Thursday, 16 October 2008

On being cited

A couple of months ago I received email from Angelique Dimitracopoulou asking to use a couple of images from an article of mine from the CSCL 2007 proceedings in a forthcoming journal article of hers. Of course it's possible to use citation indices to see who's citing your stuff, but it's somehow more rewarding to hear from the author herself. Of course I make no pretense about the fact that I was contacted only for high-res versions of the images, but it's still pretty cool.

Tuesday, 14 October 2008

Plurk: microblogging meets visualization

At a recent meeting of the Brett/Hewitt research group, Joan Touzet mentioned Plurk. I'm starting to get the notion that when Joan mentions a new technology it's best to perk up and take note. I like Plurk because it offers a new twist on microblogging: adding a timeline as an organizational or visualization tool.

Find me on Plurk here.

Sunday, 28 September 2008

Literacy done right

DrEff and I went for a long walk today. It seems that good eats feature prominently on our Toronto Bucket List. We found ourselves on Baldwin St. where we had some delicious 2-bite snacks at Yung Sing Pastry Shop.



During our walk we happened -- quite unexpectedly -- upon Toronto's Word on the Street festival. As evidenced by this photo, this event seems to have a positive impact on literacy:


Friday, 26 September 2008

Signs


About two years ago Bob McLean, a dear friend and colleague, was in London and shot this photo. I liked the photo as soon as I saw it and have been looking for an opportunity to use it ever since. There have been many significant changes in my life over the past few months, and this photo sums up things quite well. The three signs in the photo are equally applicable. Some of you who know me know that I have set a deadline of December 31st, 2008 for completing a draft of my thesis. That's 14 weeks away. I'm working to a tight deadline based on a detailed outline but I keep losing time to diversions (some unavoidable). The new year holds promise of great opportunities and I must finish. Tempus fugit.

Thursday, 18 September 2008

(How Not To Use) Multi-touch in Education

Whereas I would normally applaud the use of such technology in education, I cannot help but ask "What's wrong with this picture?"



See the full story at Engadget.

ICLS 2008 Photos

I have finally gotten around to uploading a few photos from the ICLS 2008 conference held in Utrecht this past June. The highlights included the workshop on Interaction Analysis.

Wednesday, 17 September 2008

Knowledge Forum API

I had the pleasure of meeting Stian Håklev yesterday who asked me about APIs for Knowledge Forum. We have a little-known site called Knowledge Forum Coders that documents the APIs, such as they are.

The Ubiquity of Command Lines

As many of my colleagues know I'm a big fan of the command line. I find it somewhat ironic that I work with information visualizations, and yet I have a penchant for just getting in there with plain old text commands to actually accomplish things. I even prefer command-line statistical analysis packages (or, perhaps more accurately, the command-line interface to statistical packages). It probably comes as little surprise that I really like the new Ubiquity plugin for Firefox. I suspect Quicksilver users will love this. I know I do.

Tuesday, 16 September 2008

PwnageTool and My iPhone


This morning, in a wild attempt to actually complete something, I decided to upgrade my 1st-generation iPhone to a more up-to-date version of the firmware. I grabbed the PwnageTool. All went well, thanks to the various instructions available around the web. My only regret: deciding at the final step to "set up phone as new" rather than "restore from backup". I was concerned about having problems with Mail, per some of the reports, but didn't clue in that I would lose the photos on the iPhone as a result. There was only one photo that I really regretted losing: a quirky sign on the doors of the library at work warning users about "unstable computers". Oh well.

Monday, 11 August 2008

Potential collaboration: complex network theory

Today I had the honour of being visited by Jun and Ritsuko Oshima, a pair of researchers from Shizuoka University. We had a great chat about some work that Jun has been doing over the past couple of years. After a year of missing each other we finally managed to work out a plan for moving forward on complex network theory and socio-semantic network analysis.

Sunday, 3 August 2008

Affordances

I was tracking down the definition (and etymology) of the term "affordance" for a presentation I'm working on. For some reason, my Mac's built-in dictionary doesn't know about the term and I wanted to ensure that is wasn't a neologism that had erroneously crept into my vocabulary.

I managed to track down Don Norman's essay on Affordance and Design in which he explains how, in The Psychology of Everyday Things, he appropriated the term from James Gibson's earlier work. (Wikipedia tells much the same story, but without Norman's flare.)

A bit more poking reveals that Norman will be talking in mid-October at the Franklin Institute in Phildelphia. Interesting.

Wednesday, 9 April 2008

Research celebration

Lots of people and interest on the visualization work I presented. All
in all a pretty good time.

Saturday, 5 April 2008

Blammo!


It was a glorious day for a ride: 10 degrees Celcius, no wind, sunny. I only had time for a super-fast short ride. On the way back, though, my rear tire blew out. Luckily, I had my new iPhone with me: a quick call for a ride got me out of being stranded (and I also managed to snap a couple of photos while waiting). Hopefully tomorrow will be better -- although I now have a clunker of a replacement tire on the back.