Yes I'm alive. Yes I'm back from camping. Yes it was good.
But, despite all my fitness training these last four months to strengthen my back, I hurt myself. Again.
More precisely, I strained my back and might have been able to work it out if it weren't for the fact that 5 days after I got back, I hitched a ride in the backseat of an Echo with some pals who were heading to Niagara Falls but I got off in Oshawa to visit an old pal. I then spent 9 hours walking around a huge mall in flip flops toting heavy Williams & Sonoma bags full of margarita mix, guacomole mix and measuring spoons. That, plus lugging heavy luggage aboard the VIA train home and then trying to remove it from the luggage storage area and *rrrriiip!* there it went.
I've been "convalescing" ever since, trying to get it back in shape.
So this week's variety of posts will be snippets and bits of things I've been thinking about or reading. I'll put them all down, rather than saving them for individual posts, as I won't be online much in the next two weeks - more travel and camping is forthcoming.
Saturday, July 30, 2005
Sunday, July 10, 2005
Brain food on vacation
As I prepare to go rustic camping for a week in the beautiful Laurentian mountains (i.e. no electricity or running water and I have to schlep my stuff almost a half a kilometre to my site), my friends have been snickering at me because my book bag is almost as large as my food and clothing bags. They're assuming that I am toting around all the latest in brain candy a la Nora Roberts, Dean Koontz, Sherrilyn Kenyon etc. However, if they had been able to take a peek in my admittedly bulging black nylon bookbag, they would be surprised -- it is holding as much brain food as candy.
So what am I bringing with me to read under the blue skies, pine and birch trees and sparkling waters of Lake Monroe? Here's a small crosscut:
Dilemmas of the American Self by John Hewitt
Hewitt is my new favourite symbolic interactionist. His view is more pessimistic than the classic SI theorists and his idea of juggling constructed identities through strategies of self construction make sense to me from the excerpted chapters I've read. I look forward to seeing how it ties together into a coherent unified theory.
The Internet Galaxy by Manuel Castells
I've read bits and drabs of this, of course. No self-respecting digital culture academic can ignore it. I've never taken the time to read it in its entirety though. I hope to do so this week.
Everything Bad is Good for You by Steven Johnson
His latest book is one I've been waiting to read as he tends to take a rather positive approach to Western popular culture, while still managing to be analytically critical. This book in particular interests me because it deals with an issue that I know several digital game researchers have to confront daily - the perceived idea that video games are bad for us and bad for humanity overall. I look forward to seeing how he constructs the alternate argument.
What Just Happened? by James Glick
Got this in the remainders discount bin through Indigo. It goes over the beginnings of info tech and its strange laissez-faire attitude with software defects (aka "bugs"). While it may rehash much that I already knew, I hope to glean some new insights. And yes this book might straddle the divide between food and candy.
It is my hope that I get to read a few of these, though even I, fast-reader that I am, cannot hope to read all 30 of the books I've brought. But better feast than famine when on vacation, hmmm?
I leave today, so I'll be silent here for a week. I'll post again upon my return and let you know how I did, and what the balance between brain food and brain candy actually ended up being.
So what am I bringing with me to read under the blue skies, pine and birch trees and sparkling waters of Lake Monroe? Here's a small crosscut:
Dilemmas of the American Self by John Hewitt
Hewitt is my new favourite symbolic interactionist. His view is more pessimistic than the classic SI theorists and his idea of juggling constructed identities through strategies of self construction make sense to me from the excerpted chapters I've read. I look forward to seeing how it ties together into a coherent unified theory.
The Internet Galaxy by Manuel Castells
I've read bits and drabs of this, of course. No self-respecting digital culture academic can ignore it. I've never taken the time to read it in its entirety though. I hope to do so this week.
Everything Bad is Good for You by Steven Johnson
His latest book is one I've been waiting to read as he tends to take a rather positive approach to Western popular culture, while still managing to be analytically critical. This book in particular interests me because it deals with an issue that I know several digital game researchers have to confront daily - the perceived idea that video games are bad for us and bad for humanity overall. I look forward to seeing how he constructs the alternate argument.
What Just Happened? by James Glick
Got this in the remainders discount bin through Indigo. It goes over the beginnings of info tech and its strange laissez-faire attitude with software defects (aka "bugs"). While it may rehash much that I already knew, I hope to glean some new insights. And yes this book might straddle the divide between food and candy.
It is my hope that I get to read a few of these, though even I, fast-reader that I am, cannot hope to read all 30 of the books I've brought. But better feast than famine when on vacation, hmmm?
I leave today, so I'll be silent here for a week. I'll post again upon my return and let you know how I did, and what the balance between brain food and brain candy actually ended up being.
Tuesday, July 05, 2005
What I'm doing on my summer vacation
Exams are over until Thanksgiving. The sun is shining and I'm wearing flipflops and a tank top. It is summer and I'm on vacation.
Big deal, you say? Well, actually, for me, yes. As I've been telling all and sundry in the last few weeks, this summer will be the first summer I've had footloose and free since the late 70s. No job, no school, no schedule. Just 8 glorious weeks of hanging by the pool, reading and chilling.
Well, that's the plan anyway. As it has shaped up so far, I've actually not read much and have been busy visiting friends, planning my Laurentians camping trip (starts next week) and trying to figure out what, if anything, I need to cram for in order to do well on the GREs. For my Canadian pals who read this, the GRE is the exam you have to write in order to get into U.S. grad schools. Georgetown won't take me without it.
My plan for the summer, then, is to camp, read digital culture books that I've been meaning to get to, read scifi and fantasy novels, and indulge in some eBaying. Oh and slathering on the sunscreen too, of course.
I may or may not be posting much here, as a result. It will depend on whether or not the ideas I find in my reading feel appropriate for this space.
Have a great summer!
Big deal, you say? Well, actually, for me, yes. As I've been telling all and sundry in the last few weeks, this summer will be the first summer I've had footloose and free since the late 70s. No job, no school, no schedule. Just 8 glorious weeks of hanging by the pool, reading and chilling.
Well, that's the plan anyway. As it has shaped up so far, I've actually not read much and have been busy visiting friends, planning my Laurentians camping trip (starts next week) and trying to figure out what, if anything, I need to cram for in order to do well on the GREs. For my Canadian pals who read this, the GRE is the exam you have to write in order to get into U.S. grad schools. Georgetown won't take me without it.
My plan for the summer, then, is to camp, read digital culture books that I've been meaning to get to, read scifi and fantasy novels, and indulge in some eBaying. Oh and slathering on the sunscreen too, of course.
I may or may not be posting much here, as a result. It will depend on whether or not the ideas I find in my reading feel appropriate for this space.
Have a great summer!
Friday, July 01, 2005
Gadget geek gear
I'm always on the lookout for new and cool geek gadgets. So the Thump from Oakley caught my eye. It's a mean combo of an MP3 player and Matrix-y frames and shades.
Now if only it was co-marketed with an Ipod instead of a generic player...
Who am I trying to kid? I am drooling anyway. They are fierce!
Now if only it was co-marketed with an Ipod instead of a generic player...
Who am I trying to kid? I am drooling anyway. They are fierce!
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