March 24, 2005
Himmer, MFA
Let me be the second to congratulate Steve Himmer on defending his MFA dissertation. Woohoo! [Note: This corrects a mistake in the previous version.] [Technorati tag: himmer]
March 24, 2005
Let me be the second to congratulate Steve Himmer on defending his MFA dissertation. Woohoo! [Note: This corrects a mistake in the previous version.] [Technorati tag: himmer]
From Shimon Rura:
The webcast starts at or just before 7pm on Thursdays, when our meeting starts, and ends when the meeting ends.
To listen to the live stream, you’ll need an MP3 player capable of receiving audio streams (using HTTP). Most halfway decent MP3 players can do this, including Winamp, Windows Media player, Audio (Mac), iTunes, XMMS, and others. If you’re not sure you can handle this, go to shoutcast.com and try listening to some of the streaming radio stations there. If those work, you can listen to our meeting. If you want to load a URL directly into your MP3 player, use:
If your email client shows a clickable link, try this one:
http://rura.org:8000/stream.m3u
(it should launch an mp3 player on the stream).
Note that the stream will not work except during the meeting. No call letters, not even dead silence, just *no stream*.
You can check the status of the webcast at:
If you see an “Icecast Status Page” with a blank box, it means the stream is not currently active. If you see a stream, that’s what you want. If you can’t connect, then my server may be disabled for some reason and you might want to let me know.
If you want to do more than listen, join the IRC (chat) channel:
irc://irc.freenode.net/berkmanbloggroup
That’s #berkmanbloggroup on server irc.freenode.net.
All of this information, as well as our agenda, is always available on our blog:
I’ll be there, although there’s a small chance something may come up… [Technorati tags: blogs harvard]
March 23, 2005
If Microsoft Word is no longer displaying recently used files in the Files menu, and if the “Recently used file list” option is grayed out in Tools > Options > General, you should change the value of “Add new documents to Documents on Start Menu” in TweakUI.
If you’re not using TweakUI and if you feel comfortable futzing with your Registry, go here:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\
Set “NoRecentDocsHistory” to 0.
If you don’t understand what I’m saying, then you shouldn’t be futzing with the Registry. If you do, then you know to export a copy of your registry and you know not to sue me when your whole system starts to smell of burning grease.
More info here. [Technorati tag: microsoft]
March 22, 2005
Doc and his son Allen in a beautiful, truthful photo taken by Dave Sifry…
March 21, 2005
As the American government loses whatever tiny shred of genuine decency it had and as the American media loses its last breath of proportionality, Micah Sifry blogs about how the Schiavo affair ever made it out of the waiting room where a devastated family was faced with a tragic choice. [Technorati tag: schiavo]
March 20, 2005
After a hair-raising ride from the airport — I was driving, ’nuff said — I’m here at Esther Dyson’s PCForum. Andy Stern, head of the Service Employees International Union is the second speaker. (I got too late to see Howard “multiple intelligences” Gardner.) It’s unusual for PCForum to have a union represented. It’s part of the theme, “The World Wide World.” It’s not just about tech. I don’t know how I’m going to manage…
(Gender Note:: Of the 31 featured speakers, 10 are women.)
Stern talks about the importance of unions to the American dream. [My father was a pro-union lawyer for NY State.] The largest employer 30 years ago was GM. Now it’s Wal-Mart, and it takes multiple Wal=Mart jobs to earn a living wage. Our children are on the way to being the first generation to do worse economically. He says unions havew made big mistakes, such as focusing on work rules when employers need flexibly. We’ve gone from 1 in 3 to 1 in 12 union members in the private sector.
We should try something else, he says. We should follow Diana Farrell of the McKinsey Group Institute. She suggests that we use some of the savings gained from off-shoring to supporting our unemployed workers.
Esther inteviews Jerry Yang of Yahoo!
Yahoo has hit its tenth anniversary. Jerry says that, as is typical in tech, we think that in the next ten years we’ll get to do what we thought we would have been doing in the past ten years.
Esther pushes him on whether he finds any ethical problems dealing with China. Jerry refuses to say Yes absolutely. He says that when Chinese officials explain their position, it make sense to him: China doesn’t have a tradition of free press, so when people have access to sites, they worry about the “lack of veracity.” They’re trying to do an “orderly transition” to an open Internet. “That transition is going to be managed by the government.”
Esther: “My sense is that they’re terrified of disorder.” Jerry points to the scale of the changes they’re managing, in order to say (I think) that they, and we, don’t want the disorder that would come from not “managing” the change.
Esther: Which way are you heading? Personalization and community? Or are you going to turn Hollywood on us?
“We are good example of a company trying to figure out how to marry content to this new medium.” Yahoo is only concerned with “the best stuff,” wherever it comes from. “To be able to build your personal networks, that’s really hard to do. No one’s done it right.” We have to be good at both: Watch the latest content and be a “place where users congregate and discuss things.” It’s an integration process.
How much by acquisition and how much by in-house development? Both. Acquisitions are primarily for the people. Well, also for the product. [Yahoo bought Flickr today, as everyone already knows.] He refers to Flickr as a community site, which is [imo] better than talking about it as a photo site.
Esther brings up Andy, Howard and Jerry and asks them about courage. They all talk about the courage of others and deflect the idea that they have any particular courage themselves. Howard says that he’s surprised at the distance between what his colleagues are saying about Larry Summers in private and in public. He says that courage is a muscle that needs to be developed, and points to Ralph Nader and Margaret Thatcher. But, he says, both over-reached.
Howard says we’re too big a country to have one best educational system. The Jesse Test: Is there a school that would be right for Jesse Helms, Jesse Jackson and Jess Ventura.
Jerry wants regulation to increase trust, although he thinks that’s not going to be enough without community norms. [Ack]
Scott Heiferman (meetup.com) asks how unions work as organizations become napsterized. Andy responds that they’re trying to figure it out.
Mitch Kapor comments that the folks in this room who run companies should wonder if the standard 80-hour work week gets in the way of education. “This stuff isn’t abstract. The way we run our companies has a direct impact…” [applause] Bob Frankston says that the best educators teach students how to learn. He does this in response to Andy’s repeated references to Catholic schools as models. Andy responds that we need to measure if we’re going to have an impact.
Howard says he’s working on a book about the five minds we need to cultivate: Disciplined, creating, synthesizing, respectful and ethical minds.
Mitch Ratcliffe asks Andy unions perpetuate the idea that employees can be treated as a fixed aset. We should recognize that all the industrial age models are broken. would the SEIU be willing to be treated as a group of contractors… Andy says the premise is right, and that we should think of unions as a community and ask what we can do with such an entity.
March 19, 2005
Anybody know what this page has decided to stop wrapping? My other comment pages seem to be fine…
March 17, 2005
There’s no “I” in “team” but there are two “me”s in meme.
March 13, 2005
[See note at the end of this post] Microsoft Word lets you view your document in several modes: Normal (=draft), Web page, printed page, outline, and print preview. Yet there’s no view designed strictly for readers. That’s too bad since many of us end up reading Word pages we have no editing rights to.
If Word added a Read view, it could have special functionality:
At the bottom of each screen would be Next and Previous buttons
Adjust font family and size with a click of a button…and save your adjustments as a theme
We could highlight text and have it saved on a per reader basis
Typing would automatically open up a comment window
We could choose to share our comments and highlights
We could easily set bookmarks for going back to particular spots
One click and you’re googling!
Copying and pasting into another document would (optionally!) create a footnote with the appropriate bibliographic information as entered by the author
Why not just take all of the best features of the existing e-books and turn them into a Read view for Word? And if not Word, then why not OpenOffice?
Helpful reader Shannon Clark points out in the comments that Word 2003 already has a Read view with most of these features. Damn! I knew I should have upgraded! (Thanks, Shannon.)
March 12, 2005
David Isenberg has photographic evidence that, unbeknownst to me, had George Soros sneezed as Ethan Zuckerman was talking at the Safer Democracy conference, I would have been mopping major philanthropic fluids from my pate. Damn! That’s like taking a taxi ride and only finding out afterwards that you were sharing the cab with Mick Jagger. (Btw, that’s privacy maestro Marc Rotenberg next to Soros.)