Friday, December 3, 2010
Thursday, December 2, 2010
The Cathedral and the Bazaar
The Cathedral and the Bazaar: "
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3D model by Erin | This is a 3D representation of Eric Raymond's 'The Cathedral and the Bazar'. |
Blog Nomination
The class blog that I have read most consitently throughout the semester has been Shuan's, "How did all this get here?". Always Shaun engages her reader because she brings her style and personality to the fore in every post. One of my favorite posts from her is "The Girls", a simple title for a powerful story. This post show self directed learning as Shuan looked for an event that captured the legacy of the Industrial Revolution in a single tragic event.
Shuan as does well in finding various visual resources to incorperate in her blog. For this post she found this engaging video:
Additionally Shuan's post was so interesting to some of her readers that they connected to "the Girls" and Sara Wills even mentioned Shuan's post in her blog.
Shuan as does well in finding various visual resources to incorperate in her blog. For this post she found this engaging video:
Additionally Shuan's post was so interesting to some of her readers that they connected to "the Girls" and Sara Wills even mentioned Shuan's post in her blog.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
New Direction
As the end approaches for the Cathedral and the Bazaar project we keep changing and editing ideas and directions. I believe we have settled on a final direction though. If you want to come and see the final edition it will progress on the internet here.
However, if you want to come and see all of the spectacular final projects yourself, the class is putting on a presentation on December 9, 2010 at 7pm. The place is the 3108 room of the Jesse Knight Building on the BYU-Provo campus. All of the projects should be great, however if you are like most of America and motivated by food, there is a promise of some of that too. I recommend that you attend for the purely intellectually insightful experience of viewing the projects and learning how they were created for the new world of Web 2.0
Here is a further taste of our project:
However, if you want to come and see all of the spectacular final projects yourself, the class is putting on a presentation on December 9, 2010 at 7pm. The place is the 3108 room of the Jesse Knight Building on the BYU-Provo campus. All of the projects should be great, however if you are like most of America and motivated by food, there is a promise of some of that too. I recommend that you attend for the purely intellectually insightful experience of viewing the projects and learning how they were created for the new world of Web 2.0
Here is a further taste of our project:
Monday, November 29, 2010
Bouncing Back
For those of you following our groups progress on our final project you will notice that we recently, as in 10 minutes ago, suffered a slight setback. Here is the email from our fearless leader Brad.
So fearless teaching leaders, if you are wondering about this groups progress, that is it! Hurray!
So fearless teaching leaders, if you are wondering about this groups progress, that is it! Hurray!
Web 2.0 and the overwhelming feeling of trying to learn it "all"
Web 2.0 is the nickname for the socially driven World Wide Web that we find flooding us with information every single day. Not only is there new information daily, but new ways to view, record, and share information with those that matter, and those that matter less.
Paul Anderson and Tim O'reilly outlined six ideas that form the basis of the driving force behind Web 2.0:
1 Individual production and User Generated Content
2 Harness the power of the crowd
3 Data on an epic scale
4 Architecture of Participation
5 Network Effects
6 Openness
Three of these held particular interest for me, as they directly relate to the final project my team and I are attempting to piece together, for a grade and the rest of the world to enjoy.
1) Individual production and User Generated Content
3) Data on an epic scale
6)Openness
Paul Anderson and Tim O'reilly outlined six ideas that form the basis of the driving force behind Web 2.0:
1 Individual production and User Generated Content
2 Harness the power of the crowd
3 Data on an epic scale
4 Architecture of Participation
5 Network Effects
6 Openness
Three of these held particular interest for me, as they directly relate to the final project my team and I are attempting to piece together, for a grade and the rest of the world to enjoy.
1) Individual production and User Generated Content
3) Data on an epic scale
6)Openness
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