2002-06-03»
kitty 0.91»Things that should have an RDF feed, number one.
Dorodango! The shiny ball of mud that kids (and cheating adults with electron microscopes) go crazy for!
Onion prefigures future: Meg’s fall from vegetarian grace leads ineluctably to I Desperately Need Bone Marrow.
BrainHeart is the strangest magazine I read these days. It’s a glossy Swedish magazine funded by one of the big Euro wireless venture capital firms. It has this crazy aspiration to be a muddy mix of Wallpaper*, Red Herring, Fast Company, Wired, and What Mobile?. All the articles are written in a eurojetsetting Scandlish intonation: perfectly grammatical with a plodding sing-song quality. “Let’s assume that we would like to take a wireless tourist tour through Stockholm’s 750-year-old Old Town, Gamla Stan. What would the tour look like?”, begins one rip-roaring read. Every cover has a man and a women from the endlessly dull business world of Swedish telecoms, wearing these perfect clothes, perfectly photographed in perfect settings. The articles are all about building telcos “with brain and heart”, but it’s mostly just “wouldn’t it be great if we could all be nice to one another, and guess how many Kronor I just spent on my new headset?”. I can’t put it down. I haven’t been as simultaneously revolted and fascinated by a publication since the rise of the Mexican Death zine. Get a BrainHeart subscription for free, and share my confusion.
I’ve rather foolishly hacked DeadHorse
(this site’s PHP blogging system) to cope with multiple entries in one day. It was a bit of a struggle, frankly, but it works – although the entries within a day are no longer in reverse chronological order, which ain’t the blog way. DeadHorse’s design is collapsing under the strain. I’ll have to refactor it, which if previous experience is to go by, means migrating it from PHP to something a bit less clunky.
update: Oh, it does work. I was just writing backwards. Excellent.
Quinn says it’s funny that Metafilter should run
on the same day as
“since”, she says, “Metafilter is the ultimate BBS tribute site”.
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
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.