to bind it together)… I wonder where Science Alberta got the funding… or they like a government org or what?
Game on: World of Warcraft – The Daily of the University of Washington
Here’s another story I was quoted in regarding online games. This one is from The Daily, the UW newspaper. The previous one was the Seattle PI. 🙂
Of course, the interview lasted like one and a half hours and the little bits I’m quoted as saying only barely touch upon what the conversation was about. Things I would have liked to see expanded upon are that social worlds, whether online or off, represent different places people can spend their time in, build relationships, negotiate, learn, resolve conflicts, and generally grow as people. The article has a slight bent on looking at game addiction, but the more interesting topic, I think, is after acknowledging that, yes Virginia, people are addicted to living, what kinds of work can we do or what does this new social space allow?