Rogue Scholar Posts

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Published in quantixed

Hopefully I will soon break out of this funk of posting about either Mastodon or Twitter. But not yet! This post is to say that: I made a static archive of tweets for @quantixed and for @clathrin. There, you can read all my posts, which ended in 2022. How did I do it and why? I made the archive with this excellent tool written by Darius Kazemi.

Published in quantixed

There’s plenty of guides to getting going on Mastodon, aimed at people leaving Twitter. I just wanted to post a couple of technical points about making the switch that might be of interest to people who maintain webpages with Twitter content (feeds, embeds). Mastodon status updates (feed/timeline) Twitter provided a widget that meant that an account’s timeline could be embedded on a website.

Published in quantixed

A quick post about a puzzle called Wordle that is currently taking over the internet. It’s a mastermind-like game where the object is to guess an unknown 5-letter word. Puzzlers are encouraged to share their results after completing a puzzle. Here is an example for puzzle 192. So how do you know if your performance on today’s puzzle was any good? Why not benchmark your effort against the crowd?

Published in quantixed

Part of a series on the development of Early Career Researchers in the lab. We spent a session discussing how to create a research profile. This led to a second session on CVs. Here is an outline of what we covered. CVs We talked about different CV formats first of all. We focussed on academic CVs mainly, but we discussed the differences between academic and CVs for jobs outside academia.

Starting this week, ScholCommLab co-director Stefanie Haustein is publishing a series of guest posts on the Altmetric Blog about the role of Twitter in scholarly communication. Read on for a small taste of what to expect, and find the whole series at at altmetric.com/blog/. It’s almost been a decade since altmetrics and social media-based metrics were introduced.

Published in quantixed

My activity on twitter revolves around four accounts. I try to segregate what happens on each account, and there’s inevitably some overlap. But what about overlap in followers? What lucky people are following all four? How many only see the individual accounts? It’s quite easy to look at this in R. So there are 36 lucky people (or bots!) following all four accounts.

Published in iRights.info
Author Valie Djordjevic

Snapchat soll das neue Ding für den Online-Journalismus sein, sagen viele. Bei dem Instant-Messaging-Dienst bleiben private Nachrichten maximal 10 Sekunden auf dem Bildschirm, öffentliche Geschichten verschwinden nach 24 Stunden. Vor allem Teenager nutzen den Dienst. Und so hat Buzzfeed-Autor Ben Rosen (29) Unterricht bei seiner 13-jährigen Schwester genommen, um zu lernen, wie man richtig snapchattet.

Published in iRights.info
Author Hauke Gierow

Twitter hat neue Maßnahmen angekündigt, um seine Nutzer besser vor Belästigung zu schützen. Was zunächst begrüßenswert erscheint, erweist sich als zweischneidiges Schwert: Für Nutzer wird noch undurchsichtiger, was sie auf der Plattform dürfen, was nicht und was Twitter bei Verstößen unternimmt.Das soziale Netzwerk Twitter möchte seine Nutzer besser vor Stalking, Identitätsdiebstahl und anderer Belästigung schützen.