background preloader

Ksiązki, teksty, artykuly

Facebook Twitter

CCNR. Libgen Online Library: Welcome. "computer games culture" download free. Electronic library. Finding books BookFi. Partycypacja Obywatelska. Agregator Polskich Blogów Naukowych. Industry Facts. B + R = € » Nowy projekt – BRing. Nauki społeczne dla gospodarki. Culture. Culture Tweeting the A-League: The Success Story So Far Snurb, 10 October 2013 Now that the AFL and NRL Grand Finals are over, Australia turns its attention again towards real football: the A-League season 2013/14 starts this Friday. That’s a good enough reason to review how the game has [...] Australian Reality TV on Twitter: A Two Horse Race Darryl Woodford, 13 August 2013 Last weekend provided an opportunity to compare the three currently running Australian reality television series, and their social media presence, with Big Brother Showdown on Saturday night, and both X-Factor and Masterchef airing on Sunday.

For [...] A Month of Vines: An early look at Vine through Twitter Darryl Woodford, 12 April 2013 With my CCI colleague Jean Burgess, we have recently been tracking the development and use of Vine through our existing Twitter tools. An honest mistake: how to recover from a mistweet HABEMUS PAPAM FRANCISCUM: Pope Francis’s first @pontifex tweet and public reactions « Previous Archives. Digital Humanities Now. eResearch and Digital Humanities: a broader vision? Digital Heat: Vast underground machines run by downtrodden humanists power 'Metropolis. I have been having many conversations with people of late around the boundaries of ‘eResearch’ and ‘Digital Humanities’.

And I have received lots of divergent and interesting responses from both researchers and professionals working in various ways with computing in the humanities. And there does tend to be little agreement about certain aspects of the landscape; many researchers have ‘discovered’ computing in the humanities from their own particular perspective and this perspective is often lacking generosity towards the richer and deeper veins of thought and helmsmanship provided by the long history of computing in humanities research and teaching (ie. the digital humanities). The eResearch community in Australia has done some fantastic work in terms of building and maintaining repositories and addressing related issues around data management and data re-use. Where material book culture meets digital humanities » Wynken de Worde. Below is the text from a talk I gave at the Geographies of Desire conference, held at the University of Maryland on April 27-28.

Almost everything that I said there is something that I’ve said here before, so faithful readers won’t find much that’s new. But I promised I’d stick it up here, so here it is! If you’re simply looking for the set of links to the resources I mentioned, you can find those on Pinboard. I haven’t included all of my slides here, but you can find those here. I haven’t included all my ad-libbing either, but you would have had to have been there for that. “Where material book culture meets digital humanities” Discussions about early modern books and digital tools have tended to focus on one of two responses. There are limitations, of course.

You can see one column of text on each page, along with a whole bunch of other junk. There’s still ink bleeding through from the other sides of these leaves, but it’s a bit easier to sort out what’s what. Do you see what happened? Towards Marxian Internet Studies | Fuchs | tripleC - Cognition, Communication, Co-operation.

Towards Marxian Internet Studies Christian Fuchs Abstract This article gives an overview of example approaches of Critical Internet Studies and points out key concepts of this field. Critical Cyberculture Studies and Critical Political Economy/Critical Theory of the Internet are identified as two approaches in Critical Internet Studies. The paper also discusses the role of 11 Marxian concepts for Critical Internet Studies. Marxian concepts that have been reflected in Critical Internet Studies include: dialectics, capitalism, commodification, surplus value/exploitation/alienation/class, globalization, ideology, class struggle, commons, public sphere, communism, and aesthetics.

The paper points out the importance of explicitly acknowledging the importance of Karl Marx’s thinking in Critical Internet Studies. Keywords Critical Internet Studies, Critical Cyberculture Studies, Critical Theory of the Internet, Critical Political Economy of the Internet, Karl Marx, Marx is Back Full Text: PDF. Institute For The Future. Data Journalism Handbook. Technology news, product reviews and app reviews | Digital Trends.

Czasopisma

Artykuły naukowe. Gamifikacja. Ksiązki. Filozofia. 1613_b68d. Czy centra handlowe powinny śledzić klientów bez ich zgody? Fundusze na publikacje elektroniczne i promocję w Internecie polskich czasopism naukowych : nauka2.0solution - stań na ramionach nauki nowej generacji! Niewidzialne Miasto Blog.