Currently:
2002-06-02»
Creepy obsession or pale imitation?»
Quinn says it's funny that Metafilter should
run
"since", she says, "Metafilter is the ultimate BBS tribute site".
Cheapo WiFi»
Just a datapoint: with rebates, WiFi cards
are now down to $35 in the US.
Smart Contracts»Nick Szabo, one of the more
precise extropian
thinkers, has sketched out a formal language for
defining contracts. I'd love to hear what a lawyer (preferably a lawyer with
some knowledge of computer language theory) thought of this. He also has a
lighter piece on Medieval clocks and
economics. - from Seth
Bad UI!»
Shades of Henry Ford: one of those "bad UI" moments.
2002-06-01»
All change: Stanton and Declan moving on; RSS >Link< added; Java Haiku!; Brewster Is God»
Brewster "Internet Archive" Kahle is God; and a hardworking God at that. Latest project:
digitising and distributing the receding edge - that's to say, all the
public domain stuff that existed prior to the Web.
"Public Access to the Public Domain" is a step towards Raj's "Universal Access to Human Knowledge". How hard can it be?
- from Aaron
We have to use the
next value from each node to
get to the next node.
Allen B. Downey, co-author of
the
How To Think
Like A Computer Scientist (
libre edition here): has
written a
Java version of
haiku, and ran his book
through it.
I've added that <LINK>
thing. What mime type should RDF be anyway? I have it down at application/xml.
Is that right?
Movements in the politech world. Stanton 'mech' McCandlish is leaving the
EFF. Like old movie stars who you can only imagine in black and white, I can
only see Stanton's name in non-proportional Courier font, sitting on top of
e-mails from the Blue Ribbon era EFF. Declan McCullagh is moving from Wired News,
too.
There are big changes occurring in the UK cyberrights scene this week, but
can't talk about those quite yet.
2002-05-31»
RSS in the house, 802.11b gargoyles»
Locust Technologies are a UK group working on
WiFi gargoyle tech - webcam, audio and more in luggable backpacks that can
communicate with other nodes to form a portable mesh network. Great for armies
of independent reporters. Or just armies, if you want to look at it like
that.
This stuff has been long awaited; from NTK,
1999-01-15:
Nice to see Librettos being put to better use than as
portable Quake-stations: last Monday, RODDY MANSFIELD and
his associates from the video newszine UNDERCURRENTS
barricaded themselves into Shell's London offices to protest
the company's mistreatment of the citizens of the Niger
Delta. Hours later they were forcibly expelled by police,
who smashed through partition walls to arrest them. Despite
Shell cutting off light and electricity, the team managed to
issue press releases and photos via the 133Mhz Tosh, a
cellular modem and digital camera. It's a hack that could
have wider applications. As previous Undercurrents docs have
shown, Police officers at protests have taken to arresting
legitimate videojournalists. After being released without
charge, their tapes are returned too late for mainstream
news programmes to use. In some cases, the police actively
erase footage. Now, hardware hacker that you are, you'll
realise that a handheld videocam feeding into a digitiser,
broadcasting via a line o' sight link (2500MHz? 1900MHz?) to
a mobile archive centre would provide these impromptu
censors - and us eager Max Headroom fans - with... well,
must-see TV. Think you'd like to help develop such a
monster? Give our operators a bleep.
mailto:stef@spesh.com
- unconnected with undercurrents, we hasten to add
http://www.kemptown.org/shell/pictures.html
- but, you know, if we do come up with anything
2.5Ghz? So close...
Phil Wolff asked if I had an
RSS feed for Oblomovka. Well, I guess I have now. I tried to work out what
current practice was, and it seems to be "stuff the entire entry into the
<description> tag, so that's what I'm doing for now. 48K of RDF, though:
I have a bad feeling about this.
2002-05-30»
Mozillablogs»
For scrappy, trying-to-improve-matters-from-within, no holds barred, troll
your workmates,
shout-your-rage corporate blogs, I don't think you need to look further
than the excellent Mozilla blogs - especially the ongoing (productive) spats between the Chimera developers and their colleagues. Compare that to all
the nicey-nicey community stuff
from those Macromedia
guys. Once seems to be just a question of keeping the consumers happy. The
other serves the function of keeping them informed with what's really going
on. Plus the Mozilla guys' blogs seems to be spilling off into blog-friendly
Mozilla adaptions, like in-browser RSS
viewing and HTML
editing.
Hope they don't get sacked.
Aiieee. Dave linked here, even though this is essentially my "pfft-pfft.
Is this thing on?" test site.
What's particularly frustrating is that last night, I dreamt this
spectacular four thousand word piece that would explain once and for
all the relation of blogs to journalists, the nature of flash crowds, and what
lessons Corrupt Bloggers can learn from Corrupt Journalism before it's too
late.
But unlike you, I'm only a theoretical blogger, and while Eric S. Raymond will write a
megabyte of distilled opinion before he gets up and shoots his breakfast, it still takes me
a week to think enough thoughts to spit out even a hundred words.
I'll save it all for that guest DaveNet I drunkenly promised Dave.
Yes, yes, that is what I will do. Straight after panicking about next week's Extreme Computing Conference in
London . And doing whatever it is I get paid for.
In the mean time, here is who I currently read when I'm avoiding writing:
Seth from the EFF, and
Leonard from robotfindskitten, and Quinn from my life, and Lee from NTK, and everybody from Advogato.
Smarter than you and I, thank God.
2002-05-28»
We come in peace. Hell, we come in packets.
You can now pre-order Zone 1 DVD's of Koyaanisqatsi and
Powaqqatsi! Only $22.49. If you haven't seen Koyaanisqatsi, it's about as
marvellous and moving as an 87 minute Philip Glass minimalist soundtrack
set to beautiful time-lapse photography of the natural world can be.
Previously you could only get hold of DVDs by paying a >$100 donation to
the film's non-profit owners, the Institute for Regional Education. On
the other hand, I'd like to see their planned sequel, Naqoyqatsi ('War Time')
- so maybe I should donate, at that.
2002-05-26»
So, after months of faffing around peering at different Wiki implementations, I've
finally made my Big Decision. I'm moving all of commonhouse's wikis over to MoinMoin. It looks like the Wiki for me:
extensible, a nice bunch of prepared
macros, vibrant developer community, written in Python - plus it just hit
1.0.
My big questions, though, couldn't be answered by staring at READMEs. I
needed to know where I could hack MoinMoin to run many instances of different
wikis off the one copy; whether I could keep all the data in the slightly
weird places commonhouse likes to keep data. And could I easily copy the
existing wikis over from the existing wikis we already run? To answer those, I
had to install the little fella.
I did all but the porting of old wikidom tonight, in about an hour. The
most idiosyncratic stuff I did by changing about four lines of code in
moins_config.py, and some slight mod_rewrite fu.
The rest was a breeze. Fun even.
Moinmoin has an XML-RPC
interface, and I'm going to try to use that to port the old C2.com style wikis over tomorrow night. Then
I'm going to play around with its calendar and blogging macros. Oh yes.
petit disclaimer:
My employer has enough opinions of its own, without having to have mine too.