Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Digital Remix Rubric: Prezi

Prezis should be graded based not only on the information contained by the presentation but also on the way this information is displayed. By combining multiple modes (audio, video, images, and words) in an effective and creative way, a good Prezi is effective in displaying its containing information. Furthermore, by combining modes, the audience remains interested in the point the creater is attemping to make. Thus, a Prezi shoul be graded on how creative it is, the information it conains, and how well it delivers its point to the viewer.

An example of an excellent Prezi is this on from Kairos:
http://prezi.com/ficdxdwg6aem/notes-on-notes-on-the-film/

An example of a middling Prezi is this one below:
http://prezi.com/aww2hjfyil0u/math-is-not-linear/
     though the diffences in font sizes attracts some interest to the presentation, the lack of creativity when it comes to hue or other modes results in a relatively uninteresting presentation and therefore, one that does not effectively provide its information

A poor Prezi, one that contains very few different forms of information and little information in general is:
http://prezi.com/qicwwc1z_vxj/types-of-graphs/
     here the lack of actual information about its subject other than few words and a couple of pictures limits the effectiveness of this Prezi

  

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

On the use of twitter in class

For class we frequently make use of Twitter to discuss both concepts from homework readings as well as to discuss ideas for various assignments. Not only does the use of Twitter allows for an easy way to connect to both other students as well as the instructor when questions arise from the readings which are often complex and require some clarification so that complete understanding is possible. Furthermore, our use of twitter in which coherent thoughts are necessary while being consistent with a limit on the number of characters within the message helps us practice use of concise language to convey complex but coherent ideas. This helps us most as Twitter becomes more ingrained in all branches of society resulting in a need to use twitter while still conveying and ability to use proper english when the appropriate time arrises.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Would Cicero Podcast?

Cicero, famous not only for his own orations but also for his discussions on what is necessary to be a good orator might have had to change his views on the necessities of being a good orator if he were alive to see the podcasting platform. Cicero's belief that certain innate abilities were required to even qualify for public speaking does not hold the same ground as it once did. A podcaster's ability to edit his/her audio recording of their speech allows anyone to overcome certain  failures that may arise from speaking in a public setting such as mumbling, swaying, or timing emphasises poorly. Furthermore, the ability for the podcaster to go unseen means that they can speak directly from a prewritten script and never off the cuff so that a natural ability to pick the right words as you say them is no longer necessary. Thus, all the innate abilities required to be a good orator are no longer necessary and only taught abilities become relevant. In this way everyone has the ability to become a great orator which is the same as saying no one does.

The Podacast I am following

Check out the podcast by the people who brought you Freakonomics:

http://itunes.apple.com/podcast/freakonomics-radio/id354668519

I forgot the heading to my essay

here is the essay heading

Gary Weiser
Engl278Z
Section 0201
Geary

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Inquiry Essay Bibliography

Inquiry Essay

A Room with No View
              We call it the Parlor Room of Ideas, an open forum where people can learn new ideas and contribute their opinions and knowledge to help evolve our knowledge of everything. In the Parlor Room, we all have an opportunity to influence ideas and contribute to any issue being discussed. However there’s only one problem, the Parlor Room does not exist. At least, not in the idealized way we believe it should be. This is because as technology changes, so too do the requirements for entering. Before Gutenberg created the movable-type printing press, most people, save the very wealthy and the clergy, were illiterate. This meant that the only requirement for entering the parlor room was an idea. However as books became the common media of the time, the ability to read and write became a criterion for contributing ideas. Each time the technology of the media develops, so too does the necessities of participating in the discussion. While such constraints were not amazingly limiting while the print media reigned supreme, as anyone could contribute their ideas by writing about them, as radio became the media with those who spoke on the radio had a disproportionate say both in which issues should be discussed and which opinions were expressed. The number of people holding disproportionate say in the parlor continued to increase as television became the preferred source of information with the power of many radio station consolidated into comparatively few television channels. Thus we come to crossroads as the internet becomes the new media of the times. With even fewer providers of the internet than there were television station owners, has power been consolidated even more into the hand of corporations with their own interests? Furthermore, if greater payment is required for greater quality of access to the digital technology that has become the major media, then has the digital divide become a socioeconomic divide?
There are plenty of examples of the disproportionate influence of those who can afford entrance into the parlor room most obviously when it comes to political issues. Since it costs money to send a message on television, only those who can afford the cost can make their message heard. Thus the issues that affect those who can afford entrance frequently take precedent over the issues that affect those who cannot. We can see this in the role estate taxes can play in the voting decisions of the people unaffected by such taxation. Despite the fact that such taxes only apply to inheritances of greater than 3.5 million dollars, it is an issue that many across the nation, even those in the lower class consider when making voting decisions. When corporations are able to contribute money to political action committees to present their a political issue then these corporations have a disproportionate role in the parlor room. This can be seen when groups such as the Center for Union Facts that are funded by companies such as Wal-Mart which pay for commercials attacking labor unions. These companies are able to pervert the parlor room by using their fund to have greater say both on what should be talked about and which side of an issue should be taken.
Our technological switch to digital media in place of television has the possibility to perpetuate the current separation or to close it. The existence of open forums in which everyone is able to provide their take on an issue important to them allows them to play their important role in the parlor room. However, when companies are able to pay to have preferential treatment -- as seen by the sponsored links shown at the top of any Google search -- then companies can continue to have disproportionate power. Furthermore, the ability of large companies to spend large sums of money to present specific sides of issues while funding for opposing or fact-checking sites is often limited allows falsehood and bias to denigrate the parlor room. We can see this in sites such as that of Chipotle, a tex-mex fast food company owned by McDonalds, that hides this association with claims of healthy and organic food while failing to note that a standard burrito (about 850 calories) sold by this company has more calories than a Big Mac (about 540 calories). As long as companies are able spend large sums presenting their side of an issue or stressing specific issues over that of others then the technologic era we are entering will only serve to perpetuate the uneven distribution of say that deep pocketed corporations have in the parlor room of ideas.
If access to the internet is cheap and fast, then everyone can have an opportunity to express their opinion and have a role in the parlor room of ideas. However, when the fastest, highest quality internet service is available only to those willing to pay a premium for such access, then those with the most are able to play a greater role in the parlor room of ideas. Thus we find that the digital divide has become a socioeconomic divide in which the wealthy are more likely to be both technologically savvy and have access to the medium that has become the current home to the parlor room of ideas. This chasm between availability and quality of internet access for the upper classes compared to that of those in lower socioeconomic standing is perpetuated by mergers such as that between Verizon and Google in which users are able to pay a premium on faster internet for users or greater site traffic for specific websites. In this way, the wealthy are able to have the greatest access to the internet and are able to direct more people to their websites. Because payment is required for quality internet
Let us imagine a situation in which speech is limited and only the wealthy can afford to have a say both in the issues discussed and in the decisions made by society. In this plutocracy, not only are the poor unable to have a say in the decisions made by their government, but they are also helpless as the wealthy are able to propagate their wealth at the expense of the lower classes. When only the wealthiest can enter the parlor room of ideas, the interests of the rest of America and the world are at best ignored and at worst completely opposite to the actions of the plutocracy. However, if we imagine the converse, a situation in which we all can fill our role in the parlor room of ideas then the result is quite different. When everyone is able to make their views heard, then the interests of the many rather than the interests of the few is the determining factor in political decisions. Furthermore, because the many are able to have a voice to speak out against injustices, no course of action can take place in which such rights to entry to the parlor room can be removed. In both situations, events conspire in a cascading effect, the rate of people gaining entrance to the parlor room increases when more people already are allowed to take part.  Conversely, the more people are barred from their role in the parlor room of ideas, the faster power is shift from the hand of the majority into the hands of the select few.
Thus, we are at a crossroads. As we make a shift to an internet focused media we perpetuate the short comings of the medium. By shifting our focus even further to a medium in which money greatly determines ones role in the parlor room of ideas, we give disproportionate power to the haves at the expense of the have-nots. Even more so, these short comings allow large corporations with virtually unlimited funds to determine the issues discussed in the parlor room while simultaneously blocking the opinions of those who contradict their claims. As long as we maintain a laissez-faire attitude towards internet policy letting the profit motive rule the practices of the internet then the digital divide will become equivalent to the socioeconomic divide and corporations will continue to have a disproportionate say parlor room of ideas.

Inquiry Essay Transduction

This picture representing the merger between verizon and google is also representative of my inquiry essay topic

Monday, September 13, 2010

Inquiry Essay Topic

For my inquiry in essay form, I would discuss how corporate influence of tecnology has changed our individual roles in the parlor room or more recently the market place of ideas.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

What is Literacy?

Literacy is the ability to both read and write a language. This represents the ability to convert the various alphanumeric symbols into the syllabic sounds they represent as well as the total word they create and its associative definition. Furthermore, literacy is the ability to record these words to a written medium in a way that maintains the intent and idea these words convey. Thus, in order to be literate, one must be able to understand the meaning of the sound or sights representing specific word, put them together into a cogent idea, and then shift between the various media of transmitting this idea without losing the original meaning.

 Addendum: While literacy in its literal form may solely represent such skills in print media. Literacy can also be an umbrella term for the ability to understand and participate in other fields. For example,"research literacy" represents the ability to research, present your research and your sources, and understand the research and presented sources of others.

New twitter account

check twitter at @gweiser1992