jschwartz 's Profile

Member since Jul 19, 2007, follows 0 people, 1 public groups, 26 public bookmarks (28 total).

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  • When the Thrill of Blogging Is Gone ... - NYTimes.com on 2009-06-08
    • According to a 2008 survey by Technorati, which runs a search engine for blogs, only 7.4 million out of the 133 million blogs the company tracks had been updated in the past 120 days. That translates to 95 percent of blogs being essentially abandoned, left to lie fallow on the Web, where they become public remnants of a dream — or at least an ambition — unfulfilled.
  • Technorati Popular: Top 100 blogs on 2009-06-08
  • Blogger: Lenses - Post a Comment on 2008-10-22
    • What is ultimately lost in all of this is understanding: t
    • rationality is lost.
    • 36 more annotations...
  • NCTE Inbox Blog: Twitter: 140-Character Professional Development and Writing Tool on 2008-06-11
    • Alice J. Robison, who teaches in the Comparative Media Studies Program at MIT, pointed out a great explanation of how Twitter builds and strengthens social networks yesterday on the TechRhet discussion list. The Wired article “Clive Thompson on How Twitter Creates a Social Sixth Sense” Robison points to explains:

      It's like proprioception, your body's ability to know where your limbs are. That subliminal sense of orientation is crucial for coordination: It keeps you from accidentally bumping into objects, and it makes possible amazing feats of balance and dexterity.



      Twitter and other constant-contact media create social proprioception. They give a group of people a sense of itself, making possible weird, fascinating feats of coordination.
  • GA English 9 / E Block: Lord of the Flies on 2008-06-11
    • Throughout the book there are references of normal civilization. The kids at the beginning try to keep their daily lives a part of how the conduct them selves on the island
    • . Another point, why was the book called the Lord of the Flies? The name was only mentioned once and you had to wonder whether it was Simon or whether is was the head of the pig that was left for the beast. But back to my main point. Was it better that the kids were exactly that, kids? Would it have been better if they had the experience that grown-ups have. Should the kids have known how to make a government, hunt for food, or make peace? maybe i will use Who is the Beast? how did it change over time? why were they so afraid? they hadn't seen it and only some were saying that they actually saw it. the older kids were saying that it didn't even exist. what was the beast? who was the beast? did they overcome the beast? did the beast beat them? did it beat them because of the two deaths, or did the kids win because there were only two deaths? did Simon know who the beast was? did Ralph or piggy know how to beat it or even that there wasn't one or a real one to be afraid of?
  • GA English 9 / E Block: Pride & Prejudice on 2008-06-11
    • I took this quote to mean that Mr. Bennet never wanted to see Lydia and Wickham in his house. But reading after i finished chapters 6-10 i think now it means that he never wants them to live at Longbourn.
  • Blogger: GA English 9 / E Block - Post a Comment on 2008-06-11
    • Blogger
      Taryn said...

      Why did Hallie die, will it help Codi grow? has it hit codi yet? She thinks it is a dream...i have had that feeling before... will doc homer comprehend that she has died? will he relive the pain from the realization that she is dead every time he forgets that she is gone. did hallie tell codi that she died? In Codis dream "Hallie followed me down the path. I didnt see her come, but i heard her voice right behind me. 'Codi stop. shes too heavy. you can put her down now.' 'no i cant she will fall.' 'let her go she wont fall.' 'i cant.' "let her go. let go. she'll rise." page 308. so maybe hallie was trying to warn Codi that she died. also it is proof that hallie will still be in codi's life. she will always be there to help codi, always in her DREAMS!!!! it is also interesting that it hasn't hit Codi yet, but when she does cry it almost isn't all for Codi, it is for the person in the ambulance, for her self, her father, the world, and for Hallie. and as we mentioned before all of Codi's breakdowns are because of multiply things.

  • GA English 9 / E Block: Secret Life of Bees on 2008-06-11
    • The Secret Life of Bees has many important themes that are focused on throughout the novel. Including grief, forgiveness, motherhood, and love, but the theme that I find most important is maturing.
  • Emily Gould - Exposed - Blog-Post Confidential - Gawker - NYTimes.com on 2008-06-10
    • My blog post was ridiculous and petty and small — and, suddenly, incredibly important. At some point I’d grown accustomed to the idea that there was a public place where I would always be allowed to write, without supervision, about how I felt. Even having to take into account someone else’s feelings about being written about felt like being stifled in some essential way.

    • As Henry and I fought, I kept coming back to the idea that I had a right to say whatever I wanted. I don’t think I understood then that I could be right about being free to express myself but wrong about my right to make that self-expression public in a permanent way. I described my feelings in the language of empowerment: I was being creative, and Henry wanted to shut me up. His point of view was just as extreme: I wasn’t generously sharing my thoughts; I was compulsively seeking gratification from strangers at the expense of the feelings of someone I actually knew and loved. I told him that writing, especially writing about myself and my surroundings, was a fundamental part of my personality, and that if he wanted to remain in my life, he would need to reconcile himself to being part of the world I described.

      After a standoff, he conceded that I should be allowed to put the post back up. As he sulked in the other room, I retyped what I’d written, feeling vindicated but slightly queasy for reasons I didn’t quite understand yet.

    • 1 more annotations...
  • Blogs Will Change Your Business on 2008-06-10
    • But you cannot afford to close your eyes to them, because they're simply the most explosive outbreak in the information world since the Internet itself. And they're going to shake up just about every business -- including yours.
    • Go ahead and bellyache about blogs. But you cannot afford to close your eyes to them, because they're simply the most explosive outbreak in the information world since the Internet itself. And they're going to shake up just about every business -- including yours.
    • 2 more annotations...

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