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What for decades could only be dreamt of is now almost within
reach: the widespread provision of free online education,
regardless of a geographic location, financial status, or ability
to access conventional institutions of learning. But does open
education really offer the openness, democracy and
cost-effectiveness its supporters promise? Or will it lead to a
two-tier system, where those who can't afford to attend a
traditional university will have to make do with online,
second-rate alternatives? Open Education engages critically with
the creative disruption of the university through free online
education. It puts into political context not just the Massive Open
Online Courses (MOOCS) but also TED Talks, Wikiversity along with
self-organised 'pirate' libraries and 'free universities'
associated with the anti-austerity protests and the global Occupy
movement. Questioning many of the ideas open education projects
take for granted, including Creative Commons, it proposes a
radically different model for the university and education in the
twenty-first century.
What for decades could only be dreamed of is now almost within
reach: the widespread provision of free online education,
regardless of a geographic location, financial status, or ability
to access conventional institutions of learning. But does open
education really offer the openness, democracy and
cost-effectiveness its supporters promise? Or will it lead to a
two-tier system, where those who can't afford to attend a
traditional university will have to make do with online,
second-rate alternatives? Open Education engages critically with
the creative disruption of the university through free online
education. It puts into political context not just the Massive Open
Online Courses (MOOCS) but also TED Talks, Wikiversity along with
self-organised 'pirate' libraries and 'free universities'
associated with the anti-austerity protests and the global Occupy
movement. Questioning many of the ideas open education projects
take for granted, including Creative Commons, it proposes a
radically different model for the university and education in the
twenty-first century.
WPF and Silverlight are unlike any other user interface (UI)
technologies. They have been built to a new paradigm that if
harnessed correctly can yield unprecedented power and performance.
This book shows you how to control that power to produce clean,
testable, maintainable code. It is now recognized that any
non-trivial WPF or Silverlight application needs be designed around
the Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM) design pattern in order to unlock
the technology's full data-binding potential. However, the
knowledge of how to do this is missing from a large part of the
development community even amongst those who work with WPF and
Silverlight on a daily basis. Too often there is a reliance on
programmatic interaction between controls and not enough trust in
the technologies' data-binding capabilities. This leads to a
clouding of design values and an inevitable loss of performance,
scalability, and maintainability throughout the application. Pro
WPF and Silverlight MVVM will show you how to arrange your
application so that it can grow as much as required in any
direction without danger of collapse.What you ll learn * Understand
why the separation of an application s View and its Model is
paramount, including the history of Model-View-Presenter and
Model-View-Controller. * Apply WPF and Silverlight s powerful
data-binding model correctly. * Examine how to organize an
application targeting WPF or Silverlight, including unit-testing,
source-control, separation of concerns, data serialization, and how
to tie everything together with MVVM. * Develop a full game
development application using MVVM by example. * How to serialize
the Model without being invasive, how to implement a plug-in
architecture that extends both the View and the Model, and how to
handle Exceptions gracefully. Who this book is for Developers that
wish to learn how to architect WPF or Silverlight applications to
ensure maintainability, testability, and separation of concerns.
This work explores new theories and directions in cultural studies.
What should or could cultural studies look like in the 21st
Century? New Cultural Studies is both an introductory reference
work and an original study which explores some of the most exciting
new directions currently being opened up in cultural studies. A new
generation has begun to emerge from the shadow of the Birmingham
School: a generation who have turned to theory as a means to think
through some of the crucial problems and issues in contemporary
culture. New Cultural Studies collects for the first time the ideas
of this generation and explains just why theory continues to be
crucial for cultural studies.The book explores theory's past,
present and future role in cultural studies, providing students and
researchers alike with an authoritative and accessible guide to:
some of the most interesting members of this 'post-Birmingham
school' generation; the thinkers and theories currently influencing
new work in cultural studies: Agamben, Badiou, Deleuze, Derrida,
Kittler, Laclau, Levinas, and Zizek; and the new territories being
mapped out across the intersections of cultural studies and
cultural theory: anti-capitalism, ethics, the post-humanities,
post-Marxism, new media technologies, the transnational.
The work of Samuel Weber has greatly influenced writers and
thinkers across the arts and humanities: including literary,
critical, and cultural theory; media, communication, theater, and
cultural studies; new media and technology; psychoanalysis; and
philosophy. His remarkable and inaugural texts have been especially
important to the deconstructive tradition, given his early
recognition of the importance of the writings of Jacques Derrida.
Taught by Theodor W. Adorno and Peter Szondi, he is equally at home
in the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School, in the German
literary tradition, or in psychoanalysis. Weber played an important
role in the process of translation, publication, and interpretation
that brought "theory" to prominence in the United States. His work
continues to reactivate and transform the legacy bequeathed to us
by figures such as Kant, Nietzsche, Benjamin, Heidegger, de Man,
and Derrida, not least by exposing the field of philosophy to
contemporary questions in the arenas of media, technology,
politics, and culture.This volume brings together a number of
eminent scholars seeking to assess the intellectual impact of
Weber's large body of writings. It also contains two new and
previously unpublished essays by Weber himself: "'God Bless
America!'" and "'Going Along for the Ride: Violence and
Gesture-Agamben Reading Benjamin Reading Kafka Reading Cervantes.'"
The work of Samuel Weber has greatly influenced writers and
thinkers across the arts and humanities: including literary,
critical, and cultural theory; media, communication, theater, and
cultural studies; new media and technology; psychoanalysis; and
philosophy. His remarkable and inaugural texts have been especially
important to the deconstructive tradition, given his early
recognition of the importance of the writings of Jacques Derrida.
Taught by Theodor W. Adorno and Peter Szondi, he is equally at home
in the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School, in the German
literary tradition, or in psychoanalysis. Weber played an important
role in the process of translation, publication, and interpretation
that brought "theory" to prominence in the United States. His work
continues to reactivate and transform the legacy bequeathed to us
by figures such as Kant, Nietzsche, Benjamin, Heidegger, de Man,
and Derrida, not least by exposing the field of philosophy to
contemporary questions in the arenas of media, technology,
politics, and culture.This volume brings together a number of
eminent scholars seeking to assess the intellectual impact of
Weber's large body of writings. It also contains two new and
previously unpublished essays by Weber himself: "'God Bless
America!'" and "'Going Along for the Ride: Violence and
Gesture-Agamben Reading Benjamin Reading Kafka Reading Cervantes.'"
Even after the 2008 financial crisis, neoliberalism has been able
to advance its program of privatization and deregulation. The
Uberfication of the University analyzes the emergence of the
sharing economy-an economy that has little to do with sharing
access to good and services and everything to do with selling this
access-and the companies behind it: LinkedIn, Uber, and Airbnb. In
this society, we all are encouraged to become microentrepreneurs of
the self, acting as if we are our own precarious freelance
enterprises at a time when we are being steadily deprived of
employment rights, public services, and welfare support. The book
considers the contemporary university, itself subject to such
entrepreneurial practices, as one polemical site for the
affirmative disruption of this model. Forerunners is a
thought-in-process series of breakthrough digital works. Written
between fresh ideas and finished books, Forerunners draws on
scholarly work initiated in notable blogs, social media, conference
plenaries, journal articles, and the synergy of academic exchange.
This is gray literature publishing: where intense thinking, change,
and speculation take place in scholarship.
This book is a satirical and sometimes surreal self-help guide,
which as well as challenging the orthodox perception of the
Beatles' status, presents an oppressed minority with a complete
defense strategy for dealing with any Fab Four fans reluctant to
give peace a chance. By breaking Beatles' fans down into seven key
groups, the author offers an invaluable insight into the mindset of
each individual strain. Why would anyone claim to enjoy the
Beatles' music? What's in it for them? (The reasons the Nostalgic
Impolitic, for example, will choose to become a fan will vary
greatly from those of the Latecomer or the American. They all long
to fit in, but where and with whom?) Once you learn to identify
which fan type is harassing you, simply follow the advice suggested
in this book for dealing with that particular strain, and before
you can say Pet Sounds, the fan will be retreating in defeat. The
groundbreaking research expounded in these pages is also
recommended reading for any form of Fab Four fan (apart from the
Beatle Head), who may be interested in learning how to distinguish
between articulate, cutting edge rock 'n' roll and bombastic
bubblegum claptrap.
The Accellera Universal Verification Methodology (UVM) standard is
architected to scale, but verification is growing and in more than
just the digital design dimension. It is growing in the SoC
dimension to include low-power and mixed-signal and the system
integration dimension to include multi-language support and
acceleration. These items and others all contribute to the quality
of the SOC so the Metric-Driven Verification (MDV) methodology is
needed to unify it all into a coherent verification plan. This book
is for verification engineers and managers familiar with the UVM
and the benefits it brings to digital verification but who also
need to tackle specialized tasks. It is also written for the SoC
project manager that is tasked with building an efficient worldwide
team. While the task continues to become more complex, Advanced
Verification Topics describes methodologies outside of the
Accellera UVM standard, but that build on it, to provide a way for
SoC teams to stay productive and profitable.
In the sciences, the merits and ramifications of open access-the
electronic publishing model that gives readers free, irrevocable,
worldwide, and perpetual access to research-have been vigorously
debated. Open access is now increasingly proposed as a valid means
of both disseminating knowledge and career advancement. In Digitize
This Book! Gary Hall presents a timely and ambitious polemic on the
potential that open access publishing has to transform both
"papercentric" humanities scholarship and the institution of the
university itself. Hall, a pioneer in open access publishing in the
humanities, explores the new possibilities that digital media have
for creatively and productively blurring the boundaries that
separate not just disciplinary fields but also authors from
readers. Hall focuses specifically on how open access publishing
and archiving can revitalize the field of cultural studies by
making it easier to rethink academia and its institutions. At the
same time, by unsettling the processes and categories of
scholarship, open access raises broader questions about the role of
the university as a whole, forcefully challenging both its
established identity as an elite ivory tower and its more recent
reinvention under the tenets of neoliberalism as knowledge factory
and profit center. Rigorously interrogating the intellectual,
political, and ethical implications of open access, Digitize This
Book! is a radical call for democratizing access to knowledge and
transforming the structures of academic and institutional authority
and legitimacy.
Where is cultural studies today? Does it have anything left to say?
Where is theory and where is politics? Certainly, cultural studies
seems to have lost its way somewhere between today's preoccupation
with the empirical and the theory revolutions of the 1980s and 90s.
Assessing the work of key theorists across the history of cultural
studies - Raymond Williams, Stuart Hall, Meaghan Morris and Angela
McRobbie - this book argues that the trend towards a more
politicized practice is in fact not political enough; theory, and
deconstruction in particular, can offer a more radical and a more
political engagement. Pinpointing the ambiguities that both
constitute and disturb cultural studies and outlining a radical
agenda for its future, this book is designed for all those
interested in cultural practice and theory.
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