What Teens, Screens and Digitally Divided Attention Spans Mean for Learning [Infographic] | The LAMP
Tag Archives: media
The Beginner’s Guide to SoundCloud | Mashable
Read: The Beginner’s Guide to SoundCloud | Mashable
You may also like:
- The Best Music Download Stores You’re Not Using (but Should) | LifeHacker
- The 25 Best Websites for Music Lovers | Flavorwire
- My long list of Music Discovery resources. | The Modern MLIS
‘Big Disconnect’ Offers Guidance for Parents in a Tech-Crazed World | PBS
Did you hear the one about the 7-year-old boy who opened a Wii on Christmas morning and when his parents finally checked on him, he’d played for 18 hours? Or the one about the 13-year-old girl who accidentally “butt-dialed” an old acquaintance whose number now belonged to a transsexual prostitute, who then launched a vendetta against the girl? Catherine Steiner-Adair, a psychologist whom parents seem to call whenever there’s a digital/psychological crisis at home, has heard all these stories and more, and shares them in “The Big Disconnect: Protecting Childhood and Family Relationships in the Digital Age.”
A new policy statement issued by the American Academy of Pediatrics on October 28 recommends parents control the quantity and content of the media their children consume, keep tech gadgets out of kids’ bedrooms, and model good behavior for kids by limiting their own tech use. Steiner-Adair advises the same limits, and backs these up with examples from the children and families she works with as a counselor. Here are the key lessons “The Big Disconnect” taught me, and the grades I’d give myself for how well I’m handling tech at each age.
Read: ‘Big Disconnect’ Offers Guidance for Parents in a Tech-Crazed World | Mediashift | PBS.
Upstagram Is A Flying Raspberry Pi That Publishes Live Pictures On Instagram | TechCrunch
What do Instagram, the Raspberry Pi and the movie “Up” have in common? When you mash all these things together, you get Upstagram, a neat hack that the Hackerloop team just unveiled.
First, the team made a replica of the house in “Up” using paper and foam. It was just big enough to fit a Raspberry Pi and its camera, a battery and a 3G hotspot. The Raspberry Pi, an open source and very cheap mini-computer to tweak, experiment and try new things with, is a hacker’s dream.
Then, the team used about 90 helium balloons to make the house fly above Paris’ landscape. While Instagram is only available on iOS and Android, they reverse-engineered the posting process to transform the Raspberry Pi into an Instagram-taking machine.
Read more: Upstagram Is A Flying Raspberry Pi That Publishes Live Pictures On Instagram | TechCrunch.
Recent Pew Research Links
The New Library Patron from Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
Lee Rainie, Director of the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project, will discuss the Project’s new research about library patrons and non-patrons: who they are, what their information needs are, what kind of technology they use, and how libraries can meet the varying needs of their patrons.
Photo and Video Sharing Grow Online | Pew Internet
A new study by the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project shows that 54% of internet users have posted original photos or videos to websites and 47% share photos or videos they found elsewhere online. Also: AFP: Smart phones boost photo, video sharing: study and from TIME: One Stat that Explains Why Instagram Is Adding Ads.
Tablet and E-reader Ownership Update | Pew Internet
The number of Americans ages 16 and older who own tablet computers has grown to 35%, and the share who have e-reading devices like Kindles and Nooks has grown to 24%. Overall, the number of people who have a tablet or an e-book reader among those 16 and older now stands at 43%.
1 in 7 Americans is offline. Why? It’s complicated | Kathryn Zickuhr, Pew Research | CNBC
Pew Data on News Consumption: Millennials Lead the Shift to Web Use | ContentBlogger
Mobile Health in Context: How Information is Woven Into Our Lives from Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
Digital Kids: how children are using devices, apps and media in 2013 | theguardian.com
A day-long liveblog covering the latest research, trends and views on childrens changing media habits…blending research links, videos, infographics and snapshots of previous Guardian coverage on children’s changing media habits, as well as some first-hand views from kids.
Includes clinks to media literacy reports, charts, survey results, etc.
Sample of the topics/questions:
- Can Minecraft create the next generation of quantum scientists?
- Question: where to start teaching my kids to code?
- What do tablets do to children’s developing minds?
Read: Digital Kids: how children are using devices, apps and media in 2013 | Technology | theguardian.com.
Recent Book News Links
Amazon
- Amazon Launches Day One Imprint Focusing on Poetry and Short-Fiction | GoodEReader
- Amazon launches MatchBook bundling programme | The Bookseller
Publishers
- HarperCollins Begins Selling eBooks Directly to Readers | GoodEReader
- Penguin Random House acquires Figment | Melville House. Figment is a site for teenage writers with 300,000 members.
Authors, Writers
- Writing Advice From George R.R. Martin, Karen Lord, and Other Sci-Fi/Fantasy Authors | Flavorwire
- Junot Díaz to Release Illustrated Edition of ‘This Is How You Lose Her’ | ColorLines
Books, Bookstores, Media
- Ireland to consider ending censorship of books | Melville House
- Marsan and Carvel for Jonathan Strange BBC1 adaptation | The Bookseller
- World Book Night Titles Announced | EarlyWord
- Canada Reads 2014 Top 40 | CBC Books
- 50 Books to Inspire Artists of All Kinds | Flavorwire
- 7 Great Works of Fiction Inspired by Famous Architecture | Flavorwire
- Amazing pics of an abandoned church turned into a bookstore in The Netherlands. Cool Bookish Places: Waanders In der Broeren | BookRiot
University of Texas at Austin Online Class Aims to Earn Millions | WSJ.com
Two University of Texas at Austin professors this week launched their introductory psychology class from a makeshift studio, with a goal of eventually enrolling 10,000 students at $550 a pop and bringing home millions for the school.
The professors have dubbed the class a SMOC—Synchronous Massive Online Class—and their effort falls somewhere between a MOOC, or Massive Open Online Course, a late-night television show and a real-time research experiment. The professors lecture into a camera and students watch on their computers or mobile devices, in real time.
The class, which made its debut [August 29, 2013], is emblematic of just how quickly the once-static business model of higher education is shifting as technology gives students more options and forces schools and professors to compete for their attention.
See the full story: University of Texas at Austin Online Class Aims to Earn Millions | WSJ.com.
The Anatomy of a Successful Responsive Website [INFOGRAPHIC] | Mashable
More Vendors Help Libraries Stream Video | The Digital Shift
Since the beginning of 2013, four major library vendors have announced the launch of new or expanded streaming services that will enable patrons to view movies and television shows at their library or at home using computers, tablets, smart TVs, or any device equipped with a web browser.
See the full article: More Vendors Help Libraries Stream Video | The Digital Shift.

