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Net Neutrality – It Still Matters October 25, 2009

Posted by Matthew Woolums in 21st-Century, Articles/Videos, Net Neutrality.
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I haven’t blogged about Net Neutrality for some time, but there seems to be more of an effort to get Net Neutrality codified by law under the current Whitehouse administration. Of course there are other priorities at the moment, such as the health care issue, that receive a higher priority. For those of you who are new to this blog, or just aren’t familiar with the term, I like to think of Net Neutrality as a freedom of access to Internet services. Those who provide the access should not determine what I can and can not access. Why is this important? Check out the video below to get a better idea of the issue of Net Neutrality.

My thanks to Open Thinking for pointing out this YouTube video

open thinking » Open Internet

A Little on the Light Side October 25, 2009

Posted by Matthew Woolums in Humor.
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Just in case you needed something fun today, try this.

[ INCREDIBOX ] presents [ THE INCREDIBLE POLO ]

Because They Care October 23, 2009

Posted by Matthew Woolums in Articles/Videos, Opinion, Tools.
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Much of the criticism of Wikipedia, and wikis in general, stems from the open authoring design that lets anyone contribute content. There are limitations, but the idea that anyone can be an expert is more than a little unsettling to some. Still, that openness is also the whole point behind wikis. Authorship isn’t an accidental process. Motivation to contribute mostly happens when someone cares about the content. Take for example the linked Washington Post article below. Seems Adam Lewis, an ‘amateur’ historian cared enough about the Washington DC Wikipedia entry to fix it up. I think we should all care about something like Adam does.

How an amateur historian rescued D.C.’s Wikipedia page – washingtonpost.com

Wikipedia

Wikipedia

Is Broadband Access a Legal Right? October 14, 2009

Posted by Matthew Woolums in 21st-Century, Articles/Videos, History, Opinion.
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TechCrunch is reporting that Finland has declared that broadband access is a legal right for all of its citizens. This might be a first world-wide. I’m guessing Finland won’t be the last country to declare broadband access a right. In an age where online participation in politics and access to government services is moving to the Internet, it only makes sense that we should all have access. Of course, how that is paid for is another question. How important is broadband access to you? To your country? What flavor of broadband access would you prefer? Wired, wireless, or cellular?

Applause For Finland: First Country To Make Broadband Access A Legal Right

Inventions for the Year 2020 October 8, 2009

Posted by Matthew Woolums in Articles/Videos, Tools.
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The BBC has a nice article on a project asking students to imagine helpful inventions for the year 2020. Among some of the 85,000 ideas submitted are magic pencils to automate their homework so they don’t have to do it, which sort of defeats the point of homework. Seems robots are going to be big in the future too. I’d like to see cars that drive themselves so we don’t have any more excuses for distracted or impaired driving accidents. In the classroom, I’d like to see a device that is a content delivery mechanism as well as a research tool and collaboration device, although I don’t think we’ll need to wait another 11 years to see that. What would you like to see? Besides magic pencils, what would your students like to see?

invention

invention

BBC NEWS | Technology | Children draw own visions of 2020