Rae Dong

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thatkindofwoman:

Love.

thatkindofwoman:

Love.

March 26, 2012 by Rae Dong
March 26, 2012 /Rae Dong /Source
ideas, books
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tumblr_m1i6biFrYK1qcokc4o1_1280.jpg
March 26, 2012 by Rae Dong
tumblr_m1i6biFrYK1qcokc4o2_640.jpg

theatlantic:

Confirmed: The Internet Does Not Solve Global Inequality

If you live in a rich country, the Internet has probably changed the way you consume (and produce) information. But when you look at global-scale knowledge production, things are as they ever were: the Anglophone world dominates with the United States doing the lion’s share of academic and user-generated publishing.

Those are the messages of the Oxford Internet Institute’s new e-book, Geographies of the World’s Knowledge, from which the above graphics were drawn. The book’s authors, Corinne Flick of the Convoco Foundation and the Institute’s Mark Graham and Viktor Mayer-Schonberger, reluctantly conclude that the Internet has not delivered on the hopes that it would make knowledge “more accessible.”

“Many commentators speculated that [the Internet] would allow people outside of industrialised nations to gain access to all networked and codified knowledge, thus mitigating the traditionally concentrated nature of information production and consumption,” they write. “These early expectations remain largely unrealised.” 

We’re not only talking about publishing in academic journals or Wikipedia. The researchers also sampled user-generated content on Google and found that rich countries, especially the United States, dominate the production of user content.

The fact of the matter is that people without money can’t afford to get the education necessary to publish in academic journals, Internet-enabled or not. The other fact of the matter is that the vast majority of people in very poor countries don’t spend their time producing content for free. Hope as we might, the Internet isn’t a magic wand that makes the world more equal. 

Read more. [Image: Oxford Internet Institute]

March 26, 2012 /Rae Dong /Source
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interesting concept →

May 23, 2011 by Rae Dong

Volunteering your professional skills through a Catchafire Project provides service that is 10 times more valuable than an average volunteer’s hourly wage. We help you make the biggest impact possible with your limited time.

May 23, 2011 /Rae Dong
ideas, words
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“We do not grow absolutely, chronologically. We grow sometimes in one
dimension, and not in another; unevenly. We grow partially. We are
relative. We are mature in one realm, childish in another. The past,
present, and future mingle and pull us backward, forward, or fix us in
the present. We are made up of layers, cells, constellations.”
— Anaïs Nin (via quotesforintellectuals)
April 06, 2011 by Rae Dong
April 06, 2011 /Rae Dong
quotes, ideas
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kayliafisher:

Translation from page: cut squares of newsprint larger than nails. apply a base coat of polish. when nails are completely dry, soak them in alcohol, then press newsprint on nail and slowly pull off. top coat to seal.

kayliafisher:

Translation from page: cut squares of newsprint larger than nails. apply a base coat of polish. when nails are completely dry, soak them in alcohol, then press newsprint on nail and slowly pull off. top coat to seal.

April 04, 2011 by Rae Dong
April 04, 2011 /Rae Dong /Source
ideas, cute
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thatkindofwoman:

Words to live by. For Ladies as well.

thatkindofwoman:

Words to live by. For Ladies as well.

March 28, 2011 by Rae Dong
March 28, 2011 /Rae Dong /Source
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May 10, 2009 by Rae Dong

JK Rowling at Harvard, June 2008

May 10, 2009 /Rae Dong
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