James Truitt
@linguistory.bsky.social
95 followers 37 following 180 posts
Digital archivist at Swarthmore College. Testing out bluesky; more active on Mastodon as @[email protected] Good at regular expressions; still working on irregular ones.
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Reposted by James Truitt
sonjadrimmer.bsky.social
No, resurrecting the corpse of Anne Frank so 12-year-olds can gossip with her is not how you “make history come alive.” It’s how you destroy history so that someone can come in, rewrite it, and then author a future to their liking.
Reposted by James Truitt
jedbrown.org
It is not "attribution and sourcing" to generate post-hoc citations that have not been read and did not inform the student's writing. Those should be regarded as fraudulent: artifacts testifying to human actions and thought that did not occur.
www.theverge.com/news/760508/...
For help with attribution and sourcing, Grammarly is releasing a citation finder agent that automatically generates correctly formatted citations backing up claims in a piece of writing, and an expert review agent that provides personalized, topic-specific feedback. Screenshot from Grammarly's demo of inserting a post-hoc citation.
https://www.grammarly.com/ai-agents/citation-finder
linguistory.bsky.social
Tempted to wrap up this whole section on research with "Without survey research, we never would have gotten the MPLP paper, and archivists might still be physically processing at the item or folder level today"

#GradSchool #GradSchoolGripes #MPLP
Reposted by James Truitt
ndrew.bsky.social
every single tech idea is like “soon our robots will be capable of playing catch with your kid, freeing you up to spend more time working on your employers’ spreadsheets”
Reposted by James Truitt
conure.cc
the cost of denying another's humanity is paid with one's own
Reposted by James Truitt
scottbot.bsky.social
My life improved last year when I started pronouncing AI as the name Al (AL) in my head whenever I saw it. In case you need that.
Reposted by James Truitt
faisalhamadah.bsky.social
Non-ironically my favorite genre of writing these days is a syntactically awkward student paper that is nevertheless brimming with ideas they’re trying on
sonjadrimmer.bsky.social
The palpable relief of reading a syntactically awkward student paper nevertheless brimming with ideas they’re trying on after having to consume the stale cardboard generalities of a Chat GPT essay.
Reposted by James Truitt
thatandromeda.bsky.social
If I had so many RETVRN vibes I would also have read anything whatsoever about Julius Caesar, but perhaps that is just me
Reposted by James Truitt
emilymbender.bsky.social
Here's a rule of thumb: If "AI" seems like a good solution, you are probably both misjudging what the "AI" can do and misframing the problem.

>>
Comment by Tom Diettrich on a linkedin post reading:

"You can't "test-in quality" in engineering; you can't "review-in quality" in research. We need incentives for people to do better research. Our system today assumes that 75% of submitted papers are low quality, and it is probably right (I'll bet it is higher). If this were a manufacturing organization, an 75% defect rate would result in bankruptcy. 

Imagine a world in which you could have an AI system check the correctness/quality of your paper. If your paper passed that bar, then it could be published (say, on arXiv). Subsequent human review could assess its importance to the field. 

In such a system, authors would be incentivized to satisfy the AI system. This will lead to searching for exploits in the AI system. A possible solution is to select the AI evaluator at random from a large pool and limit the number of permitted submissions. I imagine our colleagues in mechanism design can improve on this idea."

Original:
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7381685800549257216/?commentUrn=urn%3Ali%3Acomment%3A(activity%3A7381685800549257216%2C7382628060044599296)&dashCommentUrn=urn%3Ali%3Afsd_comment%3A(7382628060044599296%2Curn%3Ali%3Aactivity%3A7381685800549257216)
Reposted by James Truitt
joshuaraclaw.com
It’s fun that in Yiddish a lokshn kugel (לאָקשן קוגל) is a noodle pudding but an erd kugel (ערד קוגל) is just the planet earth
linguistory.bsky.social
"Sometimes you don't have access to the LIS literature, or time to pick out the duds and synthesize the rest, and in those times 'what are other people doing' is often a good shortcut"
linguistory.bsky.social
Restraining myself from ending my portfolio section on doing lit reviews by saying "Okay, but forget that, as a practicing professional you need to read blogs and talk to people"

#GradSchool #GradSchoolGripes #MLIS
Reposted by James Truitt
anthonymoser.com
This is the thing about ai. The benefits are nebulous hypotheticals but the costs are very high and immediate
Reposted by James Truitt
pookleblinky.bsky.social
You'd get book 5 of a series at a yard sale, and then simply never find that series or even its author again for years.

Your reading *had* to be eclectic because you were stuck with whatever you had, and what you had was scrounged up like a post-apocalyptic scavenger.
linguistory.bsky.social
Like, my friends, aren't we just talking about data at this point?
linguistory.bsky.social
Just tried to find the Rules for Archival Description by googling "RAD Canadian." Needless to say it did not work
linguistory.bsky.social
Like, yes, TEI is an XML schema… but outside of a little header like HTML has, it's not really used for encoding metadata *about* a text, it's used for encoding the text itself.
linguistory.bsky.social
Discussions of metadata standards in my MLIS classes keep gesturing to TEI. I have used TEI, and would have said it's no more a metadata standard than HTML is. At first I thought it was just one prof being obtuse, but I keep seeing it (ex: scalar.usc.edu/works/intro-...). Am I missing something?
linguistory.bsky.social
Passyunk
merriam-webster.com
What’s the word where you’re from that, when pronounced exactly as it looks, identifies a tourist immediately?
Reposted by James Truitt
acarsdrama.bsky.social
(1/2) VDLM2 Message From: N993AN / AA3245

Message: GIVING THE NEW PHILLY CAPT A PLANE WITH NO WIFI DURING A PLAYOFF BASEBALL GAME IS A BAD JOKE. THINK THEY BOOD ME AT THE GATE APPRECIATE IF YOU COULD UPDATE US WITH OCCASIONAL SCORES. I PROMISSED TO PASS THEM ALONG. UNLESS THEY ARE LOSING IAN

Tra
Reposted by James Truitt
jessothomson.co.uk
It cannot be made clearer.

If you continue to support the Harry Potter franchise in any way, you are directly funding the removal of trans people's human rights in the UK.
JK Rowling pledges to keep up fight against SNP trans policies

Author vows to bankroll campaigners after Scottish government fails to pay group's legal fees in Supreme Court equality case
Reposted by James Truitt
kissane.myatproto.social
Someone please give me a grant to do an ethnography on folk beliefs about mass-scale platform moderation before next Halloween, I promise the results will be spookier than any ghost story you can come up with