Thoughts of Chairman Bill
Grok Headline matches for Thoughts of Chairman Bill
Bill Gates: Chairman of the couch
Bill Gates: Chairman of the couch
01/06/2005 11:33 AMZDNet Jan 6 2005 2:03PM GMT
Q&A: Microsoft chairman Bill Gates
Q&A: Microsoft chairman Bill Gates
11/06/2003 06:28 AMvnunet.com Nov 6 2003 5:31AM ET
Britain to knight Microsoft chairman
Bill Gates
Britain to knight Microsoft chairman
Bill Gates
01/26/2004 10:18 AMCTV.ca Jan 26 2004 2:06PM GMT
Bill Gates' latest security thoughts
miss the mark
Bill Gates' latest security thoughts
miss the mark
06/25/2004 03:48 AMI get dozens of mailings from Microsoft every week, many of which are
pure marketing drivel and quickly go to my trash folder. Occasionally,
though, there are nuggets - such as the hands-on security labs I
mentioned last week - that can prove useful. It happens rarely,
though, and this week was no exception. Still, there was one note that
deserves a closer look.
Britain announces honorary knighthood
for Microsoft chairman Bill Gates
Britain announces honorary knighthood
for Microsoft chairman Bill Gates
01/25/2004 09:48 PMCanadian Press via Canada.com Jan 26 2004 1:34AM GMT
U.S. antitrust regulators say Microsoft
Corp chairman Bill Gates has agreed to
pay $800,000 for violating prem
U.S. antitrust regulators say Microsoft
Corp chairman Bill Gates has agreed to
pay $800,000 for violating prem
05/04/2004 03:38 AMXinhua News Agency May 4 2004 8:05AM GMT
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates has agreed
to pay $800,000 for violating stock
trading regulations.[Reuters]
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates has agreed
to pay $800,000 for violating stock
trading regulations.[Reuters]
05/04/2004 02:29 AMCHINAdaily May 4 2004 6:37AM GMT
DAVOS: President General Pervez
Musharraf with Bill Gates, Chairman
Microsoft Of USA, after their meeting in
D
DAVOS: President General Pervez
Musharraf with Bill Gates, Chairman
Microsoft Of USA, after their meeting in
D
01/24/2004 11:39 PMPakTribune.com Jan 25 2004 3:36AM GMT
Microsoft China has announced that Bill
Gates, chairman of software giant
Microsoft Corporation, is slated to
Microsoft China has announced that Bill
Gates, chairman of software giant
Microsoft Corporation, is slated to
06/15/2004 10:38 PMXinhua News Agency Jun 16 2004 2:47AM GMT
Motorola names Zander chairman;
Berlusconi bill nixed; American Electric
Power names Morris CEO
Motorola names Zander chairman;
Berlusconi bill nixed; American Electric
Power names Morris CEO
12/16/2003 02:59 PMForbes Dec 16 2003 1:34PM ET
CPPCC vice-chairman Liu meets Cisco
chairman
CPPCC vice-chairman Liu meets Cisco
chairman
09/23/2004 06:51 AMPeoples Daily Online Sep 23 2004 10:40AM GMT
IDeA announces new Chairman and Vice
Chairman
IDeA announces new Chairman and Vice
Chairman
09/09/2004 03:06 AMPublicTechnology.net Sep 9 2004 7:50AM GMT
"President Bush on Friday wished Bill
Clinton "best wishes for a swift and
speedy recovery."
"He's is in our
thoughts and prayers," Bush said at a
campaign rally.
Bush's audience of
thousands in West Allis, Wis., booed.
Bush did nothing to stop them. "
"President Bush on Friday wished Bill
Clinton "best wishes for a swift and
speedy recovery."
"He's is in our
thoughts and prayers," Bush said at a
campaign rally.
Bush's audience of
thousands in West Allis, Wis., booed.
Bush did nothing to stop them. "
09/04/2004 02:46 AMUS Senate kills move to attach energy
bill to Internet tax bill
US Senate kills move to attach energy
bill to Internet tax bill
04/29/2004 02:46 PMPlatts Apr 29 2004 6:07PM GMT
"A post about bill gates somehow fools a
whole lot of people into believing bill
gates posted the story, or is at least
reading the comments with rapt
interest."
"A post about bill gates somehow fools a
whole lot of people into believing bill
gates posted the story, or is at least
reading the comments with rapt
interest."
04/16/2004 08:49 AMThoughts of War
Thoughts of War
06/05/2005 11:27 PM The fact that we are at war always creeps up on me. I certainly don't
devote active thought to it/ Passive processing is heavily occupied
these days. Some of the most valuable ambient mainstream information
gets in from NPR...
Thoughts of the Day
Thoughts of the Day
01/11/2004 07:57 AMvalariesvision.blogs (1) .. Thoughts of the Day .. valarie
Marie
valariesvision.blogspot.com
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Thoughts from SES
Thoughts from SES
12/12/2003 07:47 PMI think the number I heard was close to 900 or 1000 attendees.
Interestingly, Google did not sponsor the conference this time. They
...
My Thoughts Exactly
My Thoughts Exactly
04/21/2004 10:12 AMFound this great
comment over at SlashDot that I
thought some of you might appreciate:
So you're telling me superglue is like perl?
Hell yeah it is. Nobody understands it, everybody screams about how
great it is, promises to work forever but in reality only works for
about three hours.
Hell yeah superglue is just like perl.
T-shirt quality stuff.
Click here to comment on this entry
"has some interesting thoughts as well"
"has some interesting thoughts as well"
06/29/2004 09:15 AMKeynote thoughts
Keynote thoughts
01/07/2004 04:52 PMMaybe it was the overhyped expectations, but today's keynote was
probably one of the least exciting ever. Steve's Reality Distortion
Field seemed to be broken.
comparison thoughts
comparison thoughts
10/30/2003 12:33 PMeating an ice cream cone is good ice cream with chocolate syrup,
whipped cream, and cherries is better calling someone...
A few more random thoughts
A few more random thoughts
03/27/2005 01:39 PMThere are a few things that continue to grate on my nerves as we near
the start of the second half of Apple’s fiscal year, so I though I’d
throw them all out there at once. Have fun.
Why can’t Apple allow first- or second-generation iPod users enjoy its
Lossless Encoder? If a simple firmware update can bring it to the mini
or the later-model players, why not all of us early adopters, too? If
you’re like me, there are at last 10 CDs that haven’t made their way
to your iPod, because you’re too last to re-encode them.
Do the actors in their commercials reflect what Dell really thinks of
its customer base? From the “Dude, you’re getting a Dell” guy, to the
trio of geeks fighting over control of their gadgets — one watching
cartoons, one singing hopelessly out of key and the other looking
playing a video game that involves the obligatory silver key — how
does this help expand its marketshare? If I was in the market for a
computer, those three fools certainly wouldn’t sway me.
Why is Apple the only company that gives any thought to naming its
music players. Dell and Creative both names theirs Jukebox (Creative
came first) and most of the others merely use a series of letters and
numbers to distinguish between models. On Dell’s commercials, they
shirk the name entirely. The guy says, “Just listen to your Dell.” Who
says that!?!
If, like me, you thought the $16.99 price was too high, but PodBrix’s
black Lego figurine holding a miniature iPod is currently selling for
more than $150 on eBay. And you guys wonder why Mac people are so
misunderstood.
Since I downloaded the $35 coupon from Amazon.com before it was
pulled, will I be able to use it? And will I once again get three
utterly useless software update coupons?
And why has Apple not built a store in Rhode Island? The Providence
Place Mall is a four-story behemoth in the heart of the capital city,
and with Brown University within walking distance, it only seems
logical. Oh, and Spymac’s weekend columnist lives right around the
corner.
Seventeen of the top 20 items selling at the Apple Store are iPods or
iPod-related. And to think, when it was released less than four years
ago, it was riled as an overpriced niche product.
These days, signing a contract with Apple is a bad luck charm. Teaming
with Hewlett Packard and Pepsi were disappointing, IBM has struggled
with supplying G5 chips, and now Motorola, who has struggled with
Apple in the past, has sputtered twice with the unveiling of its
iTunes phone. Maybe Apple should start partnering with its
competitors,
On the subject of IBM, what happened!?!? Back in July 2003, Steve
promised 3GHz inside of a year and now, nearly two years later, we’re
still 500MHz away. There’s nothing necessarily wrong with missing a
goal, but Apple and IBM seems to have all but forgotten it existed.
And it’s been nearly a year since the Power Mac has seen a speed bump.
And finally, someone should start an iPod recycling company, With four
million sold in three months, there are going to be an awful lot of
discarded iPods in a year or so. Perhaps a modern art exhibit can be
opened. Or maybe they can be donated to starving rap artists in need
of bling.
Michael Simon is a freelance writer and editor, and paginator for The
Times in Pawtucket, R.I. He is the author of Failed Attempt, written
under the moniker of Morlium, which may be purchased for $9.99, either
through the iTunes Music Store or as a full-color paperback. He can
be reached for comment or inquiry by e-mail at morlium@mac.com.
A penny for your ERP thoughts
A penny for your ERP thoughts
01/22/2004 10:23 AM
Well, actually there's no penny involved. But InfoWorld would really
like those of you who work with ERP systems to share your experiences
with them in
our ERP survey.
...Some thoughts for 2004, see you then!
Some thoughts for 2004, see you then!
12/23/2003 12:27 AMI'm going on holidays until after New Years tomorrow, and will be
spending a fair bit of time away from the box. I'm going to be simply
unavailable, which is kind of unusual for me. I may or may not blog at
all (which means that if you're not already using the
blog suggestion form
that sends your suggestions to the whole team, it's time to start),
and I'm going to be ruthlessly pitching out, rejecting, and tersely
responding to any requests for my time or attention between now and
Jan 3 when I
do get online. Downtime is good, and my
good-deeds-and-favors-battery is empty and needs recharging.
As a kind of farewell to 2003, I wrote a little squib for Warren Ellis
this morning, as part of a series of ruminations on the future that
he's putting together on Die Puny Humans. Here's it is:
The last twenty years were about technology. The next twenty years are
about policy. It's about realizing that all the really hard problems
-- free expression, copyright, due process, social networking -- may
have technical dimensions, but they aren't technical problems. The
next twenty years are about using our technology to affirm, deny and
rewrite our social contracts: all the grandiose visions of
e-democracy, universal access to human knowledge and (God help us all)
the Semantic Web, are dependent on changes in the law, in the policy,
in the sticky, non-quantifiable elements of the world. We can't solve
them with technology: the best we can hope for is to use technology to
enable the human interaction that will solve them.
On that note: I have a special request to the toolmakers of 2004: stop
making tools that magnify and multilply awkward social situations ("A
total stranger asserts that he is your friend: click here to tell a
reassuring lie; click here to break his heart!") ("Someone you don't
know very well has invited you to a party: click here to advertise
whether or not you'll be there!") ("A 'friend' has exposed your
location, down to the meter, on a map of people in his social network,
using this keen new location-description protocol -- on the same day
that you announced that you were leaving town for a week!"). I don't
need more "tools" like that, thank you very much.
An important note for 2004: stop trying to build an Internet without
malefactors, parasites, freeriders and inefficiency. There is no such
thing as a parasite-free complex ecology (thank you Kathryn Myronuk
for this formulation). Some organisms lamented the existence of
mitochondria. Others adapted to exploit them and integrate them. Some
lament the existence of spammers. Spammers will always exist: stamping
your foot and demanding their nonexistence won't change that: adapt or
die.
I'll see you again in 2004 -- if you've got a response to this piece,
post it to your blog or on
Tribe or something; I'll see
'em in the
referer
logs or in
Technorati. I won't be responding to
any email about it, though.
LinkA Few Closing Thoughts
A Few Closing Thoughts
08/29/2004 11:38 PMWhat particularly strikes me in reading over the comments (not that
I've been able to read carefully all of them) is the challenge of
managing uncertainty. It is uncertainty that pervades the topics that
I've touched on in my postings and that have provoked many of the
comments. I started...
Can Employers Own Your Thoughts?
Can Employers Own Your Thoughts?
08/18/2004 05:22 AMSalon is running a very good wrap-up of the case Evan Brown lost to
Alcatel, concerning
whether they owned the rights to an idea he developed on his own
time. The article, while sympathetic to Brown, does cover the
issues on both sides of the case, suggesting that Brown made some
mistakes in dealing with the situation -- though, all of those appear
to be honest mistakes almost anyone might make. Still, with so many
people working on random side-projects all the time, does it put
employees at risk of somehow being stuck with the company they
currently work for to avoid having to deal with a lawsuit? The
article offers some suggestions for anyone else in a similar
situation, but the best one might be what a number of readers here
suggested last year when a similar case (involving Apple) came to
light: when you're offered an employment contract
cross
out the section that says they own anything you create while employed
there.
"thoughts on perspective."
"thoughts on perspective."
05/13/2004 10:55 AMThoughts of a Dreamer
Thoughts of a Dreamer
03/24/2005 08:42 AMThe LiveJournal of Jeff Weise .. Thoughts of a Dreamer .. LiveJournal
.. member
livejournal.com/users/weise
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Quick Thoughts
Quick Thoughts
04/13/2004 12:43 AMBack from taping. Amazing. Had an absolute blast. Shows went great.
Old friends were just as friendly. Can't wait to see the results in a
couple of days. Read Dancing Barefoot en route; inspired me to do
something similar. Thanks, Wil....
"Thoughts of a Dreamer"
"Thoughts of a Dreamer"
03/26/2005 09:39 PMYahoo RSS first thoughts
Yahoo RSS first thoughts
01/23/2004 01:22 AMI’ve played with the Yahoo RSS beta
for all of 5 minutes, and it’s actually pretty decent. You can
search for feeds by keyword, which is really useful. I’ll use
that feature to find feeds for other aggregators. Your feeds show up
in the same style as official Yahoo News sources.
Headlines for recent items from the feed are displayed. I wonder if
this will affect how people craft their titles? Many blog titles are
less than descriptive. Reading a feed using only the titles from these
blogs would be impossible. As My Yahoo becomes a mainstream feed
consumer, perhaps people will write better titles.
In addition to keyword searches, you can also enter the URL of a feed of course, or the URL of a Web page, with or without the
http://. That’s an important usability step, since
many people are used to typing Web addresses without the prefix. But
rather than parsing the specified page for links to feeds, as
I’d expect, Yahoo seems to use the specified URL as a search against some sort of feed
directory. I wonder where their directory is coming from. A search for
kalsey.com turns up a link to the original name of my Simplelinks
feed, a name it only had for a day. None of my other feeds are
listed.
When I enter marketingwonk.com, I get a link to their comments
feed, but not their main feed. So their directory needs tweaking. It
would also be nice if the requested URL were
parsed for link tags pointing to feeds.
these thoughts by Lee Harris
these thoughts by Lee Harris
12/26/2003 05:24 AMmore»
techcentralstation.com/122403C.html
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Some Random Thoughts
Some Random Thoughts
12/02/2003 03:11 AMNaturally, I love that Cingular is using Tommy
Tutone's song "867-5309" to
promote number
portability! (Isn't it weird that G
ooglism is a Google search
result?)
With the holidays fast approaching, it's important to note that
there is an RSS
feed for What's
New at ThinkGeek!
I can tell that PC sales are up because I am busy dispensing
computer advice in my neighborhood. One neighbor bought a new computer
tonight, while another needs lessons to burn CDs. Neither has
broadband access, so we're still a pretty typical neighborhood.
There's a new link on the right over there for pointers to my past
Presentations and Articles.
And yes, I'm truly loving my Treo 600, thanks for asking. I promise to write up my
experiences with it to date later this week!
Evil Thoughts
Evil Thoughts
06/05/2005 10:47 PMIntel has been making denials about the DRM system embedded in the
latest Pentium D processor.
Now, what if Intel is not confirming
the DRM not because it isn't there, or it wanted security through
obscurity, but because Steve Jobs told Intel not to say
anything?
:-)
A Micropayment for Your Thoughts
A Micropayment for Your Thoughts
12/02/2003 06:32 AMWith free online material increasingly giving way to paid content,
several companies are wagering that they can make big bucks by
facilitating tiny payments for bits of online content, from news
articles and essays to poems and comic strips.
More Flat Thoughts
More Flat Thoughts
06/05/2005 11:10 PMHere's a look at some of the conversation sparked by Doc's commentary
on our Flat New World.
A few more thoughts on plinks
A few more thoughts on plinks
05/30/2004 02:59 PMFrom the com
ments on my plinks entry, it seems some people are seeing ugly
green hash marks all over the place. If that includes you, you need to
force-reload my stylesheet to ensure you
are getting the copy with the plink hiding styles.
One of the things I missed in last night's 1am coding
frenzy was the idea of globally unique identifiers for every
paragraph, as described by Chris Dent. This
leads in to a fascinating concept called
Transclusion, which originated with Ted Nelson (the father of
hypertext) and involves content that is managed by reference.
Now interesting though Transclusion is I'm not convinced
that it's a useful addition to my blog. However, there is a far more
pressing need for globally unique paragraph idenfifiers that has only
just cropped up: my index
page. On it, I display a number of different entries at once. IDs
in XHTML must be unique for the current document, so
if I have two entries on the front page that contain paragraphs with
clashing identifiers I lose validity and, most probably, God kills a kitten.
There are two ways of solving this. Firstly, I could give
every paragraph on the site a globally unique identifier - something
Chris calls a Node ID. That doesn't really tempt me: it's quite a bit
of work, and as I'm not currently interested in Transclusion (although
maybe I should be) I don't gain anything from it other than a valid
index page. The second alternative is the one I've gone for: I'm
simply stripping all paragraph IDs from the entries when they are
displayed on the front page of the site (and for the entries-by-day
views as well). It's a little hackish and it means my CMS is now doing a bit of
lifting when previously it was blissfully unaware of the numbers, but
at least it solves the problem at hand. I kind of like the ID of the
addressable paragraphs only existing on the "official" entry page in
any case.
Here's the PHP I use to strip out the IDs:
$entrytext = preg_replace('/<p id="p-[^"]+"/', "<p",
$entrytext);
One of the many benefits of writing software for yourself
is that you can often take huge liberties: I know for a fact that this
naive regular expression (as opposed to a more resilient technique
using an XML
tool of some sort) will work on all 1420 entries on this site because,
well, I wrote them all.
Miscellaneous Thoughts
Miscellaneous Thoughts
03/16/2003 10:59 AMMiscellaneous Thoughts
Highly Recommended: Brueggers Honey Grain Bagel w/
Honey Walnut Cream Cheese. And its a beautiful day in Boston at
least. Go forth and do not blog !
Grok Description matches for Thoughts of Chairman Bill
GrokA matches for Thoughts of Chairman Bill
Thoughts of Chairman Bill