Wi-Fi Means: Never Having to Say "I'm Not Working"
Grok Headline matches for Wi-Fi Means: Never Having to Say "I'm Not Working"
The W3C RDF Data Access Working Group
has published the first public working
draft of SPARQL Variable Binding
The W3C RDF Data Access Working Group
has published the first public working
draft of SPARQL Variable Binding
01/02/2005 11:31 AMxmlhack Jan 2 2005 1:45PM GMT
Quality Assurance Working Group Updates
Three Working Drafts
Quality Assurance Working Group Updates
Three Working Drafts
11/08/2002 08:17 PM8 November 2002: The Quality Assurance (QA) Working Group has updated
three Working Drafts in its seven-part QA Framework: the Introduction,
Process and Operational Guidelines; and Specification Guidelines.
Learn more about the QA Activity and the roadmap for ensuring that W3C
technologies are well implemented. (News archive)
Working Hard, Hardly Working
Working Hard, Hardly Working
06/15/2004 10:07 AMThree years ago, I was working at a small company as the unofficial IT
director / all-purpose computer bitch. I was laid off in early 2003,
but to this day, the job presents me with difficulties; namely, that
of telling prospective employers what I did, and for that matter, what
the company itself did. I have virtually no idea what this company's
function was, despite working there for over a year and a half,
although I did learn how to spew an amazing amount of marketing jargon
without thinking. As for my role there, it was essentially vast
tracts of doing absolutely nothing, punctuated erratically by moments
of panicking and crisis-defusion, usually involving something truly
earth-shattering like the CEO not being able to print her email. When
asked by interviewers "What did your company do?" I am forced to
mumble vaguaries about consulting and hope they leave the issue alone.
Politics by other means
Politics by other means
02/10/2004 06:47 AMThe Internet may have made Howard Dean, but Dean didn't make the Net
-- and his campaign's woes don't faze digital democracy's true
believers.
It has by no means been proven
It has by no means been proven
09/20/2004 03:16 AMWhat fucking morons ..
Orcinus
dneiwert.blogspot.com/archives/2004_09_19_dneiwert_archive.h
tml#109561579200025548
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"It has by no means been proven"
"It has by no means been proven"
09/21/2004 02:33 AMMeans for ends
Means for ends
01/07/2004 06:04 PMDave Pollard calls
World of Ends #1 among the Ten Most
Important Ideas of 2003.
Living Below Your Means
Living Below Your Means
02/12/2004 03:39 PMMoney-saving tips from your friendly pharmacist.
La La means I love you.............
La La means I love you.............
08/07/2004 01:53 AMI love last minute plans because often times those are the best ones!
I'm headed to LA tomorrow for a...
What It Really Means to Save
What It Really Means to Save
05/25/2004 02:43 PMA simple story from the other side of the world shows how everyday
dreams come true.
IBM minimizing ROI - what it means to
you
IBM minimizing ROI - what it means to
you
11/04/2003 12:09 PMReader revolt
Green Means Go
Green Means Go
11/07/2003 08:48 AMAndrew Gumbel has an article at The Independent titled, "Infra-red
device gives drivers the green light." Basically, he reports on the
sale (still legal at the moment) of Mobile Infra-Red Transmitters,
little boxes that plug into your car's cigarette lighter, giving you
the power to change (certain) red lights to green. Washington Post
reported on it last Friday. With more Googling, I found out MIRTs
were reported on earlier than Halloween even.
"If _, that means the terrorists have
already won!"
"If _, that means the terrorists have
already won!"
07/01/2004 03:35 PMNo visible means of support
No visible means of support
12/31/2003 12:01 PM“I just got carried away and stared making stuff,” said Byrne. “It
communicates within certain limited parameters really well and very
easily. The genius of it is that it was designed for any idiot to use.
I learned it in a few hours, and that’s the idea. It’s not a serious
statement about anything.”
On e-mail as a means of exchange...
On e-mail as a means of exchange...
03/06/2004 01:55 AMI've had lots of conversations over the last few years about ways
in which rising marginal cost could deal with grotesque abuses of
online services. There are probably a dozen posts in this blog about
that subject alone. Now the obvious example of a place where this kind
of thing has been proposed has been e-mail - people have been talking
about ways to get people to pay for e-mail "stamps" for years as a
possible means of avoiding spam. Bill Gates has proposed another version of this scheme recently. His idea -
ten-second pieces of computing time on the machine that sends the mail
being given to some worthy cause (or to just solve some abstract
puzzle). This would - apparently - be a gesture of good faith on the
part of the sender that a spammer couldn't possible match.
Now, my personal opinions about rising marginal costs have mainly
been about how to deal with noise, distance and abuse in online
communities. I once touched on the issue in connection with e-mail
(only because e-mail was a suitable jumping off point) and ended up in
an almighty fight with Cory
Doctorow about it. Since that time, I'm still of the opinion that
exponential graphs of effort or diminishing causality over space or
increasing marginal costs (all features of the real-world) still have
a role to play in how we solve gross abuses online. On the other hand
I've seen no evidence that there's a model that works particularly
well with regards to e-mail. Certainly my experience of sending the
fifty or sixty e-mails I send from my personal account a day (and the
other fifty or sixty that I send at work) wouldn't be radically
improved by having my various computers churn through puzzles for
twenty minutes a day.
With regards to the 1p-per-e-mail approach - I'm still of the
opinion that a more successful version would be about the
redistribution of money rather than the paying of it. What if the
person you sent your e-mail to got the 1p you spent to send it to them
and could then use that penny to send an e-mail in turn to whosoever
they wanted. In those circumstances, most users (who get as much
e-mail as they send) would be financially unaffected, the spammed
would get a financial reward for all the rubbish they were forced to
consume (there might even be a legitimate business model in collecting
spam) and the spammers would end up paying much much more money than
before.
This is not a new idea either, and nor do I think it's a
particularly practical one, but it does present some interesting
opportunities to think about e-mail in very different (ludicrous?)
ways - perhaps eventually even as a unit of currency that you write
upon and distribute. After all noted currency is only an abstraction
of value written on a rectangular piece of paper - why shouldn't our
future currency be based upon the transactions of plain text
files...
Read the comments
Peoplesoft: No means no (TheDeal.com)
Peoplesoft: No means no (TheDeal.com)
05/27/2004 04:48 AMTheDeal.com - The Redwood Shores, Calif.-based business software
developer rejects Oracle's fourth bid, this time $7.7 billion.
What a Weak Dollar Means
What a Weak Dollar Means
04/28/2004 01:10 PMA weak dollar can actually be good for many American companies.
Ma Bell Means Business?
Ma Bell Means Business?
07/22/2004 01:13 PMThe telephone provider focuses on declining business customers.
Dell Means Business
Dell Means Business
05/10/2004 05:51 AMWith the IT market on the rebound, Dell faces the challenge of keeping
prices down while providing innovation with a research and development
budget that is only 10 percent that of competitor IBM.
A consideration of what it means to be
secure
A consideration of what it means to be
secure
07/23/2004 09:43 AM"World War IV: How It Started, What It
Means, and Why We Have to Win"
"World War IV: How It Started, What It
Means, and Why We Have to Win"
08/17/2004 03:41 AMWhat Google's Gmail Means for the Web
What Google's Gmail Means for the Web
05/03/2004 03:44 AMTechfocus May 3 2004 7:41AM GMT
Unbreakable means Hackable
Unbreakable means Hackable
12/08/2003 03:29 PMApparently, Oracle isn't as "unbreakable" as we've been brainwashed
led to believe. Oracle confirmed that a variety of its server products
could be tampered with through vulnerabilities via the OpenSSL
protocol. The flaws could potentially open the door for a remote
hacker to cause a denial-of-service (DoS) attack, execute arbitrary
code, and gain access privileges. Read all about it in Oracle Issues
High-Severity Vulnerability Warning. I always wonder if vendors will
just give up someday, realizing that no product is...
Shark Tank: So THAT'S what it means
Shark Tank: So THAT'S what it means
03/23/2005 05:33 PMThis IT shop has a chargeback system, billing other departments for
the amount of disk space they use. But this user wants to know: What
day is disk usage calculated?
Dell means business with new PCs
Dell means business with new PCs
02/01/2005 09:06 PMLine of six new office models, including five notebooks and a desktop,
continues computing titan's Intel-only policy.
Inflammable Means Flammable?
Inflammable Means Flammable?
01/07/2004 05:19 PMThanks to John C. Welch, everything you need to know about Mac OS X's
recently-ballyhooed "DHCP Vulnerability".
This 3G phone means business
This 3G phone means business
02/05/2005 09:51 PMElectric New Paper Feb 4 2005 5:12PM GMT
Pricing software by means
Pricing software by means
01/09/2004 09:51 PMAmong the many responses to my post on
piracy was one which suggested I price my software by country.
The general idea is that it's unfair that someone in the United States
is charged the same price as someone in, say, Russia, where economic
conditions are much harsher.
I have to say that I agree with this sentiment. Russia isn't such
a warez capital because it's a dishonest country - it's a country with
many skilled people thrown into chaotic times. In order for some of
them to maintain these skills, they may need to stay up-to-date with
the latest software. But in order to be ethical, they need to shell
out a week's pay to register one measly program.
I've actually talked with other shareware authors about this in the
past, and a number of them shared my belief that charging a lower
price in certain countries would be a better way to do business.
Several of us discussed ways to handle this, but in the end it was
decided that it would be so hard to manage that it wouldn't be
feasible. Verifying the country of origin and weeding out fraud would
simply require too much time. There are ways to automate this, of
course, but most of us need to rely on third-party ordering services
so we don't have much control over the purchasing process - so it
would be up to us to handle the extra work.
Most shareware companies are one-person outfits such as my own, and
we all find it difficult to balance the many demands of running our
businesses. We tend to shy away from anything that's time-consuming
simply because we often have no time left at the end of the day. In
my case, I'm not going to implement something if it means I have less
time to spend with my kids.
One possible solution is to skip charging by country and instead
ask each customer to pay what s/he believes the software is worth. A
minimum price would be required to make sure the order processing fees
are covered, but the final price would be determined by the customer.
This sidesteps the need for any verification, and could
potentially even increase earnings since I'd get orders from
those who previously couldn't afford our software.
On the surface I really like this idea, but the more you
think about it the more it seems just as problematic. First there's
the fear factor: I rely on software sales to feed my family, so I'm
scared to try such a thing. But even if I ignore this (not to mention
the issues involving third-party ordering services), there are still a
boatload of issues involving corporate sales, etc., that would eat
away at my time.
I'd like to hear other thoughts on this so I've enabled comments
for this post. However, I'm going to disable them once the comment
spammers hit, so if you have your own blog you'd be better off posting
there and sending a trackback ping.
BTW, I should add that my posting about this does NOT mean that I'm
about to implement such a system, since the ordering services for both
TopStyle and FeedDemon are already in place. I'm simply thinking out
loud about how such a system might work in case I want to try it with
future software.
This Means War... or at least a good
noogy-ing!
This Means War... or at least a good
noogy-ing!
01/18/2004 08:08 AMemptybottle.org/glass/2004/01/this_means_war_or_at_least_a_good_noo
gying.php
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What the Attack on Abu Ghraib Means
What the Attack on Abu Ghraib Means
04/04/2005 12:46 PMAs I
mentioned
earlier, the attack on Abu Ghraib is proof that al Qaeda is now
officially in Iraq. The execution followed a classic al
Qaeda pattern. Here are some things that the press missed in the
little coverage they provided:
- The level of sophistication. Swarming and feints.
- Large number of attackers (50).
- Low casualties for attackers killed (~1 maybe).
- No prior intelligence on a large, well planned attack of this
size.
- Weapons mix: RPGs, VBIEDs, and small arms.
This is problematic. This attack demonstrates that Al Qaeda
can now mount an attack of the size and sophistication necessary to
over-run a large number of US troops.An over-run could
produce significant US casualties and captives.
What 2007 means to your data center
What 2007 means to your data center
06/12/2004 03:38 PMPart I: The SMP revival
CVS as a means of keeping track of your
life
CVS as a means of keeping track of your
life
11/12/2003 01:28 PMThis is a
habit of
the alpha-geeks if ever there was one: Joey Hess keeps all of his
email, config files, and all of his work files in a CVS repository.
CVS is a free software tool that programmers use to keep track of, and
synchronize, changes to documents. It's optimized to keep groups of
people spread out over time (multiple versions) and space (multiple
contributors) in synch, but Joey's had the key realization that he, on
his own, is separated from himself by time (the file he edited
yesterday, last month, last year) and space (his laptop, his desktop,
his work computer). Keeping everything in CVS means that he can keep
all of his user-environments in synch, it means that he never loses
data. This is the kind of thing that Passport is meant to solve, and
the sort of thing that LifeLog was supposed to do, but Joey's solution
has the signal advantage of using free software with a robust
developer community that is completely, 100 percent under his control.
It only took a few more weeks before the advantage of having a history
of everything I'd done began to show up. It wasn't a real surprise
because having a history of past versions of a project is one of the
reasons to use CVS in the first place, but it's very cool to have it
suddenly apply to every file you own. When I broke my .zshrc or
.procmailrc, I could roll back to the previous day's or look back and
see when I made the change and why. It's very handy to be able to run
cvs diff on your kernel config file and see how make xconfig changed
it. It's great to be able to recover files you deleted or delete files
because they're not relevant and still know you've not really lost
them. For those amateur historians among us, it's very cool to be able
to check out one's system as it looked one full year ago and poke
around and discover how everything has evolved over time...
I'm told that the best backups are done without effort--so you
actually do them--and are widely scattered among many machines and a
lot of area so that a local disaster doesn't knock them out. They are
tested on a regular basis to make sure the backup works. I was doing
all of these things as a mere side effect of keeping it all in CVS.
Then I sobered up and remembered that a dead CVS repository would be a
really, really bad thing and kept those wimpy backups to CD going. But
the automatic distributed backups are what keep me sleeping quietly at
night. Later, when I left that job, the last thing I did on my work
desktop machine was: cvs commit ; sudo rm -rf /. And I didn't worry a
bit; my life was still there, secure in CVS.
Link
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/a>)
With services, Dell means business
With services, Dell means business
11/18/2003 07:47 PMZDNet Nov 18 2003 6:48PM ET
Wired News: Does the End Justify the
Means?
Wired News: Does the End Justify the
Means?
03/19/2003 10:46 PMany particular website is banned in certain countries .. bypass
national censorship filters .. Does the End Justify the Means? .. Free
speech online: .. According to Wired .. Article from Wired ..
Wired
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10.3: Another means of fast screen
locking
10.3: Another means of fast screen
locking
11/14/2003 11:23 AMHere's a bit of an improvement on Panther screen locking. A previous
hint suggested using the Fast User Switching (FUS) menuling to bring
up the login window. This is a good method, arguably better than using
the screensaver ...
Understanding what Reciprocal Linking
means
Understanding what Reciprocal Linking
means
05/18/2004 05:58 PMWebDevInfo May 18 2004 9:09PM GMT
Across America, War Means Jobs
(washingtonpost.com)
Across America, War Means Jobs
(washingtonpost.com)
05/11/2004 09:08 AMwashingtonpost.com - FAIRFIELD, Ohio -- Along a quiet strip of gray
corrugated metal buildings, across the street from a La-Z-Boy
distribution center, Gary Allen and his ever-expanding crew are
running one of the most urgent operations of the Iraq war.
What XHTML means for wireless
development
What XHTML means for wireless
development
01/24/2003 02:11 AMCNET Jan 24 2003 1:24AM ET
Mobility means more billable time
Mobility means more billable time
05/04/2004 06:25 AMPersonal Computer World May 4 2004 10:55AM GMT
Grok Description matches for Wi-Fi Means: Never Having to Say "I'm Not Working"
GrokA matches for Wi-Fi Means: Never Having to Say "I'm Not Working"
Wi-Fi Means: Never Having to Say "I'm Not Working"