Persons, Objects, Projects

Real conversations help us become more fully human.

meyen hertzsprung's avatarThe God Who Understands Me

A few of my clients call it the Look. They direct the Look at someone, not in order to see a person, but because they want a ‘hit’ or a ‘fix,’ a way of escape from pain or boredom or drudgery. Another client uses the term Body Parts. He looks at a woman, and what he sees could be legs, or breasts, or feet. He might occasionally remember something as personal as a voice or a smile, but more often he is focused on the anticipated pleasure of being swept away into a fantasy world where he ‘gets what he wants.’ In various branches of academia over the last 60 years we know the Look as the ‘objectifying gaze,’ and it is a means of exerting control over others. People can be unpredictable and unreliable, but not if we objectify them, not if we break them down into things like…

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Crap, Damned Crap, and Big Data

Henrik Gabs Liliendahl's avatarLiliendahl on Data Quality

Lately Jim Harris made a thought provoking post on the Mike2 blog. The post is called A Contrarian’s View of Unstructured Data.

Herein Jim wrote:

“My contrarian’s view of unstructured data is that it is, in large part, gigabytes of gossip and yottabytes of yada yada digitized, rumors and hearsay amplified by the illusion-of-truth effect and succumbing to the perception-is-reality effect until the noise amplifies so much that its static solidifies into a signal.”

Indeed, the sound of social data may be like that. Yesterday I wrote a post called Keep It Real, Stupid. Herein I mentioned an apparently fake quote by Albert Einstein saying:

“If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough”.

Today I tried to see how the fake quote was doing on Twitter.

OMG: Going on more than one tweet per minute along with some mutations of the quote saying:

“If…

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The God of the Plod-Plod-Plod

meyen hertzsprung's avatarThe God Who Understands Me

One wintry day last fall I was going through my Facebook News Feed and came across story after story of God’s miraculous work: God rescued, God provided, God saved, all in seemingly supernatural ways. We’ve all heard those stories of how a cheque comes in the mail for the precise amount of an impending bill that wouldn’t have been paid, or how an unintended schedule change saves a life. I have a few of them myself, stories that talk about God’s power and love revealed in apparently undeniable ways.

I actually like those stories, although more often than not I feel like I’m walking a knife’s edge when I hear them (or even when I tell them), the suspense lying in whether I would let myself believe that God had much to do at all with the ‘miracle.’ People tell these stories in order to affirm or encourage faith, but…

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Startup Weekend was the Best Risk I Ever Took

A former teacher reflects on her first forays into the educational startup community.

TechPudding's avatarTechPudding

In the fall of 2013, I took a risk and experienced something that profoundly changed me. It was exciting, terrifying, and fueled by adrenaline. No, I did not go skydiving or F1 racing. I attended Startup Weekend.

Here’s What Happened

On November 8th, I attended Startup Weekend Women’s Edition, the first Women’s Edition in Canada. In a nutshell, Startup Weekend is an immersive 54-hour event where participants pitch, form teams, develop, and present an entrepreneurial venture in an adrenaline-saturated blink of an eye. There is a reason why the phrase, “No talk, all action” is the motto of the weekend! Here’s a short explanation of what it’s all about.

Why I Went

As a former teacher who currently works on a district edtech implementation and professional learning team, I have had plenty of opportunities to work with teachers, administrators and students and explore how to apply existing edtech…

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Attention shopping cart ditchers: look at what you’ve done

Return your shopping cart to the corral. Just. Do. It.

The Matt Walsh Blog's avatarThe Matt Walsh Blog

GetAttachment

Look at this. Do not avert your gaze. This. This is what greeted me when I came out of the grocery store today.

It’s not about the car. It’s not about scratches and minor dents. I don’t care about these things. And that’s not because I abhor materialism (although I do abhor materialism), it’s primarily because I’m incredibly awkward and clumsy. Due to my clumsiness, all of my physical possessions will, probably within 45 minutes of their initial purchase, be broken, battered, bent, scratched, dented and/or otherwise ruined by me.

I’ve had to adapt and grow accustomed to damaged goods, because I am so inclined to damage them. But, notice, I only damage MY OWN goods.

This isn’t about the car. It’s about the principle. For many years I have used every platform and every tool at my disposal to fight against the terrorists who leave their shopping carts chaotically…

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Gay Activism and Forced Abortions

The gathering darkness looms before us.

Gerard M. Nadal's avatarComing Home

cws_372_03_COPYRIGHT

Whether pro-life, pro-choice, pro-family, or pro-homosexual, activists never speak on behalf of only themselves when speaking to issues. They speak for larger constituencies. For years there has been within the homosexual activist community a vocal group with a contempt for heterosexuals in general, and women in particular. “Breeders, ” is their word for us, sneered with a venomous contempt. I’ve heard it uttered since the 1980’s. Thus, the following story from LifeSite News comes as no surprise:

SYDNEY, November 6, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Women should be forced to abort their children for the next 30 years as a part of global population control, homosexual activist Dan Savage told Australian television on Monday.

Savage, whose anti-bullying program “It Gets Better” was heavily promoted by President Barack Obama, made the statement during a four-member panel during the “Festival of Dangerous Ideas.”

Audience member Lisa Malouf closed the program by asking, “Which so-called…

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What Baptism Does For Us

What Baptism Does For Us

“God’s free gift is the beginning of our relationship with God. What we do with it is crucially important. Whether or not we receive the gift with gratitude and return to Jesus determines whether it is a fleeting moment of grace or a new way of life.”

One Rock 2013 WYD@Home

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One Rock 2013 WYD@Home, a set on Flickr.

Selected images from One Rock 2013, held at Mount St. Francis Retreat Centre in Cochrane, Alberta

Calgary 2013 Flood YYCFlood

Elbow River Flooding 2013Calgary Flood 2013Calgary Flood 2013Calgary Flood 2013Fish Creek ParkFish Creek Park
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Calgary 2013 Flood YYCFlood, a group on Flickr.

Photographs of 2013 Calgary Flood damage