Monday, 29 September 2008

Intellectual Augmentation


(image by twenty questions)

I've started back at University this week and now find myself doing a semester of my MsC. in e-learning entitled 'How people learn in an online environment'. This is some 'thinking out loud' about a position paper written by my tutor which touches on a number of issues to do with cognition and learning...

I'm fascinated by the issue of "Intellectual Augmentation". As some of you will have heard me mention, I work for the Police Forces of the UK. It's arguable that 21st century policing will be about information management - which is more than just learning about the job. It's about learning how to manage information about the job.

Recently I was half-way through reading a blog on something related to work and stopped to just tag it in Delicious. I don't know why, but for once I asked myself what the actual likelihood of me going back to read this was? Minimal, I decided. And if that were so, then why am I doing this? Why not keep reading? Why stop?

Is delicious making me dumber? Is it making me lazier? Or do I actually have to hold every exact reference, citation and date in my head?

Why can't delicious just hold that information for me, freeing up valuable 'RAM' in my head to concentrate on the bigger picture? Whatever that is.

It's an interesting set of questions and one which relates back to the Task-Artefact question - observing how social bookmarking facilities change our relationship with the information that we manage and acquire, perhaps driving us towards a relationship with learning which is now mediated by machine (the semantic tagging behind delicious and diigo etc.) and which assumes that we have a different, more surface-like relationship with a field of learning and it's constituent parts which we no longer hold in our own memories but only have a loose connection with via an external database of content and semantically linked objects.

Doesn't this raise some very fundamental questions about how we define learning? Does this change how we need to examine and assess people? Does it change what we mean by mastery of a subject? Is mastery no longer the ability to recite wholesale facts and figures but rather the abiliity to categorise that subject's constituent parts - and to assimilate new objects into that field?

Is 'learning' becoming a question of ability to manage information and categorise it for later access from an external aid? And if so, where do we draw the line in what we hold inside and outside of ourselves?

Wednesday, 3 September 2008

More Cyber-Nookie

(photo by Dr. Joanne)

Following on from the intriguing BBC documentary we featured in June comes a Guardian piece on how virtual world software is evolving to allow for increased realism in online whoopie. From Paul McNamara:

'People have been getting it together online for years now, whether it's via dating and contact websites or virtually via their avatars in online worlds such as World of Warcraft and Second Life. But it took a Florida plumber to develop a system that further blurs the line between the virtual and real worlds.'

Ooooo. Sticky.

Read the full article here.

And if that isn't enough to get you all flustered, the Guardian's Alexs Krotoski has penned an interesting piece on Cyber-sex in Second Life:

'It turns out that people who use Second Life are a randy bunch. Most online sex estimates place active online sexual activity around the 2% mark (versus passive, like looking at pictures and videos), whereas the vast majority of the people I surveyed between April and December 2006 have had at least one sexual encounter in the virtual world. Brits are a particularly active bunch which, depending on your views on online pleasure, is either a great thing for international relations or a sad state of affairs in the bedrooms of Blighty.'

Read more about Alexs' research here.

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

Elgg give it another go

peaked by twenty_questions.
(photo by twenty questions)

And here's hoping they can get it right this time. I love ning.com but some competition would do no harm.

'Elgg is an open, flexible social networking engine, designed to run at the heart of any socially-aware application. Building on Elgg is easy, and because the engine handles common web application and social functionality for you, you can concentrate on developing your idea.'

Oh and it's free.

Anyone used the new Elgg social network-builder yet? If so, let us know.

Try Elgg here.


Blogged with the Flock Browser

Monday, 1 September 2008

Ubiquity - me likey

ripples by twenty_questions.
(photo by twenty questions)

Mozilla Ubiquity - it's damned clever kids. First, install the thingy from the nice folks at Mozilla. Now, open a random page of the internet (let's say with, oh I don't know, a picture of a giant turd), press Ctrl + Spacebar, type in 'email to the ex' and, whaddyaknow, it just does it. Assuming you have your former lovethang saved in your GMail account as 'the ex'.

More you say? Okay then.

Want a map of that? No worries. Make with the Ctrl + Spacebar thing and then type in 'map of cheating tart's house'. And voila, you have a map. Okay, well not really. But you get the idea. Anyway - watch the video...


Ubiquity for Firefox from Aza Raskin on Vimeo.
Blogged with the Flock Browser