Comcast sits at the table with the big boys In a recent article in the Philadelphia Inquirer, reporter Akweli Parker shows how Comcast is using its clout as the #1 American cable provider in America.. It became number one when it acquired AT & T Broadband last year, and it now has over 22 million… Continue reading Comcast sits at the table with the big boys
Month: May 2003
New York Times
New York Times – free registration required Broad Domestic Role Asked for C.I.A. and the Pentagon. The Bush administration and leading Senate Republicans sought today to give the Central Intelligence Agency and the Pentagon far-reaching new powers to demand personal and financial records on people in the United States as part of foreign intelligence and… Continue reading New York Times
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Product announcement. The slick Windows interface for Radio from Social DynamX (a partner of UserLand) is now available for download. It should be up in the store soon. It offers the following: 1) Spell check. 2) A slick Windows editing surface. 3) Tabbed browsing. 4) Outlook style news aggregation. 5) Simple image insertion. Here is… Continue reading download
ThreadsML: Ben groks it and raps it out…..
ThreadsML: Ben groks it and raps it out…… Ben Hammersley gave a session at ETCON on Mail List bots – but it was actually on ThreadsML. He started off by introducing everyone to Geoff Cohen's email header, which had in it – all sorts of meta-data. Ben then showed the equivalent meta-data inside of an… Continue reading ThreadsML: Ben groks it and raps it out…..
$1.00 a song, instead of $.10 a song
$1.00 a song, instead of $.10 a song. New 15GB and 30GB iPods and Music Store. News.Com: “The software will be able to read music files encoded with ACC, a format that Apple says 'compresses much more efficiently than older formats like MP3…while delivering quality rivaling that of uncompressed CD audio.'” Apple: Tunes Music Store:… Continue reading $1.00 a song, instead of $.10 a song
We Do Plenty
We Do Plenty. This post from the blog Just What Does a Librarian Do? illustrates why I think libraries should give blogs a try. They really do help you add content, rather than forcing you to focus on the process of adding content (which is usually such a barrier). “I quickly added two links to… Continue reading We Do Plenty
The importance of human-readable markup
The importance of human-readable markup. Via Slashdot, a new HTML rendering bug that can crash Internet Explorer, Outlook, and other products that use Microsoft HTML rendering libraries. That’s not terribly funny. But here’s the funny part. Here’s the markup that makes it crash: <html><form><input type crash></form></html> Presumably there are other variations, but that just made… Continue reading The importance of human-readable markup
Two Gothic Cathedrals
Two Gothic Cathedrals. St. Chapelle is a Gothic chapel built by Louis IX in 1248 to hold the trinkets he picked up on his first foreign trip (i.e. “Crusade”). Apparently, the Venetian merchants had a few baubles that he was interested in and which he brought back as mementos of his travels: Notre Dame Cathedral… Continue reading Two Gothic Cathedrals
Computerized voting killing democracy in the US
Computerized voting killing democracy in the US. Glitch Wins by a Landslide, in CounterPunch: Computerized voting machines in the 2002 election did all kinds of weird things: if you pressed the Democrat's name in some counties in Texas, for example, the Republican's name was chosen. And in Cormal County, Texas, three Republican candidates won by… Continue reading Computerized voting killing democracy in the US
NEASIST Fun!
NEASIST Fun!. I forgot to mention that the NEASIST program went quite well. There were oohs and aahs during Steven's presentation on RSS, Jessamyn is exceptionally hard on herself because she gave a fascinating talk (and congratulations, Ms. Councilor!), and I learned search engine goodness from Greg and Ran. Riba blogged the day's events, and you can… Continue reading NEASIST Fun!