I don't really care for little things that put people down... but it was amusing...
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Politics or Style?
I found this article on the front page of the NY Times.
Look Is the Same, the Labels have Changed
The article itself is kind of a bore, but I was just amused that this article was in "politics" and not "style."
I realize the person they're critiquing is in politics, but is it really meant under the Politics tab?
Look Is the Same, the Labels have Changed
The article itself is kind of a bore, but I was just amused that this article was in "politics" and not "style."
I realize the person they're critiquing is in politics, but is it really meant under the Politics tab?
Monday, October 20, 2008
Drunk Emailing
Here's an entertaining article about Drunk Emailing.
I wonder if Stanford will ever implement this into their system...
Also... Dr. Jeremy Bailenson is my Professor! and I found this article without even realizing that he was in it. hahahaha.
Drunk Emailing
Here's an excerpt:
"Jim David, a comedian who lives in Manhattan, said he wished he had Mail Goggles one night when he was “looped” and sent an e-mail message to a religious organization, “saying something like, ‘you people are directly responsible for gays everywhere getting beaten,’ ” he recalled in an e-mail message.
“I received a response from their legal department that wanted to know specific information as to exactly how I knew they were responsible, that these were very serious charges, and that I should receive a phone call from the F.B.I. soon,” Mr. David said. “I hit ‘delete’ faster than lightning and took an Ambien.” "
I wonder if Stanford will ever implement this into their system...
Also... Dr. Jeremy Bailenson is my Professor! and I found this article without even realizing that he was in it. hahahaha.
Drunk Emailing
Here's an excerpt:
"Jim David, a comedian who lives in Manhattan, said he wished he had Mail Goggles one night when he was “looped” and sent an e-mail message to a religious organization, “saying something like, ‘you people are directly responsible for gays everywhere getting beaten,’ ” he recalled in an e-mail message.
“I received a response from their legal department that wanted to know specific information as to exactly how I knew they were responsible, that these were very serious charges, and that I should receive a phone call from the F.B.I. soon,” Mr. David said. “I hit ‘delete’ faster than lightning and took an Ambien.” "
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Donner Scavenger Hunt 08-09
The video is too long for youtube... boo...
So instead, click the link below to connect to our scavenger hunt video!
Donner Scavenger Hunt 08-09
Donner Love!
So instead, click the link below to connect to our scavenger hunt video!
Donner Scavenger Hunt 08-09
Donner Love!
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Information Overload
Every day, we receive a barrage of emails that we complain about, yet at the same time can't live without.
In a span of 2 hours, it is possible for a person to get 40 new emails in their inbox, most of which are irrelevant to him or her.
Here's an article about our email use and the information overload that we experience.
A Marketplace for Attention
Here's another one:
Infomania
In a span of 2 hours, it is possible for a person to get 40 new emails in their inbox, most of which are irrelevant to him or her.
Here's an article about our email use and the information overload that we experience.
A Marketplace for Attention
The productivity of information workers is jeopardized by too much e–mail.
Companies are beginning to investigate the financial costs associated with information overload. Research from one Fortune 50 company estimated the cost of information overload at US$1 billion annually based on lost work time and reduced employee efficiency (Zeldes, et al., 2007). This estimate did not include additional costs associated with reduced work quality, job satisfaction and innovation. The estimated cost of information overload for the larger economy is stunning — US$588 billion annually (Basex Report, 2006).
Here's another one:
Infomania
A typical Intel knowledge worker receives 50–100 work–related e–mail messages each day
On average, knowledge workers can expect three minutes of uninterrupted work on any task
On average, a major interruption occurs every 11 minutes [24], the time to return to an interrupted task is 25 minutes [25], many incoming e–mail messages are reacted to within seconds of arrival [26] (implying constant e–mail monitoring to the detriment of concentration on the task at hand), and recovery from e–mail distraction takes 64 seconds [27]. It is thus fair, yet sad, to say that many knowledge workers have almost no uninterrupted work time – time that is essential to enabling creativity, innovation or serious problem solving [28].
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