EEVL Doin' the RSS Thing
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EEVL Website Launches Hot Topics on
Engineering and Technology
EEVL Website Launches Hot Topics on
Engineering and Technology
03/30/2005 06:05 PMA new feature called Hot Topics has been added to the EEVL website
which gives access to in-depth reports on topical engineering and
technology issues. The new feature is called Hot Topics
The Old New Thing
The Old New Thing
06/18/2004 04:58 AMRaymondChen's weblog .. The Old New
Thing
weblogs.asp.net/oldnewthing
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site | 5 links
Getting beyond the next big thing
Getting beyond the next big thing
08/15/2004 09:32 AMMcKinsey says a post-boom tech industry can profit mightily by taking
stock in the operations of many slower-growth industries.
Next best thing to being there
Next best thing to being there
11/15/2003 08:46 AMLos Angeles Times Nov 15 2003 7:38AM ET
This thing still on?
This thing still on?
02/05/2005 10:19 PMFor a variety of boring reasons I spent some time today upgrading my
old Windows 2000 box to WinXP. I believe that Radio has survived the
transition, but this is a test post to make sure...
One New Thing
One New Thing
01/29/2004 12:59 PMOne New Thinghttp://nlrp.blogspot.com/Weblog of Lynette Reville, a new librarian in Australia, who
is on a library-like quest to find One New Thing to learn every day.
Her companion website is the
New Librarian's Resource Page
. Both are resources that you need to visit. I will be adding One
New Thing to my
eCurrent
Awareness 2004 Report.
TV the next big thing?
TV the next big thing?
06/10/2004 04:36 AMYes I know, you are wondering if I have lost it. To be honest when I
read all the fuzz about it I thought "TV?...
Best Thing at CES
Best Thing at CES
02/01/2005 09:27 PMWhat was the best thing at CES? Macworld, writes Dan Dubno
for CBS News. After a week in Las Vegas, at the Consumer
Electronics Show, I had seen all there was to see...Yet something was
missing at CES, and a week later, at Macworld in San Francisco, we
found it: the new Mac Mini and the iPod Shuffle. [Jan 27, 2005]
Is This Thing On?
Is This Thing On?
07/02/2004 10:46 PMJesus, hanging on the cross, says, “Peter, come here.” Peter,
thinking he is about to receive a profound religious truth, tries goes
to Jesus but...
The Next Big Web Thing - Really
The Next Big Web Thing - Really
03/13/2003 10:22 AMWhat happened to Web services? Well, they're out there, being
developed by Microsoft and Sun employees as well as folks working on
other platforms. But, thankfully, what keeps showing up on the radar
is not the position papers produced by vendors' marketing departments,
but rather the quiet, diligent work of the W3C, which will have the
last laugh, in my humble opinion.
Say one thing, do another
Say one thing, do another
03/06/2004 01:54 AMIf It's Not One Thing...
If It's Not One Thing...
06/06/2005 12:15 AM I've been gone for a while ... and for too many reasons to count,
but I'll try.
- Family problems months ago that are ongoing
- Preparation at work for some changes
- New car, and the financial wrangling that made it happen
- Possible new work in the future
- Built foundation of that possible new work
- Upgraded Mac Geekery and codepoetry to Drupal 4.6 (on the same
install, no less)
- Worked so hard, slept so little, immune system went down enough I
picked up shingles – yay me
So, while I'm doing my best not to scratch everywhere, I'm looking
at the tech news as of late and realizing that there is absolutely
nothing interesting going on until the 29th. Sure, sure, Adobe is
trying harder to be the Microsoft of the media applications market,
and succeeding, and other little fun things going around and around,
but overall it's just your average monkey business.
But, damn, did you see Apple's stock price? Down $10 in
just a few days for no real reason. Well, the whole market went to
crap along with it (the Dow dropped over 500 points) so it's not like
a bias or anything but ... wow.
Anyway. I'll have a long biting insight ready just as soon as the
hydrocodone wears off... -scratch- -scratch-
One More Thing...
One More Thing...
06/05/2005 10:47 PMIntel
Inside the Apple.
Oh, And One Last Thing...
Oh, And One Last Thing...
04/18/2005 10:21 AMSteve Jobs is finally getting his wish: an user interface that is
really good enough to lick
"it's a Catholic thing."
"it's a Catholic thing."
04/29/2004 09:09 AMOne thing the internet got right
One thing the internet got right
06/17/2005 07:18 PMIn reading about the copyright insanity of Wal-Mart and Ofoto, I'm reminded
of how much better the copyright prevention approach works online. In
the (much criticized and abused, but in this case, forward thinking)
DMCA, there's a safeharbor provision for ISPs so that they aren't
responsible for what happens on their network, their members actually
doing things illegally are responsible. This makes perfect sense and
does have methods and rules about what an ISP needs to do to help
remove offending material, but never puts the ISP on trial for the
work of their customer. Without this, ISPs wouldn't be able to fund
the manhours to babysit and question every single byte on their disk
drives.
Wal-mart and Ofoto are making really bad business decisions as the
result of pressure from professional photographers, presumably to
prevent lawsuits directed at the photo developers themselves. But like Ernest said, this is a silly approach.
Every service can have unintended uses and consequences like getting
wedding photo duplicates made without the photographer's permission,
but the person that took possession of the negatives is in the wrong,
not the photo developer. The same goes for Kinkos watching your every
move when you use their copiers.
Maybe we could see an end to these silly stories if safeharbor
provisions were more widespread. It seems like the one thing in
internet law we really got right.
Are Firewalls Useful? And Another
Thing...
Are Firewalls Useful? And Another
Thing...
09/23/2004 10:56 AMCan Diversity Be a Bad Thing?
Can Diversity Be a Bad Thing?
04/12/2004 03:34 PMvs. Linux GUI:
Owen found an interview that really, really hits the nail on
the head about a big problem with Linux.
Right now, the Linux community values "diversity" too
highly to ever get a single, consistent GUI, let alone a good one. At
the same time, it holds on doggedly to its (often ancient) Unix-rooted
traditions and conventions.
Finally, it's hard to get a really large group of Linux developers
to do much of anything beyond a single "project." A GUI is not a
"project." It's the whole OS from the user's perspective, and it must
be from the creators' perspective too or it will
fail.
This is so true. One thing that has always bothered me about Linux
is the lack of a consistent file structure. One distribution puts
certain files in one place, and another puts them somewhere else.
This was such a big problem, in fact, that the United Linux consoritum was put
together specifically to define a common file system. However, Red
Hat didn't play ball, and that really marginalized any chance of
success.
As for the GUI problem discussed above: Gnome or KDE? Why? Why
don't they get together and build the GUI to end all GUIs and
just make life simpler for everyone? The different Linux
distributions and GUI essentially create multiple "virtual OSs."
You're running Fedora and KDE, or SuSE and Gnome, or Slackware and
something else.
You also see this when installing software. I'm using Red Hat
Fedora, so I need to find an RPM specifically for my distribution.
This isn't the same thing that will run in SuSE or other
distributions. In fact, they may not use RPMs at all. You may need
to compile them from source, etc.
About 18 months ago, I made a concerted effort at using Linux on
the desktop. I posted here about the lack of consistency:
While I appreciate the cowboy, wild-west, open-source
attitude as much as the next guy, I also appreciate not having to
relearn an interface for every new app. With Linux apps, Lord only
knows what the menu commands are going to be. Right-clicking on the
workspace may reboot the machine for all you know. CTRL-A works in
some apps, not in others. Double-clicking has all sorts of different
behaviors as well.
Let me say that I haven't found this issue to be the case with
Fedora, but the premise holds true. Linux developers look at their
one little corner of the OS. They are tactical. No one is looking at
the big picture — the strategic picture.
Perhaps the best thing to happen to Linux would be for Red Hat to
destroy all competitors and become the Microsoft of Linux. If
everyone was using Red Hat, and there was one monolithic entity
working on developing the platform, maybe this would provide the
cohesion the OS needs to make real inroads on the desktop.
Far be it for me to agree with Owen about anything, but this
interview is right on the money.
Click here to comment on this entry
Too much of a good thing
Too much of a good thing
07/16/2004 08:21 AMForget spam -- our real conundrum is the overload of legitimate
e-mail. But help is coming.
Only thing getting larger
Only thing getting larger
03/08/2004 11:23 PMThe few that each of us receive is just a fraction of the online
enhancement craze. A Google search for "penis enlargement" yielded 1.8
million hits. ...
Yahoo should do the right thing!
Yahoo should do the right thing!
12/24/2004 12:46 PMI have about a dozen e-mail accounts spread all over the net but I
keep a printout in our safety deposit box along with many other things
a print-out of all of my login names and passwords in a sealed
envelope.
But not everyone has pre-planned for something bad happening to
them. A Marine who was unfortunately killed in action in Iraq has a
Yahoo e-mail account that the family is trying to secure before the
account expires. Yahoo has refused to give the account password to the
family.
E-mail accounts could contain information that the family would
cherish but it also could contain information that would leave a bad
taste in their mouth. I think Yahoo should give in to the families
wishes, but I would hope with enough public pressure they would turn
the account over. [CNN]
Put that filthy thing out!
Put that filthy thing out!
02/18/2004 12:04 PM Smoking
banned from the Irish workplace (including pubs) from March 29th
Looks like all of us smokers will have to comply. Personally, I can't
wait for the ban to come in as it will be further incentive for me to
fight the addicition. Hopefully the ban on smoking at my office will
mean it'll be easier to stop.
All that said, I wonder how it's going to be enforced? The way I see
it, the only way it could be properly enforced is through the public
being prepaired to report transgressions to those charged with
enforcing the law. Maybe the fear of that will make sure that business
owners see to it that their workplaces are smoke free.
that bad journalism thing
that bad journalism thing
06/15/2004 03:18 PMi think it's the Tribune's way of saying they think nobody read
Choire's NYT piece
The best thing about identities - is
that there are so many of them
The best thing about identities - is
that there are so many of them
12/31/2004 10:59 AMWe used to use that line when we referred to standards.
Wi
shing that the world would
coalesce around a single standard:
a) ignores the fact that there is Microsoft. So choose your
category wisely and stay under the radar, as Microsoft - no matter
what - will come up with their own thing. In the case of subscription
formats - they actually PRECEDED RSS with something called CDF. But
since it failed, that gave Dave Winer an opportunity of getting RSS
going "user the radar" until it was too late for Microsoft to stop
him.
b) assuming that there will ever be a single digital identity
standard - is wrong. Kim Cameron raps out his beliefs - which he calls
"The Fifth
Law of Identity". I totally agree with Kim that a meta-identity
format is needed to brdge and connect together all of these disparate
systems.
c) is rather naive and clearly sees the digital identity space as
one thing. It's not. What digital identity is to the FOAF nerds or
Tantek Celik's XFN cult is completely different than how the i-names
folks or Sxip Network sees it. And I haven't even brought up the
enterprise wonks - lile PingID. Or the god head Craig Burton or his
nemisis Kim Cameron. We all see this space as something completely
different.
So - by definition - we (at best) can at least hope for some sort
of meta-standard.
God bless the meta-directory gods.
UPDATE: Craig Burton raps it
our succinctly - like only he can.
The law of pluralism is contrary to the laws of customer control.
Let's be clear, the law of pluralism requires operating system
independence--by definition. This means the Microsoft Identity
Archtiect is calling for a system that is not necissarily Windows
centric by design. This--of course--is the only way such a system can
really work--but consider the implications.
A cross platfrom identity metasystem sun-spot hot and--with the
other laws being discussed here--changes everything.
[Craig Burton:
logs, links, life, and lexicon]
Too much of a good thing?
Too much of a good thing?
01/01/2005 04:42 AMglobetechnology.com Jan 1 2005 7:04AM GMT
Next big thing? A little PlayStation
Next big thing? A little PlayStation
01/06/2005 04:45 AMAjc.com - Thu Jan 6, 02:09 am GMT
The in thing: Outsourcing
The in thing: Outsourcing
05/14/2004 01:37 PMCNET May 14 2004 5:39PM GMT
Gillette's New, New Thing
Gillette's New, New Thing
05/24/2004 12:41 PMGillette is counting on the new M3Power shaving system to
differentiate its line.
The New iMac: One Thing Too Many
The New iMac: One Thing Too Many
08/31/2004 11:28 AMI don't mean to put a damper on the wonderful new iMac, but Apple
needs to look far back to the tradition of the Performa line. By Apple
Matters (via MyAppleMenu)
: An Old New Thing
: An Old New Thing
07/07/2004 07:49 PMIn Kendall Clark's first week as managing editor, he says hello to new
challenges and old friends.
What a sick thing to do...
What a sick thing to do...
07/25/2004 04:03 PM
Bush administration seeks to block consumer drug
suits. White House says injury claims undermine FDA.
Gee. I don't know
wh
y we might need some legal recourse against drug manufacturers?
Weasels!
Joe Trippi's next big thing
Joe Trippi's next big thing
07/26/2004 07:41 PMHoward Dean's campaign wizard is now a consultant without a candidate,
but he's giving John Kerry free advice: Reject public financing and
turn to your base to neutralize the Bush money juggernaut.
BlogPet, best thing ever
BlogPet, best thing ever
07/29/2004 08:45 PMoh please oh please oh please english version!
Thing you don't want to see in the
morning
Thing you don't want to see in the
morning
08/05/2004 03:56 PM
Click to view the complete scene.
 |
Very early in the morning, I walk out with the firm purpose of taking
the garbage out. I walk in, turn on the lights by waving my arms
frantically (the motion detector apparently works only if your body
mass exceeds 120 kg - the local cats apparently can grow very big) and
something is not quite right. I see shoes from the corner of my eye.
"Shoes?", I think to myself. "Shoes, dangling from the
ceiling?"
I look left and yeah, a pair of mens' shoes is hanging a meter and a
half off the ground. With pants and all.
My stomach curls up in panic.
Half a second later, my brain catches up and I laugh.
Definitely another one in the category of things you can do with your laundry but
probably should not.
Is there such as thing as too much
memory?
Is there such as thing as too much
memory?
08/14/2004 11:54 AM
Munich Bans
Memorial Plaques Munich has decided to ban memorial plaques to
Jewish, Sinti and German citizens deported and murdered during World
War Two. Jewish leaders, fearful that the plaques would stir up
anti-Semitic fervor, supported the ban.
These plaques are the work of a German artist,
Gunter Demnig.
”He first had the idea in the early 1990s when he was unveiling a
memorial for the Sinti and Roma victims of the Holocaust.
“An elderly woman approached him and insisted that "no Gypsies
ever lived here". "It is so easy for people to deny
something. I wanted to ensure that this would not happen," he
says. (BBC).”
This reminder of the holocaust brought to mind the
Pinkas Synagogue
in Prague, as well as the
Viet Nam
Memorial
and the
AIDS quilt --
monuments that really changed me.
Thing Knowledge
Thing Knowledge
06/18/2004 12:53 PM
My friend Alex at University of California Press gave me a review copy
of the book
Thing Knowledge: A Philosophy of Scientific
Instruments by Davis Baird. Sounds heavy, but on first glance it
seems that Baird has balanced deep philosophy with fun machine
history! The illustrations and vintage photographs are a treat too.
I'm looking forward to digging into it. From Peter Galison's blurb on
the back:
"Grappling with a wonderful assortment of objects--from
antique orreries to modern spectrographs--Davis Baird draws the reader
deep into fascinating questions about the nature of knowledge. As
lucid on the semantic account of theories as it is on the inner
workings of the cyclotron, this book that brings the laboratory to
philosophers and philosophy into the laboratory."
Warning: At $65, it's a pricey book, probably due to a limited print
run.
Link"watch the whole thing "
"watch the whole thing "
07/16/2004 03:18 PMIt's like that spiderman thing all over
again
It's like that spiderman thing all over
again
07/10/2004 06:43 AM
Friday Saturday Flash Fun -
MorrisseyDance (warning - cheesy
audio) How Do You Steer This Thing?
How Do You Steer This Thing?
07/16/2004 05:22 AMCan biker moguls Senior and Paulie Teutul of American Chopper leverage
their brand?
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EEVL Doin' the RSS Thing