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Living with Digital Children

August 9, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Being One Comment

Aine and Finn at Peet's

Going through my email this evening I find that my daughter, sitting in her room three meters away, has sent me this website: The Case Against Time-out – The Natural Child Project.

Now we don’t do time outs at our house and my daughter has informed me that she sent this along because it talkas about things we agree with.

But aside from that, I’m just laughing. Imagine receiving this from an 11 year old who wants you to feel like your parenting choices are valid.

I have great kids.

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WordPress 2.6 Upgrade: Fixing Missing Categories

August 8, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Wordpress One Comment

If you have upgraded to WordPress 2.6 and your categories are hosed, have a look at this fix, which worked for me. It takes a bit of time, depending on hyour number of categories, and you need to mess around in the database, but it’s fairly straigtforward.

Thanks for the post David!

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The Conversation Prism

August 8, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Collaboration 2 Comments

The plethora of online tools

My friend Eric Lillius perodically sends me cool bits and pieces. I hadn’t seen this yet though: The Web 2.0 Conversation Prisim.

More at PR 2.0.

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Being prepared to be surprised – and to learn something

August 7, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized

In a post on reviewing academic articles, I was really struck by the way academics deal with surprises.

Yes, I regularly check (some) references. If the author of a (history) paper I am refereeing makes a surprising claim – e.g., something that if true I might reasonably be expected to have encountered before, not just something I know FA about – I almost instinctively check to see what his/her source is, and if it’s something I have readily to hand, may actually go to the text to see if it supports what the author concluded.

Usually it does, and I’ve learned something new.

From surprise to curiosity to learning.   Straight forward enough, but how many of us dismiss surprises outright, or believe them straight away?

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The Next Starbucks?

August 7, 2008 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized One Comment

The Next Starbucks is an article in Architect Magazine that has several architects envision the coffee shp of the future.

There are some interesting designs here, but my favourite has to be the last one, in which the designers think first about the social nature of the coffee shop and come up with some old patterns for community use:

Merging the concept of the flexible, shared workspace with that of communal dining creates a new “third place,” a community kitchen. Anchored by a 60-foot-long wooden harvest table, a kit of parts serving different functions can be freely arranged wherever the user sees fit. The configuration of the pieces as well as the length of the table can be customized, depending on the conditions of the store. Diverse spaces are created along the table’s length; some are highly interactive while others, such as the side tables, provide more privacy.

This versatile modular system can also adapt to special functions that may happen inside the store. Its components easily detach and roll around in order to accommodate poetry readings or other large gatherings.

Friends at OSonOS and other places have been interested in the nature of a new kind of coffee shop in which conversation can be a primary function. With so little shared public space in North American cities and towns these days, it seems more and more important to pay attention to these third places.

As an aside, my local coffee shop here on Bowen Island is called The Snug. It is an important community hub, especially in the winter time when locals gather there in the mornings and afternoons and get straight on what’s going on. The previous owners were so trusting of the community that they even turned over the keys to myself and friends so we could have weekly Irish music sessions there. Those sessions continue under the new owners as well.

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