91,781 research outputs found
Visual Representations of Gender and Computing in Consumer and Professional Magazines
Studies in the nineteen-eighties showed that advertising images of computers were gendered, with women relatively less represented, and shown with less empowered roles, problems or presented as sexual objects. This paper uses a mix of content and interpretative analysis to analyse current imagery in consumerist and professional society publications. It reveals the present variation and complexity of the iconography of computers and people across different domains of representation, with the continuation of gender bias in subtle forms
Spartan Daily, February 7, 1983
Volume 80, Issue 6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/6988/thumbnail.jp
Spartan Daily, February 7, 1983
Volume 80, Issue 6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/6988/thumbnail.jp
Some Peer-to-Peer, Democratically and Voluntarily Produced Thoughts About \u27The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom,\u27 by Yochai Benkler
In this review essay, Bartow concludes that The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom by Yochai Benkler is a book well worth reading, but that Benkler still has a bit more work to do before his Grand Unifying Theory of Life, The Internet, and Everything is satisfactorily complete. It isn\u27t enough to concede that the Internet won\u27t benefit everyone. He needs to more thoroughly consider the ways in which the lives of poor people actually worsen when previously accessible information, goods and services are rendered less convenient or completely unattainable by their migration online. Additionally, the Internet is easy enough to be optimistic enough as a technological achievement, but just as nuclear fission can be harnessed both for electrical power generation and annihilating destruction, the raw communicative capabilities can\u27t be qualitatively assessed without reference to specific content. Pornography and its symbiotic relationship to the Internet require thoughtful scrutiny. Astroturf and other targeted attempts to instrumentally distort democratic discourse need to be analyzed and possibly also rechanneled or contained. The impact of moving resources online upon people who substantially live in an offline, analog world, needs to be contemplated more fully
The geographies of cyberspace
In this I paper I explore the need for a new field of geographic enquiry called
cybergeography. This is the investigation of the complex and multifaceted structure,
use and experience of the online world inside global computer-communications
networks, most obviously represented by the Internet and the World-Wide Web. In
particular I focus on how one can study the geography of Internet diffusion from
publicly available statistics. Then I consider ways that the landscapes of Cyberspace
can be mapped to enhance our understanding of their evolving form and texture using
examples of a real-time “weather map” of Internet congestion and maps of the urban
structure of virtual world
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The genesis and development of mobile learning in Europe
In the past two decades, European researchers have conducted many significant mobile learning projects. The chapter explores how these projects have arisen and what each one has contributed, so as to show the driving forces and outcomes of European innovation in mobile learning. The authors identify context as a central construct in European researchers’ conceptualizations of mobile learning and examine theories of learning for the mobile world, based on physical, technological, conceptual, social and temporal mobility. The authors also examine the impacts of mobile learning research on educational practices and the implications for policy. Finally, they suggest future challenges for researchers, developers and policy makers in shaping the future of mobile learning
A Librarian Looks At American Publishing
How does, and how should, a librarian look at publishing in
1967? As a minor customer buying a small part of the output of a
large industry? As a fellow member of the nation's communications
apparatus ? As one of the last of the Mohicans upon whom the tribe
of McLuhanites is about to count coup? Is the librarian like one of a
boatload of frantic voyagers in immediate danger of drowning in a
roaring river of print loosed by publishers? Or may librarians and
publishers be thought of as linked in a symbiotic relationship like that
of the Egyptian plover and the crocodile? The plover helps the
crocodile as lookout and oral hygienist. In return he gets the delicious
leeches he finds along the crocodile's gums. Both partners benefit.
However one describes the publisher -librarian relationship it is
obvious we each have important functions in the series of processes
from the writing of a book to its publishing, and on to its selection,
acquisition and presentation to the reader. We share in the crucial
responsibilities of maintaining our country's information network.published or submitted for publicatio
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