“Because he’s following his principles, he is literally now subsisting on bread and water,”
And my first thought was “NOW he has principles?”
Retired computer programmer who is now a Volunteer Naturalist and Volunteer Ranger for local and state parks. And I play hockey to try to stay in shape.
“Because he’s following his principles, he is literally now subsisting on bread and water,”
And my first thought was “NOW he has principles?”
Fear the Weapons of Math Instruction!
Am I the only one old enough to remember when “Brand X” was the obviously substandard brand that all the name brands compared themselves to?
@0uterzenith I have spent the last couple of days banging on this in anticipation of moving from Evernote. Both Obsidian and Joplin look like they would work for you. I’ve decided on Joplin for a number of reasons that are important to me.
I found a web browser extension called “MarkdownLoad” that lets you capture all or part of a web page and save it to a markdown file (.MD) that you can then import into either. Solves the one issue I was really worried about in moving from Evernote.
If I read a book to inform myself, put my notes in a database, and then write articles, it is called “research”. If I write a computer program to read a book to put the notes in my database, it is called “copyright infringement”. Is the problem that there just isn’t a meatware component? Or is it that the OpenAI computer isn’t going a good enough job of following the “three references” rule to avoid plagiarism?
1 - Tenure just got thrown out.
To implement these reforms, the superintendent is requiring every employee in the 29 schools, from the janitor to the principal, to reapply for their job.
2 - No libraries.
Miles has said that librarians will likely be eliminated—because, in his view, their job consists only of “checking out books,”
3 - Fire Brigade method of staffing.
“He seems to be taking an approach that’s based on the idea of equity, the idea of finding the strongest educators in the entire district and moving them to the campuses that have the greatest number of students with unmet needs.”
4 - Big Brother comes to the classroom. Not mentioned was the additional staffing to watch monitors and “disciplinary enforcers” needed to remove poorly behaving students and watch them in the separate room.
a strict disciplinary regime enforced by cameras in every classroom.
So now I get to decide if Xtwit is worth $1/year. And my answer is “No.”