I spent today writing up lectures for my course because this new job starts on Tuesday effectively and I don’t think I’ll have time to actually write the lectures during the weeks I’m giving them.
If you’re doing it right, writing a lecture takes a lot of damned effort. Even if you know the material, it’s a matter of reading or skimming a hell of a lot of stuff to confirm that you’ve analysed a particular thing correctly or that you’re quoting the right person. These are notes that someone is going to write down as if it’s gospel. I can’t just be at the “good enough” level that I’m at defending an argument at a party.
So, I’ve just done “internet cultures”, “history of hypertext”, “theorising hypertext”, “comprehension and presentation: concise, scannable and objective” and kind of balked when I got to the one on Nielsen and usability because I hate him (this’ll be interesting if any of my smarter students pick up on the fact that I mentioned I keep a blog…).
I’m worried I won’t get all 12 weeks’ worth of lectures written by the end of this week (no, let’s be serious, I know I won’t) and I’m worried about what that means for my one day a week ‘free time’ I had hoped for.
Anyhow, it’s definitely too late at night now to give you my MIFF reviews, so that will just have to wait.
I will say I’m pleased that Labour has taken a stance on the PBS and the local content aspects of the FTA which were the bits that worried me the most, and that it appears to be a firm stance. Howard’s idiotic assertion that you can only be completely for or completely against the FTA just reaffirms his narrow-minded conception of the world).
Of course, Latham could indeed have said no to the whole thing. That would have been good.