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December 1, 2003

Guide to Gimme

Michelle Johnson, in the Boston Globe today (link breaks tomorrow), lists the gadgets to get for your most beloved geeks. The gadgets are, in order of appearance:

iPod (and other players, including Rio Nitrus and Dell’s Digital Jukebox)

ZVUE! movie player that only plays movies in its proprietary format (D’oh!)

Mission 3D’s Photo3D kit that takes 3D photos with any digital camera. You have to wear special glasses to see the effect.

Netflix, the subscription service that sends DVDs to your house.

USB flash drives, including IBM’s, Verbatim’s and Iomega’s

Philips’ Audio Key Ring MP3 player

SanDisk 8-in-1 USB 2.0 card reader

Services that let you push-and-talk via your cellphone, from Sprint and Nextel

The Sidewinder hand crank that recharges your cell phone battery

Wireless IM’ing with Motorola’s IMFree

I have none of these devices except the boring old USB flash drive. But I can’t say that I actually want any of them, except maybe an iPod. What I actually want is the Garmin StreetPilot 2610 GPS for my car. Now we’re talking gifts for geeks!

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: December 1st, 2003 dw

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November 28, 2003

Life goes on. Hooray!

Denise is a mom!

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: November 28th, 2003 dw

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November 12, 2003

Shel Israel blogs about the Gates Foundation

Shel Israel of Conferenza and ItSeemsToMe has started blogging with a piece praising the Gates Foundation and wondering why more people don’t think well of it.

Is it true that people don’t think well of the Foundation? Shel’s evidence is that the speaker at Pop!Tech from the Foundation wasn’t rated all that highly. I was at Pop!Tech and I rated her an 8 out of 10 not because I don’t like Gates or his Foundation but because I thought the presentation itself was good but not great.

I was initially skeptical about the Foundation but I’ve been mightily impressed with it ever since. So, of course I assume everyone else is, too. Ah, the Data Point of One. Welcome to the blogosphere, Shel!

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: November 12th, 2003 dw

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November 2, 2003

Democracy vs. Postage: You be the judge

Absentee ballot with all three candidates running unopposed

Click on this preview to see the Richmond, Virginia absentee ballot in all its glory.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: November 2nd, 2003 dw

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October 28, 2003

If Ahnuld has a sense of humor…

…as one of his first acts as governor he’ll create a state telecommunications agency called “SkyNet.”

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: October 28th, 2003 dw

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October 25, 2003

Cyber Blog War , Paranoia or PR Opportunism?

According to an article by Lou Dolinar in Newsday, Al Qaeda may have initiated a denial of service attack aimed at Internet Haganah, a site that tries to get Web hosts to boot sites it believes belong to terrorists. Internet Haganah thinks that a recent DoS attack was directed at it by “hackers associated with Yussuf al-Ayyeri,” an Osama crony.

Although there was a DoS attack last week that shut down a bunch of blogs, the article gives no evidence to support the claim that it was directed at Internet Haganah or that it was instigated by any particular group. According to Internet Haganah, the Al Qaeda group discussed on various bulletin boards how to block its service, but the article doesn’t try to verify even that claim.

This is some sensationalistic, sloppy reporting. Big time.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: October 25th, 2003 dw

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October 17, 2003

[POPTECH] Lessig

Larry Lessig is talking about — guess what — copyright. And more. He is a fabulous presenter. You feel smarter just hearing his voice.

He begins by wondering what would had happened to photography if the courts had decided that you had to have permission before taking someone’s photo. In fact the courts did decide this, but went for

In 1800, only the publication of commercial works was regulated by copyright. You could transform it without permission. And all non-commercial works were free. Over time, the law of copyright was changed to cover more non-commercial works. In 1909, the word “publish” was replaced with “copy” in order to cover things like copying statues, but the “copy” word accidentally meant that the scope of the law was increased as there were more machines for copying. Had “publish” been kept, we would not have been tempted to regulate, say, photocopiers. By 1995 and the Internet, we’ve lost the division between the commercial and noncommercial because the law is regulating copying. Copyright now covers uses of content, not just the publishing of commercial content.

Larry asks whether this is, overall, good or bad. We can agree (he says) that it’s good to protect commercial published works on the Internet. Even transforming copyrighted published materials is good: Grisham can control and benefit from the movie that’s made of his novel. But is it good for non-commercial copying and transforming? Maybe it makes sense to control some of the non-commercial. But we need to ask.

Larry shows the hysterical mix of Bush and Blair singing a love song to each other and points out that it’s illegal. “We should be changing the law to fit the changing technology.” We have to protect authors of course, but our response has been to go to war…a war against our children. We should in fact lock up the real pirates who run off illegal CDs. But transformation of culture, fan fiction, and 12-year-olds sharing content should not be the subject of our war. “We’re seeing a land grab.”

The consequence: If you think about what we could be doing if we were free to share and transform. We are squandering our opportunity “because those who have the power and time and patience to spend time in Wasington are succeeding in redefining the rules to mean that to share or transform you need permission.”

What do we do? Larry at first thought we should reform the law “because the tradition speaks on our side of the battle…We’ll just appeal to the values of our framers.” It is, he says, hopeless. Instead, Larry is working to change within the law: Creative Commons. It’s a set of tools to mark content as free…to let a reasonable layer of permission sit on top of copyright law.

“It’s been framed as pirates vs. property. But there’s also a tradition in which we build upon our pasts and we want to give people permission to be part of that tradition.”

Someone asks about civil disobedience. Larry tells of an RPI student who was sued for indexing RPI files, 25% of which were MP3s. The RIAA sued, asked how much the kid had saved, and settled for that amount ($12,000). Disgusting and depressing.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: October 17th, 2003 dw

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October 6, 2003

Bricklin Pix

Dan Bricklin has posted lots of photos from BloggerCon.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: October 6th, 2003 dw

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September 24, 2003

[Vanguard] Me

I just gave my presentation. Basically, since this conference is talking about Knowledge Management, I tried to shout the words “flesh” and “desire” as often as possible.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: September 24th, 2003 dw

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September 19, 2003

The Security Metaphor

Seth Gordon suggests that the metaphors by which we talk about computer security are misleading. It’s not war and it’s not a disease. It’s a con game.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: September 19th, 2003 dw

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