-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Archives
Categories
Tags
- #citylis
- #libchat
- Aaron Swartz
- altmetrics
- Artificial Intelligence
- artistsbooksonline
- Asymetrical Encounters
- BIALL
- Black Power
- blogging
- Brazil
- cataloguing
- Centre for Digital Humanities
- Civil Rights
- creative commons
- Databases
- Data Mining
- data protection
- Digital Humanities
- Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- DTD
- Dutch Digital Library
- Embedding
- Europeana
- Excel
- Franco Moretti
- HTML
- Information Architecture
- information governance
- information management
- Information Retrieval
- Italian feminism
- Jacob Harris
- JSTOR
- Julie Meloni
- literary studies
- London Lives
- Luciano Floridi
- many-eyes
- Mark-up
- Martin Hawksey
- metadata
- Michel Foucault
- moribund
- Ngram Viewer
- NHS
- Open Access
- OWL
- physical appearance
- RDF
- Richard Rogers
- Semantic Web
- Sharon Howard
- Shortcodes
- Stephen Hawking
- Stephen Ramsay
- TAGS
- TEI
- Terminator 2
- Terry Gilliam
- Texcavator
- text analysis
- The Hermeneutics of Screwing Around
- The internet's own boy
- Tim Berners-Lee
- Tim Hitchcock
- Twitter Analytics
- UK web archive
- Ulrich Tiedau
- Vannevar Bush
- voyant
- W3C
- wordle
- World Wide Web
Meta
-
Blogroll
Creative Commons Licence
Steve Mishkin: For what it's worth by https://smishkindita14.wordpress.com/ is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Tag Archives: JSTOR
#citylis at the Movies: The Politics of Information
Yes, I have been reading, honest, but for my first post this week I’d like to share my thoughts on two very different films I saw last week: The Internet’s Own Boy and Brazil. Fear not though hardy reader, for … Continue reading
Posted in Information Ethics
Tagged Aaron Swartz, Brazil, creative commons, JSTOR, Luciano Floridi, Open Access, Terry Gilliam, The internet's own boy
3 Comments