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Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:59:57 GMT

Guide to Institutional Repository Software.

http://www.soros.org/openaccess/software/

Really helpful report from George Soros' Open Society Institute that looks at the currently available open source institutional repository systems that comply with the Open Archives Initiative metadata harvesting protocols. (Note these aren't 'learning object' repositories per se – these are typically more focused on archiving scholarly publishing and other institutional materials, though through things like z39.50 and the IMS digital repositories interoperability spec it may end up that your searches go against these repositories and more.)

You'll have seen this already over at OLDaily (you do read Stephen already, don't you?) – this post was more a personal note as this was one of those 'just in time' nuggets that float through the blogosphere and land on your desktop seconds before you knew you needed them. Hurray!. – SWL

[EdTechPost]

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:55:31 GMT

Warfare at the speed of light. After sinking 40 years and billions of dollars into beam weapons, defense scientists are on the cusp of what could be a military revolution ÉÉ warfare at the speed of light. [Gyre.org]

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danger danger danger danger danger

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:49:44 GMT

What is Internet infrastructure?. Stratton Sclavos of Verisign distills the essence of the SiteFinder controversy in his CNet interview:

“The reason Site Finder became such a lightening rod is that it goes to
the question: Are we going to be in a position to do innovation on this
infrastructure, or are we going to be locked into obsolete thinking
that the DNS was never intended to do anything other than what it was
originally supposed to do?”

There is a subtle but essential misunderstanding here.  Innovation
can and should happen in Internet infrastructure, but there are a
handful of core elements that must remain open and radically simple if
the Internet is to remain, well, the Internet.  These include
TCP/IP, SMTP, HTTP, BIND, BGP, and the DNS (especially the .com
registry).  Any change in these protocols should be very carefully
vetted through a consensus-based process. 

The key issue that Stratton misses is that a few simple and
non-proprietary core connectivity protocols make innovation possible
elsewhere.  Take Internet routing, for example.  Akamai and
its competitors built content-delivery networks that fundamentally
changed the way a high percentage of Internet traffic moves through the
network.  But they did it on top of the core protocols, which
remain unchanged.  Innovation took place, but without breaking the
fundamental underpinnings of the open Internet.

The debate about spam, where many people are proposing mandatory
authentication as a solution, illustrates the same confusion. 
Breaking email to fix spam is like breaking the DNS to “fix” mistyped
domain names.  That's why I like Tim Bray's suggestion to use relay servers for spam prevention.  Like Akamai, it leaves the basic infrastructure unchanged. 

Lack of innovation at one level promotes innovation at another
level.  As long as the global Internet community knows that SMTP,
IP, and the domain name system will remain stable, it can build
wonderful new things that leverage that base.  At the same time,
the guardians of the core infrastructure, which includes large network
owners, Verisign, and standards bodies, can focus their energies on
ensuring that the infrastructure can scale.  Because the DNS today
does do something different than it was designed for: it supports a
global network used by billions of people and facilitating billions of
dollars in economic activity.  And that's the greatest innovation
of all.   [Werblog]

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Kevin is precisely right here. you cannot build a house that will last without foundations, and you cannot have interoperability without stable protocols, and while you can develop those protocols, random isolated enclosing moves are not innovation as much as transformation, transformation with the purpose of seizing territory and limiting access to others.

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:45:03 GMT

Top Ten Activist Campuses. Mother Jones reports on the Top 10 Activist Campuses: Number one is the University of Tehran, followed by California community… [TalkLeft: The Politics of Crime]

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at least one virginia campus carries on the tradition of the fathers(and mothers) of our country.

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:41:19 GMT

Jon Maddog Hall. 22 Oct 2003: Newsforge interviews Jon Maddog Hall.”Either we should bring the laws regarding software into the twenty-first century so a reasonable software programmer can reasonably respect ownership rights (or defend them) without unreasonable time and legal costs, or only large companies will be able to create software in the future. It becomes too complicated otherwise.I believe that “the common good” in a world-wide software development can not tolerate software patents, needs a shorter time frame [RootPrompt.org -- Nothing but Unix]

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:39:01 GMT

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:37:19 GMT

The Open video project is

A shared digital video collection. The purpose of the Open Video Project is to “collect and make available a repository of digitized video content for the digital video, multimedia retrieval, digital library, and other research communities”.

The Project is sponsored by and developed at the Interaction Design Laboratory at the School of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill.

With a good search facility

Thanks Blueblog

(Acc. to Smart Mobs.) [A blog doesn't need a clever name]

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:34:06 GMT

happy blogiversary to me. One year. Four hundred and thirty-nine entries. One thousand, five hundred and forty-six comments. (Thanks for being the first, Joi!) Over fourteen thousand page views per month. An entire world of new friends and colleagues. A changed life…. [mamamusings]

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congratulations on a 1 year old, my blogiversary is the 28th of dec. not too far off

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:32:24 GMT

Berlin Declaration on open access released. The long-awaited Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities was released today by the Max-Planck Society, European Cultural Heritage Online (ECHO), and the participants in the conference on
Open Access to the Data and Results of the Sciences and Humanities (Berlin, October 20-22, 2003). The signatories include representatives of the major scientific and scholarly societies in France and Germany. Institutions that did not participate in the drafting may still sign it by contacting Dr. Stefan Echinger.

Excerpt: “The Internet has fundamentally changed the practical and economic realities of distributing scientific knowledge and cultural heritage. For the first time ever, the Internet now offers the chance to constitute a global and interactive representation of human knowledge, including cultural heritage and the guarantee of worldwide access….Our mission of disseminating knowledge is only half complete if the information is not made widely and readily available to society. New possibilities of knowledge dissemination not only through the classical form but also and increasingly through the open access paradigm via the Internet have to be supported.”

The Berlin statement draws its inspiration from the Budapest Open Access Initiative and bases its definition of “open access” on the Bethesda Statement on Open Access Publishing. [Open Access News]

October 22, 2003   No Comments

Wed, 22 Oct 2003 15:28:24 GMT

discourse.net on The Practical Nomad. Michael Froomkin (Professor of Law at the University of Miami, moderator and contributor to ICANN Watch, and part of the Freetotravel.org team), has some especially kind words about my fledging efforts in his blog at discourse.net. Check it out, especially… [The Practical Nomad]

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the practical nomad blog looks like it will be very useful

October 22, 2003   No Comments