D'Arcy Norman, PhD

Recent Posts

still by FAR the best comment on sharecropping

Merlin Mann posted this gem back in April, in response to the announcement of Google Drive:

I still chuckle about that one. So concise. Yes. We'd like to store your panties for you. Sure, you can trust us. Please. Give us your panties.

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on Pulp

I saw the new Pulp app for Mac and iPad, and thought it looked interesting enough to try out. I started on the Mac side, importing a bunch of feeds that I'd exported from my FeverËš reader. It's definitely different, but I think I like it.

Here's the "home" front page - similar to the "Hot" section in FeverËš - it mines the items in the subscribed feeds, to find trends and more-linked-to items.

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traffic quiz

When driving in an active school zone, with school buses and kids in the area, you find yourself behind a cyclist. He is only going 35km/h in the marked 30km/h zone, and is riding in the middle of the lane (the other lane is for parking, and has cars and buses etc... along it). What do you do?

a) Realize that you are speeding, slow down to 30km/h, and continue as though nobody shat in your breakfast. Which is nice, because it's a beautiful spring morning.

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aPOPcalypse Now

Jim Groom, at TEDxNYC1, on apocalypse/zombie/crisis narratives, and communities creating together.


  1. yeah. I didn’t think I’d be linking to a TED video either. But come on. Jim Groom. Animated GIFs. Bronies! ↩︎

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on reclaiming dropbox with owncloud

In the Reclaim project, I've been struggling to find a way to properly access my files from anywhere - Dropbox has that problem solved handily.

I've been watching ownCloud for awhile, and it's getting to the point where it's just about ready to use as a self-hosted Dropbox replacement. Previous versions had web- and webDAV interfaces, but didn't have the ability to sync files to each computer I use. The web interface worked, but was too awkward to actually use for anything. And using webDAV directly was so frustratingly slow that it was basically a non-option (saving a large file to webDAV has to upload the entire file each time you hit command+s, which can lock up the application you're using until it's done. not fun).

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What Is "Ed-Tech"?

In some cases, "ed-tech" is shorthand for some very cool tech,. In some cases, "education" is just shorthand for a category within a larger app market. Sometimes all this talk about a definition of "ed-tech" prompts a great conversation about what we mean by learning in a mobile, networked world. And sometimes when we talk about "ed-tech," we're still talking about crappy tech and crappy education and crappy pedagogy and crappy outcomes.

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on empathy

half-baked post alert

This is nothing new, but I've been internally coming back to it often enough that it's worth saying out loud.

We've been working on identifying and documenting the needs of our campus community, with respect to an eLearning environment - with the unspoken goal of finding The One True Tool that will serve everyone's needs. The further-unspoken-message being that everyone is (or should be) fundamentally the same, and that by finding and encouraging a single set of "best practices" that we'll be able to help the lesser-able (i.e., different) people to adapt (i.e., conform). There are reasons to encourage conformity - it's easier to support, easier to implement, cleaner to put into an RFP, etc...

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mapping dangerous spots on a bike commute route

I just saw this amazing tool mentioned on BikeCalgary - an interactive map that lets you plot your bike commute route and then display bike-related incidents (I won't call them accidents, because they're not).

Turns out, my commuting route has only had 2 reported incidents in the last several years - both on a narrow stretch that causes me constant grief with drivers thinking they need to pass me even though it's not safe to do so.

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