Author Archives: Timothy Burke

A Bedtime Story

My own Congressman has a heart-warming analogy on his website about why a Constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget is our most important national priority right now. Yes, he’s one of those who is against raising the debt ceiling, even … Continue reading

Posted in Politics | 3 Comments

Technology, Note-Taking and Research Workflow

I was asking about this on Twitter and I’ll ask here, since it was hard to explain in 140 characters. Last summer, I asked for some advice on a couple of kinds of software and got some great suggestions. I’m … Continue reading

Posted in Information Technology and Information Literacy | 8 Comments

A Crude and Simplifying Metaphor

Russell Arben Fox replies in comments to my rant on the politics of good-enough with a very appropriate challenge: isn’t that project itself something that calls for extraordinarily difficult and challenging kinds of tactical and strategic work, mobilizing and mass … Continue reading

Posted in Politics | 3 Comments

Towards an Opt-Out Button in Left-Liberal Debates

I’ve recently had a couple of interesting exchanges with valued folks about formal electoral politics and their connection to the question of what progressive politics ought to be in the United States. In terms of the debt ceiling issue in … Continue reading

Posted in Domestic Life, Politics | 7 Comments

Escaping the Maze by Unplanned Routes

I’ve been trying to think of what to say about the “reboot” of DC Comics’ line of published titles that has generated so much talk among comics bloggers and commenters. On one level, purely as a consumer, I’m just kind … Continue reading

Posted in Popular Culture | 2 Comments

Reform or Schadenfreude? Reading the Fall of the House of Murdoch

Of all the distressing things about this global moment, the most distressing of all is the seeming resignation of national, local and world publics about the parade of woes confronting them. I’m not offering this as the stereotypical complaint of … Continue reading

Posted in Politics | 4 Comments

Pictures From an Institution 5 (Training)

Another thing that happens in the summer in most colleges and universities is training with new technologies, pedagogies and subjects. Some faculty and staff go elsewhere for one or two week programs, and some programs happen at home. Today I’m … Continue reading

Posted in Academia, Digital Humanities, Pictures from an Institution, Swarthmore | Comments Off on Pictures From an Institution 5 (Training)

Paul Grobstein

I was devastated to find out that while I was away, Paul Grobstein, a biologist at Bryn Mawr College whom I’ve come to treasure as a colleague, had died on June 28th. Paul’s online footprint is extensive, particularly at the … Continue reading

Posted in Academia | Comments Off on Paul Grobstein

To a Medical Center in Fresno

My trip to California took a bit of a downward turn a bit more than a week ago when I began to develop a fever and associated symptoms (headache, dizziness, fatigue, sleeplessness) while in the southern Sierra Nevada. After a … Continue reading

Posted in Politics | 1 Comment

Is Tuolumne Worth It? Information Regimes Old and New

I’m posting this from Yosemite National Park, where I’ve been for a few days. The waterfalls this year are unusually spectacular due to extremely heavy snowfall in the Sierra Nevada over the winter. I was especially keen to show my … Continue reading

Posted in Information Technology and Information Literacy, Miscellany, Oh Not Again He's Going to Tell Us It's a Complex System | 2 Comments