Archives
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May 20, 2013
On Tornadoes
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April 28, 2013
The Digital Public Library of America
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April 12, 2013
→ Mendeley and Open Access
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April 5, 2013
History Harvest Blitz Week
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March 26, 2013
Interview for Digital History@Rice
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February 24, 2013
The Link Blog Experiment
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February 23, 2013
→ Secrets of Data Visualization
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February 3, 2013
→ The MOOC Bubble
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January 28, 2013
Parsing CSV Data with Ruby
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January 8, 2013
Defining Digital Humanities
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December 28, 2012
→ E-book Readership Rising While Print Declines
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December 15, 2012
→ Digital Jubilee
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December 13, 2012
→ About Beards
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December 13, 2012
→ Perspective Icons for Omnifocus
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December 11, 2012
→ Fussy Coffee
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December 7, 2012
Using Text Expansion in My Research Workflow
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December 5, 2012
Word Processor Mode in Vim
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December 3, 2012
New Job, Joining Stanford
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November 27, 2012
→ 1970s Homebrew Computer Club Newsletters
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November 26, 2012
→ Remove Multiple Open With Entries in Finder
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November 26, 2012
OmniFocus Workflow and Notes
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November 24, 2012
Using AppleScript to Automate Notetaking
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November 23, 2012
→ The Beards of Silicon Valley
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November 21, 2012
→ The Silicon Prairie
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November 20, 2012
Using Markdown Like an Academic
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November 17, 2012
Lorem Ipsum Block in Sublime Text
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November 14, 2012
Searching My Brain
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November 10, 2012
→ What Your Web Design Says About You
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November 9, 2012
→ Star Wars Episode VII May Have Found Its Writer
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November 8, 2012
→ Evernote 5's New iOS Interface
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November 1, 2012
→ Africa's Silicon Savannah
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November 1, 2012
→ Ethiopian Kids Hack OLPCs
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October 16, 2012
Opening Marked in Vim
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October 12, 2012
Better Web Scraping with Nokogiri
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October 10, 2012
Building Your Own Memex
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October 8, 2012
→ Github Training
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October 2, 2012
→ The Blossom Coffee Machine
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September 29, 2012
→ Bit Rot
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September 27, 2012
→ How the Internet Ruined San Francisco
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September 24, 2012
Grad Students Guide to Good Coffee
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September 21, 2012
→ Fewer Copyright Restrictions Benefit the Economy
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September 19, 2012
→ The NSA Data Center in the West
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September 18, 2012
→ Handy Guide to Regular Expressions
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September 12, 2012
→ Resources for the Academic Job Market
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September 5, 2012
Turning 28
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September 4, 2012
On Podcasts
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August 28, 2012
→ One Giant Leap
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August 13, 2012
Towards Better PDF Management with the Filesystem
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August 8, 2012
→ The Tech Specs of Curiosity
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August 6, 2012
→ Backup Now
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July 25, 2012
→ Indulge in Curiosity
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July 23, 2012
→ Mangling the Origins of the Early Internet
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July 18, 2012
→ UCI Study Finds People Who Check Email Less Frequently Have Better Focus
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July 16, 2012
→ What the Internet Looks Like
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July 16, 2012
→ The Vertue of the Coffee Drink
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July 11, 2012
What I've Learned as an Academic Blogger
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July 10, 2012
→ Digital History Training Becoming Common in Public History Programs
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July 10, 2012
→ Writing for History Buffs
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July 9, 2012
→ The Busy Trap
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July 5, 2012
→ Google Tracking Wildfires in the West
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July 5, 2012
→ Becoming a Stylish Writer
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June 16, 2012
→ Dotfiles on Github
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June 15, 2012
→ How to Brew French Press Coffee
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June 7, 2012
A Few New Scripts
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June 6, 2012
AHA Forming a Task Force on Digital Scholarship
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June 6, 2012
Popup Footnotes
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June 4, 2012
→ An Alternative GTD System
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May 24, 2012
→ Content on the Web
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May 22, 2012
Forking the Rubyist Historian
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May 16, 2012
→ The Bastards Book of Ruby
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May 15, 2012
It's About the Problem
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May 15, 2012
→ World Aeropress Championship
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May 10, 2012
→ Hemingway on Writing
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May 8, 2012
→ Open Source Data Journalism Handbook Launched
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April 25, 2012
Adam Lisagor's AeroPress Tribute
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April 24, 2012
A Simple Ruby NGram Generator
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March 28, 2012
→ 1862 Great Plains Symposium
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March 3, 2012
Full Trash
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March 1, 2012
→ Give It Five Minutes
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February 29, 2012
→ The Internet is Not Broken
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February 15, 2012
The French Press Method
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February 5, 2012
Journals in the Digital Age
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February 2, 2012
The Paleo Diet
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January 22, 2012
Redefining Scholarship in the Digital Age
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January 18, 2012
Standing Against SOPA
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January 13, 2012
A Call to Redefine Historical Scholarship in the Digital Age
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January 5, 2012
Digital History at the AHA
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January 1, 2012
New Year
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December 27, 2011
→ A Literary History of Word Processing
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December 17, 2011
Legacy Research
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December 7, 2011
Directions in Digital Humanities Research
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December 1, 2011
Alone Together
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November 17, 2011
Who Controls the Master Switch
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November 9, 2011
What My lolcat Ate For Breakfast
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November 3, 2011
The Architecture of Humanities Cyberspace
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October 27, 2011
Peer Reviewing Writing History in the Digital Age
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October 25, 2011
The Obligation of Open Access
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October 20, 2011
Latour and the Social
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October 13, 2011
Models for Narrative in Digital Humanities
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October 11, 2011
The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood by James Gleick
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October 6, 2011
SpecLab and Digital Aesthetics
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October 6, 2011
Thanks, Steve
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October 5, 2011
Remembering Steve Jobs
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September 28, 2011
Spatial Humanities and Visual Narratives
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September 26, 2011
Digital Humanities at the 2012 American Historical Association
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September 22, 2011
Information and Data in the Digital Age
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September 14, 2011
Electronic Text and the Digital Humanities
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September 7, 2011
The Medium of Digital Humanities
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September 1, 2011
Organizing Knowledge and the Future of the Humanities
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August 29, 2011
The Digital Humanities Seminar
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August 23, 2011
→ Project 2000 - Apple Computer
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August 4, 2011
Constructing a Digital Humanists' C.V.
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July 22, 2011
Using Notational Velocity
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July 17, 2011
Own Your Identity
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July 12, 2011
On Writing and Notebooks
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July 9, 2011
Twitter from the Command Line
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June 30, 2011
Grown Up Computing
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June 29, 2011
Silicon Valley and the Cold War
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June 29, 2011
→ Writing in the Age of Distraction
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June 29, 2011
→ How Books Are Made, 1947 Style
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June 29, 2011
→ Internet Predictions from 1982
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June 28, 2011
→ The Market for Digital Textbooks
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June 27, 2011
→ US Supreme Court Rules Video Games Protected Under the First Amendment
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June 27, 2011
→ Self-Publishing is About to Get Real
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June 27, 2011
→ What Happens On the Internet Every Sixty Seconds
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June 26, 2011
→ Why Macs Cost More Than PCs
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June 26, 2011
→ Dropbox Breach Affects Fewer Than 100 Accounts
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June 9, 2011
→ Visualizing Historical Data and the Rise of Digital Humanities
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May 29, 2011
→ Gaming the Archives
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May 27, 2011
→ Of Goats and Headaches
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May 25, 2011
→ Digital Humanities: Not Building, But Sharing
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May 18, 2011
→ Writing and the Problem of Quick Consumption
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May 10, 2011
Designing Digital History
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May 9, 2011
→ The Humanities Done Digitally
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May 5, 2011
Longform Writing on the Web
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April 28, 2011
→ The Challenge of Writing
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April 19, 2011
Migrating to Jekyll
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April 3, 2011
→ Go Write
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March 29, 2011
→ Alternative Scholarly Publishing
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March 22, 2011
→ Code School
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March 17, 2011
Day of DH
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March 15, 2011
→ "You think you’re being a leader, but you’re probably being a manager."
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March 15, 2011
Initial Thoughts on TileMill
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March 13, 2011
→ Go Be Awesome
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March 12, 2011
→ Instapaper 3.0
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March 4, 2011
→ A Web Designed for Reading
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March 3, 2011
→ Upgrading Windows
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March 3, 2011
→ How Twitter's TOS Changes Hurt Academic Research
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March 3, 2011
→ Digital Historical Research
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March 3, 2011
→ The American Literature Scholar in the Digital Age
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March 3, 2011
→ Editing in the Digital Age
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March 2, 2011
Apple iPad 2
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March 2, 2011
→ Defending the Humanities
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March 2, 2011
→ Coverage of the Apple Event
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March 2, 2011
Digital History and Continuous Deployment
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March 1, 2011
→ What Scholars Want from the Digital Public Library of America
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March 1, 2011
Why I Don't Use A Commenting System
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February 14, 2011
→ Using Vim
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February 14, 2011
→ What is the Internet?
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February 13, 2011
FREQr Version 2
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February 8, 2011
→ Programming Guides
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February 3, 2011
→ Stanford Tool DataWrangler
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February 2, 2011
→ Less Yack, More Hack
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January 30, 2011
→ Creating a Government-less Internet
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January 30, 2011
→ Learn How to Code
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January 29, 2011
→ EFF Uncovers Widespread FBI Violations
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January 25, 2011
→ The Importance of No
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January 24, 2011
→ Hiring Front-End Engineers
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January 22, 2011
→ Focus
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January 19, 2011
→ Road Train Technology
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January 17, 2011
→ Netflix Spends 20 Times More on Postage than Bandwidth
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January 16, 2011
Facebook and the Problem of Publics
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January 12, 2011
The Rubyist Historian: Our First Program
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January 8, 2011
The Rubyist Historian: Randomness
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January 7, 2011
The Rubyist Historian: Working With Advanced Data
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January 4, 2011
The Rubyist Historian: Arrays and Hashes
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January 2, 2011
The Rubyist Historian: Loops and Control Structures
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January 1, 2011
→ RSS is Dying
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December 31, 2010
The Rubyist Historian: Methods and Classes
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December 29, 2010
→ URL Design
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December 29, 2010
The Rubyist Historian: Getting Started
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December 23, 2010
→ Net Neutrality
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December 22, 2010
→ Why We Program
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December 14, 2010
→ A Great Year for Ruby
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December 11, 2010
→ Start Using CSS3 and HTML5 Now
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December 10, 2010
The Rubyist Historian: The Series
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December 3, 2010
How I Learned Code
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November 28, 2010
→ Ruby vs. Python
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November 28, 2010
FREQr, a Command Line Word Frequency Generator
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November 27, 2010
Refocusing on Content
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November 24, 2010
Pianobar, Your Command Line Pandora Client
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November 20, 2010
→ Long Live the Web
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October 11, 2010
→ Douglas Rushkoff, Program or Be Programmed
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October 10, 2010
→ Some Good Words to Live By
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October 8, 2010
Open Access Scholarship and Computers in the Humanities
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October 8, 2010
Back to Blog (Basics)
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October 2, 2010
Excuse the Mess
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August 10, 2010
Preparing for Your Semester Teaching Assistantship
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October 25, 2009
Tool Review: TokenX and Language Analysis
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September 7, 2009
Tool Review: Google Earth for Digital Historians
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June 3, 2009
Digital History as a Research Methodology
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April 20, 2009
Foundational Material in Digital History
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December 18, 2008
Framing Red Power: Newspapers and the Trail of Broken Treaties
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November 29, 2008
How To: Designing Digital History
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November 8, 2008
Open Source Scholarship, and Why History Should Be Open Source
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November 7, 2008
The Dell Mini 9: A Historian's Review
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October 26, 2008
The WHA: A Debrief
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September 18, 2008
The Promise of Digital History
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May 2, 2008
Kindle as a Metaphore for the History Web
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April 23, 2008
The Challenge of Digital History
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April 12, 2008
Liveblogging the Rawley: The Historical Community Online
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April 8, 2008
Bobley Visits UNL