Tagged with “book” (8) activity chart

  1. Admiral Shovel and the Toilet Roll

    It begins to look as if we might have been wrong. All those predictions driving us forward throughout history have brought us finally to the unexpected realisation that the future is, suddenly, no longer what it used to be. Oops.

    http://2012.dconstruct.org/conference/burke/

    James Burke is a living legend. Or, as he put it, “No-one under the age of fifty has heard of me and everyone over the age of fifty thinks I’m dead.”

    He is a science historian, an author, and a television presenter. But calling James Burke a television presenter is like calling Mozart a busker. His 1978 series Connections and his 1985 series The Day The Universe Changed remain unparalleled pieces of television brilliance covering the history of science and technology.

    Before making those astounding shows, he worked on Tomorrow’s World and went on to become the BBC’s chief reporter on the Apollo Moon missions.

    His books include The Pinball Effect, The Knowledge Web, Twin Tracks and Circles.

    —Huffduffed by psd 8 months ago

  2. SitePoint Podcast #111: Responsive Web Design with Jeremy Keith

    Episode 111 of The SitePoint Podcast is now available! This week Louis Simoneau (@rssaddict) talks with Jeremy Keith (@adactio), a UK-based web designer and author of several books on web design. We talk about Jeremy’s views on Responsive Web Design, and how Jeremy feels this is creating an exciting time to be a web designer.

    http://blogs.sitepoint.com/podcast-111-responsive-web-design-with-jeremy-keith/

    —Huffduffed by psd 2 years ago

  3. Tools Never Die. Waddaya Mean, Never? : Krulwich Wonders… : NPR

    Krulwich makes a bet he can find tools that have gone extinct but it turns out old technology doesn’t disappear like you’d think. Tools from centuries ago are still being made and used, by more people than you’d think.

    Kevin Kelly should know better, but boldly, brassily, (and totally incorrectly, I’m sure), he said this on NPR:

    "I say there is no species of technology that have ever gone globally extinct on this planet."

    http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2011/02/02/133188723/tools-never-die-waddaya-mean-never

    —Huffduffed by psd 2 years ago

  4. ‘Afterlives’: 40 Stories Of What Follows Death : NPR

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100778241

    —Huffduffed by psd 2 years ago

  5. Web Axe Episode 75: Jeremy Keith interview, Google Wave

    Web Axe is a podcast and blog on practical web design accessibility tips.

    This week, Ross interviews Jeremy Keith; Dennis and Ross discuss news, articles, and Google Wave.

    http://webaxe.blogspot.com/2009/10/podcast-75-jeremy-keith-interview-wave.html

    —Huffduffed by psd 3 years ago

  6. Against Intellectual Property

    Copyrights and patents have come to be called “intellectual property,” a phrase which suggests that they are much akin to ordinary property. They are not: they are a government grant of monopoly power. The argument in favour of intellectual property must then be that these monopolies provide important offsetting incentives for innovation and creation.

    However, all the available evidence suggests that patents and copyrights are a failure, and inhibit innovation and creativity at least as much they encourage it.

    In this lively and entertaining lecture, Dr. David Levine documents the history of intellectual property, arguing that the best strategy for stimulating creativity in 21st century society is to eliminate copyrights and patents entirely.

    SFU/BMO Bank of Montreal Lecture Series

    http://www.sfu.ca/cstudies/mpprog/sfubmo_levine.htm

    —Huffduffed by psd 3 years ago

  7. David Mitchell on The Bat Segundo Show

    The show that started it all. David Mitchell discusses Cloud Atlas with Our Young, Roving Correspondent, who was rather green at this point in the program.

    Subjects Discussed: Islands, notebooks, The Cloud Atlas, Thornton Wilder, Luisa Rey.

    From http://www.edrants.com/segundo/the-bat-segundo-show-1/

    —Huffduffed by psd 3 years ago

  8. Kurt Vonnegut Reads Breakfast of Champions

    To honor the passing of Kurt Vonnegut, one of the rare and universally loved literary world greats, we present this special podcast of his very first public reading of the classic Breakfast of Champions, three years before it was published, on May 4, 1970 at the 92nd Street Y.

    http://blog.92y.org/index.php/item/kurt_vonnegut_breakfast_of_champions_podcast/

    —Huffduffed by psd 3 years ago