Lorem Ipsum

http://www.lipsum.com/

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/212251/en-us

‘re trying out a new Word template and need to quickly stick a few
paragraphs of test text in it: instead of copying and pasting the old
boring “lorem ipsum,” type =rand() and hit Enter. Older
versions of Word will fill in a few lines of “The quick brown fox”
automatically; Word 2007 will insert random text. You can even specify
the number of paragraphs and sentences in each paragraph substituting p
and s variables with numbers using =rand(p,s). Pretty
programmer-friendly feature for a non-geeky word processor?go ahead,
you know you want to fire up a new document and try it yourself.

Pew Internet Report: Teens, Privacy and Online Social Networks

This recent report from Pew Internet & American Life Project reviews How teens manage their online identities and personal information in the age of MySpace.

Some interesting findings:

1. Boys and girls have different views/behaviors on privacy
2. Half of all American online teens use a social network
3. Teens treat various types of personal information differently

This report is important because it is describing tomorrow’s college students. We need to understand students’ use and perceptions about technology. Our IT folks need understand this so that our technology infrastructure can continue to evolve at an appropriate pace. Our administrators need to understand this so that we can anticipate how to respond to issues related to privacy, and ethics, and the many other areas. Our faculty need to understand how students will expect these technologies and behaviors to translate into the classroom. Our Student Affairs folks need to understand how these behaviors will translate into behaviors outside the classroom. The list goes on, but the additional point is that we should be doing this collectively: having conversations across campus about the next generation of students that will be here soon.

(Side note: seems as if these “generations” come more and more quickly. The baby boomer generation is generally accepted as being post-WWII through the very early 1960s, where as “Generation X” and “Generation Y” and now the “Net Generation” have all followed in quick succession.)