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Tag: research

Scholars and practitioners: How do you read? (Not “how do you recognize shapes and turn them into meaning,” although that’s plenty interesting in its own right.)

I pretty much gave up reading for pleasure some time in high school (probably right around the time I was forced to read The Grapes of Wrath); I’ve probably read a dozen novels in the last thirteen or fourteen years. Now I read internet crap (news, essentially) and technical material, things found online and most easily consumed via LCD screen.

Except, for some reason, research papers. I can’t read research online. It doesn’t sink into my brain in any meaningful way unless I kill a tree and curl up with a stapled, 2-up duplexed printed copy and a highlighter or two. (I haven’t yet figured out why this is; perhaps my technique is broken—see below.)

And yet there are plenty of lovely PDF readers for the Mac: Skim (which I do use for LaTeX preview), Papers (winner of an Apple Design Award), and so forth. Clearly some people are able to consume journal articles and conference proceedings electronically, else there would be no demand for such tools.

So I ask: How do you consume your research or other non-reference technical material? Online or offline? More to the point: is there some refinement to my reading technique that will allow me to use a different medium (ideally, an electronic copy plus PDF annotation)? Or am I doomed to my pulpy ways?

Long time, no post. Just shipped off a huge paper—one that should stand a fair chance of being accepted—and am overcome with a deep sense of relief, even closure, to go with my profound exhaustion. Finally, on to other things: new ideas full of potential and old projects, long-neglected.

I’m back. I tried using Twitter, I really did, but thumb-typing snarky updates on my phone is painful, and 802.11 service was spotty. (Clearly, this is a way of communicating that was made for the iPhone.)

What’s more, there wasn’t really a lot to be snarky about, at least not a lot that fits into 140 chars. To wit:

Daniel Sandler: I’d like to draw your attention to one piece of prior art for Auditorium: the papal conclave. The election of the Pope occurs in proceedings that are closed to outsiders, in which ballots are cast in plain view of all electors, but are kept secret. These are properties that are in a sense shared by voting in the Auditorium.

Peter Neumann: You need to add white smoke!

Daniel Sandler: In my experience with electronics, if white smoke comes out you’ve done something wrong.

A famous computer scientist weighs in on Dan’s research idea.

Just sent off a paper submission (re-running pdflatex right up until the last minute, as usual). Tomorrow morning: back to grading and my MS thesis with renewed vigor. It’s all about 残心.

So Jason gets a new job, and I have to hear about it from his blog. Bah.

Since I’m already elbows-deep in gnuplot, here’s a graph to explain what’s going on here:

Fig. 1. Cumulative distribution function of friends, co-workers, and acquaintances working at Google, as a function of time.

Update: Chris points out that my data collection has been sloppy, and that the graph above actually represents the function of friends who have gone (or will go) to work at either Google or Apple.

Chère Lazyweb: It’s time to stop keeping research notes on scratch paper (not to be confused with scrap paper) and in my tiny daily Moleskine journal. I’m looking for composition-book suggestions.

(continued…)

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