Friday, September 20, 2013

Shall we play a game?: The rise of the military-entertainment complex 

The Army wants you to play video games: For decades, the military has been financing, inventing and perfecting them


Shall we play a game?: The rise of the military-entertainment complexThe origins of the U.S. military’s involvement with video games lie in its century-old status as this country’s primary sponsor of new technologies. A quick checklist of the technologies that either stem from or were significantly refined in defense-funded contexts shows how pervasive the military’s influence has been: digital computers, nuclear power, high-speed integrated circuits, the first version of the Internet, semiconductors, radar, sonar, jet engines, portable phones, transistors, microwave ovens, GPS—the list goes on. As Ed Halter writes in his book “From Sun Tzu to Xbox,” “The technologies that shape our culture have always been pushed forward by war.”

Monster (as in Beats) makes a tablet?

monster-m7-tablet-walmartMonster, the company known for its headphones and cables, is diving into the tablet arena with its new $149 M7, a 7-inch tablet available only at Wal-Mart. 

When we compared it to the iPad Mini specs online, the iPad appears to have a faster processor, but the M7 seems to have a better resolution screen. All other major specifications were equal.

But, is it worth $149? And, can it compete with all of the other Android tablets, and the iPad mini?

Read these articles to find out...

Monster creeps into tablet market with unassuming M7

by Devin Coldewey, NBC News


Monster announced Wednesday that they have a new tablet available only to Wal-Mart shoppers — a petite 7-inch tablet going for just $150.


Monster is selling a $149 tablet at Wal-Mart, but do you want it?

by Jeffrey Van Camp, Digital Trends


monster-m7-tablet-colors
In a perplexing announcement today, high-end audio cable and headphone manufacturer Monster announced that it’s making … a really cheap tablet. The Monster M7, a $149 Walmart exclusive, was announced today and is already available for order on the retailer’s online site. It will be available in Walmarts everywhere on Sept. 25. 
 The big selling point of the 7-inch M7 appears to be its color palette, which is bright enough to adorn a pack of Skittles. It will come in black, white, purple, blue, green, pink, orange, and red. Under the hood, we don’t see any huge red flags, but we have some big questions as well.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

My Homework Planner app

myHomework logo
Parents, Teachers and Schools
myHomework helps students at any level improve their organization and become better students.

With pricing options starting at Free, myHomework is helping students and schools in any financial situation.

For a fraction of the cost of paper planners, schools or parents can offer myHomework to their students ad-free.

5 apps to track homework assignments

These apps will help you get organized and remember assignments.

5 Apps to Track Homework Assignments
at NBC News

Whether you are the student or it's someone else in your family, it's important to keep things organized and on track from day one.


Monday, September 16, 2013

Help with literary analysis essays...

Roane State Online Writing Lab
Students are asked to write literary analysis essays because this type of assignment encourages you to think about how and why a poem, short story, novel, or play was written.  To successfully analyze literature, you’ll need to remember that authors make specific choices for particular reasons.  Your essay should point out the author’s choices and attempt to explain their significance.
Another way to look at a literary analysis is to consider a piece of literature from your own perspective.  Rather than thinking about the author’s intentions, you can develop an argument based on any single term (or combination of terms) listed below.  You’ll just need to use the original text to defend and explain your argument to the reader.

Germanna Community College
Downloadable PDF
A literary analysis is not merely a summary of a literary work. Instead, it is an argument
about the work that expresses a writer’s personal perspective, interpretation, judgment, or critical evaluation of the work. This is accomplished by examining the literary devices, word choices, or writing structures the author uses within the work. The purpose of a literary analysis is to demonstrate why the author used specific ideas, word choices, or writing structures to convey his or her message.


Bulletproof schools

After Newtown Tragedy, Some Schools Are All But Bulletproof 
by Craig Lemoult at NPR

Dara Van Antwerp, an armed school resource officer, will be permanently stationed at Panther Run Elementary School in Pembroke Pines, Fla. Across the country, schools have increased security after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Conn., last year.
Dara Van Antwerp, an armed school resource officer, will be permanently stationed at Panther Run Elementary School in Pembroke Pines, Fla. Across the country, schools have increased security after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Conn., last year.

iPhone colors... a sign of social status?


by Rachel Quester at NPR
"The iPhone is a social sign in addition to being a tool," Stahl says. "It is worn like a piece of fashion, emails are conspicuously 'Sent with my iPhone,' the shape changes to signal that the owner has the newest model, whole communities speculate about what the new iPhone will be like, etc.," he says.
The new iPhone 5c is displayed during an Apple product announcement Tuesday in Cupertino, Calif.So if the iPhone is in fact a social sign, do the new colors mean new distinctions between users?
Options were previously limited to black and white, and before the introduction of the iPhone 5 a year ago, it didn't seem that easy to tell apart the different models.
Now, the color of your phone signals the price you were willing to pay.

Google Drive gets an update with Google Keep

Google Keep Code Hints at Upcoming Google Drive Integration 

post-itby Jon Russell at The Next Web

Google Keep code hints at future Google Drive integration and support for video playback

Ever since Google launched Keep, its rival to note-taking apps like Evernote, there’s been an assumption that the service will integrate with Google Drive, which covers Google’s cloud storage and Google Docs services, but it seems that the connection will be broader than initially expected.

Continue reading the article here.

Apple's new iPhone processor may lead to wearable tech

Apple’s M7 chip is the Trojan Horse for its wearable computing plans

iPhone 5s M7 processorby Chris Brandrick at Gigaom

Could the iPhone 5S’s new M7 chip be something of a trojan horse, leading the way for Apple’s wearable-tech debut?

As expected, Apple’s Town Hall September 10th event went by without even a hint of a could-be iWatch, or any sort of wearable tech product. However, during the presentation Phil Schiller did tout an intriguing new iPhone 5S feature — the introduction of an all-new co-processor, dubbed the M7.

What could stop millions of smart phones from being shipped?

by Leo Mirani at Quartz

It was an industrial mishap barely noticed outside the arcane world of electronics supply chains. On Sept. 4, a fire engulfed a substantial portion of an SK Hynix production plant in Wuxi, China. The plant produced between a tenth and a sixth of the world’s supply of dynamic random access memory (DRAM), a sort of memory chip used in all computing electronics from laptop computers to mobile phones. Hynix is the world’s second-largest maker of the stuff, supplying everybody from Apple and Dell to Lenovo and Sony.
So how bad was the disruption? The effects of the fire were instant: the spot price of a benchmark unit of 2-gigabit DRAM jumped some 20% to $1.90 the following day, a three-year high. Prices show no sign of retreating. According to Trendforce, a research firm, the shipment of some 10 million smartphones and 11 million laptops could be affected within a month. 
Continue reading the article here

Is everyone a journalist?

The Government Wants To Define Who Qualifies As A Journalist

by Gregory Ferenstein at TechCrunch
tumblr_m41p5eymgW1rvc0w0o1_400Journalists and netizens have mixed feelings about a long-sought federal media shield law that is headed to a vote in the Senate. The Free Flow of Information Act of 2013 would protect designated journalists from revealing their sources against a subpoena. Dozens of established media outlets are thrilled about the law, which was derailed in 2009 after WikiLeaks ignited a global debate about a new kind of journalism. But, after 3 years, no member of Congress seems willing to add in protections for leakers like Julian Assange or Edward Snowden.
“The world has changed. We’re very careful in this bill to distinguish journalists from those who shouldn’t be protected, WikiLeaks and all those, and we’ve ensured that,” Schumer said. “But there are people who write and do real journalism, in different ways than we’re used to. They should not be excluded from this bill,” said author Senator Charles Schumer.
 Continue reading the article here.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Confusing our web resources in class?

I get it. We use several different websites in class. They can get confusing. So, here's the breakdown:

Blogger - Quick announcements (which will also be on Edmodo), interesting stories, college prep information, technology news, apps for students, etc. By responding to blog posts not related to a class assignment, you can earn bonus points 1st quarter (English 2 only). Second quarter you will be required to participate on the blog.

Edmodo - Specific assignment details, announcements, a place for students to ask questions, participate in online discussions, get help, etc.

Google Drive - Use Google Drive and your academic Google account to turn in essays (when required), peer edit, have people proofread your writing, etc. You can also use Drive to collaborate on group projects.

Parent Connect - Your official online grade book. The only grade book you should worry about.

Remind101 - Once you sign up to receive text messages or emails, you don't need to do anything! You don't need to download an app, go to the website or anything. Just receive the messages when I send them.

We are sure to use more online resources this year, but you can do it! You can keep track of them all. I will help. You can also ask questions whenever you have them.


Add these sites to your bookmarks bar here at school (if you are logged in to Google it will save those bookmarks and pull them up on any computer) and at home. In fact, if you use Google Chrome on your tablet or smartphone, Chrome will remember your bookmarks as long as you are signed in to Google.

Need a fun way to check your grammar?

Let's face it - if you find grammar fun, you probably don't get out enough. 

But, jobs and scholarships have been lost due to simple grammar mistakes; so, even though grammar isn't fun, it is important. 

The rest of your life people will judge you based on your perceived intelligence. If you sound smart, they will think you are smart. If you sound uneducated, they will assume you are. 

Here are a few links to websites that allow you to review the rules and practice your grammar skills, without opening a boring textbook.

Big Dog's Grammar
Maybe some dull, basic English grammar stuff here, but I know how to get to the meat of any subject. Join me as I nose my way through the least you need to know to bluff your way through Freshman comp or any general writing task.

Here you have a list of the bare essentials of grammar. These are the things that English teachers love to comment on in your papers. They really are important, and, no, those profs don't just mark them so they can keep you from ever getting anything higher than a C on a paper.

If getting your point across in writing or making someone think you know what you're talking about is ever important to you, you have to get a handle on these things!

Big Dog is also available in Spanish.

Grammar Bytes! Grammar Instruction with Attitude



Grammar Bytes
Test your grammar knowledge here. Fun interactive exercises await!

Grammar Bytes (www.chompchomp.com) has handouts, links to YouTube videso, games, a quick guide to tips and rules, etc. 

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

College graduates earn > $3million ?



This Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation video (You Tube) estimates that by 2018, 22 millions graduates with college degrees will be needed in the United States.

Clowning around in crisis...

Clowns Without Borders: entertaining children in crisis for 20 years – in pictures 

Clowns Without Borders: DRCThe Guardian home

Clowns Without Borders, an artist-led organisation that works with children affected by war, violence or other social issues, marks its 20th anniversary this year. Tahmeena Bax talks to Jamie McLaren Lachman, director of the South Africa branch, about CWB's work.

View the rest of the photos here.

The Many Faces of 9/11 as told in The New Yorker covers

2011_09_12_Juan_Twin_Towers.jpg9/11 New Yorker Covers  

Wednesday is the twelfth anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. That tragedy has been examined in the pages of The New Yorker, and also on its cover. Here is a slide show of some of those covers, reflections of the changed urban, political, and cultural landscape that 9/11 left behind.
See the rest of the slideshow at The New Yorker here


How the N.S.A. cracked the web...


How the N.S.A. cracked the web


POSTED BY MATT BUCHANAN at The New Yorker
It’s been nearly three months since Edward Snowden started telling the world about the National Security Agency’s mass surveillance of global communications. But the latest disclosures, by the Guardian, New York Times, and ProPublica are perhaps the most profound yet: the N.S.A. and its partner agency in the United Kingdom, the Government Communications Headquarters, possess significant capabilities to circumvent widely used encryption software in order to access private data.

nsa-privacy-290.jpgEncryption poses a problem for intelligence agencies by scrambling data with a secret code so that even if they, or any other third-party, manages to capture it, they cannot read it—unless they possess the key to decrypt it or have the ability to crack the encryption scheme. Encryption has become only more pervasive in the decade since the N.S.A.’s “aggressive, multipronged effort to break widely used Internet encryption technologies” began in 2000. When you log into Gmail or Facebook, chat over iMessage, or check your bank account, the data is typically encrypted. This is because encryption is vital for everyday Web transactions; if for instance, you were to log in to your Gmail account using a park’s open wireless network and your username and password were transmitted in plain form, without being encrypted, your credentials could potentially be captured by anyone using that same network.

Continue reading the article here.

What if your dad built Auschwitz?

Hiding in N. Virginia, a daughter of Auschwitz

WRITTEN BY Thomas Harding, 
The Washington Post
PUBLISHED: SEPTEMBER 7, 2013

Brigitte Höss lives quietly on a leafy side street in Northern Virginia. She is retired now, having worked in a Washington fashion salon for more than 30 years. She recently was diagnosed with cancer and spends much of her days dealing with the medical consequences.

Brigitte also has a secret that not even her grandchildren know. Her father was Rudolf Höss, the Kommandant of Auschwitz.

It was Rudolf Höss who designed and built Auschwitz from an old army barracks in Poland to a killing machine capable of murdering 2,000 people an hour. By the end of the war, 1.1 million Jews had been killed in the camp, along with 20,000 gypsies and tens of thousands of Polish and Russian political prisoners. As such, Brigitte’s father was one of the biggest mass murderers in history.

Continue reading the article here.

When did literally literally change?

Ambrose Bierce. Ever heard of him? Bierce, like Mark Twain, is a famous American writer known for his satire and humor. Bierce predicted, even in the 19th century, that the word literally would someday be used to mean figuratively. And now, in the 21st century, it has.

Weighing in on ‘literally,’ but figuratively, of course

By Gene Weingarten, The Washington Post

To the Nobel Prize committee:

I am writing to suggest that you make your first posthumous award in literature, and that it go to Ambrose Bierce, the 19th-century American satirist. I have always admired Bierce, but I do not write merely as a fan; I write to acquaint you with what may well be the greatest feat of long-range prognostication in the history of the written word.

Continue reading the article here.

So You Want To Be A Private Eye?

So You Want To Be A Private Eye?

So You Want To Be A Private Eye?

Bruno Strebel spends his days tracking missing persons, insurance scammers and white-collar criminals. The former cop founded a detective school that teaches others to do the same.

By Valérie de Graffenried
LE TEMPS/Worldcrunch

ZURICH — He takes out an old leather briefcase and points to a tiny hole on the side the size of a pin head. “That’s where the camera is. Invisible from the outside,” says 60-year-old Bruno Strebel, head of Zurich’s Private Detective Academy, “the only school of this type in Switzerland.” This diminutive man is also the chairman of the Professional Detectives Association, and his cold blue eyes try to assess people quickly. He weighs every word he speaks.

We’re meeting at his academy’s offices in the Zurich neighborhood of Höngg. A former airport police officer, Strebel became a detective in 1977. “A man was watching me at my workplace,” he explains. “One day, he came up to me, told me I could be doing much better and gave me his detective card. A few weeks later, intrigued, I called him, and we started working together.”

Nicki Minaj's real life copyright law case

Photos: Nicki MinajMusician sues rap star Nicki Minaj

Nicki Minaj stole for her hit "Starships," claims lawsuit filed by underground artist Clive Tanaka

By Jason Meisner
Chicago Tribune reporter

Pop star Nicki Minaj burned up dance floors last summer with her hit song "Starships," which set a Billboard record for its stretch of 21 consecutive weeks in the Top 10.

Clive Tanaka, meanwhile, is an underground artist who has cloaked himself in mystery. While his meticulously crafted electronic music has won accolades, he's never performed in public. His fans don't know his real name or even where he hails from.

Now Tanaka, in a lawsuit filed under the name of his company, is accusing the Trinidad-born Minaj of stealing from his 2011 song "Neu Chicago" to create the electro-pop hooks that drove her best-selling single.

Continue reading the article here.

Teenagers... they just don't listen!

Even When Told True Risks, Kids Often Misjudge Them 

by NANCY SHUTE
I told him he would break his arm if he did that. But he did it anyway.September 10, 2013 2:29 PM

Parents are forever warning children and teenagers that bad things will happen if they take big risks. But the kids never seem to listen. That may be because their brains just aren't properly processing the odds that they'll break an arm or be in a car crash.

To find this out, researchers at University College London asked 59 young people, ages 9 to 26, to guess the odds that particular bad things would happen to them. The list of 40 unfortunate events ranged from being seriously injured in a car crash to getting lice.

Finish reading the article here.

How Two Newspaper Reporters Helped Free an Innocent Man

How Two Newspaper Reporters Helped Free an Innocent Man

Daniel Taylor didn't commit murder — and the author, a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist, proved it in The Chicago Tribune. But it took the justice system more than a decade to catch up.


BY MAURICE POSSLEY, The Atlantic

“Air is air, you know?” he said after a few moments. “But the air I breathed in when I walked out that door was totally different. Really, I lack the vocabulary to explain it. I am really out.” He smiled broadly. “I am really free.”

Read the rest of the article here

English 2 Response to Literature Rubric

English 2 students - Don't forget you have an essay due tomorrow.
"Is Montresor a Reliable Narrator?" (Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado")
The rubric that will be used for grading can now be found at Edmodo.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Midterm? Already? Argh!

It's true. Midterm is this Friday. 

Time to get your ducks in a row. 

Of course, I will be sending home midterms for students who are under-performing (D/F). 

But, if you would like me to send home a midterm for quality grades, let me know. I would be happy to! (Especially if it keeps you from being grounded.)