As you probably noticed...
... I've been traveling a bit--hence the slightly erratic SRS posts over the past month. This will probably continue for a bit more time as I keep moving around the planet.
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Taveuni, Fiji |
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Pensacola, FL |
This is what comes from being an itinerant scholar. Even now, in the Age of the Internet and high bandwidth connections with live streaming 360-degree video, there's still an ineluctable value in actually being present.
Why is that? Couldn't I just phone (or video) it in?
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Knoxville, TN |
What's more, when I visit you in your workplace (or university), we have the chance to have lots of informal, high-touch (notice I didn't say "high-bandwidth") interactions. I've been in a lot of high quality videoconferences, but the quality of physical presence (with all of the nuances that seem to get lost over video) is powerful.
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UCSD, La Jolla, CA |
Even though physically traveling to another venue is kind of a hassle--it's almost always worth it. (Especially when that venue includes scuba diving, which doesn't work well over video...)
Besides, when I travel, I pick up all kinds of ideas for SRS Challenges. You'll be seeing a few during the next year!
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Me playing chess with statue. Georgetown, DC. I think I'm winning. |
Thanks for hanging in there with me as I travel hither and yon. It'll all be worth it!
Still searching!
Reference: Olson, Gary M., and Judith S. Olson. "Distance matters." Human-computer interaction 15.2 (2000): 139-178.