European workers take to the streets
Grok Headline matches for European workers take to the streets
Microsoft will face off against the
European Commission on September 30 in a
European Union court in Luxembour
Microsoft will face off against the
European Commission on September 30 in a
European Union court in Luxembour
07/27/2004 02:25 PMNewsweek Jul 27 2004 6:38PM GMT
Taking Wi-Fi to the Streets
Taking Wi-Fi to the Streets
12/11/2003 02:33 PMYou know Wi-Fi has really hit the mainstream when art students use it
in their performance art pieces: Students from New York's Parsons
Design and Technology have built access points into bicycles and will
use them to send emails from New York subways. The architects of this
idea seem a bit torn between regarding it as performance art and
pointing to its utility. There's not a very detailed techincal
explanation for how this works, but it appears that the APs use cell
networks for backhaul or are used as repeaters to extend signals from
other hotspots. It's kind of a cool idea for delivering Wi-Fi
connections on short notice or for a temporary reason. Or, wouldn't it
just be cool to have so that you could be sure of having a
connection--and be able to share it with pals--anywhere?...
Taking it to the Streets
Taking it to the Streets
07/20/2004 09:29 PM
I'm starting to like these Salon articles on social networking. They're well researched, written
and informative. What a concept - no more copycat journalism!
Here's the article by Paul Lamb....
Get up, stand up, social network
Can online networking offer a leg up to the disadvantaged? The
founder of Street Tech aims to find out.
By Paul Lamb
July 20, 2004 | "Welcome to the brave new world of social
networking," I tell a group of 30-odd African-American, Latino,
Southeast Asian, and white adult students from low-income and
underserved communities in the San Francisco East Bay. Six months ago
most of them knew nothing about computers, but they will soon be
certified computer technicians, having completed a rigorous technical
and soft-skills training program at the nonprofit organization called
Street Tech that I helped to found
five years ago. Today they are learning about social networking.
Despite the relative success of our job placement efforts for
Street Tech graduates, some will fail for the same reasons they came
to us for training -- they lack education and in-demand skills, or
suffer from low self-esteem. For many the transition from street
culture to mainstream business culture is a major challenge. Try to
imagine the opposite scenario of a white professional moving into an
urban ghetto and you can begin to understand.
In addition to good skills and great mentors, what our students
really need to succeed professionally is a good social network to plug
into. As any successful professional knows, in most cases it is people
and not the classifieds that will help you get your next job and the
one after that. In fact, jobs are 10 times more likely to be found via
a professional's network than on a job board. Thirty-five to 50
percent of hires made by hiring managers come through direct
referrals.
It is for these reasons that I have chosen to conduct an experiment in
social networking. My thinking is that since people networking is the
best way to get a job, perhaps the latest in online social networking
tools can be used to help the "unconnected" to connect in ways not
previously possible. In other words, can the latest networking
technology be leveraged to allow marginalized and disadvantaged folks
to build a personal network that allows them to leap over the old
boys/girls networks that have traditionally shut them out? If my
hypothesis is correct (that social networking can indeed be used as an
effective tool for social justice) then we may have stumbled upon
something really important and useful here.
So to start this quest I called up the folks at LinkedIn, the
premier social networking tool for professionals. To my pleasant
surprise they not only seemed genuinely interested in helping out, but
agreed to set up a group within LinkedIn for the students, supporters
and employer partners of Street Tech. I have been working steadily
since then to build out the group and invite as many folks as possible
to join it. In theory, the more people you have in your social
networking group, and the more contacts that each individual group
member has, the greater your chances of connecting with friends of
friends that have an appropriate job contact. According to LinkedIn,
nearly half of their 600,000 current users are hiring managers.
One of the real advantages I see to a tool like LinkedIn is that it
allows the hiring manager to feel more comfortable about a referral
because, in theory, the referral is coming from a trusted source --
thus making their chances for success much higher than if that same
hiring manager just received a stranger's résumé on his or her desk.
Second, our students can use the tool to search out numerous employers
at one time and don't have to go to numerous job boards or make cold
calls without first having an inside connection. Finally, the Internet
is a much safer place for our folks to start out. Here they are
anonymous and will not be judged by their physical experience or lack
of mainstream professional graces.
No doubt social networking is not the holy grail for the
disadvantaged job seeker or social networker. It has numerous
downsides. The various online social networking sites were clearly
built by the educated elite for the educated elite, not for people of
lower socioeconomic status. The current tools are therefore not
entirely welcoming and user friendly for those on the far side of the
professional divide. The premier sites are not interactive enough, and
are not as attractive to younger folks and those who are more visually
intuitive.
Ultimately I don't know how this experiment is going to turn out,
and I realize full well that face-to-face people skills are far more
important than what any online social networking tool has to offer.
Landing a job through social networking or any other means is only
half the battle. Keeping the job and moving up the career ladder is a
much bigger challenge, and one that technology tools cannot fully
assist with at present.
But the potential for greater opportunity through social networking
is there -- all of Street Tech's students are now linked in to
LinkedIn, understand clearly its advantages and disadvantages, and
seem genuinely excited about using it and other social networking
tools. We won't know how effective the tool is for our folks for
perhaps a year or so. In the meantime I am prepared to give it my all
because I have witnessed firsthand the power of technology to change
people's lives and to bridge the digital divide. Ask any of our many
graduates that started out with no computer skills and now are
successful computer professionals and they will tell you firsthand.
My hope is that social networking can indeed become a tool for
social justice. Maybe then we can begin creating more and better
technology tools, not just for the person with the deepest pockets,
but for those whose pockets are in most need of filling.
[Salon]
MMORPGs take to the streets
MMORPGs take to the streets
04/06/2005 05:59 PMOne recent trend in the online gaming market has been towards mobile
phones. Though we are moving into an era where people can potentially
walk around with a networked game console in their hand, current
mobile game development still lacks many of the resources that
traditional gaming platforms offer, leaving gamers speculating about
the prospect of additional mobile MMORPGs (massive multiplayer online
role playing games).
"As the phones get better and better, they could host games onto
themselves, but largely at this stage, they would need to be more
casual, simple titles," MMORPG.com's Lead Content Editor Dana Massey
told Spymac. "One problem with MMOs is that they are large and
complex beasts, which is not very well suited to the often-simplistic
interfaces that you find typically on a cell phone. That is not to say
a new design suited to cell phones will not come along. I am certain
many folks are working on it as we speak."
There have been a few massive multiplayer mobile games offered in the
past but mobile gaming is now blossoming with large manufacturers like
Nokia, Sony-Ericsson, and Motorola improving the gaming performance of
their phones, and adopting open platforms as their mobile OS to
support multiple mobile gaming services.
Nokia in March announced the development of a new PC-mobile phone
cross-platform MMORPG, HinterWars: The Aterian Invasion. Created by
Nokia for promotion in the Asia-Pacific region, the game allows the
user to play along with thousands of others using the Nokia N-Gage
gamedeck or computer. The game expected to be available for download
free of charge in the fourth quarter of 2005.
“HinterWars represents an all-new gaming concept that for the first
time brings together the two most popular gaming platforms – the
mobile phone and the PC,” Nokia Multimedia's Rick Gawdat said.
"What’s even more appealing is the true mobility that HinterWars
offers gamers. When they’re at home or not on the move, they can play
HinterWars on their PCs, but when they’re out, or traveling in the
bus, train or taxi, they can continue playing the game on their N-Gage
gamedeck.”
We can expect to see this trend towards mobile gaming continuing,
following the increasing interest in MMORPGs. Because MMORPGs are
often, to some extent, competitive, people often feel the pressure to
play as much as possible, leaving the mobile phone a great target for
on-the-go game play. "I could easily foresee game designs that
encourage people to log in for short bursts throughout the day to keep
on top of things," Massey said. "There would be no better way to do
this than via cell phone."
From the Screen to the Streets
From the Screen to the Streets
10/29/2003 08:15 PMAggregators of blog postings—which rank blog listings by popularity,
similar to Google’s page rank technology—already serve as a filter for
this flood of ...
Pacman on the Streets
Pacman on the Streets
05/06/2004 01:38 AMI must play this before I die. I think I'd rather act out
Defender or SimCity.
Pacman on
the streets.
PacManhattan unleashes the old arcade game
on the streets of New
York. Students from NYU's Interactive Telecommunications program
marked out some city streets, donned costumes of game entities, and
played out.

Attentive Smartmob readers will recall that an earlier
version of this was launched in Singapore, in 2003.
(thanks
to dens)
[
Smart Mobs]
Time to hit the streets
Time to hit the streets
04/09/2004 04:05 PMIt's time to take
to the streets and fight.
Wi-Fi from London Streets
Wi-Fi from London Streets
12/20/2003 08:35 PMStreetNet Islington, London
MMORPGs take to the streets: Part II
MMORPGs take to the streets: Part II
04/12/2005 11:28 AMThere has been a recent increase in the amount of massive multiplayer
online games (MMOs) and massive multiplayer online role-playing games
(MMORPG) for the mobile phone out in the market. With the mobile
gaming market blossoming, we see better games developing and a growing
title selection emerging.
Evidence of the strength of the mobile gaming market can be seen in
the recent development of dedicated mobile publishing divisions by a
number of computer and video games companies, most notably game
publishing giant, Electronic Arts.
Media research group Screen Digest gives two reasons for the recent
influx of mobile games. Mobile phone penetration in developed
countries started to reach saturation, making networks look at
"non-voice services to increase revenue and act as a differentiating
point to reduce churn," and downloadable technologies (and enabled
handsets) emerged to offer a compellingly simple (and billable)
platform for the delivery of games.
Mobile phone game-maker AwareDreams began the first serious research
on the subject back in 2001.
"It seemed quite an obvious thing to do," AwareDreams' Managing
Director Jochai Papke told Spymac. "After all, cell phones are meant
to communicate and multiplayer is just a little more communication
than single-player."
AwareDreams' Fantasy Worlds: Rhynn is one of the first J2ME MMORPGs
for mobile phones. The game features hundreds of human players and
bots in the same game world, four different playable character types
(human, orc, elf, dwarf) and character building through experience
levels while allowing for players to chat and trade with other
players.
According to Papke, the growing usage of net connected cell phones can
be well utilized, though the major drawback is network latency.
"Deployment of a realtime multiplayer racing game is not possible to
realize in most current cellphone networks today. The other is pricing
for data traffic. Our game addresses both issues in that it lag times
are pretty well compensated and network traffic is kept reasonably
low."
"MMORPGs of various kinds on cellphones will be a common thing in the
future," Papke said. "After all, being mobile brings in a whole bunch
of new aspects into game design."
Related articles:
MMORPGs take to the streets
Apple to bite into gaming market?
Dance the pounds away
Green games
Gavin Newsom's mean streets
Gavin Newsom's mean streets
07/23/2004 08:06 AMSan Francisco's mayor hit the national stage when he allowed 4,000 gay
couples to wed. But he wishes the world would pay more attention to
his new crusade: Reducing crime and despair in the city's poorest
neighborhoods.
THE BROOKLYN RAIL - STREETS
THE BROOKLYN RAIL - STREETS
08/02/2004 01:58 PMAn Anarchist in the Hudson Valley: In Conversation With Peter Lamborn
Wilson
brooklynrail.org/spotlight/july04/wilson.html
track this
site | 3 links
Microsoft Streets & Trips with GPS
Microsoft Streets & Trips with GPS
07/03/2004 01:32 PM
The 2005 edition of Microsoft Streets & Trips not
only comes with a version of Pocket Streets for Pocket PC (which it
may of before, I'm not sure), but the $130 version comes wtih a GPS
unit, as well. Anybody know what the make and model on this unit is?
Or failing that, who makes the internals?
Read - Purchase Page [Navarre]
Intel's 64-Bit Pentium 4s Hit The
Streets
Intel's 64-Bit Pentium 4s Hit The
Streets
03/22/2005 04:42 PMSlashdot Mar 22 2005 5:06AM GMT
Mozilla 1.0 Hits the Streets
Mozilla 1.0 Hits the Streets
06/07/2002 07:44 AMAfter a development cycle measured on a geologic time scale, Mozilla
version 1.0 was released today. Was it worth the wait?
New Low Cost DVD Burners Hit The Streets
New Low Cost DVD Burners Hit The Streets
12/06/2003 10:51 AMWireless streets of Philadelphia
Wireless streets of Philadelphia
09/01/2004 11:38 AMBarlow will be dancing in the streets
Barlow will be dancing in the streets
08/01/2004 05:05 AMThis just in from the BarlowFriendz mail
list......
DANCING IN THE STREETS: REVOLUTION WITH A
SMILE
I spent most of my political life as a Republican. While that's a
little hard to imagine now, I have sufficient experience to know that
the commonly held view that Republicans either can't dance or won't
dance is inaccurate. When I was a Republican, I was as dedicated to
dancing as I am now and there were others like me, as I recall.
Still, part of what drove me from the party - aside from a
categorical repudiation by the current administration of most
Republican principles - is a dour dancelessness that crept into
Republican "culture." It seems increasingly ironic to call the GOP a
party at all...
Maureen Dowd recently observed that the Republicans had become so
obsessed with rejecting the 60's ethic of doing it if it feels good
that they have taken up an ethic of doing it if it makes someone else
feel bad. Moreover, the GOP strategy of basing their root-level
organization on Hot Protestantism has infused their ranks with a lot
of chilly Puritanism, which, as H.L. Mencken defined it, is "the
haunting fear that someone, somewhere, is having a good time."
These were among the factors in mind recently as I turned my
thoughts to what I might do to vex the Republicans when they gather in
New York a month from now. Furious as I may be at their policies,
conventional protest is not an option.
If it were peaceful protest, they would ignore it even if two
million people turned up. They have a demonstrated capacity to do
that. Indeed, the administration consists of such fervent God-anointed
idealists that they would "stay the course" against any opposition
short of a majority too overwhelming to rig their electronic voting
machines against.
If the protests in New York should turn even a little violent, it
will be to Bush's benefit. This is so much the case that I rather
expect to see undercover agents provocateurs scattered among the
ragtag disaffected who will shortly descend on Manhattan. And the
NYPD, while generally my favorite police force on the planet, can get
themselves in a froth when they feel spooked. One thrown bottle could
result in days of riveting television, during which Bush would have
plenty of opportunity to pretend, convincingly to some, that he was
Gary Cooper.
Besides, anyone with an explicit intention to protest Republican
policies, anyone carrying an anti-Bush sign, indeed, anyone wearing a
neither a smile nor a Bush button, is likely to be corralled into one
of the remote "Free Speech Zones" that Mayor Bloomberg will graciously
provide his guests, there to vent his fury upon his fellow infuriated.
None for me, thanks.
I have another idea, and you can help. Indeed, as wild, fun-loving
BarlowFriendz, I'm counting on you to help.
I want to dance in the streets.
I don't want to confront the Republicans. I want to discombobulate
them. I don't want to argue with them, which would only convince them
further, I want to throw them off their game. I don't want to be
aggressive in my discontent. God knows there's been plenty of that on
all sides. I want to be genial. But disconcerting.
So, to that end, I propose the following: I want to organize a
cadre of 20 to 50 of us. I want to dress us in suits and other plain
pedestrian attire and salt us among the sidewalk multitudes in
Republican-rich zones. At a predetermined moment, one of us will
produce a boom-box and crank it up with something danceable. Suddenly,
about a third of the people on the sidewalk, miscellaneously
distributed in the general throng, will start dancing like crazy and
continue to do so for for about a minute. Then we will stop, melt back
into the pedestrian flow, and go to another location to erupt
there.
Perhaps if we enlist enough troops, we can have several platoons
simultaneously exploding into dance around Manhattan, so there will be
absolutely no way to tell where we might strike next.
I promise you, this will make the Republicans uncomfortable. They
will return to their partisan duties with a sense of disquiet that
will slightly but surely fuzz the intensity of their focus. Besides,
we'll enjoy it. That alone will irritate them. And we'll be doing
nothing they can arrest us for. Nor, for that matter, televise us
doing. By the time cameras arrive, we'll be gone.
I have to admit there's nothing terribly original about this idea.
I'm talking about forming a standard smart mob, similar to the group
my friend Reverend Billy convenes every Tuesday to wander around the
WTC PATH station, muttering the 1st Amendment. But it's a start, and I
think that once we get ourselves assembled, we will be able to cook up
a number of other creative pranks we might inflict on our thin-lipped
countrymen.
I may put up a web site that we can use to organize ourselves. In
the meantime, I will start a mailing list of everyone who wants to
participate. Furthermore, you can go to my blog
http://blog.barlowfriendz.net where this will also be posted and
participate in the discussion there.
Please e-mail me at once - at barlow at eff.org - if you're
interested. And pass this invitation to others who might be.
I've been thinking for some time that the problem with politics is
that doesn't know how to have a good time. And it certainly doesn't
dance enough. This is your chance to address both of these
deficiencies.
And remember the great Emma Goldman who said, "If I can't dance, I
want no part of your revolution." What she knew is that dancing is
itself a revolutionary act. Come revolt with us. And bring your
smile.
Yippie-ti-yo,
John Perry Barlow
Policing a City Where Streets Are Less
Mean
Policing a City Where Streets Are Less
Mean
08/07/2004 03:38 PMTen years after the city began one of the biggest crime drops in
history, the face of policing has changed in ways small and large.
3g Arrives: Taking It to the Streets
3g Arrives: Taking It to the Streets
04/06/2005 02:35 AMCIO Today Apr 6 2005 5:05AM GMT
Navigate The Streets Pictures
Navigate The Streets Pictures
05/21/2004 07:02 AMTim from the 'Navigate the Streets' contest we wrote about a couple
months back sent a link to some pictures from last week's race in
Toronto. Navigate the Streets is a technology-friendly scavenger hunt,
where participants use wireless (and other)...
SoftRAID 3.0.3 hits the streets
SoftRAID 3.0.3 hits the streets
05/13/2004 08:09 PMSoftRAID 3.0.3 shipped today, the latest version of the company's
software RAID product...
Cobble-bone streets
Cobble-bone streets
08/19/2004 11:42 AM
When construction workers in
Oslo dug a drainage ditch around a church in the "Old City" district,
they uncovered a slew of skeletons little more than a foot below the
surface. According to an Aftenposten Norway article, the skeletons
likely belong to the former tenants of a Dominican monastery located
in the area from 1240 until 1537.
"Before the Reformation the most blessed resting spots
were awarded hierarchically and could be bought. The best plots lay
under the holy water that drained off the church roof and dripped onto
the ground below... The skeletons also bear witness to medieval times
as an age of violence. Many of the bones reveal notches that must have
resulted from brutal force."
Link (via Fark)Zimbabwe paper hits the streets
Zimbabwe paper hits the streets
01/22/2004 04:26 AMThe Daily News resumes publishing four months after being closed down
for operating without a licence.
Chinese sales staff sent to beg in
streets
Chinese sales staff sent to beg in
streets
08/12/2004 11:04 AMYou need to toughen up, sunshine
RIAA Takes the Fight to the Streets
RIAA Takes the Fight to the Streets
01/09/2004 09:57 PMReview: Streets & Trips provides more
info
Review: Streets & Trips provides more
info
02/06/2005 01:10 AMBoston Globe Feb 6 2005 4:21AM GMT
XP Service Pack 2 Hits the Streets
XP Service Pack 2 Hits the Streets
08/27/2004 05:27 PMPocket Streets 2003 Maps
Pocket Streets 2003 Maps
08/15/2004 07:36 PMThe New Affiliate Policy Hits The
Streets
The New Affiliate Policy Hits The
Streets
02/01/2005 09:16 PMLong talked about - the fateful new AdWords Affiliate policy is
implimented. Final effects to be determined.
Review: Streets & Trips Provides More
Info (AP)
Review: Streets & Trips Provides More
Info (AP)
02/06/2005 12:22 AMAP - With Web sites like Yahoo and MapQuest giving away maps and
driving directions it seems like a waste of money to buy a standalone
program that basically does the same thing. To survive, software
publishers need to offer a lot more than the online freebies.
Microsoft Corp.'s Streets & Trips 2005 does just that.
True Crime: Streets of L.A. now shipping
True Crime: Streets of L.A. now shipping
03/17/2005 03:06 AMAspyr today announced True Crime: Streets of L.A. for Mac has begun
shipping and is expected to be on retail shelves by March 19...
The Streets lead Ivor nominations
The Streets lead Ivor nominations
04/11/2005 08:44 AMThe Streets - aka British rapper and songwriter Mike Skinner - are
nominated for two Ivor Novello awards.
Asus A730W Hits the Streets
Asus A730W Hits the Streets
12/22/2004 01:36 AM
It doesn't get much slower than this week (well, maybe
next week), it seems, so forgive me if I'm posting news that PDA
Buyer's Guide will be posting a review soon of the Asus A730W. On the
upside, that means the Pocket PC handheld (an upgraded, Wi-Fied
version of the A730) should be around for purchase, if you're in the
market. And Asus is tossing in an extra battery and a USB Host cable
with the VGA PDA, so it's a pretty decent deal at $570.
Coming Soon: ASUS A730W VGA Pocket PC Review
[PDABuyersGuide]
OmniWeb 4.2 Beta 2 Hits The Streets
OmniWeb 4.2 Beta 2 Hits The Streets
03/13/2003 10:23 AMPocket Streets 2002: GPS Update
Pocket Streets 2002: GPS Update
08/16/2004 10:00 PMProtest creates gridlock on SF streets
Protest creates gridlock on SF streets
03/21/2003 02:26 AMDancing in the Streets: Revolution with
a Smile
Dancing in the Streets: Revolution with
a Smile
08/01/2004 03:33 AMDance Dance
Revolution
barlow.typepad.com/barlowfriendz/2004/07/dancing_in_the_.
html
track this
site | 3 links
Smartphone version of Pocket Streets
Smartphone version of Pocket Streets
07/28/2004 08:18 PMNew York's Finest Sweep Up Streets
New York's Finest Sweep Up Streets
09/02/2004 01:52 PM
Protests at
RNC test appropriate response
An eyewitness account by
I Can't Believe Its A Democracy - "I just
have to pause here for a moment to make an observation. How many times
have I seen an interview with an arrested protester who claimed he or
she had done nothing to provoke the police. Almost always my reaction
has been, "Yeah, sure." Only now I was seeing this very
situation unfold in front of my eyes. These protesters, while
certainly noisy, had obeyed police instructions down the entire length
of the street. Now they were being treated as if they had gotten
wildly out of control, but they hadn't. I know, because I was
there."
Another account from
Captain Normal (also an eyewitness and even got
arrested and held for 24 hours without being charged or being able to
contact a lawyer) discusses a family of French tourists caught up in
the sweep as well as some of the other residents of
"Gitmo
on the Hudson".
Grok Description matches for European workers take to the streets
GrokA matches for European workers take to the streets
European workers take to the streets