Server:Apache/2.4.18 (Ubunt...
The main IP address: 159.89.43.75,Your server Canada,Vancouver ISP:Fletcher Challenge Canada Limited TLD:org CountryCode:CA
The description :wandering iq. raised by wolves. friend to cheese. working to bend the arc of justice....
This report updates in 17-Sep-2018
Created Date: | 2004-12-10 |
Geo IP provides you such as latitude, longitude and ISP (Internet Service Provider) etc. informations. Our GeoIP service found where is host xolotl.org. Currently, hosted in Canada and its service provider is Fletcher Challenge Canada Limited .
Latitude: | 49.249660491943 |
Longitude: | -123.11933898926 |
Country: | Canada (CA) |
City: | Vancouver |
Region: | British Columbia |
ISP: | Fletcher Challenge Canada Limited |
HTTP Header information is a part of HTTP protocol that a user's browser sends to called Apache/2.4.18 (Ubuntu) containing the details of what the browser wants and will accept back from the web server.
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Server: | Apache/2.4.18 (Ubuntu) |
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Date: | Mon, 17 Sep 2018 15:52:10 GMT |
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ipv4: | IP:159.89.43.75 ASN:14061 OWNER:DIGITALOCEAN-ASN - DigitalOcean, LLC, US Country:US |
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skip to primary navigation skip to content skip to primary sidebar opening knowledge practices renewable experiential & applied learning makercart mediapede teaching history through film nate angell wandering iq. raised by wolves. friend to cheese. working to bend the arc of justice. flickr github linkedin rss twitter pictures blog recipe resume republications contact nate rsvp: indieweb summit 2018 9 may 2018 by nate angell 1 comment nate angell will attend indieweb summit 2018 filed under: education , events , internet , rsvp , technology , work tagged with: rsvp caring for oer 19 mar 2018 by nate angell leave a comment “ the bad shepherd ” by jan brueghel the younger in the public domain. this is the beginning of a post i’m researching on the care framework using a workflow that includes zotero to record and display reference information and hypothesis to record and display notes. as i haven’t drafted any content yet, so far this post just displays the references and notes i’ve already collected. references a running list of works i’ve found relating to the care framework, collected in the zotero open knowledge practices group library under the tag “careframework” and here presented in chronological order by publication date. contact me with suggestions of other works to add or to join the zotero okp group so you can add to the collection yourself. 1561563 careframework items 1 date asc 1 http://xolotl.org/wp-content/plugins/zotpress/ notes a dynamic list of my annotated notes on works related to the care framework. filed under: communities , real tagged with: annotation , bibliography , hypothesis , oer , scholarship , workflow , zotero random encounters: thinking beyond the totality 12 feb 2018 by nate angell 2 comments “ totality ” by geoff livingston licensed cc by-nc-nd . this post involves a bit of frankenstein thinking, because two — seemingly unrelated — posts i came across recently made connections for me. let’s see if i can explain why i think they’re connected. tl;dr: while i have gigantic respect for both authors of these posts, i think both ask us to view things too generally, without paying attention to details that matter. the first came to me by way of a challenge prompt in the #engagemooc running now, shepherded by natalie delia deckard , bonnie stewart , sundi richard , arianna montero-colbert , annie sadler , et al. the prompt is a quote from john perry barlow, who i’m sad to say recently passed away after a life of inspiring me and so many others to think differently. the quote comes from a remarkable meeting between jpb and bell hooks in 1995, which is a conversation i would have thought could come to us only in a wonderful dream if it had not actually happened. it’s not that there’s anything particularly healthy about cyberspace in itself, but the way in which cyberspace breaks down barriers. cyberspace makes person-to-person interaction much more likely in an already fragmented society. the thing that people need desperately is random encounter. that’s what community has. — john perry barlow jpb was a more complex thinker than this one quote suggests — he wasn’t a simplistic cheerleader for “cyberspace” the way some have made him out to be. and yet, i find myself caught on how jpb characterizes cyberspace here in just one, positive way: as a breaker of barriers, bringing people together in an otherwise fragmented society through random encounters, that also, somehow, generate community. from where we sit in 2018, it may be easy to look on jpb’s quote as a naive view. but as soon as i read it, my mind popped to something else i’d read recently that gave me the same kind of pause, from another thinker that has influenced me (and others) a lot: david wiley, writing on reflections on 20 years of open content: lessons from open source . david ends his reflections by asking us if we’d like to live in a world where commercial organizations are heavily engaged in creating, distributing, and stewarding open educational resources, just like so many are now in open technologies. he also chides us in the open community a bit for not being more welcoming of commercial engagement in oer. i take the same kind of pause i did reading jpb’s quote. to me, both cyberspace and oer are tools that i think can be used to generate positive outcomes, but can also (very clearly i think) be used to generate outcomes i don’t support, like political polarization or business models that sell us back our experiences rather than proprietary content. while cyberspace and oer both have inherent structural characteristics, none of those characteristics guarantee any specific social outcome. to argue otherwise would require a kind of technological determinism, right? so in the same way i might look askance at the idea of cyberspace healing a fragmented society, i might also question whether an intensifying adoption of oer in commercial educational publishers is necessarily a good thing for education. the internet might spread and oer may “win” (to paraphrase david), but neither necessarily guarantees the outcomes i want to see. when i come across these grand statements, i always want to stop and find the more complicated story that doesn’t ask us to believe or accept that cyberspace or oer are always good, just because they sometimes are. filed under: communities , internet , politics tagged with: @opencontent , engagemooc , johnperrybarlow , oer , technodeterminism open licensing over tv dinners and smoothies 18 jan 2018 by nate angell 2 comments an offhand, only half-serious comment i made in the creative commons open education slack channel in response to a very worthy question from bccampus’ amanda coolidge led to a new (?) metaphor to help explain the different open-licensing implications between collecting and redistributing a group of works with different open licenses versus actually remixing several works to form a new, derivative work: hereafter known as the tv dinner vs the smoothie. a “tv dinner” open work is when one collects separate works together and redistributes that collection, but clearly separates each work and its attribution. in this case, one is not “remixing” works, but rather curating them and offering that curation to others. like with real tv dinners, you can still consume each ingredient by itself because they are served with clear boundaries separating each. in an open-license tv dinner, each work maintains its separate license and the collection does not need to reconcile the different licenses because each work stands alone in the collection. a “smoothie” open work is when one mixes together parts or the whole of one work with parts or wholes of other works to create a new, derivative work that includes material from many sources. like with real smoothies, you can’t easily separate the different ingredients once they are blended together. in an open-license smoothie, one can only include works with mutually compatible open licenses and the open license of the full derivative work must be consistent with the licenses of all the included works, typically the most restrictive license. to help illustrate the metaphor i created some (admittedly slapdash) illustrations, and with some input from creative commons’ cable green and ryan merkley and others, have refined them a bit and offer them here for others to use to help illustrate and explain these different situations. in case you were wondering and like to go meta, yes, these images are themselves smoothies, so i was careful to include only works with compatible copyright statuses and license the new derivative works with licenses that are consistent with all the works i used. visualizing the metaphor feel free to download and retain/reuse/revise/remix/redistribute these images and/or the original sketch file , as long as you adhere to the various open licenses of the materials. let me know if i can help provide modifications or different formats for these works, and i’m alway
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http://xolotl.org/tags/metaphors/
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http://xolotl.org/open-licensing-over-tv-dinners-and-smoothies/
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Whois is a protocol that is access to registering information. You can reach when the website was registered, when it will be expire, what is contact details of the site with the following informations. In a nutshell, it includes these informations;
Domain Name: XOLOTL.ORG
Registry Domain ID: D104990311-LROR
Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.namecheap.com
Registrar URL: http://www.namecheap.com
Updated Date: 2018-09-25T20:30:10Z
Creation Date: 2004-10-12T12:44:28Z
Registry Expiry Date: 2019-10-12T12:44:28Z
Registrar Registration Expiration Date:
Registrar: NameCheap, Inc.
Registrar IANA ID: 1068
Registrar Abuse Contact Email: [email protected]
Registrar Abuse Contact Phone: +1.6613102107
Reseller:
Domain Status: ok https://icann.org/epp#ok
Registrant Organization: Data Protected
Registrant State/Province: Panama
Registrant Country: PA
Name Server: NS1.DIGITALOCEAN.COM
Name Server: NS2.DIGITALOCEAN.COM
Name Server: NS3.DIGITALOCEAN.COM
DNSSEC: unsigned
URL of the ICANN Whois Inaccuracy Complaint Form https://www.icann.org/wicf/)
>>> Last update of WHOIS database: 2019-01-28T04:58:13Z <<<
For more information on Whois status codes, please visit https://icann.org/epp
Access to Public Interest Registry WHOIS information is provided to assist persons in determining the contents of a domain name registration record in the Public Interest Registry registry database. The data in this record is provided by Public Interest Registry for informational purposes only, and Public Interest Registry does not guarantee its accuracy. This service is intended only for query-based access. You agree that you will use this data only for lawful purposes and that, under no circumstances will you use this data to (a) allow, enable, or otherwise support the transmission by e-mail, telephone, or facsimile of mass unsolicited, commercial advertising or solicitations to entities other than the data recipient's own existing customers; or (b) enable high volume, automated, electronic processes that send queries or data to the systems of Registry Operator, a Registrar, or Afilias except as reasonably necessary to register domain names or modify existing registrations. All rights reserved. Public Interest Registry reserves the right to modify these terms at any time. By submitting this query, you agree to abide by this policy.
The Registrar of Record identified in this output may have an RDDS service that can be queried for additional information on how to contact the Registrant, Admin, or Tech contact of the queried domain name.
REFERRER http://www.pir.org/
REGISTRAR Public Interest Registry
SERVERS
SERVER org.whois-servers.net
ARGS xolotl.org
PORT 43
TYPE domain
DOMAIN
NAME xolotl.org
HANDLE D104990311-LROR
CREATED 2004-12-10
STATUS
ok https://icann.org/epp#ok
NSERVER
NS1.DIGITALOCEAN.COM 173.245.58.51
NS2.DIGITALOCEAN.COM 173.245.59.41
NS3.DIGITALOCEAN.COM 198.41.222.173
OWNER
ORGANIZATION Data Protected
ADDRESS
STATE Panama
COUNTRY PA
REGISTERED yes
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