- Education
- Cursive writing rapidly becomes passe
I found the this interesting, as both a representative for our county is quoted, and my son has taken it upon himself to learn cursive (he's in first grade, and I have no idea what sparked him to do this, but reading this article I am glad that he has). - Gaming
- Burger King orders up Xbox games
So while McD's is focusing on healthy food choices and excercise for kids, BK has gone with video games that teach kids how to stalk. wtf? - Just for Fun
- Top Ten Geek Wallets
Each of these are interesting, though I don't think I would want to actually carry any of them. - Linguistics
- FBI agents still lacking Arabic skills
Only 33 with limited proficiency, that is all they have. (Also they need Urdu and Farsi speakers.) - Science
- BECs confound at higher temperatures
This is mainly for me, I'm not sure anyone else would be interested (though it's very cool!). - Physicits observe subatomic quick-change artist
Ditto my comment above. - Scientists teleport two different objects
Now this you should look at. Teleporting a macroscopic atomic object over half a meter, while converting between light and matter! Awesome!
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-11 02:24 pm (UTC)However, I do of course share the same concerns as the other historical scholars, and in fact we've talked about it in the hallways at school. I wonder if reading cursive will become like reading 18th c cursive with all the weird "fs" and stuff?
I do still write in cursive in letters and cards and if I'm leaving someone a personal note, however.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-11 04:47 pm (UTC)That's exactly how I am (though I'm not taking notes very often any more). I remember taking my AP exams in high school and writing the essays for the literature portion in my print/cursive mix, but I really couldn't tell you the last time I actually set out to write something in cursive. Hmmm.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-11 05:09 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-10-11 05:16 pm (UTC)Yes, I thought the historical aspect, and using handwriting for proof of existence/authorship, was very interesting. If cursive continues to decline, will printed signatures be accepted? I would think that printing would be much easier to forge than cursive, but maybe not. Of course, soon we will have microchips in our fingers or retinal scans and never have to sign anything again...