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"Apps I’d like to see"

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Blogger (Ryan) said...

There's a general gamifacation/life tracker thing at habitrpg.com. It's still kind of buggy, and obviously it doesn't have PhD life programmed into it to start with, but you can customize it. It seems like it's being rapidly developed at the moment, and I bet there'll be a smartphone app to accompany it soon. I'm a grad student and I use it basically how you describe, so clearly, the future is now.

10:44 AM, March 21, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Does it work? I mean, is it helpful to you?

10:45 AM, March 21, 2013

Blogger (Ryan) said...

I haven't been running my life through it, so I can't issue a very thoughtful verdict. As I say, it's kind of new so the occasional glitches have been a little discouraging to getting totally caught up in it. For instance, it will sometimes forget you've checked stuff off, added todos etc...then you come back the next day and it subtracts 'health' thinking you've missed a deadline, and you can't correct it. Or the servers will overload and you can't get to it for like an hr. So with stuff like that happening currently it is hard to rely on too much.

I'm talking it down more than I should though, they are clearly in a testing period, improving it constantly, and it seems really promising. It has a nice set-up of Behaviors, Daily Habits, and To-dos, which is a pretty decent way of dividing up your life. I find that the first two legitimately help nudge me to keep up certain good habits daily, (which is good for me because I'm one of those people who often works more in bursts and getting into routines is clearly better). So yeah, thinking about things in that way is certainly helpful for someone like me, especially as one of the most difficult aspects of grad school can often be the lack of structure.

Obviously it won't really make you do anything, but when they get it working more reliably, and (for a lot of people) get it into a phone app I think it'll be great. It's definitely more fun thinking about stuff that way than just crossing things off a list and trying to remember that I wanted to make myself wake up earlier this month or whatever.

11:19 AM, March 21, 2013

Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

The doctoral experience as a game? Too boring. Who gets a job at the end would be simulated by rolling dice. :-|

I am always amazed by folks who use Google, Facebook etc then complain how bad it is. Why not just use good software? Who cares if it's popular?

2:45 PM, March 21, 2013

Blogger Phillip Helbig said...

Lines we would like to see male actors utter in pornographic movies, #38: "Does it work? I mean, is it helpful to you?"

2:47 PM, March 21, 2013

Blogger Uncle Al said...

"Why, for example, doesn’t gmail..." Somebody else's patent. Answered entries' titles will be user-specified brightness, font, effects, and/or colors rather than being marked. "The intelligent robot that will do your household..." Tack down everything, blast through live steam. All accesses will be locked for safety, then everybody in the home is ordered to immediately leave.

I have zero apps in my life. This is a tremendous timesaver. There should be an app for it.

3:11 PM, March 21, 2013

Blogger msleifer said...

Regarding the seminar calendar thing, before we get to that we should at the very least have an open repository of pre-recoded talks. In fact, Lucien Hardy's original intention for PIRSA was to provide something like this for the whole of physics, so that talks would have a citable arXiv-like permanent URL. In the event, it was never opened up to other institutions because the challenges of transcoding and hosting video are a lot greater than converting and hosting papers. However, I think it would be good to open source the PIRSA codebase so that other institutions can host their videos in a common format. If it is made compatible with OAI-PMH then the metadata could be harvested and collected in a single site, as currently happens with institutional repositories for papers. I think it is very important that open standards are established for metadata on talks to the same extent that it has been done for papers. I usually learn much more from talks than from papers, so if you really want to have open science then this must be done.

Encouraging streaming and opening the access to it would be the next logical step after pre-recorded talks. I don't know if OAI-PMH can handle this, but if not then we need to establish some open standard for the metadata and incorporate it into all the livestreaming solutions. Having the metadata be harvestable is a better option than requiring people to enter data about talks into a central database. I am sure that Google Scholar and the other main academic search engines would then want to harvest this data.

3:15 PM, March 21, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Phillip: Yeah, maybe the doctor who signed the prescription?

1:57 AM, March 22, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Hi Matt,

Yes, I recall this vision for PIRSA and I find it a shame, really, that it never turned into reality. It would have been a great resource. Best,

B.

1:58 AM, March 22, 2013

Blogger Sabine Hossenfelder said...

Hi Ryan,

Thanks for sharing your experience. I find it very interesting indeed. It seems to have a great potential to change consumer behavior because it's a simple way to aggregate lots of information and present it to people in a simple way.

What I am thinking is for example that people would fill out some questionnaire about what is important to them and how important it is. For example to support the local economy or the national one, ecological or ethical worries, quality versus quantity, company reputation, and so on. Then they could go into a score and scan a few products and see which one aligns best with their values. Imagine how useful this could be to alleviate some of the alleged "irrational" decisions that people make because when they're standing in a store they simply can't process all the information that they allegedly take into account when buying products, with the result that their purchase decisions often do not align with their political or social values.

Does the app you're using have some functionality that goes into this direction?

Best,

B.

4:18 AM, March 22, 2013

Blogger Arun said...

An "eBay" for developers - post your job, receive bids, select a developer, get your requirements implemented - at your own risk, of course.

https://www.elance.com/

2:52 PM, March 26, 2013

Blogger Anonymous Snowboarder said...

Bee - I guess you must have watched too much "Jestons" when younger. I think Rosie is still a few decades away :(

Personally I would like an app that would make me not hate Java so much so perhaps I could write more apps.

7:21 PM, March 26, 2013

OpenID sammyhey said...

What a great idea for a research seminar channel. There used to be a research channel on Dish Network but they seemed to have few seminars and no way of finding out what shows were upcoming.

Do you know of any good resources currently available for finding research seminars online short of a research seminar channel?

1:38 PM, March 28, 2013

Blogger Plato Hagel said...

I hope its okay Bee to post this?

Just a little plug here about broadcasting system development for institutes of higher learning.

Any progress there and development could help with a system for broadcasting information within certain spectrum. Any work in that effort would not only help with the Institutes broadcasting and lectures, but would also provide for a format of such, developing a *free* community based information development system between existing frequencies.

I hope somebody jumps on this.

12:53 PM, March 29, 2013

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