All those topics that i wish i had time to pursue more earnestly.
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Sun, 25 May 2003 16:34:13 GMT

Bursty Community Formation in Blogspace. Absolutely fascinating paper on community formation in blogspace, by Ravi Kumar, Prabhakar Raghavan, Jasmine Novak, and Andrew Tomkins, called On the Bursty Evolution of Blogspace. (Free ACM account required — it's so worth it, just for this article.) [A Man with a Ph.D. - Richard Gayle's Weblog]

This is an itneresting read, but i'm wondering why this is different from say the irc community around certain events, etc. i don't think blogging is anymore bursty or really that bursty at all in comparison..

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:32:29 GMT

Now that's small.

No that's not dust they're prototype RDIF tags from Hitachi

[Micah's Weblog]

Wow – that is small. About 10 years ago I met with the head of strategic planning at Loblaws, Rob Almeida, who then went on to set up President's Choice Banking. We were talking about the future of supermarkets. At the time, he forecast two things: that supermarkets would scale up to 80,000 square feet. Which they have done. And then, that a maximum size would be reached and the strategy of bigger is better would have to be rethought.  His other big idea was that, at some point, inventory management technology may advance to the point where it would be possible to go the other way. To have a small mart that would have everything you needed because it would be able  to track everything so well that it would only carry what we wanted. I wonder are we in sight of Rob's second prediction?

[Robert Paterson's Radio Weblog]

These are going to change a lot of things. If items, or people, can be tracked by specks almost too small to see, what will happen to our expectation of privacy? WHat will happen to our constitutional rights against search and seizure when we can really have no reasonable expectation of privacy? But then, we could use the same technology and follow politicians everywhere. Oh, this is going to be a fine kettle of fish. [A Man with a Ph.D. - Richard Gayle's Weblog]

These are small enough to inhale, spread across clothes, etc. with powerful enough transceivers you could very much track a person doing just about anything with the proper application of these. In short, this needs regulated.

my proposition is that any device that can be used to identify and track human beings, being intended for that or not, should be labelled as such with a warning label that is readable to the unaided human eye.

in short, that would prevent rfid dusting. i mean these things can be inhaled or theoretically injected in a wide variety of ways.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:27:12 GMT

Dream Tournament: Annika vs. Vijay. Sid Meier designed a virtual golf course that pits Vijay Singh against Annika Sorenstam. By Sid Meier. [New York Times: Technology]

Simulations are fine, but lets put some tournaments together with mixed membership. Since I worked on a golf course as a kid, I've seen that the equality in this sport is quite easy to see, it is all about the set-up of the holes.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:22:42 GMT

Probe into 'happy pill' after suicides. Government bows to pressure over Prozac and Seroxat. [Guardian Unlimited]

It's about time.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:21:31 GMT

Directory of Open Access Journals under Creative Commons. Lund University in Sweden has recently launched the Directory of Open Access Journals featuring hundreds of peer-reviewed, scholarly journals from scientific and cultural communities. Their principal aim is to secure the right of “users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles.” Along with the searchable directory, they also provide a metadata model based on RDF and license all their data under an Attribution-Sharealike license. [Creative Commons: weblog]

this is great! wish I'd gotten it together first of course, but congrats on it.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:18:35 GMT

Help wanted
Since I'm lucky enough that this blog is read by a decent number of talented software developers and technology managers, it seems like a good place to point to this job posting. Salon is in the market for a VP/technology. If you're interested or you know someone who might be, read the posting and see if it sounds like a good fit. [Scott Rosenberg's Links & Comment]

I hope they hire someone that can secure their premium content a bit better, cause 2600 has a nice article on bypassing their cookie based security system this month. i use all server side sessions myself keyed to a uid cookie that has no content other than identifying the server side session. I dunno if that's common, but it's common sense.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:15:54 GMT

Army and M.I.T. Unveil Futuristic Soldier Center. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology won a $50 million Army contract to form a center that develops combat gear using materials the size of atoms. By Reuters. [New York Times: Technology]

yes remember this is the group that swiped someones comic and used it for their proposal, never giving credit, until a fuss was thrown…..

choose your own ethics, but i don't think they should be rewarded given such things.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:13:46 GMT

Toys of the 80s. Toys of the 80s
They don't make them like they used to. [MetaFilter]
hmmm, they did have some great toys back then

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 16:10:55 GMT

Computer games degree 'not Mickey Mouse'. A course sponsored by PlayStation games console maker Sony is worthwhile, an academic claims. [BBC News | Technology | UK Edition]

a degree in computer games actually couldn't be 'mickey mouse' really, there is just so much to a game beyond anything people think is simple. to really get it going degreewise, you need to be very creative and interested in the topic and have the ability to get students to imagine something that is very hard to imagine, differences.

May 25, 2003   No Comments

Sun, 25 May 2003 15:42:23 GMT

Swarm Journalism Unmasks Another Fake. Reason: The Mystery of Mary Rosh: How a new form of journalism investigated a gun research riddle. Stories that might… [Dan Gillmor's eJournal]

this is a great phenomenon, i wish someone would do it for the bushies

May 25, 2003   No Comments