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Blurts and collective creativity

There are four example formats for blurts that I want to consider here, although there are many others floating about that I could have discussed. They are: 1) facebook status updates, 2) twitter’s tweets, 3) moves in signtific’s forecasting games, and 4) comments in Tim Gowers’ mathematical blog. Each has a different character but each shows how the properties of length, rapidity, and openness can play into a successful conversation.

The author equates blurts to a form of brainstorming in which the participants—and not a moderator—shape the structure of the conversation.


Darwin

This and others like it are for sale via Zazzle. The artist is donating profits to the National Center for Science Education.


Is the Crime Mapping initiative failing UK communities?

A Cimex study looked at a bunch of police-operated crime maps in the UK and found them confusing and difficult to use, even when compared to the tabular crime data presented on UpMyStreet, a non-governmental website offering information for people planning a move within or to the UK.

The police websites mentioned in the article include: