Hapgood

Mike Caulfield's latest web incarnation. Networked Learning, Open Education, and Online Digital Literacy


  • Why Facebook Won, and Other Hard Truths

    A lot of people have been tweeting and emailing me and DM-ing me the recent Guardian piece by Iran’s “blogfather”. You should read it yourself, but in short it is the story of a man sent to jail for blogging in Iran at the height of blogging’s influence and coming out of jail many years Continue reading

  • Markdown added to Wikity

    Markdown support has been added to Wikity (more specifically GitHub-flavored Markdown). I’ve done this for some very good reasons, and I’ve also done this a bit differently than most implementations, and I thought I’d explain why. First, a brief description of what Markdown is, for the uninitiated. Markdown is a markup format produced in 2004-ish Continue reading

  • Do Instructors Search for Open Educational Resources at the Last Possible Moment?

    Here’s the pattern for searches for “open textbook” searches on Google. I just ran this out or curiosity a couple minutes ago. You’ll notice immediately that there is a cyclical pattern. Click source up under the image to go and explore the graphic yourself, but the pattern is pretty easy to sum up. The high Continue reading

  • Clint Lalonde’s Sustainability Plan

    I just found this 2014 quote from Clint Lalonde: Something that is easy to copy makes it more likely that it will be copied. And if it is copied, it has more chances of living beyond its original life. A thousand versions of something seems to me to be the ultimate sustainability plan for any Continue reading

  • How Federated Open Educational Resources Could Work

    WSU Vancouver installs a server running some Wikity-esque software on WordPress Multisite. It allows faculty (and hopefully, eventually, students) to make as many WordPress sites as they want. Faculty make wiki-like linked sites on personal interests, but also use the platform to assemble and write materials for their classes. Meanwhile UBC or UMW or NIU Continue reading

  • Wikity and Pinterest

    After my presentation at OpenEd, David Wiley said he wished he hadn’t gotten a call in my session because he wanted to ask a provocative question: How was what I was doing with OER different from Pinterest for text? He said he thought he knew the answer to that, but would have liked to hear Continue reading

  • Introducing Wikity

    Wikity is up. The join code is “peloton”. I show how you can work in Wikity in the video below. In brief, the idea is other people’s investigations or explanations of things feed into what you are exploring; you add your bit to that and feed it forward for others to use. At the same Continue reading

  • Shuttleworth Funded!

    I’m pleased to announce that the Shuttleworth Foundation has given me a “flash grant” to support my work. I don’t know how much you all know about Shuttleworth flash grants, but they are more gift than grant. You don’t apply for them. An email shows up in your inbox one day and says hey, we Continue reading

  • Calypso is the Future of Personal Cyberinfrastructure

    OK, so I haven’t used Calypso. I don’t own a Mac, and I’ve been working on other things. But I read Matt Mullenweg’s post on the introduction of the tool and Ben Werdmüller’s excellent take on that post,  and ultimately the current experience offered by that tool doesn’t matter. What matters is the separation of concerns, Continue reading

  • Federated WordPress

    Those who follow this blog will know that I’ve taken a bit of time off from federated wiki in order to try to bring some principles from federated wiki into WordPress. While most days this feels like having left Xerox PARC to go work on Windows 1.0, there are other days where it feels really Continue reading