Reading and Listening | January 26, 2013

Reading

The New York Times | Saturday, January 26, 2013

The Wall Street Journal | Saturday, January 26, 2013

CIO

The Atlantic

Fast Company | December 2012 / January 2013

Wired | December 2012

Scientific American | January 2013

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J. K. Rowling

Listening

  • Live / The Way We Walk, Volume 1: The Shorts by Genesis
  • The Joshua Tree by U2
  • Contact Soundtrack by Alan Silvestri
  • Fleetwood Mac by Fleetwood Mac
  • Argonautica by Koan
  • Sacred Treasures III by various artists
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Reading and Listening | January 25, 2013

Reading

The Wall Street Journal | Friday, January 25, 2013

The Wall Street Journal | Thursday, January 24, 2013

Faculty Focus | January 25, 2013

CNet

The Economist | January 19th – 25th, 2013

Listening

  • Interloper by Carbon Based Lifeforms
  • Brahms: A German Requiem by Lorin Mazel and the New Philharmonia Orchestra & Chorus
  • Britten, Handel, & Vaughan Williams by Herbert von Karajan and the Philharmonia Orchestra
  • Fahrenheit Project – various artists

Family Movie Night

  • Die Hard
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Reading and Listening | January 24, 2013

Reading

The New York Times | Thursday, January 24, 2013

The Wall Street Journal | Thursday, January 24, 2013

Inside Higher Ed

GQ | January 2013

Listening

  • Chopin: Nocturnes by David Barenboim
  • Beatles for Sale by The Beatles
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Reading and Listening | January 23, 2013

Reading

The New York Times | Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Wall Street Journal | Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Inside Higher Education

American Libraries | January / February 2013

ZDNet

Listening

  • Dreams in Stereo by Zero Cult
  • Handel: Music for the Royal Fireworks / Water Music by Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
  • Copland: Bernstein Century – Copland by Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic
  • Kumharas Ibiza, Volume 5 by various artists
  • Abacab by Genesis
  • Aerial Boundaries by Michael Hedges
  • Wide Awake in America by U2
  • Who’s Next by the Who
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Reading and Listening | January 22, 2013

Reading

The New York Times | Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Pew Internet & American Life Project

Smithsonian

The Wall Street Journal | Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Listening

  • Transformers Soundtrack by Steve Jablonsky
  • Elgar: Violin Concerto & Vaughan Williams: The Lark Ascending by Simon Rattle with Nigel Kennedy and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
  • Fahrenheit Project by various artists
  • MOOCs for the Rest of Us by NITLE / Inside Higher Ed
  • Can’t Buy a Thrill by Steely Dan
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Reading and Listening | January 21, 2013

Reading

The New York Times | Monday, January 21, 2013

Toledo Blade

College & Research Libraries | January 2013

The Economist | January 19th-25th, 2013

Listening

  • Hydroponic Garden by Carbon Based Lifeforms
  • Dvorak: Serenades Opus 22 & 24 – Neville Marriner and the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
  • Union – Yes
  • Dancing at Lughnasa – Bill Wheelan
  • The Hunger Games Soundtrack – James Newton Howard
  • The Social Network Soundtrack – Trent Reznor
  • The Ultimate Blue Train by John Coltrane
  • Intersections 1985-2005 by Bruce Hornsby
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Reading and Listening | January 20, 2013

Reading

The New York Times | Sunday, January 20, 2013

MIT Technology Review | January / February 2013

Books

  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J. K. Rowling
  • Writers Writing Dying by C. K. Williams
  • Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

Listening

  • Debussy: La Mer & Prélude À L’après-midi d’un Faune – Bernard Haitink
  • Mozart: String Quartets – Quartetto Italiano
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Reading and Listening | January 19, 2013

Reading

The Wall Street Journal | Saturday, January 19, 2013

  • bookPutting Statistics to Work in a Land of Illusions by Carl Bialik – The introduction of statistics in North Korea highlights the dearth of reliable state data.
  • Health Law Pinches Colleges by Mark Peters and Douglas Belkin – The impact of The Affordable Care Act on adjuncts.  “I think colleges and universities are going to have to rethink their model for how they compensate adjuncts.  It’s clear to me over time the current model isn’t going to be sustainable,” Mr. King said.
  • Tough Flu Season Hits Elderly Hard by Jennifer Corbett Dooren
  • TSA to Halt Revealing Body Scans at Airports by Jack Nicas – “This solves our most significant concern” about full-body scanners, said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a privacy advocacy group.  “Not having TSA agents in darkened rooms looking at naked pictures of people getting on a plane is a good outcome.”
  • Labor-Pool Worries Fuel Calls to End One-Child Policy by Laurie Burkitt – “China’s top national statistician on Friday called for changing the country’s one-child policy because of the nation’s shrinking pool of workers, adding to a chorus of opponents who say the policy will have long-lasting effects on the country’s economic stability.”

The New York Times | Saturday, January 19, 2013

Foreign Affairs | November / December 2012

Books

  • Lightspeed: Year One edited by John Joseph Adams
  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J. K. Rowling
  • Writers Writing Dying by C. K. Williams
  • Too Big to Know by David Weinberger
  • Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

Listening

  • Making Movies – Dire Straits
  • A Momentary Lapse of Reason – Pink Floyd
  • Led Zeppelin I – Led Zeppelin
  • Mahler Symphony No. 1, “Titan” – Bruno Walter and the NBC Symphony Orchestra
  • Kind of Blue – Miles Davis
  • Renaissance – Branford Marsalis
  • Brahms Symphony No. 1 – Marin Alsop and the London Philharmonic Orchestra
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Information Not Affirmation

For those of us working in higher education information technology, summer is not down time.  Summer is a mad dash to update everything, to report on what we accomplished over the last year, and to make our plans for the coming one.  Still, as active as it is, summer uses a different kind of energy, and it’s a nice time to put the blinders on and go.

It’s also a good time to catch up with reading.  This past weekend I read a slim book, The Information Diet: A Case for Conscious Consumption, by Clay A. Johnson.  We’ve had speakers come to campus to talk about managing information overload, but Johnson’s book is different.  While he does encourage us to consume less, he also wants us to consume better.

Johnson likens so much of the information we all consume to junk food.  There’s lots of crappy stuff out there, and sadly, all of us are consuming it.  What’s worse, the media companies are creating content that’s personalized for us.  Liberal?  MSNBC has just what you’re looking for.  Conservative?  Fox has you covered.  Beyond that, however, Johnson looks into how media companies track internet search trends in real time, with freelance writers quickly writing and posting content that’s likely to draw us in.

The results? Media companies make a healthy profit as we click through “news stories” written just for people who have the same perspectives we do.  They make cash from the ads that are displayed.  Unfortunately for us, we aren’t reading information; we’re receiving affirmation of our biases.  While groups have always had our differences, the level of anger in the conversation seems to get worse all the time.  Why?  Because both sides of any given position are being fed tidbits that reinforce their beliefs.  Johnson, who quit his job with the Sunlight Foundation after he realized that putting the facts out there isn’t sufficient to support an educated political dialog.

Johnson encourages us to consume our information more carefully.  Instead of clicking on the ehow.com link that will tell you just what you were hoping someone would tell you, try looking for information.  Often that means you need to try to obtain the original source documents, or at least get as close as you can to them.  Libraries, of course, are excellent for helping with this kind of thing.  But perhaps I’m showing my bias there.

Read Johnson’s book yourself.  See what you think.  While I am not particularly interested in the web site efforts Johnson proposes in the late parts of his book, I do think it’s vital not only to politics, but to discourse in general that we seek information, not affirmation.  After I finished reading, I took a walk through my bookmarks and removed several that I’ll be better off without.

 

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How to Buy a Book

So, recently I’ve changed my buying patterns when it comes to books.  I decided it didn’t make any sense to keep giving Amazon money when there are bookstores in Richmond that are closing.  Now when there’s a book I want, I add the title, author, ISBN and ISBN-13 to a note I keep in Evernote.  Then I go to Barnes & Noble to buy the books.

Frequently they don’t have the books I want in stock.  It doesn’t make sense for them to stock lots of books on higher education or specifically on teaching and learning.  But if I go to the information desk, they are happy to look up the books, order them, and apply my member discount to the purchase.  As a member, they ship the books to my house at a faster-than-standard shipping speed, for no extra cost.  In the end the books are a bit pricier than Amazon, but the store gets credit for the sale (as opposed to purchases on the B&N web site), which will hopefully help to keep the store around.

I’m not bound to Barnes & Noble in particular: they’re just the closest bookstore.  I want to find additional booksellers who might not be part of a big chain (suggestions from fellow Richmonders are welcome).

My goal is to help the stores in town.  Amazon is great for making additional recommendations, but I still like browsing.  And just as so many people enjoy libraries as spaces, my family and I love to hang out in bookstores, reading books while we have a little coffee.   So I think it’s worth it to spend a bit more so the store can stay and the people working in the store can stay.

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