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Comment Re:Why do we even take notes? (Score 1) 569

I don't understand your point here. Are you saying it's more efficient for the professor to give the same lecture every term for years at a time, writing the same thing on the board over and over again? That they can't spend an afternoon with Inkscape and a word processor or a pad of paper and a scanner? Or that I'm somehow ignorant for being an autodidact?

I think your idea of "instruction" is vastly different than what happens at most universities. You get crammed into a class of 100 or so students and act as a passive receptacle for somewhere between 1 and 3 hours.

Later on you ask your friends for clarification, if they don't know, you ask the course newsgroup or go to office hours. THIS is where the real instruction happens.

The dude standing in front of the blackboard is just another medium, it is more effective for some than others. If this medium is what you think education is, I pity you.

Comment Re:Why do we even take notes? (Score 1) 569

Alright, so be honest here. How many times during lectures do you hint at what will be on the exam? How much emphasis do you put on the material that will be on the exam in terms of lecture hours spent talking about it?

And how much time do you spend teaching things that aren't on the exam?

Someone studying from the book won't know what you'll be measuring, they will get a broad and shallow education on the material vs the narrow and deep understanding that exams typically test for. They didn't necessarily learn less, but the only metric you're using will show otherwise.

Comment Why do we even take notes? (Score 2, Insightful) 569

I graduated 3 years ago, but it bothered me immensely when professors would write things on the board that weren't duplicated in the course notes. It was just a lazy way to enforce attendance. I always learned better out of books than by listening to someone, so sitting around in class just to transcribe felt like a waste of time.

So this whole issue of not having diagrams or about which device to use seems like a manufactured problem. Putting a PDF on the course website with all the diagrams and text would render it moot.

Comment Re:Needlessly alarmist (Score 5, Insightful) 158

I don't care about the BBC, I care about the inflammatory tone of the summary. CCTV is a network consisting of 19 channels, a small fraction is news that is favourable to the Chinese government but most of it is typical TV crap like talk shows, dramas, and cartoons.

Saying that delivering CCTV over iPhone is a new way to project political views or some form of indoctrination is about as accurate as doing a find/replace of CCTV for BBC in the summary. It is needlessly alarmist, it's a troll written by someone who has never watched TV in China.

I wish more networks would think about making their content available on the iPhone, state-sponsored or not. It's quite convenient. But if someone has an issue with CCTV's content or the lack of free speech in China, they should write accurately about that and not what medium it is delivered over.

Comment Needlessly alarmist (Score 4, Insightful) 158

"The UK's Heritage Minister has praised the growth of the iPlayer application from state broadcaster BBC as the Trust looks for new ways to project its political views. The free flash video streaming, one of a growing number from British state-owned news outlets, has gained 500,000 users in the month or so since it went online and is adding 2,000 new users each day, the BBC Trust said in a statement on its Web site. The iPlayer app has shown 'favorable performance' and proven especially popular during broadcasts of major events, such as a recent royal funeral, the statement said."

But I guess "Chinese government streams television network to iPhones" wouldn't be nearly as fetching.

Comment Freakonomics (Score 1) 630

Unlike a lot of the posters here, I think at that age, it's more important to show students why math is important than the concepts used by upper year college students. When I started my Math/CS undergrad, the department pretty much dismissed everything I was taught in high school and started from first principles. Even things I taught myself at that time outside of school like computer graphics turned out to be irrelevant.

In relation to statistics, I think they're vastly under taught and under appreciated in the high school curriculum. As much as engineers and scientists like to scoff at the lax rigor that's employed sometimes, statistics are essential to the social sciences. We need good psychologists, good economists, good politicians, and insightful voters, and statistics is how we get there.

Also, every time some USian I work with spits out that asinine Mark Twain quote about statistic or says "14% of all people can tell you they're made up", I just want to hit them. It seems like rhetoric has totally destroyed data in this country's discourse.

Anyways, the most interesting book I've read when considering this aspect is Freaknomics. It shows how data analysis can be used to explain everyday phenomena in society in laymen's terms. It's pulp, but it's interesting. There might also be others with a similar bent.

Comment Re:If you can't fail, why bother playing? (Score 1) 507

I agree with you completely about GTA 4. The worst part is that when you're driving back to a mission you've done twice before with an NPC, he'll say something along the lines of "Let's just listen to the radio" instead of repeating the mission dialogue again.

This is insane. It's an acknowledgement from Rockstar that they know there's tedium in having to repeat the same motions over and over again but they do nothing about it.

Role Playing (Games)

Fallout 3 Launches Amidst Controversy 397

Earlier this week, Bethesda released Fallout 3 after a long campaign of defending and protecting the game's reputation from claims that it contained inappropriate content. Ads for the game in Washington DC's subway system were pulled after they upset some touchy travelers over the depiction of post-apocalyptic Washington landmarks. Shortly before the game's release, early trailers were removed as well. Earlier this year, the game was banned in Australia for its in-game use of morphine, causing the drug's name to be changed to Med-X. On the issue of sensitive content, Bethesda's Emil Pagliarulo wrote in Edge Magazine about the design decision to disallow the killing of children in the game. Gamasutra ran an opinion piece on the same subject, and the Washington Post discusses the role of Washington DC in Fallout 3. On the DRM front, the game does come with SecuROM, but Bethesda says it's only used for a disc check. Reviews for the game have been overwhelmingly positive so far, despite reports of bugs with the save system and occasional lock-ups.
Operating Systems

Submission + - Is Foxconn deliberatley sabotaging Linux? (ubuntuforums.org) 3

Anonymous Coward writes: "A user on the Ubuntu forums posted a thread questioning the practices of the hardware manufacturer, Foxconn. From the Thread:
"I disassembled my BIOS to have a look around, and while I won't post the results here,I'll tell you what I did find.
They have several different tables, a group for Windws XP and Vista, a group for 2000, a group for NT, Me, 95, 98, etc. that just errors out, and one for LINUX. The one for Linux points to a badly written table that does not correspond to the board's ACPI implementation."
The worst part is Foxconn's insistence that the product is ACPI compliant because their tables passed to Windows work, and that Microsoft gave the the magic WHQL certification."

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