• A New York Times Dream

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    1 comment on A New York Times Dream

    This is a real dream I had, about four hours ago: I was with a friend in a shop of gadgets and curios – the sort of place that has soap dispensers attached to D-ring clips, or electronic scales with keyboards – when I spotted a odd device on the bottom shelf. It looked like…

  • The Quick Rise of Reading

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    1 comment on The Quick Rise of Reading

    A mere two weeks after I wrote about The Long Decline of Reading, which drew largely on the US National Endowment of Arts’ (NEA) 2007 data, the NEA promptly released a report (Reading on the Rise) showing that fiction reading rates significantly increased from 2002 to 2008. Not just for certain age groups or ethnicities,…

  • Mastery of Games

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    5 comments on Mastery of Games

    Chess is not a game I’ve ever been a big fan of. I played a little at school, but I never had the patience or concentration to really study the game or learn the moves. I’d often look at better players and have absolutely no idea what was going on or why they were making…

  • Ernst Choukula

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    3 comments on Ernst Choukula

    There’s been some ruckus about a History class at George Mason University in which students created a hoax about an ‘Edward Owens’, the “Last American Pirate”. They made a blog, put up some YouTube videos, and most annoyingly, created an article on Wikipedia. I find these hoaxes tiresome. We all know that it’s easy to…

  • The Long Decline of Reading

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    55 comments on The Long Decline of Reading

    “It doesn’t matter how good or bad the product is, the fact is that people don’t read anymore. Forty percent of the people in the U.S. read one book or less last year. The whole conception is flawed at the top because people don’t read anymore.” – Steve Jobs on eBook readers and the Amazon…

  • The ‘Chinese Rejection’

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    1 comment on The ‘Chinese Rejection’

    Probably an urban myth, but the ‘Chinese Rejection’ letter from publishers is a good laugh: “We have read your manuscript with boundless delight. If we were to publish your paper, it would be impossible for us to publish any work of lower standard. And as it is unthinkable that in the next thousand years we…

  • ARGs conference slides now online

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    Most of the slides from the ARGs in Charity and Education conference are now online, in a lovely Slideshare-embedded format. You name it – PowerPoint, Keynote, PDF – we’ve got it. There are also some links to good blog writeups of the conference, in case you want more commentary. Next time, we’ll record the sessions…

  • My Daily Read

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    2 comments on My Daily Read

    “You’re better off reading a bunch of blogs than most columnists.” – me, earlier today. Every time I open the Guardian, or the Times, or any other newspaper, I am disappointed by the poor quality of the columns and editorial. For the most part, they’re barely-informed polemics that are constrained by word limits and motivated…

  • Democracy Scorned

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    4 comments on Democracy Scorned

    The energy and public participation in the 2008 US Election has made many in the UK very jealous, and is raising questions about, say, why we don’t have primary contests to choose party leaders. Here’s how leadership contests currently work: Conservatives: MPs choose two candidates, who party members can then vote on Labour: the totality…

  • ARGs in Charity and Education Conference

    Despite the real and growing interest in ‘serious’ ARGs from companies and broadcasters, there hasn’t yet been a conference dedicated to the subject where people can share knowledge. There’s so much potential for what serious ARGs can do that I’ve worked with the guys at Law 37 to organise ARGs in Charity and Education, a…