Kyocera isn't
the only camera company taking hot fashion tips from Apple's iPod
mini. Adesso has a new line of new cameras that seem to match, at
least superficially, the green, pink, and blue colors of the mini.
However, in an interesting break from Kyocera's form, the Adesso
cameras seem to be exceptionally, well, crappy, with the high
end model rolling in with a 1.3-megapixel sensor. I guess hoping
for an LCD on the back of these is asking too much, huh? I think this
is one time when following the 'smaller is better' ethic is probably a
misstep.
Even worse? They're not even out. (Thanks,
Justin!)
Fact Check Reality Check01/03/2005 02:18 PM Ooh I like this, about time fact checking got a reality check. Jason
Kottke satirizes anal retentive blogger fact checking...
Check 21 becomes law, allows electronic check settlements11/03/2003 06:00 PM President Bush signed into law the Check 21 bill, which allows banks
to substitute images for paper checks, allowing them to save billions
of dollars and speed up check processing.
First off, a roundup of the best (and worst) coverage of webloggers
in the mainstream media: Note - I'm going to leave off weblogs penned
by pros, like the excellent CNN
weblog (nbote: I'm here at the DNC helping CNN make sense of the
blogosphere). Wired News' Adam L. Penenberg covers the eclectic mix of reporting going on from the
convention floor.
Many webloggers also were on the nightly news programs, and
posted
The heat turned up in Manhattan today, as speeches by Zell Miller
and Dick Cheney provided red meat to party faithful, and protests
outside the convention hall increased in intensity and number.
After-hour parties abounded, but behind the scenes, the effect of money in
politics only got rarely
reported. More from on and off the floor:
Reactions to Zell Miller: The angriest spee
ch of the convention, seemingly came from Zell
Miller, as Glenn Reynoldsnotes, "It's
funny that the purest voice of Jacksonian America at this Republican
convention -- in fact, at either convention -- comes from a
Democrat.". Begging to Differ wrote, "Zell Miller was more effective
tonight than any Republican could have been. John Kerry will have to
answer, if he can."
The two Cheneys - diverse reaction from liberals and
conservatives The Technorati
Politics Attention Index™ saw heavy blogging from both the
left and right regarding Vice President Dick Cheney's speech tonight.
Conservatives like Si
ster Toldjah remarked, "A SOLID performance!". Ann Althouse wrote, ""He lays it out. And you
can take it or leave it. He's not doing the twist. He's Dick Cheney."
Liberals felt differently. Josh Marshall described a
common liberal perspective: "My first thought was, bold
words for a man whose office is the subject of an on-going criminal
inquiry. But apparently that’s not the subject of polite
conversation."
Arnold gets fact-checked The liberal blogosphere has been buzzing about Arnold
Schwartenegger's speech last night. Numerous bloggers pointed out
that while Arnoldhasspoken of Nixon debating Humphrey
in 1968, the debate never happened.
Protest Vignettes Outside of the convention, New York is
filled with protests, from big, to small, to personal. Inside the
convention hall, AIDS demonstrators disrupt
ed a Republican youth gathering on the floor, unveiling an anti-Bush sign and disrupting a speech by Andrew Card. Andrew Sullivan reports on a
particularly rude
protester, while Peter Northrup wrote "of a self-proclaimed liberal [that] was spending her day,
not protesting with angry slogans, but sitting in front of an empty
chair and a sign that invited conservatives to sit down and talk with
her about the future of the country." Ratherbiased has pictures of a
protester
being removed from tonight's Cheney speech.
Blogging a talk-show appearance: Michelle Malkin blogs her side of the
story after appearing on MSNBC's Hardball. First-hand accounts
like this are shifting the fulcrum away from show hosts and producers
who often attempt to unfairly create controversy. Malkin's account,
while completely subjective, allows her to get her side of the story
out to the world, just as the FCC's Mi
chael Powell or Mark
Cuban, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, use their blogs to speak
to the world in a timely, unedited fashion.
Jesse Jackson: Both liberals and conservatives weighed in
on Jackson's speech, and the overall reaction was negative. Jesse
Taylor of Pandagon opined,
"Jesse Jackson's onstage now...and not really impressing. He just came
off a Wyclef Jean performance, and the speech is just...weird. The
more inflammatory elements of the Democratic Party are not coming off
well in this new "hope springs eternal" message group."
More on Obama-mania:Positive reports keep coming in on
Barack Obana, soon-to-be-senator from Illinois. David
Weinberger: "The good news for Hillary is that she might get State
Department when Obama is President in 2012.". Thomas F. Schaller at
Gadflyer marked this as a
turning point: "That said, at some future point we will realize
that last night marks the point where Obama eclipsed Jackson as the
standard-bearing voice of black Democrats. Sorry, Jesse: That
unofficial title has finally been passed to a new generation."
Al Sharpton: Sharpton proves again that he is a masterful
speaker. Dave Winer wrote in
an email, "Sharpton was inspiring, had the crowd on its feet 18 times.
A soul revival. Killer speech." Dave Johnson had sympathies for the man to follow
Sharpton: " Who did Bob Graham piss off, that he has to follow Al
Sharpton?" Other liberals were not as kind, and saw hypocracy in Sharpton's speech: "I just heard Al
Sharpton address the convention and I was rather astounded by the
glorious reception he received. 'Our vote is not for sale,' he
thundered. This from the man who leased his entire campaign consultant
named Roger Stone. The only line missing from Sharpton's speech: 'I
have a scheme.'", wrote Marc Cooper.
Best delegate blogging from the floor award: Goes to
19-year old Karl-Thomas
Musselman, the youngest delegate from Texas. His reporting on Kucinic
h's, Sharpto
n's and Graham's speeches were refreshing and showed his
excitement at being on the floor, but be sure to read his earlier
entires
revealing more behind-
the-scenes of a delegate's life.
John Edwards: Personally, I wan't terribly impressed by
Edwards' speech tonight. Perhaps it is because he has laryngitis, or
because he was tired, but his oratory didn't live up to admittedly
high expectations. Others differed in their views. Dave Pell at
Electablog wrote,
"Edwards owned the crowd and the night and delivered just what this
pundit ordered. A healthy infusion of the two Americas speech that
rings so clearly true to the ears of any who open their eyes to see.
". And Alan at The Command Post weighed
in: "The fanfare for Edwards is genuine adulation … the star
appeal is palpable, and the crowd won’t let him go. Whatever
happens in this election cycle … the next time Edwards runs in
the Democratic primaries, he’s not finishing second." On a more
humorous note, he
added, "Thank Fod He Didn't Dance ... He didn’t try to do
that stupid little on-stage dance that white politicians always try to
do."
Blogs on Media on Blogs: First off, a great post on what blogging the
convention is like from Visicalc author Dan Bricklin. Wired News'
Adam L. Penenberg covers the eclectic mix of reporting going on from the
convention floor. David Weinberger takes the
media to task as well. His takeaway? "Objectivity is a form of
rhetoric."
Arnold, the Bush sisters, voting machines, Kerry Campaign shakeup
rumours, criticism of RNC bloggers, and censorship of Supreme Court
decisions were on the minds of bloggers today as the second day of the
Republican National Convention wrapped up.
Arnold's speech polarizing California governor Arnold
Schwartzenegger provoked strong reactions from both Liberals and
Conservatives. Lots of conservative bloggers swelled with pride at
Arnold's speech, according to the Technorati Conservative Politics
Attention Index™, such as Jay Reding, who wrote, "His story of living under
the shadow of Communism is an important reminder of why America is
still admired across the globe." Technorati's Liberal Politics
Attention Index™ showed liberal bloggers reacting strongly to
Arnold's jabs at Democrats: Luis Poza
wrote of the Governor's speech, "full of sound and fury and signifying
nothing".
The Bush sisters Jenna and Barbara Bush's speech provoked
jeers from authoritative liberal bloggers, and Conservatives largely
remained silent on the speech. Keith Berry wrote, "Up until now,
I've never really felt bad for anybody with the last name Bush, but
watching the Bush twins at the GOP Convention was was just so sad I
was nearly brought to tears. It was a train-wreck. An honest to God
train-wreck." On Dummocrats.com, a conservative
blog, James K. Hat wrote, "This convention has been great so far.
(Edit - great until the Bush daughters spoke... what in the world was
that?)", and the Washingon Monthly rreports on other conservative reactions.
Revelations on an easy way to hack voting machines made
their way through the blogosphere today, in this article on Bev
Harris' blackboxvoting.co
m, noting that the Diebold GEMS central tabulator, used in many
over 30 states, contains a stunning security hole.
Kerry campaign shakeup rumoursMickey Kaus reports on the
rumours, starting in the Washington
Prowler, that Kerry will shake up his campaign staff. This was
later covered by MSNBC, and CNN
a>.
Blogger's Corner events, and critiques General Tommy Franks
came by the
bloggers' area at the RNC for a photo
opportunity, and while there announced his support for President
bush, a prelude to his more official annoucenet on Sean Hannity's
radio show. Salon.com publishes a
biting article on the actions of the RNC credentialed bloggers.
Redactions of Supreme Court decisions in Patriot Act
suit?The Memory Hole
reports on the "blacki
ng out" of passages quoting US Supreme Court decisions in the
ACLU's suit against the Justice department. This could be a breaking
story in tomorrows news.
While bloggers were a novelty at the DNC in Boston and were less of
a story in and of themselves during the RNC, the quality of commentary
and the number of breaking stories during the RNC show that bloggers
are starting to hit their stride. The toppling of Ed Schrock, two-term Republican congressman
from Virginia, after investigative reporting from a blogger showed the
growing political power of citizen journalism. The use of blogging
technology during protests and also from delegate phonecams on the
convention floor show that this pushbutton publishing technology is
filling an important journalistic niche.
The convention wrapped up as first President Bush spoke and then Senator Kerry, in an
unusual move,
followed from a campaign rally in Ohio. Bloggers at the
convention formed into two primary camps: mostly conservative RNC
credentialed bloggers, writing from Blogger's Alley in the Felt Forum,
outside the main convention hall, and a group of mostly liberal
bloggers that gathered at The Tank, a performance space in midtown
Manhattan. Of course, there were many other bloggers from all over
the country who were adding to the conversation. Top stories from the
final day of the convention include:
Democrats divided?That's what Dick
Morris wrote, in the New York Post's opinion column. " In an
incredibly striking contrast, Bush voters are united on virtually all
the questions that divide the Kerry vote. So Bush can advance his
agenda with impunity while taking aim at Kerry voters who are
antagonized by their candidate whenever he has to choose a position."
Not all liberals agree. Lambert from Corrente wrote, "If Kerry can get people to listen and
think, Bush is toast."
Zell Miller challenges Chris Matthews to a duel Chris
Matthews had a heated exchange with Zell Miller after his speech
Wednesday night. Here's the
clip in Windows Media Format. Media Bistro has more details, and ongoing
commentary on the Miller speech is here.
Word frequency analysis The New York Times reports via an
interesting graphic the frequencies of
different words used during the DNC and the RNC. Micah L. Sifry performs the
same analysis on Bush's acceptance speech.
President Bush's speech Similar to the DNC, Conservatives
went quiet after the final speech of the convention, but the Technorati
Attention Index™ showed a burst in anti-Bush postings after
the speech ended. this is probably because of the "satisfaction
effect" - that conservatives are happy with the climax of the
convention, while liberals are so unsatisfied, they are vociferously
blogging. William
Saletan commented after the speech, "The 2004 election is becoming
a referendum on your right to hold the president accountable."
Dave Winer wrote, "I'm glad Kerry responded to the Republicans.
Maybe it's time, though, to consider a new format, where they do a
Democratic talk show, with Mario Cuomo, Wesley Clark and James
Carville reviewing the Republicans. They require serious rebuttal.
Don't pretend they're going to roll over and let the Dems win. Fight
fire with fire. It's good that Kerry has shown his anger. It's not
good that he trailed off into his standard incoherent stump
speech."
George Bush's National Guard Service questions Two
important updates in the George Bush Alabama National Guard story -
Salon reports on the widow of a Bush family confidant who says that
Bush did no National Guard service in the spring of 1972. And Ben
Barnes, the former Texas official who says he pulled strings to get
George W. Bush into the Air National Guard will be appearing on 60 Minutes.
G-Wrap 1.9.107/28/2004 03:08 PM A wrapper generator.
SID Wrap-Up
SID Wrap-Up06/02/2004 03:52 AM The "Big Picture"' at the Society of Information Display show was
exactly that--big picture screens. With Intel about to unveil cheap
and plentiful LCOS chips, the display market is in for a wild ride
over the next year.
G-Wrap 1.9.0
G-Wrap 1.9.006/30/2004 02:30 PM A wrapper generator.
The GET CREATIVE! Moving Image Contest
has gone the way of 2003. Many thanks to those of you who
submitted entries by the New Year. Our panel
of expert
judges is now sorting out the winners. Stay tuned!
No wrap puzzle
No wrap puzzle03/22/2005 03:37 PM Anybody know what this page has decided to stop wrapping? My other
comment pages seem to be fine......
ApacheCon wrap
ApacheCon wrap12/19/2004 03:43 PM ApacheCon was a lot more fun than I had expected. Lots of people to
meet and see again, it was great. Having half the talks be about
java-something limits the selection a bit for me, but there were quite
a few httpd or general "web stuff" talks that were fun. My talk was in
one of the big rooms and it was pretty packed, thanks for coming
everyone! :-) The questions I got at the end of the talk and...
PMA 2004 Wrap-Up
PMA 2004 Wrap-Up02/19/2004 04:55 PM The Photo Marketing Association trade show (usually referred to as
"PMA") is one of the photographic industry's largest and most
important meetings, a platform used by most companies to release their
newest products to the public. This year's gathering, held at the Las
Vegas Convention Center, proved to be one of the most vibrant and
exciting in the show's history, with the promise of digital
photography's power and affordability finally matched by the range of
products available to both the consumer and professional alike.
I had a lot of fun at the Spectrum Conference, and overall it was a
great learning experience. Cory's
notes over at BoingBoing were better than actually attending, as
he whittled down hours into a few choice paragraphs and quotes. While
some of the legal details sailed over my head, there were interesting
discussions about technology and implementation issues. Much of the
debates revolved around taking either a commons approach, where anyone
can do anything with the spectrum and we'll think of ways to regulate
it as needed, and the property approach, where segments are auctioned
off to the highest bidder to own and do whatever they want. The moot
court near the end of day one pitted one group vs. the other, but
overall was a mishmash of ideas. I'm surprised the commons folks don't
use more examples from all over the world, where unlicensed spectrums
seem to reign supreme, and I was surprised at the weak arguments
presented by the property folks who claimed there would always be room
in a profit-driven model for a small commons.
The crowd split on the approaches, with every technologist,
software creator, and wifi-loving laptop owner siding with a commons
approach, while the straight laced older generation of washington
policy types seemed big on the property side. Numbers wise, the
pro-property folks were definitely in the minority, and from a quick
visual survey of the room, I'd say anyone born after the dawn of unix
time (Jan 1, 1970) was a commons supporter, so my guess is that
property's days are numbered.
G-Wrap 1.9.6 (Default branch)04/14/2005 12:56 PM
G-Wrap is a tool (and Guile library) for
generating function wrappers for inter-language
calls. It currently supports generating Guile
wrappers for C functions.
Changes:
This release adds support for the size_t and ssize_t datatypes.
Linux Bangalore/2003 Wrap Up12/03/2003 06:24 AM I was gonna write a summary of day 1 and day 2 separately but didn't
have time. Damned jet lag and cold and stuff. Anyway, I'll start out
by pointing you at a few day #1 write-ups: Atul Chitnis and Yahoo's
very own Kalyan Varma. Day #1 When we arrived at the conference on day
1 (Tuesday), I was surprised by how many folks showed up. There was a
massive line. Thousands of people. According to what I've read,
more...
ActiveXbox.com: E3 2004 Final Wrap Up05/20/2004 11:25 AM One intriguing game being shown for the first time at this year's E3,
albeit only as a non-playable video, was Dead Rush, a new action title
from Activision. With a story described by one of the developers as
being heavily influenced by Escape From New York, and a heavy focus on
vehicular combat, Dead Rush looks like a fast-paced thrillfest. The
game features on-foot combat, but the real excitement starts when you
step into one of the vehicles. As you speed your way across the game's
city setting, you will find your car being besieged by monsters on all
sides, forcing you to drive defensively in an effort to make it out
alive. Look for more details on this game soon.
Regulators wrap up Microsoft hearings
Regulators wrap up Microsoft hearings11/15/2003 07:45 AM San Jose Mercury News Nov 15 2003 6:36AM ET Grok Description matches for Garçon! The Check, Please, and Wrap Up the Bordelais! GrokA matches for Garçon! The Check, Please, and Wrap Up the Bordelais!
Garçon! The Check, Please, and Wrap Up the Bordelais!
The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry: