I've been enjoying repartee with the math-teach irregulars over on Math Forum, an old haunt of mine, approaching 6K postings over the years, maybe more if we count lost dialogs (had a good one with J.H. Conway when MF was still with Swarthmore).
The thread includes some commentary on OLPC and some early mistakes. I should have more links to back me up on some of this stuff. Wikipedia would likely sweep it out the door in its present form, but then I wasn't intending to write the veridical history. Our recent PPUG meeting at Produce Row included Michelle Rowley's proposal to do a Pycon talk centered around posture, ergonomics, yoga, all those tricks you need to know to stay buff in your cubicle. Reasonably, she was concerned this topic would be deemed too froo froo by the ambient serious-minded engineering culture, however she had solutions for that, namely software services, written in Python, that would encourage self-awareness while working. Your phone might have a few words to say about your posture occasionally, thanks to a tickler file you threw together in some DIY hack job, latter ported to github and turned into a community service enterprise, complete with forking branches. We talked about the self quantification movement springing from athletics mixing with cloud services. This'd make work in a cubicle a little more like a gym class. The next generation of cubicle may have more "monkey bar" features, letting you hang upside down while coding. I could see a whole office doing that, maybe at Marvel Comics. Urban Airship. Michelle is an accomplished Djangsta and systems architect, with an earlier background in PHP. She's working on a yoga-related web site for teachers, a kind of Khan Academy for yogis, minus most of those Youtubes (that's not how she describes it, and I'm not doing her business model justice, just giving some more background on our User Group leader). I brought a laptop to the meeting and showcased some of my Tractor Graphics, simple Python generators ploughing in 2D fields of ASCII. I've written a lot about that here before. I've got some sample slides in my Photostream, clearly early draft in that the spellchecker is turned on and giving wavy lines in Powerpoint. I've pointed math-thinking-l to the thread, so far without sparking any commentary. That's a sleepy-head list these days. Kirby Thread on Math Forum: http://mathforum.org/kb/thread.jspa?threadID=2299146&tstart=0 _______________________________________________ Edu-sig mailing list Edu-sig@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/edu-sig