Comic Creativity: Panel to Panel
Grok Headline matches for Comic Creativity: Panel to Panel
Panel To Panel Ad
Panel To Panel Ad
08/17/2004 10:47 PMHere's an ad for the upcoming
Star Wars: Panel To Panel—From The
Pages of Dark Horse Comics to a Galaxy Far, Far Away, a new trade
paperback from Dark Horse that will collect many of the covers from
various
Star Wars comics over the years. Look for this book to
arrive September 29th.
Systems Panel 1.0.4
Systems Panel 1.0.4
11/10/2003 11:33 PMA system administrator intranet solution.
Perl Panel 0.4.2
Perl Panel 0.4.2
05/28/2004 01:51 PMAn X11 panel program written in Perl.
CC on Seybold DRM Panel
CC on Seybold DRM Panel
08/17/2004 06:59 PMI'm speaking on a DRM Roundtable 10:30AM tomorrow at Seybold San Francisco.
The panel will address current and future trends in Digital
Rights Management (or the pejorative: Digital Restrictions
Management).
We have two FAQs
addressing Creative Commons and DRM, reproduced below:
Is Creative Commons involved in digital rights management
(DRM)?
No; we prefer to describe the technical aspect of our work as
digital rights description. Whereas digital rights management tools
try to prevent certain uses of copyright works and restrict your
rights, we're trying to promote certain uses and grant you rights.
Instead of having software say, "No, you cannot modify this file," we
want it to say something more like "The author will let you modify
this file, but in return, give her credit."
While the tools are similar, our goals are different. Instead of
using one of the many DRM formats, we've chosen to go with the W3C's
RDF/XML format. Instead of saying "We're not placing these
restrictions," we say "We grant you these permissions," so that search
engines and other applications can easily find generously licensed
works and sort them.
A physical analogy may be helpful. It's DRM's job to put up signs
that say "No Trespassing." It would seem silly to take those signs and
change them to say "Yes Trespassing," which is what using a DRM format
to express our licenses would be like. Instead, we're building new
signs that say "Welcome, Please Come In," and that use different
colors and designs to convey their different messages.
We're leaving "enforcement" to the law, social norms, and the good
faith of the participants. Our tools act as informative aids, not
instruments of control. We want to help copyright holders notify
others of their obligations and freedoms, and to help everyone find
places on the Internet where creative reuses are encouraged.
What happens if someone tries to protect a CC-licensed work
with digital rights management (DRM) tools?
If a person uses DRM tools to restrict any of the rights granted in
the license, that person violates the license. All of our licenses
prohibit licensees from "distributing the Work with any technological
measures that control access or use of the Work in a manner
inconsistent with the terms of this License Agreement."
For those not lucky enough to attend the panel, in addition to
covering the FAQ points above I will give examples for positive use
cases of Digital Rights Description in the areas of
- Discovery
- Expression
- Commerce
- Resource Management
and draw some broad distinctions between DRM and DRD:
- Copy/Use promotion vs. Copy/Use protection
- Encourage fans vs. Discourage casual pirates
- Resource management vs. Customer management
- Web content model vs. 20 Web content model
Ops Control Panel 1.1.0
Ops Control Panel 1.1.0
04/16/2004 03:45 AMA lightweight MRTG frontend.
FDA Panel Says No To Silicone
FDA Panel Says No To Silicone
04/12/2005 06:50 PMCBS News Apr 12 2005 11:00PM GMT
Perl Panel 0.2.0
Perl Panel 0.2.0
01/06/2004 01:18 PMAn X11 panel program written in Perl.
Systems Panel 1.0.5
Systems Panel 1.0.5
11/19/2003 08:05 PMA system administrator intranet solution.
Ops Control Panel 1.4.1
Ops Control Panel 1.4.1
07/05/2004 09:06 PMA lightweight MRTG frontend.
Perl Panel 0.1.1
Perl Panel 0.1.1
12/23/2003 02:15 PMAn X11 panel program written in Perl.
9/11 panel says hijackers got help in
U.S.
9/11 panel says hijackers got help in
U.S.
06/28/2004 01:28 PMOps Control Panel 1.0.0
Ops Control Panel 1.0.0
12/20/2003 07:24 PMA lightweight MRTG frontend.
New Journalism Panel
New Journalism Panel
02/10/2004 02:51 AMI something going on that is changing the journalist role? How do we
do this better? Dan: On my right, is Jeff Jarvis, but I won't go into
that any further. Jay Rosen Teach-ins should teach us things, the
most...
Ops Control Panel 1.2.0
Ops Control Panel 1.2.0
04/30/2004 07:43 AMA lightweight MRTG frontend.
Perl Panel 0.5.0
Perl Panel 0.5.0
06/29/2004 12:47 AMAn X11 panel program written in Perl.
Panel at SXSW
Panel at SXSW
03/13/2003 10:21 AMI'll be moderating the ambitiously titled "Beyond the Blog: The Future
of Personal Publishing" panel at this year's South By...
9/11 Panel Says 'We Are Not Safe' (AP)
9/11 Panel Says 'We Are Not Safe' (AP)
07/22/2004 08:21 PMAP - America's leaders failed to grasp the gravity of terrorist
threats before the devastating attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, taking
actions so feeble they never even slowed the al-Qaida plotters, a
national commission said in a blistering report Thursday.
9/11 Panel to Get More Access to Memos
(AP)
9/11 Panel to Get More Access to Memos
(AP)
02/10/2004 05:29 PMAP - The federal commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks will
get greater access to classified intelligence briefings prepared for
President Bush under an agreement reached Tuesday with the White
House.
Panel in Helsinki June 10
Panel in Helsinki June 10
05/19/2004 06:03 PMI will be on a panel at a conference in Helsinki on June 10. It is
the Annual
Meeting of the International Network of Private Business Organizations
- COMPETITIVENESS THROUGH CREATIVITY. I will be representing the
Keizai Doyukai (The Japan
Association of Corporate Executives) and will be speaking about
"Creativity and Innovation - Rare Virtue or New Standard?". I'm not
sure who they're inviting to participate, but if you're going, please
let me know.
707 panel as decorative lighting
707 panel as decorative lighting
03/31/2005 05:48 PMMark Frauenfelder:
Todd Lappin has finished installing his 707 jet panel in his house. It
looks incredible!
This hangs on one wall of our living
room, above the stairway that leads down to the garage. As you walk up
the steps, you get this view.
My 707 has come a long way since I first found it at an aircraft
scrapyard in Tucson. Here's a daylight view, shortly after I stripped
off the paint. The illumination comes from rope lights mounted on the
structurally-cool back side. (Next time you rest your head against a
window-seat wall to snooze, this is basically what lies
underneath.)
Link

IceWM Control Panel 3.1
IceWM Control Panel 3.1
12/25/2003 06:49 AMA full-featured control panel for IceWM.
Guidelines for panel presenters
Guidelines for panel presenters
02/01/2005 08:42 PMSteve Boback sent this
around to the Blog
Business Summit presenters. I thought it was pretty
salient.....
Based on my experience, various critical posts made by attendees of
previous blog conferences, and reading/listening to the transcripts
and session recordings available from other blog events, I have some
culled some guidelines largely based on comments from attendees at
other conferences.
* AIM HIGH: Attendees will forgive sessions that contain a
significant percentage of new or unfamiliar material. They will be
merciless if you teach them "stuff I already knew".
* PRAGMATIC INFO: The one main thing I'd like to emphasize is that
we should all present information that helps people execute on
better--more profitable business blogging NOW. Our audience wants
tools and techniques that they can leverage asap when they get back to
the office. For example, let's not talk too much about what protocols,
platforms, or standards SHOULD win various standards battles. Please
focus on how to use (today) the ones that WILL win. Our audience
doesn't have time and $$ to spend on investing in "great" and/or
"future" technologies and then end up being orphaned. As we have all
learned the hard way, "best" does not necessarily mean "enduring".
* HOW-TO FOCUS: This is a how-to event. At all costs avoid the
tendency to fall into the trap of talking about how cool this all is,
how we can all change the world, or any subject that veers out of the
how-to arena. There is no shortage of conferences that will
pontificate, self-congratulate, and debate for hours on how blogs can
liberate humanity and eliminate global warming. This is not one of
them.:)
* AVOID THE ECHO CHAMBER: This conference is about bloggers
teaching effective businesses-related strategies and tactics, not so
much about bloggers talking to bloggers about blogging. That being
said, bloggers that successfully provide
sales/marketing/pr/collaborative benefits to businesses have a lot to
tell those bloggers that aspire to do the same. One key note to
remember--if something has already been said by someone on the podium,
avoid repeating it.
* TALKING ABOUT YOUR PRODUCTS/SERVICES: It's like salt on a steak.
A very small amount carefully applied can be okay. More than just a
touch and the whole thing tastes pretty bad. People hate paying for a
commercial. A slide at the beginning and a mention at the end are
about it, in our experience.
* CUT TO THE DEMO: Show. Don't just tell. Get out of PowerPoint
(or
whatever) and *demonstrate* what you're talking about.
* REPEAT THE QUESTION: With questions from the audience, repeat the
question. This is a constant complaint from attendees. It also allows
you to recast a problematic question in your own terms.
* DON'T GET SIDETRACKED: Wait for questions until the end. If you
get a specialized or off-topic question, don't get sidetracked. Recast
the question or ask the person to see you after the session.
* DON'T ARGUE: If you're participating in a panel, don't fight.
Don't be acrimonious. People generally like it when speakers disagree
in an informative, interesting way. They hate it when they argue.
* CROSS REFERENCE. Please attend other conference sessions and
refer to them in your presentations. It puts your content in context
and avoids repetition. Give your attendees cross-refs to other
sessions.
* STAY ON TIME: Start and end on time. We keep to a *strict*
timetable, and we'll have the hook ready. Attendees really like it
when we stay on schedule. Also, do not end your session more than 2-3
minutes before the allotted time.
9/11 Panel Says F.A.A. Played Down
Scenario
9/11 Panel Says F.A.A. Played Down
Scenario
01/27/2004 02:50 PMWASHINGTON (AP) -- Months before the Sept. 11 attacks the Federal
Aviation Administration played down the possibility of suicide
hijackings, saying the greater threat was from explosives smuggled
aboard planes, a federal panel investigating the attacks said Tuesday.
Tcl/Tk PPP Interface Control Panel 0.1.2
Tcl/Tk PPP Interface Control Panel 0.1.2
12/21/2003 03:37 PMA PPP Interface Control Panel written in TCL/TK.
Political Blogging Panel
Political Blogging Panel
02/10/2004 02:51 AM3/5 of panelists agreed to join our Board of Advisors. They can't be
wrong. Doc is moderating, but rarely in moderation. Cameron Barrett:
Clark Community Network lets people create and cross-categorize their
own blogs. 10k blogs, 300k comments. David Weinberger:...
WH Says It Will Act on Intel Panel
Report
WH Says It Will Act on Intel Panel
Report
04/01/2005 06:49 AMZ 106.7 Apr 1 2005 10:33AM GMT
MyAccount Control Panel
MyAccount Control Panel
05/13/2004 11:12 AMFirst Release
Kyocera's New Solar Panel
Kyocera's New Solar Panel
08/04/2004 11:37 AM
The intern was disappointed to learn that this
Japanese woman is not included with Kyocera's new solar panel
(with the world's highest efficiency rating for mass produced solar
cells). I didn't have the heart to tell him that we actually do
receive review models with our review models -- screaming stacks of
them, actually -- but that we feel he's just too young to see the
prostitutional side of technology reviewing (the writers kneeling for
the product companies, that is; the models we set free in a bucolic
reserve).
Oh, and nevermind that these have a 15.7% conversion efficiency
rating (That's the highest?) and will be followed up by cells with a
17.7% rating in 2005. Let us do the science talk, okay?
Read
- Press Release (Japanese) [Kyocera via MYCOM PC
Web]
Panel wants records online
Panel wants records online
03/29/2005 09:08 AMOrlandosentinel.com - Tue Mar 29, 12:36 pm GMT
MiG-29 Instrument Panel Clock
MiG-29 Instrument Panel Clock
02/01/2005 09:09 PM
Your lover still won't call you "Maverick"—you can at
least get some ego-stroking respect from your desk. While not as fun
at parties as the Geiger-triggering substances siphoned off the black
market as a result of the fall of the Soviet Union, the MiG-29
instrument panel clock will keep time even at 1,800 miles per hour or
while pulling multiple Gs. Siegler & Co. is selling them as part of
their "Sovietski Collection" for $179.00, where they tell us the
clocks are "terrific for your desk, home or office. Or, use in your
plane! One-year warranty. May not meet U.S. F.A.A. requirements."
Storefront Page [Sovietski via
RedFerret]
[etech] Day 2 - Folksonomies panel
[etech] Day 2 - Folksonomies panel
03/17/2005 03:00 AMClay Shirky moderates a panel on folksonomies. Participants: Jimbo
Wales (wikipedia), Joshua Schachter (del.icio.us) and Stewart
Butterfield (flickr). Clay: Why did you decide to let users in to
categorization? Jimbo: We launched our categorization system last
June. For the first few weeks, it was a complete madhouse in the
English wikipedia. In the German one, they held off for a couple of
weeks. It took a little while for things to be rationalized. We
decided to let the masses categorize it because that's just the Wiki
way. Stewart: We added it because Joshua told us to. I don't think
of...
The bl0gging panel at Davos
The bl0gging panel at Davos
01/23/2004 01:27 AMYesterday was the blogging panel at Davos. Jay Rosen was the
moderator and the panelists were Orville H. Schell, Loic Le Meur,
yours truly and Hubert Burda. You all already know Loic and Jay I'm
sure. Orville is the Dean of the Berkeley Graduate School of
Journalism and was at the Media Leaders discussion the day before too.
He's got some great perspectives and his positive and insightful view
on blogs was encouraging. Hubert Burda is the CEO of Hubert Burda
Media, one of the largest media conglomerates in Europe and I was
extremely impressed by his positive and open view on blogs and media.
In other words, we had a great panel.
Jay kicked it off by saying that we were going to ignore the
official title, "Will Mainstream Media Co-Opt Blogs and the Internet".
;-)
I explained that blogging meant a lot of things. There was the
technology of blogging, the act of blogging and what journalists were
talking about most of the time. I explained the power-law and asserted
my position that the head of the curve, or the more popular blogs,
were like an amplifier and that I agreed with many people who believe
that the "tail" or the more personal blogs was where most of the
interesting stuff was going on. I talked about Ross Mayfield's layers
and the idea that a lot of interesting sources could be filtered by
special interest groups, through a social layer and to the amplifier
where maybe they can connect, merge with mass media to a certain
extent. Because of the the media orientation of the panel and the
audience, we decided to focus on the impact that blogging had on
journalism and media.
Loic said he thought blogging was like "open sourcing" himself.
Which I thought was an interesting way to look at it. He used his
metaphor about how he thought blogging will do to the traditional
media what Napster did to the music industry. He clarified that he
meant that it would allow people to share information peer to peer
instead of going through traditional distribution. The difference was
that people could more easily create content for blogs than music.
Mr. Burda had a lot of great insights and talked about how
collapsing business models and changes were all part of the game and
that he and the others needed to let go and adapt. He made a point
that he would be interested to see more blogs focusing on things like
science instead of typically popular stuff like politics.
I think we all agreed that the ability for blogs to talk with and
become one with the audience was key.
What was interesting was the number of people from the mass media
in the audience who still seemed to think that blogs were either just
poor quality news or that bloggers were just wannabe journalists. One
person from a newspaper said that she thought blogs would just become
incubators for journalists. I (emotionally) asserted that the mass
media and blogs were not the same. Many bloggers (such as myself) are
blogging, not for the money, but for a passion which embodies what I
believe is part of the heart and soul of journalism. We are not
encumbered by the pressures of advertising, marketing and the burden
of having to sell print media. It's insulting to think that all
bloggers just want to be journalists for print media. I pointed out
that big media had a role and that their ability to protect their
journalists from litigation and to fund particularly expensive
investigations and stories was something we can't do, but the notion
that we're just little versions of them was absurd.
Jay chimed in and pointed out that blogs are much more similar to
the spirit of the "freedom of the press" referred to in the US
constitution. IE citizens with presses.
I'm on a narrow band connection so I will add links after I get
to a wifi connection.
SxSW Panel Notes
SxSW Panel Notes
03/19/2005 02:16 AM
A few follow-ups from the panels I was involved in at SxSW
2005.
IA Summit folksonomies panel
IA Summit folksonomies panel
03/24/2005 12:14 AM Thanks to Peter Morville, here are links to info about the panel on
folksonomies at the IA Summit: PDF's of the panelists' slides by Gene
Smith Peter Morville, Peter Herholz and Thomas Vander Wal Seb Paquet's
notes on the presentations An MP3 of Peter Morville on "sorting out
social classification" which we're warned crashes Firefox but works on
IE. I'm really sorry I missed attending the Summit. It sounds
fascinating: The leading thinkers and what a great time to be talking
about these issues. [Technorati tags: taxonomy folksonomy iasummit]...
washingtonpost.com: 9/11 Panel Unlikely
to Get Later Deadline
washingtonpost.com: 9/11 Panel Unlikely
to Get Later Deadline
01/19/2004 01:57 PM9/11 Panel Unlikely to Get Later Deadline: Hearings Being Scaled Back
to Finish Work by May .. Bush, Hastert to Oppose More Time for Sept.
11
Commission
washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A28025-2004Jan18?language=p
rinter
track this
site | 5 links
Torque Control Panel
Torque Control Panel
06/13/2004 01:53 PMCreation
On being on the panel at Blogs in
Action...
On being on the panel at Blogs in
Action...
03/25/2005 08:36 AMLast night I was the opening act of
a sexy little conference about how people might use weblogs that
Alastair Shrimpton of the UK
branch of Six Apart was hosting
at the Polish club near Imperial College. I was a fairly late addition
to the schedule, but I don't think I roamed too far off the point. Suw
Charman wrote some insanely intense and
accurate notes about the whole thing over on Strange Attractor,
including this near-perfect transcript of a part of my talk:
If you want to use blogs for what they're most naturally
useful for, if you're trying to exploit what makes them brilliant,
keep the individual at the heart of it. Knowledge management, or
community building, or publishing Wonkette style, keep the individual
at the core, be conversational. Even Fleshbot has an editorial tone,
not that I've ever been, and neither have you, and nor should
you.
It was a very interesting evening all things considered, although I
sometimes get the impression that I look like I'm having too much fun
or am misbehaving when I do these things. Hopefully I didn't say
anything too out on a limb. I'll probably stick up my notes at some
point.
I think the best speaker of the evening was John Dale who has been
putting to gether Warwick
Blogs for Warwick University (which look like a pretty stunning
implementation of the weblog concept inside an academic context). I
think the part of his talk that surprised me most was that of
everyone I've ever seen trying to market and publicise weblogs
they seem to have done it best. They had a whole series of pretty
stunning stickers and posters and fridge magnets that they distributed
all over the campus. I've never understood why weblogging companies
don't explicitly target these venues - surely if you get them when
they're young, imaginative and have a lot of free time then they're
likely to stick with you for years. Here's a lifted image from the
Warwick blogs site to give you a sense of the way they branded the
thing:

Checking out his site, I see John was at ETech too. It's a shame we
didn't meet each other in that context too. That could have been
fun.
Read the comments
ICANN panel condemns Sit
ICANN panel condemns Sit
07/13/2004 08:25 PMTechzonez Jul 13 2004 11:45PM GMT
RavenCore Control Panel
RavenCore Control Panel
01/03/2005 12:43 PMDemo Available - RavenCore Hosting Control Panel
Grok Description matches for Comic Creativity: Panel to Panel
GrokA matches for Comic Creativity: Panel to Panel
Comic Creativity: Panel to Panel