Tensions between personal space and social space in mobile learning
Tensions between personal space and social space in mobile learning – Feedback
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Google Street View Privacy Issues
In the Tensions between personal space and social space in mobile learning symposium John Cook mentioned Google Street View and mentioned privacy issues.
I heckled from the back about how not only are you viewable on Google Street View but your image may then make the rounds on social news sites such as Digg. As you can see from here there are quite a few Digg front page stories that focus on Google Street View. Remember that a Digg story with two thousand odd diggs, will generally generate about fifty to a hundred thousand page views!
Personally I think it is a real issue and can only get worse.
It reminds me of a novel I once read in which privacy disappears (not through the internet but by wormholes).
The Light of Other Days looks at how the invention of wormholes which allow you to view anywhere anytime impact on society.
‘Space is what keeps everything from being in the same place. Right?’ With these words Hiram Patterson, head of the giant media corporation OurWorld, launches the greatest communications revolution in history. With OurWorld’s development of wormhole technology, any point in space can be connected to any other, faster than the speed of light. Realtime television coverage is here: earthquakes and wars, murders and disasters can be watched, exactly as they occur, anywhere on the planet. Then WormCams are made to work across time as well as space. Humanity encounters itself in the light of other days. We witness the life of Jesus, go to the premiere of Hamlet, solve the enigmas that have baffled generations. Blood spilled centuries ago flows vividly once more – and no personal treachery or shame can be concealed. But when the world and everything in it becomes as transparent as glass and there are no more secrets, people find new ways to gain vengeance and commit crime, and Hiram Patterson finds new ways to keep his Machiavellian schemes secret.’
Tensions between personal space and social space in mobile learning
ALT-C Opening Themes
Opening Keynote
It’s quite an enjoyable keynote from Dr Michelle Selinger Education Strategist, Cisco Systems.
It is a typical keynote in the sense that nothing innovative, nothing new (for me anyway), but a nice start to the conference and some enjoyable clips (I quite enjoyed the Southpark bit).
ALT-C Opening Address
Oh where shall I go…
So here we are on the first full day of ALT-C. Over morning coffee I had another look at the programme to see where I shall be going this morning and this afternoon.
I will need some time to prepare for my workshop so will be “missing” some of the day to setup and ensure I have everything ready.
I have decided to go with a mobile learning theme today. I will be going to the Tensions between personal space and social space in mobile learning symposium and then a series of short papers, projectBluetooth – delivering large-scale content and support to the mobile generation and Which side of the wall are you on? then I will go to Web 2.0 and informal learning which all look interesting.
Hopefully (wireless access permitting) will be blogging and adding photos to my Flickr account over the day.
Check out my Jaiku for intermittent thoughts over the day.
It’s not just Alan Partridge….
Famous people from Norwich
- Michael Andrews (artist) (1928-1995)
- Elizabeth Bentley 1767-1839.Authoress wrote ” Tales for Children in Verse”.Lived at 45 St St. Stephen’s Square.
- George Borrow (1803–1881), writer and traveller. In his youth Borrow was resident at Willow Lane. He attended the Norwich King Edward school. Borrow recollects his youth in the city and conversations with the philologist and translator of German Romantic literature, William Taylor in his semi-autobiographical novel Lavengro.
- Sir Thomas Browne (1605–1682). medical doctor, polymath scholar, encyclopedist and philosopher with interests in Biblical scholarship and the esoteric. The stylistic purity and stupendous learning displayed in Browne’s varied prose in the spheres of religion, science and art are minor classics of World literature.
- Edith Cavell (1865–1915) was born in Swardeston, 4 miles south of Norwich. She was a World War I nurse who was executed by firing squad by the Germans for helping allied prisoners escape in violation of military law. She is buried on Life’s Green, on the east side of Norwich Cathedral.
Continue reading It’s not just Alan Partridge….




