thx, Nick.
On Oct 7, 2008, at 9:23 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
I am taking the liberty of forwarding this to the FRIAM group
because I think it is such a great opportunity. It is the kind of
thing large numbers of people pay big money to go here in some hotel
ball room somewhere and it is happening right here in Santa Fe.
Please see below.
Hope to see you there on Wednesday (and the following Tuesday).
Nick
Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Ethology,
Clark University ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
----- Original Message -----
From: Don Begley
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 10/7/2008 10:11:04 AM
Subject: sfx News: Three Tuesdays Tomorrow Night Instead
Presidential Debate Looms:
Three Tuesdays -- Unwinding the Rhetoric -- Postponed to October 8
at 6:30 pm
The second session of Tom Johnson's Three Tuesdays workshop
(described below) has been rescheduled for tomorrow night, October
8, to avoid conflict with tonight's presidential debate. The time
and location remain the same, 6:30 at Santa Fe Complex.
Swimming Against the Flow
(October 8, 6:30 pm)
Presidential debates; vice presidents, too; ads, emails and web
pages: claims and counterclaims abound. Come to this second workshop
at Santa Fe Complex to learn how to look beyond the scripts and see
what is really going on this this fall's campaigns.
From soap to soapboxes, ads, debaters and talking heads work
overtime to control or influence the flow of information available
to voters. Learn how to swim against the flow, by navigating
upstream through the flood of information around us to find where
the information comes from and investigating its accuracy in this
second of the Three Tuesdays workshops before November's elections.
On Tuesday night, October 7, journalist Tom Johnson will show
workshop participants how to track data to their upstream sources.
Web pages and their data are not static events; learn how to find
the "signs" of where they came from, who owns the site(s) and
sometimes who links to them. Johnson will discuss how investigators
can use these attributes to advantage and also take a step back to
consider the "architecture of sophisticated web searching."
The third and final workshop, on October 14, will explore the payoff
for the research done by the workshop's participants: following the
money to see what and who is supporting the campaign. This final
workshop looks at web sites that make it easier to follow the
election money and focuses on how to get their data into a
spreadsheet. Then what? A short intro to slicing-and-dicing the
numbers. (Even if you are a spreadsheet maven, please come and act
as a coach.)
These workshops will give participants an opportunity to do some
hands-on ("On-line hands-on", that is) investigation of New Mexico
politics. Participants are also encouraged to bring a laptop if they
can. After learning to do the online research needed to understand
what's happening in the fall political campaign, participants will
have the opportunity to do homework assignments and contribute to
the Three Tuesdays wiki so their discoveries will be available to
the general public.
Everyone is welcome but space will be limited. A suggested donation
of $45 covers all three events or $20 will help produce each
session. Click here to sign up.
Tom Johnson's 30-year career path in journalism is one that
regularly moved from the classroom to the newsroom and back. He
worked for TIME magazine in El Salvador in the mid-80s, was the
founding editor of MacWEEK, and a deputy editor of the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch. His areas of interest are analytic journalism,
dynamic simulation models of publishing systems, complexity theory,
the application of Geographic Information Systems in journalism and
the impact of the digital revolution on journalism and journalism
education. He is the founder and co-director of the Institute for
Analytic Journalism and a member of the Advisory Board of Santa Fe
Complex.
Santa Fe Complex is located in the Railyard Art District within
walking distance of the hotels, restaurants and shops at the plaza
downtown. We're housed in two facilities, the project space at 624
Agua Fria and the work space at 632 Agua Fria.
The conference area contains meeting rooms and facilities for short-
term use associated with on-going sfComplex projects. The project
space houses the great room, where we hold events and offer Internet
access, working facilities, a coffee lounge and work carrels for
laptop users.
While there is parking at 624 Agua Fria, the Romero Street parking
lot is more conveniently located for the 632 facility. Romero St. is
an old-style Santa Fe ox-cart road just east of the 624 driveway.
Follow it until it opens up to two lanes and turn hard right into
the parking lot for 632.
Here's a map to our location. For more information, call Don Begley
at 505/216.7562.
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FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
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============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org