- @charliesaidthat The only thing I can think of is window tax but it's not a thing anymore in reply to charliesaidthat ->
- Did…. @5USATV's Access just confuse Gemma Chan with Constance Wu? They mentioned the two leads of Crazy Rich Asia… https://t.co/QpeR3c7tKt ->
- Mum's just asked why the oven clock and the clock in front of the TV are both fast by different amounts. Had to rem… https://t.co/xRBD1CG0CC ->
- …the kinetic watch, that she gave me, which is never right because I don't move enough and have to keep put it forward randomly in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- I don't understand how the proceedings of a funeral take so much time here ->
- Ok, my A-ma's funeral took 3 days, which make sense because burning that much paper money takes a lot of time in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- And then various friends and more distant relatives would drop by and pay their respects etc and it was all catered by the funeral directors in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- But like, the people dropping by were only expected to stay for half an hour tops and then they could go in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- Tomorrow I'm going to a funeral and the Mass is probably going to be an hour, which fine, that's how long Mass is b… https://t.co/vd2UmN9b51 in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- AND THIS IS WHY I USUALLY JUST GO TO THE RELIGIOUS SERVICE OR WHATEVER AND THEN LEAVE in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- And like, I know how expensive catering the reception after a funeral is because we did that for Dad and I guess th… https://t.co/dyLwGZF7P6 in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- For my Dad's funeral, loads of people turned up and like… we didn't even tell them he was dead. It was just the o… https://t.co/05gi58Au81 in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- It is deeply weird to meet one of your Dad's former co-workers for the first time and have to comfort them on the l… https://t.co/VormXjPxRl in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- Incidentally, I think my Mum has her funeral Mass all planned out but the reception will be down to me and heads up… https://t.co/Iec4ntHqV3 in reply to herdivineshadow ->
- I am watching Space Seed and the thing that makes Wrath of Khan the greatest film of all time is the literal 15 years between them ->
Daily Archives: September 25, 2018
On reading
At some point, two different things about reading ended up in my “tabs to read” window – one about skim reading and the other about reading with a pencil.
In the first, Maryanne Wolf (Director of the Center for Dyslexia, Diverse Learners, and Social Justice at UCLA) talks about how our brains’ ability to read is changing as we read on electronic devices more:
My research depicts how the present reading brain enables the development of some of our most important intellectual and affective processes: internalized knowledge, analogical reasoning, and inference; perspective-taking and empathy; critical analysis and the generation of insight. Research surfacing in many parts of the world now cautions that each of these essential “deep reading” processes may be under threat as we move into digital-based modes of reading.
She goes on to talk about we have less “patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts” and along with that potentially comes less ability to apply higher levels of critical analysis to such texts (or perhaps also in texts we come across in every day life like contracts or wills).
The whole article is worth reading (especially how the change in reading is coming with a change in empathy) but the main thing that interested me was how reading on physically printed media instead of a digital device kind of added “a spatial ‘thereness’ for text” and readers have a better sense of where they are in what they are reading – a place “to go back, to check and evaluate one’s understanding of a text.”
The second tab I’ve had open – the one from Austin Kleon’s blog about reading with a pencil made me really think about how I read. I don’t think I could ever actually write IN a book, which is also interesting to me – there are people who freely write in books they own and then there are people who would never dream of it and is there anyone in between?
Marginalia means to me that I’ve paid attention to the thing that I was reading – for the essays and such that I’ve written in the past, I’ve always had to print out papers (in part to highlight them and make notes) rather than attempt to read them in a digital format. Even though I can’t bring myself to write notes in a book, the books I used for my dissertation were RIDDLED with post-it notes with various scribbles and arrows on them.
I feel like I don’t read as much as I used to – I certainly don’t get through as many books as I once did. However, when I really think about it, I wonder if I am really reading less or is it that reading in a digital format somehow counts less? Instead of zipping through novels, I read fanfic, journal articles, meta, Twitter, newsletters (the satisfaction of reading a blog with the ease of it being right there in my inbox, though I never forsook RSS), the odd Livejournal/Dreamwidth entry… so am I really reading less? Or is it that I don’t have the patience for long things anymore? I know I don’t understand how anyone can binge-watch a series – I can watch two episodes tops before I have to switch to a different series.
Anyway. It is a thing I have been thinking about.
Other stuff:
- Tackling the Ethical Challenges of Slippery Technology – I studied software engineering and the closest we really got to thinking about ethics was the single first-year module “Philosophy of Computer Science” (or something similar). I ended up writing about whether an AI could have a soul. More recently, I was talking about AI with a priest and he couldn’t believe that we don’t necessarily know why an AI might make a particular decision – if we made them, then we must understand them right?
- The Edwardian Women Who Claimed to Travel Back in Time
- The Most Important Skill Nobody Taught You
- Solving All the Wrong Problems
Mirrored from half girl, half robot.
On reading
At some point, two different things about reading ended up in my “tabs to read” window – one about skim reading and the other about reading with a pencil.
In the first, Maryanne Wolf (Director of the Center for Dyslexia, Diverse Learners, and Social Justice at UCLA) talks about how our brains’ ability to read is changing as we read on electronic devices more:
My research depicts how the present reading brain enables the development of some of our most important intellectual and affective processes: internalized knowledge, analogical reasoning, and inference; perspective-taking and empathy; critical analysis and the generation of insight. Research surfacing in many parts of the world now cautions that each of these essential “deep reading” processes may be under threat as we move into digital-based modes of reading.
She goes on to talk about we have less “patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts” and along with that potentially comes less ability to apply higher levels of critical analysis to such texts (or perhaps also in texts we come across in every day life like contracts or wills).
The whole article is worth reading (especially how the change in reading is coming with a change in empathy) but the main thing that interested me was how reading on physically printed media instead of a digital device kind of added “a spatial ‘thereness’ for text” and readers have a better sense of where they are in what they are reading – a place “to go back, to check and evaluate one’s understanding of a text.”
The second tab I’ve had open – the one from Austin Kleon’s blog about reading with a pencil made me really think about how I read. I don’t think I could ever actually write IN a book, which is also interesting to me – there are people who freely write in books they own and then there are people who would never dream of it and is there anyone in between?
Marginalia means to me that I’ve paid attention to the thing that I was reading – for the essays and such that I’ve written in the past, I’ve always had to print out papers (in part to highlight them and make notes) rather than attempt to read them in a digital format. Even though I can’t bring myself to write notes in a book, the books I used for my dissertation were RIDDLED with post-it notes with various scribbles and arrows on them.
I feel like I don’t read as much as I used to – I certainly don’t get through as many books as I once did. However, when I really think about it, I wonder if I am really reading less or is it that reading in a digital format somehow counts less? Instead of zipping through novels, I read fanfic, journal articles, meta, Twitter, newsletters (the satisfaction of reading a blog with the ease of it being right there in my inbox, though I never forsook RSS), the odd Livejournal/Dreamwidth entry… so am I really reading less? Or is it that I don’t have the patience for long things anymore? I know I don’t understand how anyone can binge-watch a series – I can watch two episodes tops before I have to switch to a different series.
Anyway. It is a thing I have been thinking about.
Other stuff:
- Tackling the Ethical Challenges of Slippery Technology – I studied software engineering and the closest we really got to thinking about ethics was the single first-year module “Philosophy of Computer Science” (or something similar). I ended up writing about whether an AI could have a soul. More recently, I was talking about AI with a priest and he couldn’t believe that we don’t necessarily know why an AI might make a particular decision – if we made them, then we must understand them right?
- The Edwardian Women Who Claimed to Travel Back in Time
- The Most Important Skill Nobody Taught You
- Solving All the Wrong Problems
Mirrored from half girl, half robot.
comments
On reading
At some point, two different things about reading ended up in my “tabs to read” window – one about skim reading and the other about reading with a pencil.
In the first, Maryanne Wolf (Director of the Center for Dyslexia, Diverse Learners, and Social Justice at UCLA) talks about how our brains’ ability to read is changing as we read on electronic devices more:
My research depicts how the present reading brain enables the development of some of our most important intellectual and affective processes: internalized knowledge, analogical reasoning, and inference; perspective-taking and empathy; critical analysis and the generation of insight. Research surfacing in many parts of the world now cautions that each of these essential “deep reading” processes may be under threat as we move into digital-based modes of reading.
She goes on to talk about we have less “patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts” and along with that potentially comes less ability to apply higher levels of critical analysis to such texts (or perhaps also in texts we come across in every day life like contracts or wills).
The whole article is worth reading (especially how the change in reading is coming with a change in empathy) but the main thing that interested me was how reading on physically printed media instead of a digital device kind of added “a spatial ‘thereness’ for text” and readers have a better sense of where they are in what they are reading – a place “to go back, to check and evaluate one’s understanding of a text.”
The second tab I’ve had open – the one from Austin Kleon’s blog about reading with a pencil made me really think about how I read. I don’t think I could ever actually write IN a book, which is also interesting to me – there are people who freely write in books they own and then there are people who would never dream of it and is there anyone in between?
Marginalia means to me that I’ve paid attention to the thing that I was reading – for the essays and such that I’ve written in the past, I’ve always had to print out papers (in part to highlight them and make notes) rather than attempt to read them in a digital format. Even though I can’t bring myself to write notes in a book, the books I used for my dissertation were RIDDLED with post-it notes with various scribbles and arrows on them.
I feel like I don’t read as much as I used to – I certainly don’t get through as many books as I once did. However, when I really think about it, I wonder if I am really reading less or is it that reading in a digital format somehow counts less? Instead of zipping through novels, I read fanfic, journal articles, meta, Twitter, newsletters (the satisfaction of reading a blog with the ease of it being right there in my inbox, though I never forsook RSS), the odd Livejournal/Dreamwidth entry… so am I really reading less? Or is it that I don’t have the patience for long things anymore? I know I don’t understand how anyone can binge-watch a series – I can watch two episodes tops before I have to switch to a different series.
Anyway. It is a thing I have been thinking about.
Other stuff:
- Tackling the Ethical Challenges of Slippery Technology – I studied software engineering and the closest we really got to thinking about ethics was the single first-year module “Philosophy of Computer Science” (or something similar). I ended up writing about whether an AI could have a soul. More recently, I was talking about AI with a priest and he couldn’t believe that we don’t necessarily know why an AI might make a particular decision – if we made them, then we must understand them right?
- The Edwardian Women Who Claimed to Travel Back in Time
- The Most Important Skill Nobody Taught You
- Solving All the Wrong Problems