Posted in Educationon Apr 25, 2007
Today is the last day of finals, and I’m done. But as of this point, if you’re not done, and you have a test in the testing center, you are in trouble. I’ve never seen a longer line for the testing center. The line is out the door. It is past the Brimhall building. It goes past the McKay building. It is almost to the JFSB. I wonder what happens if they go to close tonight and there is still a huge line.
Posted in Writingson Apr 21, 2007
If you were to walk across a typical university campus, you would most likely see many students with little white iPod earphones, listening to music. It is nearly impossible to ride public transportation without seeing someone listening to their portable music device. Just about everywhere you go, people listening to music. Music has found its role in just about every aspect of modern life. From television programming to shopping establishments, music has the potential to influence our moods and behaviors (Bruner 94).
Flooding our environment with tunes everywhere, music has the potential to influence our intellectual development. Can particular listening habits increase our intelligence? This question was made famous by a 1993 article in Nature magazine titled “Music and Spatial Task Performance” by university professors Frances Rauscher, Gordon Shaw, and Katherine Ky. They presented research results that suggest that, after listening to Mozart, college students increased their scores on spatial sub-tests in the Stanford-Binet IQ test (611). The spatial sub-tests measure a person’s ability to reason and mentally manipulate shapes and figures. In their research, students listened to about ten minutes of Mozart’s Piano Sonata, and subsequently scored eight to nine IQ points higher on spatial tests taken within ten minutes of music listening. Students did not improve in IQ tests taken later than fifteen minutes after listening to Mozart, nor they did they improve their IQ tests after sitting in silence or listening to relaxation instructions (Hetland 105).
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Posted in Technicalon Apr 20, 2007
How would you respond if I told you that all it would take is a few clicks to upgrade your Windows XP to Wndows Vista? That it would be able to download and upgrade the entire system in a matter of hours (depending on the speed of your Internet connection). What if I said it would also upgrade your word processor, web browser, and most of the other commonly used applications? What if I said it wouldn’t even cost you a thing?
Posted in Technicalon Apr 19, 2007
Thunderbird is an email software sibling to Firefox, the excellent web browser from the Mozilla foundation. Today I found out that version 2.0 was released for Thunderbird. Among the new features are:
Posted in Lifeon Apr 19, 2007
I feel like I can breathe again. And breathing means blogging. It has been a busy semester, and I’ve had to cut back on a lot of things in my life. I’ve lost a few friends, a few ounces of sanity, and I haven’t been able to blog quite like I used to. In fact, I blogged more in each of the first four months of 2006 separately than I have in all of 2007 so far.
Hopefully with the semester finishing up, I’ll be able to breathe. I hope I can be more social, make some friends, and blog. Next week is the first week of the rest of my life. World, get ready, because I’m back.
Posted in Technicalon Apr 18, 2007
I noticed recently that Google has a web page widget for Google Talk. I have one major suggestion:
I manage an instance of Google Apps for Your Domain. It would be more than great if Google could work out an instance of the Talk Widget to work with a Google Apps domain. The widget could be either added to the customized Google Apps homepage, or it could even be added to another homepage for the domain.
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