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  1. Headline Tweak on Apple Doesn't Design For Yesterday · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple Changes System Font, Degrading Onscreen Readability

    There, fixed that wonky headline for you. I suspect you were posting with the new OS X Yosemite and just couldn't read what you were typing?

  2. Smoke & mirrors on user statistics on Canadian Government Trucking Generations of Scientific Data To the Dump · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't believe Shea's claims about the usage numbers. Those stats reflect people who requested help in using the libraries - relatively rare with specialized research collections where a host of users just get to work in what used to be showpiece collections. Many of these users came from the DFO institutions but also from outside, including academics, people in industry and other government employees. The provision of materials over the internet? Largely had to be digitized from library collections. Now we'll have neither the collections nor the librarians to do so.

    The hasty closures and haphazard deaccessioning of these collections that represent substantial investments of taxpayer money over decades? Entirely the opposite of what conservatives claim to value - careful custody of a nation's heritage and citizen investment. (Canada's federal government is in the control of the Progressive Conservative party, hard at work muzzling the scientists supported by our tax dollars.)

    From The Tyee's December 23 story on the topic, "What Driving Chaotic Dismantling of Canada's Science Libraries": Moreover records on library usage were overtly biased and based on who asked for help, said Burton Ayles, a retired director general for DFO who lives in Winnipeg and has used the Freshwater Institute library frequently.

    "Most people that come in to the library don't have to request help. They just use the material. Just look at any regular library."

  3. Attitudes About Online Writing on Ask Slashdot: Is the Bar Being Lowered At Universities? · · Score: 1

    I've taught in a writing-intensive discipline at the university level for more than twenty years. I see many of the same problems now that I did when I began teaching. Problems manifest at the macro and micro level - almost all are only improved when students A) take the work seriously and B) practice lots. Blogs are an attractive way to encourage students to write frequently and, hopefully, hone their skills.

    The catch-22 is that blogs, board posts and the like are rarely taken seriously. Students often fall back into the bad habits of their personal practice or rush to push out the mandated word count at the last second and with little reflection. Their posts can be incoherent and are commonly littered with typos. They hardly appear to be the work of an aspiring professional but getting students to understand and care about those distinctions isn't easy. Does your assignment include any sense the posts are assessed as compositions and not just as tasks to complete?

    Not every professor puts a priority on building writing skills. Maybe yours doesn't in this course but you can still, in your own posts, model a clear and professional communication style. See if there are courses or workshops in disciplinary writing. Talk to faculty in your field about whose writing they admire or what models are useful for aspiring practitioners. (Hint: it's often not the most esteemed journals!)

  4. Re:How do they 'encourage' us to stay home? on Stay Home When You're Sick! · · Score: 1

    They weren't seeking treatment for the cold, they were seeking a doctor's note to document the illness which, sadly, is required by a host of employers in many countries. You're right that it's a perverse incentive and a drag upon the medical system (even if the sufferer has to pay for the doctor's note which they do because it's not covered under the health service). But employers worry that people are claiming to be ill just to 'get off work' and demand this proof: thereby inspiring a lot more people to clock in even when they're contagious or to spend hours clogging up the healthcare system if they don't want to inflict this on their co-workers.

  5. Re:Correlation is Not Causation on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 1

    Soon as you get a time machine, we can talk about more data collection. That's the problem with history: we're at the mercy of whatever's survived and it can be scary how little that is. Seriously, we're losing some historical data faster than we can analyze it and that even holds for very recent history what with the degradation of various digital data forms. (How are those 5 1/4" floppies doing nowadays? Or tape drives?) Not to mention the destruction wrought by war, natural disaster or simple incompetence.

    There's also no evidence for human societies being comparable enough to make the same prediction (or solution) work from one to another. Some of the great attempts at comparative histories that I mentioned above, such as the Tillys' work on the Rebellious Century or Skocpol's comparison of France, Russia and China, have fallen apart when subject to closer scrutiny. Maybe if we had all the data ever created and the supercomputers to crunch it all, we could reduce human experiences to a mathematical model but that sounds a bit ridiculous. Most historians would suggest that humanity would benefit a lot more from some other endeavours. Like preserving, restoring and studying some of those degrading documents. . . .

  6. Re:Correlation is Not Causation on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 1

    Yes, you can find and argue for causation if you have the right data and good insight. The problem in history is that we're often working from incomplete and sometimes even what feels like sabotaged data. I do work with the history of crime and there are famous studies showing how a lot of the crime reporting in 19th century England, say, were massively tweaked in order to promote the producing police agencies' claims for more funding. Some crimes were massively under-reported in the documents due to social attitudes at the time that led authorities to lack interest or feel they couldn't do anything about the problem, so why report their failures to their higher-ups?, while others were exaggerated in order to highlight how more police and more resources were desperately needed.

    So all of those lovely charts about crime rates over time start to look a lot less reliable when you poke into the data at the base level. When the definition of a particular crime changes, that has to be taken into account. What do we mean by infanticide? What did people in 1800 mean by the term? How many people really WERE in that gathering, assembly, march or riot? Were they there for the reasons that the official accounts claim or was it something different? How do you know?

    I don't think any historian has a big objection to analysts making direct parallels between what they see today and certain events in the past. You're right that those kind of insights are useful (and they're the fruit of a lot of sociological, political science and economics research that's highly respected for good reason). It's when someone starts to talk about inevitable highs and lows or natural rules of society that we get antsy, because that puts a lot of faith in data that we've been trained to approach with caution and in the broad pictures of humanity that we're always diving into and reworking at more basic levels of analysis.

  7. Re:Correlation is Not Causation on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 1

    Looking for universal rules of human behaviour in history is fruitless for two reasons. First, to put it in Asimovian terms, there are a lot more Mules than there are rules: people who break with expectations and predictions and their historical agency goes against the expected "flow".

    Second is the problem of complexity. There's so much data that's not recorded or doesn't survive, even in our modern age and moreso the farther back you go. Researchers who try to connect two seemingly-related phenomenon in different circumstances end up tripping up on the differences they've discounted, ignored or don't see until someone brings up the flaw. For current-day society, historians would ask what current events and developments aren't even appearing on the radar of contemporary analysis.

    Historians still generalize, but under limited terms (comparing, say, the decline of industrial production in similar cities/cultures or pointing out similarities between the adoption of or opposition to Reformed religion in early modern European states). Even then, they often get hammered by colleagues who point out key differences they argue have been overlooked in the analysis. Given that critics can shoot holes in the comparison, especially as it broadens, historians have learned to be very carefully about generalizing from the past. We'd obviously be very skeptical of someone who claims they have drawn a universal lesson of human behaviour (and nothing in Turchin's work has really made an impact on historical scholarship, even though his book has been out for almost a decade and he's been promoting his cliodynamic theories for even longer).

    This skepticism towards positing rules of human social behaviour is probably why the other social scientists don't always feel we fit in with their disciplines and keep putting us back over into the humanities.

  8. Re:Correlation is Not Causation on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 1

    We're not reciting the past, we're uncovering the past and interpreting it as well as teaching others how to do the same. Just because we can't predict the next big thing doesn't mean we're irrelevant - rather like seismology isn't irrelevant because it can't tell you when the next earthquake will happen on this or that fault line.

    Historians tend to say "You're cherry-picking your data" when the cliometricians or cliodynamists come to town. They're taking material from one set of circumstances and missing another, conflating events that aren't equivalent or sometimes simply misreading things that have changed dramatically over time. (Did you know that up until the 19th century in Europe, it was an established belief that women were sexually insatiable and utterly physical creatures, incapable of ruling their baser emotions while men were more spiritual and disinterested in sexual or physical matters. Nowadays, of course, western societies pretty much put it the other way around. But if you read something about woman's 'nature' in a fifteenth century source, it's coming from a wildly different assumption than a 21st century individual might expect. The same kind of 'false friends' exist in everything from laws to agricultural practice to religious activity. Nothing stays the same, even when people are trying to conserve practices!)

    Historians also tend to emphasize how behaviours are socially constructed and how those constructions change over time. So, for us, to expect that the same rule would hold for 1830 and 1930 and 2030 is hard to believe. Furthermore, that it would hold for all societies in some cycle of development? Again, tough to swallow. I've looked at some of the material they're putting forward and it's not rocking my world yet, nor is it making a big impact with other historians even though Turchin's book has been out for years, now.

    With regard to Turchin, Dewey & Kondratiev and their long-cycle models, I'd have to say that most historians would be with the doubters. Not enough's attributed to human agency as matters are described to cycle up and down in response to "natural laws". Never underestimate the power of a few well-placed individuals to screw everything up at unpredictable moments!

    It's not inevitability, it's incidence. Social, technological or political change takes a long time to shake out. While we can talk about patterns, it's never a good idea to believe they're natural forces dictating the future. Instead, we'd talk about patterns in terms of parallels: see, when the printing press was developed and popularized, these are some of the effects that it had, direct and indirect. How can that inform our understanding of how the internet is changing modern economies, culture and education, say? But nobody who tells me something like, see, it took seventy years from the advent of printing in Germany for Luther's 95 theses to be circulated, so there's a cycle for you!, is going to convince me they have a useful scheme. I'd say that such pie-in-the-sky claims are counterproductive.

    Turchin hasn't engaged historians nearly as much as he has economists and his interest in predictive modelling fits more in with that field than with history and historians whose chief interest remains in accurately documenting the past as opposed to thinking we can predict the future. That didn't work so well for Fukuyama, now, did it?

  9. Correlation is Not Causation on Mathematician Predicts Wave of Violence In 2020 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As a historian with a lot of statistical study under my belt, call me skeptical. I don't see how we're able to make the leap from his observations to cycles at work in wildly variant institutions and cultures. This sounds an awful lot like the wide-eyed promise of cliometrics to revolutionize history starting in the 1950s.

    In the mid-twentieth century, cliometrics (ah, look how much it reads like cliodynamics!) was going to save us all from the loosey-goosey styles of history that just weren't as good as honest-to-gosh social science. (This is why many mid-twentieth century universities placed history in their social science faculties rather than humanities where it was categorized in older university systems.) Certainly, learning how to handle large data sets and tackle questions of change over time with accurate analysis has been good, but stats wasn't the smoking gun to solve historical debates. Look how hard some of the great works of cliometrics crashed and burned when they tried to assert a grand rule of human behaviour: just two examples off of the top of my head, the Tilly's "The Rebellious Century, 1830-1930" which tried to unify the study of European revolutions over a century or Theda Skocpol's "States and Social Revolution: A Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China" which claimed that you could come up with a universalizing analysis of authoritarian state collapse. Both are interesting and ambitious books but ultimately unconvincing as they attempted to assert a general rule-set for history.

    Now we're told that cliodynamics is going to solve the problem. Again, as the original article notes, most trained historians are skeptical. It's not just that we like futzing around with old documents, it's that we're aware of the weaknesses in ongoing research, holes in observations and the biases in the data. You want to point to huge amounts of populist violence in the U.S. circa 1920 as proof that it was a high in a fifty year cycle? I and other historians can point to stunning outbreaks a decade earlier related to the anarchist movements and a decade later with the unrest regarding the Great Depression. It's not so much cherry-picking counter examples: it's the wrongheaded concept of seeing people as pawns of historical forces. Asimov was fun to read, I'll grant you, but I'd hope that people can see that human agency has an awful lot more to do with historical change than the rules of psychohistory.

    Stop looking for general rules of what's going to come next and consider, instead, clear-sighted analysis of how we've come to where we are and what that tells us about problems we've had and continue to experience.

  10. Re:Not only, but also on Medieval "Lingerie" From 15th Century Castle Could Rewrite Fashion History · · Score: 1

    Middle English? In Austria? Really?

    If you're going to pedant, pedant all the way!

  11. Re:Pedagogy & Positivity on Teaching Natural Sciences To Social Science Students? · · Score: 1

    Thanks for this helpful follow-up!

    I'll likely follow your suggestion for my own class. I have six weeks in which to get 60 history majors excited about and reasonably adept at statistical analysis: creating a keystone project in which they present their research with their own visualization of the data would be a great way to finish the unit.

  12. Pedagogy & Positivity on Teaching Natural Sciences To Social Science Students? · · Score: 2

    If you're not familiar with it, I recommend you read Ken Bain's What the Best College Teachers Do (2004) which provides a wide range of insights and approaches that can help you out in any classroom. Speaking as a former science major who went on to a Ph.D. in history, the number one difference I notice between the streams is that many of the social science and humanities students believe they're bad at math and statistics. Problems in high school convinced them that they can't cut it - a high proportion will claim they're incapable in the fields. The secret to your success is convincing them that they can and want to master these skills.

    I know - I teach a stats module as part of my sophomore course for majors. They learn how to read, interpret and critique statistics in articles in their field of study. Did you know that most of them don't know how to read and interpret statistics? The number of students at the start of the course who tell me they don't stop to read the charts because "they'll never understand them" is staggering. Statistical literacy should be the bedrock skill you inculcate. Show them good and bad uses of statistics. Teach them to figure out when someone's playing fast and loose with figures, hoping to fool readers. That will build their confidence and their thirst for knowledge.

    My students go on to create their own time series and other statistical outputs from a dataset that they all find fascinating. (I use the Old Bailey Online for this, a website with material in statistically manipulable format for almost 200,000 trials at London's major criminal court: almost everyone finds the history of crime at least a little bit intriguing and so they will persevere a bit more when they run up against problems or road blocks.) Don't waste a lot of the time throwing new theories at them - make sure that every new concept you introduce is tied to something they'll want to and be able to explore.

    Sure, some won't want to try. They'll find the work too hard or uninteresting no matter what you do. But others will be able to master this if you make it clear both why they need to learn certain techniques and how while giving them some clear and jargon-free walk-throughs. Exercises they can tackle tied into the fields they already find interesting are a great way to keep them motivated.

    Look at some of the textbooks that are out there for stats that are directed to your U's social science fields - see what elements they emphasize as important for the field of psych, poli sci, etc., and then decide how you want to incorporate those key elements into your own teaching. Avoid getting too tied into teaching a particular software package - make sure they understand how to generalize their application.

    Good luck - you're tackling what many consider a thankless course but one which can help to change students from math-phobic and fearful to at least statistically literate and confident that they can understand and apply some basic skills in the field as they go on in life.

  13. Look to Your Legislators! on Why Kids Should Be Building Rockets Instead of Taking Tests · · Score: 1

    Schools seem to have forgotten that students learn best when they are engaged

    No, they haven't but they're mandated by law to administer these tests and the law then uses the results of these tests to justify firings and closings. If you put a piece of cheese into a maze and deposit a very hungry mouse at the start of the maze, are you surprised when they get through it as fast as possible to get to the food? Same goes for underfunded, even adequately funded schools whose staff knows their future rests upon the test.

    Every time you hear a politician demanding new types of accountability and more evidence of outcome in schools, colleges and universities, know that what they're really saying is that they're putting yet another unfunded or underfunded mandate upon the education system. Good educators, and there are plenty out there, Aren't seeking to hide their achievements but every time you agree with the schemes of politicians that give us stuff like "No Child Left Behind" you add a new standardized test (created and assessed by a for-profit institute that'll also sell your schools the needed textbooks and prep materials to ensure student success).

  14. Re:"Braveheart" Weddings Now? on Canadian Copyright Board To Charge For Music At Weddings, Parades · · Score: 1

    Especially apt considering that the idea of medieval lords enjoying the right of prima noctis or droit du seigneur was faked up by later writers. Lords might have abused women on their properties, but it wasn't a legally enshrined right. Somebody just sold you a bill of goods, rather like the Copyright Board's doing here. . . .

  15. Raceways, even! on Ask Slashdot: Shortcuts To a High Tech House · · Score: 2

    Yup, you'll appreciate having room for growth built into the system. Unobtrusive raceways (many can be worked right into the molding either above or at ground level) allows you to upgrade or update your wiring and cable options. Make sure you're not overloading circuits while you're at it. Even some more recent builds are shockingly undersupplied for power needs. Getting a licensed electrician whenever you mess with your wiring is only smart, too. Your house is a big investment. Do it right!

    If your guests bring their own tech, make sure you have robust internet access that's easy for them to use. One room in our house remained a frustrating slow spot so we ran a wired connection to the router for that desktop PC. Otherwise, we can offer good Wifi. I keep cards with guest access info so new visitors can add themselves to the network.

  16. Re:well duh on Microsoft Barring Certain Staff From Buying Macs, iPads? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You're so right. There's nothing touch-typing-friendly about a screen-based keyboard. It can be fun, but you can't have your eyes on one part of the room while you take down text or transcription at 80+ wpm. Virtual keyboards are useless for high-speed or even medium-speed touch-typing tasks.

  17. Just like a computer is for nothing but work. . . on The eBook Backlash · · Score: 1

    What's the problem with using a tablet in multiple ways and even mostly not for reading? Are these people in trouble for not reading enough on their tablets? I doubt it!

    An e-ink device is marvelous for people who do a lot of reading in digitized texts but few are set-up for real multipurpose use. A tablet can be easily used for a lot of different functions: reading may be advertised as a primary role for some of these such as the Kindle Fire, but it's hardly the only or even the best role. So why are people surprised that others are using tablets as multifunctional devices? It's rather like being surprised that you'll code, surf, compose and goof-off on the same personal computer.

    Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go pick up my ereader and get back to some real work. . . .

  18. Work Like a Contractor on Ask Slashdot: Using Company Laptop For Personal Use · · Score: 1

    If your company does a lot of working with contractors or independent entities, chances are that they have policies in place to support people who aren't using institutional systems. Check and see if there's a contractor policy already in place that covers this and if any other employee has opted for this freedom.

    After a couple of years of frustration with super-crappy work machines, I checked with my employer (a university). Was there anything for which I needed their hardware or software to access? The answer was no. I don't do financials, I access institutional data at only one step above the general public (Read-Only, limited access) or through portals that are already designed to work off-site.

    So I cut the cord and don't use a work-provided machine for anything. It's occasionally annoying (as when my HD died and I had to deal with that on my own) but in so many other ways, intensely liberating. I watch colleagues wrestle with clunky "hardened" laptops or the large Powerbooks they get if they're not stuck with a low-spec desktop. I attend meetings with all of my documentation and data-crunching done on a netbook or ereader that's customized to my workflow. Plus, because I have consulting and contract work outside my full-time job (with employer's full knowledge and consent), my tech is even partially deductible at tax time.

    If you can't use your own or can't afford to at this point, talk with IT about the acceptable policy for occasional private use and software add-ons they'd approve. At least you'll know you'll be in their good graces when you're on the road for them and would like to surf to /.

  19. John Wiley, not the Hoboken Publishing Company on Patent Attorneys Sued For Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    Read through the OP before summarizing somewhat sloppily, please! The publisher that's initiating this is John Wiley which is based in Hoboken, not named after Hoboken. Wiley is a major publishing house that most academics and many others will recognize. This move might remind you of Elsevier's role in the recently-pulled Research Works Act.

  20. Re:Students & Faculty Attack Agreement on Universities Agree To Email Monitoring For Copyright Agency · · Score: 1

    Yup, if they do get into AC and don't want to deal with an off-campus email, that's too bad. There's not that much that I care about that comes via university email but the dean's office will be the losers if they can't reach me to schedule a committee meeting!

  21. That's Ms. Hypocrite to You on Universities Agree To Email Monitoring For Copyright Agency · · Score: 1

    I registered with them and, every year that I get paid, I funnel the money to a copyfighting cause. Check out OpenMedia.ca for one such great option! Plus I write them regular letters as a member, haranguing the board and denouncing their policies.

    Registered or not, they're still collecting money 'on my behalf' that only goes to fill their warchest. AC levies a fee on every bit of media that they can count being loaned, copied and read in schools and on campuses, caring not who's the author until you register with them and force them to cough up a share of the funds.

    They're collecting money based off of my writing, your writing, everyone's writing: Canadians and other citizens! They'll pay out if you register, though and I figure that hurts them at least a little bit which works to our advantage.

  22. Students & Faculty Attack Agreement on Universities Agree To Email Monitoring For Copyright Agency · · Score: 5, Informative

    Via Ariel Katz, UofT Students and Faculty Demand Suspending the Access Copyright Agreement

    I'm on faculty at a different Canadian university. So far, we've cut no deal with Access Copyright yet and I hope we stay strong. You can bet that I'm asking our union to keep an eye on the situation as it relates to the privacy rights of students and faculty!

    Ironically, I benefit financially from Access Copyright, having registered as an author with them years ago when a colleague pointed out they were collecting money on my behalf, whether or not I made my claim against them. I'd much rather take a few hundred dollars out of their pockets to pass onto a copyfighting cause each year!

    If my university does cave to Access Copyright, I'll cease using my university email. It'll be annoying to switch away from an address I've used for twenty years, but better than seeming to acquiesce to further indignities. I suspect that we'll see more and more academics exploring that option if Toronto and Western are setting a trend.

  23. Re:Time look at the middle ages roots in today's c on China To Cancel College Majors That Don't Pay · · Score: 1

    You didn't have majors in medieval universities. You had the seven liberal arts (the trivium and the quadrivium) which underlay a church-centred curriculum. Think of it as the ultimate gen-ed degree! By the sixteenth century, you had clearly defined professorships in specific fields such as mathematics (think of the Lucasian Chair at Cambridge held by Isaac Newton). To study engineering, say, you didn't go to universities in the eighteenth century - they simply didn't teach a curriculum that covered such topics. Nineteenth century universities is where real specialization took hold to create the idea of majoring in a specific study or another.

    Of course, you'd only know this if you studied history. I mean really studied history to learn how to find information as well as usefully analyze that data. For this, you have to go beyond glib and flawed recall. "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." - George Santayana

  24. Prof's perspective on Plagiarism Inc. · · Score: 1

    This is plagiarism both by my university's definition and the one that's included in my syllabus.

    This kind of activity is also why I don't allow free-choice essays and require students to submit work in progress during the term as they "workshop" major projects. It's all about deterring plagiarism and trying to get the students to, you know!, actually complete the course requirements. Crazy ideas.

  25. Desktops Rare in Retail on Flight of the Desktops · · Score: 1

    Had one of our old family PCs die a few months ago and needed to replace the machine (for school use) very quickly. There was little choice in desktop models at local retailers and most of these machines were priced at or above comparably equipped laptops. I'm used to being able to buy a decently-equipped tower cheaply. Those days seem to be gone, at least for the big-box and mall stores.

    There, instead of the wall of towers and monitors you saw a few years ago, you'll see laptops, netbooks and monitors. My choice was pretty simple for this replacement machine, especially since I couldn't wait for parts to come in the mail. We now have a shiny new laptop in the house and one more empty desk!