Monthly Archives: March 2010

FCC Releases Broadband Plan


The FCC Broadband Plan was released on March 16, 2010. Get details of the Plan and learn about how accessibilty and the needs of people with disabilities are considered and included. Add your comments to the FCC website. Continue reading

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Daniel Reetz: The Why in DIY Book Scanning |


via the Berkman Center, [Today] The Why in DIY Book Scanning | Berkman Center: Daniel Reetz, founder and steward of the DIY Book Scanner community Tuesday, March 23, 12:30 pm Berkman Center, 23 Everett Street, second floor This event will … Continue reading

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Health Care REform Email From Barack Obama


I received this email message from the President last night (March 21, 2010) at 11:51 p.m. I remember similar historic votes when the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 were passed in Congress. I don’t have any kind of personal documentation from 1964 (I was 9 years old then. I lobbied for the ADA for two years and was invited to the signing ceremony at the White House on July 26, 1990. I have plenty of documents and memorabilia from that experience, though none of it is online. After hearing CBC Spark’s show on personal digital archives, I know I need to do something about that before all that stuff is lost in the clutter. Continue reading

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Was Shakespeare A Plagiarist?


Plagiarism is constantly in the news these days, as it was in 2006 when Harvard student Kaavya Viswanathan’s How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got A Life was exposed as less then original. But, as we know, claims of literary plagiarism go back centuries. So why do people still get so worked up about it? Mike Pesca reflects on the past, present and future of plagiarism. Continue reading

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Edward Tuffte Seeks Visual Clarity On Recovery.gov


Edward Tufte is perhaps the country’s foremost evangelist for the clean, clear and rich presentation of complex information. The Obama administration’s stimulus package is flooding the economy with 787 billion dollars for employment and public works projects. Put the two together, as Obama did earlier this month when he nominated Tufte for the stimulus advisory board with the hopes that the public will have a fighting chance of understanding where the stimulus money went and what it’s doing. Continue reading

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