Tags / connection

Tagged with “connection” (6) activity chart

  1. Seth Godin: The Art of Noticing and then Creating

    An original and helpful voice on this landscape of digital connection for which there are no maps. Seth Godin is a singular thought leader and innovator in what he describes as our post-industrial, post-geography "connection economy." Rather than merely tolerate change, he says, we are all called now to rise to it. We are invited and stretched in whatever we do to be artists — to create in ways that matter to other people.

    —Huffduffed by charleroper 3 months ago

  2. Failing to Start, Why We Accept Mediocrity and How to Change | Social Media Examiner

    —Huffduffed by piamch8eec 4 months ago

  3. Where is Rails Headed?

    Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 57:29 — 78.9MB) Panelists Aaron Patterson (twitter github blog) Charles Max Wood (twitter github Teach Me To Code Rails Summer Camp) James Edward Gray II (blog twitter github) Peter Cooper (site twitter

    http://rubyrogues.com/where-is-rails-headed/

    —Huffduffed by kuebelreiter one year ago

  4. Listen to the Christ in Egypt radio show!

    The book that proves many of the most important characteristics of the gospel story of Jesus and the Christian religion could be found in ancient Egypt for centuries prior to Christ’s alleged advent!

    http://stellarhousepublishing.com/christinegypt.html

    —Huffduffed by papei 2 years ago

  5. The Connection: Web Logging

    Brad Graham, Rebecca Blood and Evan Williams discuss this new-fangled blogging thing on May 18, 2000. Hosted by Christopher Lydon.

    "To be, virtually, is to blog. Blogging, or making a web log, is tracking your own web journey click by click. A web log at its most basic is a mere collection of links, a massive list of virtual cool sites you’ve seen — a story about a gang of drag queen purse snatchers, interviews with physicist Freeman Dyson, a site full of techie horror tales. But most blogs are a lot more — a personal journal or a new journalism, a publishing house where everyman or woman can rant, share or divulge. Blogs are a daily snapshot of the ever-changing web; they may be the new literature. Like the first museums, the web log is an e-cabinet of wonders, a quirky, human attempt to filter a new mass of information — this time online. On a blog you get E-text of Gogol’s The Overcoat, news of a Japanese foot cult and fun facts about potatoes. So, dump the old website, with its pet photos and family updates. We’re Blogging in this hour of The Connection."

    http://www.theconnection.org/2000/05/18/web-logging/

    —Huffduffed by adactio 3 years ago

  6. WNYC Radio Lab - Where Am I?

    "OK. Maybe you’re in your desk chair. You’re in your office. You’re in New York, or Detroit, or Timbuktu. You’re on planet Earth. But where are you, really? Radio Lab tries to find out where you are. This hour: stories of people whose brains and bodies have lost each other. We ask how does your brain keep track of your body? We’ll examine the bond between brain and body and look at what happens when it breaks. We begin with a century-old mystery: why do many amputees still feel their missing limbs? We speak with a neuroscientist who solved the problem with a magician’s trick: an optical illusion. We continue with the story of a butcher who suddenly lost his entire sense of touch. And we hear from pilots who lose consciousness and suffer out-of-body experiences while flying fighter jets." From http://podcast.com/show/15998/ and iTunes

    —Huffduffed by tiffehr 4 years ago