"Necessary" reading on Google
Grok Headline matches for "Necessary" reading on Google
SEC Might Want To Cool Off After Reading
About Google In Playboy
SEC Might Want To Cool Off After Reading
About Google In Playboy
08/12/2004 04:49 PMPoor Google. They've made such an effort to remain ridiculously quiet
during the "quiet period" to avoid any IPO delays, but now it's
looking like the thought of being in the same pages as naked women may
have gotten to them. The latest issue of Playboy apparently has
an interview with Google's co-founders that some believe may make
the SEC impose a "cooling off" period (I won't even go there...)
before they'll allow the IPO to proceed. This is, of course, the same
thing that happened to Salesforce.com, that had a huge
NY
Times interview with its founder come out days before the expected
IPO. The SEC made them push that IPO off a month. Considering the
weak state of the IPO market these days, this might not actually be a
bad thing, though I'm sure Google was hoping to get the process over
with as quickly as possible, to get rid of all this negative press and
detailed attention surrounding the IPO. Of course, it does make you
wonder... what happens to the auction process? Since the bidding is
set to close any minute now, if the IPO gets put off a month, will
they let people change their bids? Over the next month, plenty could
happen that might make people change how they feel about Google and
what they might be willing to pay.
Google Now Reading Flash Files
Google Now Reading Flash Files
04/27/2004 10:22 AMWebProNews Apr 27 2004 2:04PM GMT
Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary
Reading in America
Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary
Reading in America
07/09/2004 01:22 PMdownload a .pdf of the actual study on reading ..
report
nea.gov/pub/ReadingAtRisk.pdf
track this
site | 5 links
Google creating online reading room
Technology challenges Sprint-Nextel
merger Apple fights back aga
Google creating online reading room
Technology challenges Sprint-Nextel
merger Apple fights back aga
12/19/2004 03:28 PMSeattletimes.nwsource.com - Thu Dec 16, 11:24 pm GMT
What I'm reading...
What I'm reading...
07/10/2004 05:41 PMI linked to this the other day in the linklog, but it occurred to
me that maybe I should do a
kottke and pull out my contribution to Phil's What Webloggers are reading post and stick it up here just in
case anyone's interested:
I’m currently reading Dave Eggers’ You
Shall Know Our Velocity, which I was slightly dreading but
now would highly recommend. After that I was hoping to muster the
enthusiasm to have another stab at the last half of Larry
Lessig’s The
Future of Ideas. The arguments aren’t new to me, but
I thought I should probably go back and read the man himself. I really
need to start reading more fiction again. For a start, I need to catch
up with my Neal Stephenson — I’ve not read The
Confusion or Quic
ksilver yet. But I’ll probably end up trawling
through the various social software related bits of social science
that I’ve been meaning to read for ages (Schelling<
/a>, Goffman, Olson,
Hall)
and bunking off occasionally to grab a bit of Kim Philby’s My
Silent War. I’ve become a bit obsessed with the whole
Cambridge Spy thing since starting work at Broadcasting
House.
Reading
Reading
12/11/2003 04:52 PM
My current reads,
favourite reads of
times past, and ever-expanding
queue of reads to
come. You'll see this post bounce to the top of the blog whenever
I review or alter my list.
In Hand
For the full list, take a gander
here.
On Queue
In Mind / On Shelf
- Designing With Web Standards by Jeffrey Zeldman ... good,
clean, anal-retentive (in only the best way) site building
- Mobile Usability: How Nokia Changed the Face of the Mobile
Phone by Christian Lindholm, Turkka Keinonen, and Harri Kiljander
... droolworthy, to be sure; on the suggestion of Clay
- Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen ... waited long enough to dive
into another of her lovely books
- Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Michael Lewis
... recommended by Tim
- Python in a Nutshell by Alex Martelli ... ;-)
- My Year of Meats by Ruth L. Ozeki
- Practical RDF by Shelley Powers
- Tears of the Giraffe by Alexander McCall Smith
- Pigs Have Wings: A Blandings Story by P. G. Wodehouse
- The No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency by Alexander McCall
Smith
- Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
- Washington Square by Henry James
- Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J. K. Rowling
- Fingerprints: The Origins of Crime Detection and the Murder Case
that Launched Forensic Science by Collin Beavan
- Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation by Joseph J.
Ellis
- Ambling Into History: The Unlikely Odyssey of George W. Bush by
Frank Bruni
- The Empty Chair by Jeffery Deaver
- The Clock of the Long Now by Stewart Brand
- The Humane Interface by Jef Raskin
- Tomorrow Now: Envisioning the Next Fifty Years by Bruce
Sterling
- The Coffin Dancer by Jeffery Deaver
- Nanotechnology: A Gentle Introduction to the Next Big Idea by
Mark Ratner and Daniel Ratner
- Nexus: Small Worlds and the Groundbreaking Science of Networks
by Mark Buchanan
- Linked: The New Science of Networks by Albert-Laszlo
Barabasi
- Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution by Howard Rheingold
- "High Score! The Illustrated History of Electronic Games", by
Rusel DeMaria and Johnny Lee Wilson
- Kick Me: Adventures in Adolescence by Paul Feig
- The Bone Collector by Jeffery Deaver
- Summerland by Michael Chabon
- The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs
- Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software by
Charles Petzold (re-read)
- How to Be Good by Nick Hornby
- Bridget Jones's Diary by Helen Fielding
- High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
- Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal by
Eric Schlosser
- The Death of Vishnu by Manil Suri
- Small Pieces Loosely Joined: A Unified Theory of the Web by
David Weinberger
- The Invisible Computer by Donald A. Norman
- The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell (re-read)
- Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America by Barbara
Ehrenreich
- Curve Ball : Baseball, Statistics, and the Role of Chance in the
Game by Jim Albert and Jay Bennett
- Love Is the Killer App : How to Win Business and Influence
Friends by Tim Sanders
- Java Servlet
Programming by Jason Hunter, William Crawford (Contributor)
- Something Fresh (A Blandings Story) by P. G. Wodehouse
- Interface Culture by Steven Johnson
- The Future of Ideas by Lawrence Lessig
- Building
Wireless Community Networks by Rob Flickenger
- Green Mars by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Spider-Man: The Ultimate Guide by Tom Defalco, forward by Stan
Lee
- The Return of the King by J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael
Chabon
- Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and
Software by Steven Johnson
- Reinventing Comics by Scott McCloud
- The Two Towers by J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien
- Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumbled the Future of
Microsoft by David Bank
- The Innovator's Dilemma: The Revolutionary National Bestseller That
Changed The Way We Do Business by Clayton Christensen
- Joystick Nation : How Videogames Ate Our Quarters, Won Our Hearts,
and Rewired Our Minds by J. C. Herz
...
If you're reading this, according to NPR
you are "no one"
If you're reading this, according to NPR
you are "no one"
07/07/2004 09:30 PMScripting News
"No one
was listening," said the NPR...
"No one was listening," said the NPR announcer, as she introduced
the guy who post
ed the note on Tuesday morning about the new Edwards decals on the
Kerry campaign plane. No one was listening, except for the people who were
.
Clearly no one reads blogs...
I'm going to be doing a Summer Reading Series interview for NPR
this week. I should list all of the blogs people should read this
summer. ;-)
Reading everything
Reading everything
09/16/2004 09:19 AMWhen I was a kid, we had the twenty-odd volumes of The World Book
Encyclopedia sitting in its own rack in our upstairs hallway. It was a
lively encyclopedia, with pages of colorful flags from around the
world and a supplement that one year used acetate overlays with the
enthusiasm of a Hollywood director who's discovered a left-over
special effects budget. I was not the nerd who in 6th grade let it
slip that he was reading the entire set, although I was envious of
him. Fortunately, my attention was soon taken up by the serious
pursuit of masturbation. Still,...
Who's Reading What in RSS
Who's Reading What in RSS
01/16/2004 01:00 PMDave Winer has put together a cool way for people to see who's reading
what in the blogworld, by asking people to share their OPML (Outline
Processor Markup Language) files, which in this context is a list of
Websites I subscribe to using my RSS reader. He calls it a
commons for sharing outlines,
feeds, taxonomy -- and I'm fascinated by its implications.
Mind Reading
Mind Reading
03/13/2003 10:16 AMAn American researcher taps collective consciousness by scanning Web
searches.
More required reading
More required reading
11/10/2003 11:28 PMVia Craig, Big John and Holly Bergevin present
Float: The Theory and Flow
ing and Positioning: Two Page Models. Both articles take a complex
topic and present it in clear, straight forward terms with excellent
illustrations and the kind of insight in to browser bugs (in
particular the vagaries of IE) that you just won't find anywhere
else.
Blog reading up 58% in U.S.
Blog reading up 58% in U.S.
01/04/2005 09:19 AMFC Now: From the Reading Pile
FC Now: From the Reading Pile
06/17/2005 03:40 PMThe most recent edition of Knowledge@Wharton includes a couple of
interesting articles. Good Managers Focus on Employees' Strengths, Not
Weaknesses focuses on the work of Marcus Buckingham, who suggests that
good leaders play chess rather than checkers. And Florida Red...
Hi-tech reading aid comes to UK
Hi-tech reading aid comes to UK
07/15/2004 06:50 AMA device that lets visually-impaired people read books more easily has
been launched in the UK.
Happy Reading.
Happy Reading.
12/28/2004 01:51 AM
eSchol
arship Editions. Like ebooks? Want something free,
nonfiction,"scholarly", publicly accessible, and more recent
than
Gutenberg ? (Lately I'm
on an Ancient History kick.) My problem with this
"eScholarship" site is they try to make it hard to download
a whole ebook to read offline. For one of those, for people who are
interested in 20th-century political history-cum-theory that's never
had much to do with any U.S. election, today I'm recommending
the Platform. I Need Reading Lessons
I Need Reading Lessons
05/13/2004 06:32 PMI need reading lessons or something. I know that when people read on
the web, they often skim. But I seem to forget that I'm one of those
people too. Someone pointed me at this story a little while ago and I
read skimmed it (twice) as "Yahoo Mail will be providing 100MB of
'virtually unlimited' storage" which is, obviously, a dumb thing to
say. We all know that Gmail offers 10 times that, right? So I pointed
this out...
Want A Job Reading Email?
Want A Job Reading Email?
07/20/2004 12:40 PMA new study has found that companies are so worried about what's going
out over email that 44% now
employ people whose job it is to read outgoing email to make
sure company secrets aren't getting out. Now, it may depend on the
company (and secrets) in question, but doesn't it seem likely that
paying someone to read through outgoing email may be a bit expensive
than the likelihood of real risk from an outgoing email?
"after reading that thread"
"after reading that thread"
01/18/2004 09:15 AMThe Death of Reading
The Death of Reading
04/27/2004 01:12 PM
Shortly after learning of the closing of
Avenue Victor Hugo
Books in Boston, a
fire destroys
Spartacus books in my former haunt Vancouver. Although obviously not
related, the demise of these two institutions is sad, though Spartacus
is trying to carry on through a series of fundraisers this summer.
Good photos of AVH and
Twelve Reasons for the death of small and independent
bookstores.
The Reading File
The Reading File
01/17/2004 10:58 PMIt's a good bet that Mars will continue to fascinate science fiction
writers and interplanetary travel proponents.
"Steve Reading"
"Steve Reading"
03/23/2005 04:58 PMRecommended Reading
Recommended Reading
05/21/2004 08:24 AMYou can learn a heck of a lot by reading just a few enjoyable business
books.
Blog reading up 58% in U.S
Blog reading up 58% in U.S
01/04/2005 11:15 AMSlashdot Jan 4 2005 1:51PM GMT
Remedial XML: Further reading
Remedial XML: Further reading
06/06/2002 06:00 AMCNET Jun 5 2002 10:13PM ET
3D bl0g reading!
3D bl0g reading!
07/07/2004 12:43 PMwell, it's kind of like 2D reading on a skewed plane, but still! the
future!
Your Car Is Reading Your Email
Your Car Is Reading Your Email
09/09/2004 09:24 AMCurrently Reading: Trading Up
Currently Reading: Trading Up
01/05/2004 03:00 PMTrading Up: "Middle-market
consumers, in the United States and around the world, are trading up
to New Luxury products and services that deliver higher levels of
quality, taste, and aspiration than conventional ones. Because New
Luxury goods sell at premiums of 20-200% over standard midprice goods,
they deliver higher profits. They also sell in much higher volumes
than superpremium products."
It's a rather interesting look at what's driven the success of
companies like Starbucks, Victoria's Secret, and others that make huge
profits selling premium-priced products on a mainstream scale. This
goes against the traditional assumption that goods sell at either a
low volume or a low price. Turns out, people will "trade down" in
some categories that don't matter to them in order to trade up in
areas that do.
It pretty much only talks about real-world goods, not software or
web-related stuff, nor even high-tech stuff, and I don't yet know how
exactly the lessons apply to the areas I usually think about. But they
probably do. (Is Apple a trading-up brand? Or is it not mainstream
enough? Maybe") I'm only about a third of the way through it, but good
stuff so far.
"What bl0ggers are reading"
"What bl0ggers are reading"
07/10/2004 03:20 AMInteresting reading
Interesting reading
04/04/2005 06:48 PM## Peter Drucker looks
at the big picture of the world economy today -- really four
economies, he says: information, money, multinationals and mercantile
exchange.
|   |
For thirty years after World War II, the U.S. economy dominated
practically without serious competition. For another twenty years it
was clearly the world's foremost economy and especially the undisputed
leader in technology and innovation. Though the United States today
still dominates the world economy of information, it is only one major
player in the three other world economies of money, multinationals and
trade. And it is facing rivals that, either singly or in combination,
could
conceivably make America Number Two. |
## Cy
nthia Ozick reviews Joseph Lelyveld's memoir. I haven't read the
book, but the former N.Y. Times editor apparently did a vast amount of
legwork researching his own childhood. This is Ozick's discussion of
the limitations of Lelyveld's approach:
|   |
...There is no all-pervading Proustian madeleine in Lelyveld's
workaday prose. Yet salted through this short work is the smarting of
an unpretentious lamentation: ''If this were a novel,'' ''If I were
using these events in a novel,'' and so on. Flickeringly, the writer
appears to see what is missing; and what is missing is the intuitive,
the metaphoric, the uncertain, the introspective with its untethered
vagaries: in brief, the not-nailed-down. Consequently Lelyveld's
memory loop becomes a memory hole, through which everything that is
not factually retrievable escapes. Memory, at bottom, is an act of
imaginative re-creation, not of archival legwork. ''Yes, I was
finding, it was possible to do a reporting job on your childhood,''
Lelyveld insists. Yes? Perhaps no. The memoirist has this in common
with the novelist: he is like the watchful spider alert to every
quiver on its lines. Sensation, not research. |
Well put. I think one of the reasons I chose, as a young writer, a
career as a critic rather than as a reporter was that I could not see
devoting my life to writing that was all "nailed-down." Reporting is a
necessary and valuable skill, and I have deep respect for those who do
it well; it's hard, hard work, too. But it will typically miss that
dimension of "the intuitive, the metaphoric, the uncertain, the
introspective." In American journalism as it is conventionally defined
by those who carve out the job descriptions, a critic's portfolio is
broader, and it's possible, under the right alignment of stars, to
feel as well as to record -- or rather, to record what one has felt
along with what one has witnessed.
## Apparently there's a movement afoot in the world of
writing about games to be less "nailed-down." It's called the "New Games
Journalism" -- "a narrative, experiential approach that
acknowledges the effect of the game on the player." I'll need to read
up. This was sort of what I had in mind 15 years ago when I began to
move my attention from the world of theater to the digital realm, and
thought, hey, why not try writing more ambitious reviews of
videogames? I'd just turned 30, though, and was already feeling that
the gaming world was one I would be less and less able to keep up with
as the decades advanced. (So right!) So I wrote one opus -- an
"experiential" discourse on the world of Super Mario -- and moved
on to broader terrain.
Reading with your ears
Reading with your ears
08/23/2004 06:49 AMZDNet Aug 23 2004 11:04AM GMT
after reading that thread
after reading that thread
01/17/2004 11:09 PMR2D2 is his co-pilot .. forums.nasioc.com .. H-Wing del Sol .. an auto
forum
forums.nasioc.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=484634
track
this site | 6 links
reading “Voynichese”
reading “Voynichese”
01/08/2004 08:17 PMHere's something weird and interesting from this week's Economist:
an article on the Voynich manuscript.
Quote:
THE Voynich manuscript, once owned by Emperor
Rudolph II in 16th-century Bohemia, is filled with drawings of
fantastic plants, zodiacal symbols and naked ladies. Far more
intriguing than its illustrations, however, is the accompanying text:
234 pages of beautifully formed, yet completely unintelligible
script.
Modern scholars have pored over the book since 1912, when Wilfrid
Voynich, an American antiquarian, bought the manuscript and started
circulating copies in the hope of having it translated. Some 90 years
later, the book still defies deciphering. It now resides at Yale
University.
The manuscript is written in “Voynichese”, which consists of
strange characters, some of which look like normal Latin letters and
Roman numerals. Some analysts have suggested that Voynichese is a
modified form of Chinese. Others think it may be Ukrainian with the
vowels taken out. But Voynichese words do not resemble those of any
known language. Nor is the text a simple transliteration into fanciful
symbols: the internal structure of Voynichese words, and how they fit
together in sentences, is unlike patterns seen in other languages.
The other alternatives are, as the article notes,
that the manuscript is either in code, or simply a hoax. Nevertheless,
my geek-sense flares up when reading about something like this. Oh
boy! An entire manuscript to decrypt, and a few centuries old to boot!
Does that sound like fun or what?
A little light reading
A little light reading
04/11/2005 05:06 PMBooks that can help start a home business
Friday reading
Friday reading
01/09/2004 09:57 PM PV Comics has hundreds of
pages of
free comics from
a dozen talented artists. Friday reading fun!
Weekend reading from the OECD
Weekend reading from the OECD
06/17/2005 05:03 PMI've been a fan of the OECD's "Working Party on the Information
Economy" reports. Though I don't agree with everything they've said,
they've been extraordinarily balanced and informative.
This is the latest -- a report on "Digital
Broadband Content: Music." It promises to be interesting and valuable
weekend reading.
Stocks Up Despite Sluggish GDP Reading
(AP)
Stocks Up Despite Sluggish GDP Reading
(AP)
08/27/2004 01:23 PMAP - A sluggish gross domestic product reading was nonetheless better
than expected, prompting investors to send stocks slightly higher
Friday on hopes that the economic slowdown would not be as bad as
first thought.
Share and map your RSS reading list
Share and map your RSS reading list
01/06/2004 03:20 AMDave Winer's created a service that maps out who reads what RSS feeds
-- just upload the OPML file from your RSS reader and it will add your
name to the list of subscribers for all the feeds in your rota. Cool
to see who's reading you, and who you're reading. Made me remember
that I have a bunch of blogs in my bookmark group that I haven't
entered into my RSS reader...
Link
(
via Battelle)
Score Reading Trainer 0.1.0
Score Reading Trainer 0.1.0
12/20/2003 08:43 AMA trainer for reading musical scores.
Reading bl0gs in the Netbeans IDE
Reading bl0gs in the Netbeans IDE
03/22/2005 05:09 PM
Alexis Moussine-Pouchkine:
In his "F
eedReader" tutorial (version française ici), Rich Unger explains how to develop an RSS reader on
top of the NetBeans
platform (using P@'s and
friends' Rome Atom/RSS tools).
Grok Description matches for "Necessary" reading on Google
GrokA matches for "Necessary" reading on Google
"Necessary" reading on Google