This is a personal blog charting what I am up to - including teaching, researching, and thinking about prevailing ideas on humanities scholarship and how it intersects with digitality/technology/computing.
Monday, November 14, 2011
'Frontline' tweet 'earth-shattering'
This article from the Irish Times newspaper looks at a number of issues arising from the chairperson of the final Irish Presidential debate before the election asking a question prompted by a tweet.
Indeed in the creation of liveness, spontaneity and engagement many current affairs programs use twitter and SMS as ways of allowing their audiences to engage with material under discussion. The difference here it seems, is that the production team took a tweet as being from a particular source, but that tweet was not from where it appeared to be from. It was not checked - no one looked at the other tweets from the source, or checked to look at the tweets from the political party it claimed to represent - and the result (we voters in Ireland know) was 'earth shattering'. New media and old media are not the same - the new mimics the old, but is utterly different in many respects. Authenticity is at the heart of this - anonymity and the filters that old media must uphold...
Friday, November 11, 2011
Taking stock of our pooled research
Claire O Connell in today's Irish Times is writing about a group of Medical Research hospitals that have come together to create a shared database, to further research.
Now a new initiative is linking cancer biobanks between hospitals in Dublin, Cork and Galway.
As she says herself: The word “bank” might be somewhat tainted these days, but how about this more altruistic model: depositors donate, the “currency” helps fuel biomedical research and the end results can lead towards improved therapies for patients.
“Biobanking is saving biological samples such as human tissue, blood or urine, for research purposes,” explains Prof Eoin Gaffney, a consultant histopathologist at St James’s Hospital and Trinity College Dublin.
The process looks straightforward on the surface – but “It’s no use just storing samples, you need to have a good annotated database that tells you where the samples are and what types of samples they are, as well as pathological data and clinical data,” he says.
This is another example of how sharing data, but not just raw data, but data that has been made meaningful by researchers in the field, can enrich research for all
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Flash fiction: 'Intense, urgent and a little explosive'
This new form of fiction is 'just right for our times - shorter than a novel, is it a shorter story?
Monday, October 3, 2011
Digital Cultures Workshop University College Cork
Launch of Aigne
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
David Puttnam on Ireland - Digitality and Research infrastructures
What is DH and why is it relevant for PhDs
Monday, July 4, 2011
Innovation - Intermediality and Bjork
Saturday, June 11, 2011
ESF Humanities Spring- "Changing Publication Cultures in the Humanities".
There are interesting debates on everything from bibliometrics, to open access with the scholar Gudrun Gersmann giving a masterclass on digital publishing this morning. She gave excellent examples such as OAPEN, Francia(at Perspectivia), and recensio.net
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
The interface as narrative device
Sunday, May 8, 2011
Blogging the tsunami
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Policy Document on the Open Access Agenda - Arcadia.org.uk
Knowledge shared online
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Honest to Blog - A Symposium on Web Legitimacy
The second symposium - under the auspices of Pue's Occurrences - is being held in TCD this Friday 4th March. It promises to be a wide ranging discussion of the Irish blogosphere.
Monday, February 28, 2011
New Media - Social Networking and Inclusion
Every news programme, every paper, almost every TD had a twitter account. Post Trafigura the oft scorned tweet has gained some gravitas, that and the impact social networking is having in the Middle East at present, coupled with the impact and immediacy of the tweet and the blog cannot be ignored.
Live blogging too has impacted enormously - whether your sport is centred on the Aviva, or the local count centre, RTE's, and the IT's enhanced coverage was excellent recently.
In 'Another blog about the role of Social Media' Éanna Ó Caollaà writes about the best Tweets in #GE2011 - they are well worth a look...