Posts from — June 2004
Wed, 30 Jun 2004 23:02:12 GMT
News UPdate. Yes, I broke wordpress again, or it was still broken. Jeremy helped me work through the logic to find the missing file(s). Now just have to fix something else… but I'm keeping away from rampant computer use and doing other useful things. Like starting to work again on the Medieveal Latin British vampire stories. I did two papers on these fragments in the works of Walter Map and William of Newburgh last year, and have done nothing since, but now Quinn Yarbro is co-editing an anthology of old and obscure vampire stories with college level articles, and I'm submitting the map/newburgh stuff. One of my two major summer projects. The other will be on blogs and hacking with KAT! I hope.
In the mean time, thanks go out to Rochelle for giving me a gmail account… [Team Polysynchronous - Just Differently Intelligent - - Just Differently Intelligent -]
—-
mumbles something about fixing it friday, where is that rm-f command anyway…. no, if asked, i'll fixors it, as per my contract with the world, some sort of permanent penance for portending to be a realist in a former life i think.
June 30, 2004 No Comments
Wed, 30 Jun 2004 22:58:38 GMT
EFF Publishes Patent Hit List. Winnowing a field of nearly 200 questionable patents, the Electronic Frontier Foundation decides to challenge 10 of what the group considers to be the most dubious and abused technology patents. By Daniel Terdiman. [Wired News] [A blog doesn't need a clever name]
—-
i wish they didn't have to do this, most of those patents are completely improper in regards to what a patent should be.
June 30, 2004 No Comments
political economy of librarianship by birdsall
i downloaded this earlier today on my every so often on interesting uses of political economy. having just read it, i find that it makes the pertinance of political economy for those interested in librarianship, but it doesn't really go as far as i'd like talking about the becoming part of librarianship that is part of the political economy, nor does it really deal in any depth with the obvious relationships between andrew carnegie's recognition of the library as state economic driver and the role of the librarian. however, it is a fantastic marker of a future direction of research.
June 30, 2004 No Comments
political economy of the internet and grid computing conference
this looks like it might be interesting….
June 30, 2004 No Comments
one big republican party.
this sort of speaks a wee bit negatively toward the way the republican party thinks about sex. but maybe they just believe it should be deregulated? no, their marriage policy somehwat contrary to that, hmmm…. well, remember tailhook?
June 30, 2004 No Comments
Tue, 29 Jun 2004 21:00:35 GMT
New WSIS papers from APC. A grant from Canada's International Development Agency enabled the Association for Progressive Communications to commission two studies on the hottest issues emerging from WSIS-1: Internet governance and funding ICT development in the “South.” Both documents have just been posted on… [InternetPolicy.net]
—–
worth the read….
June 29, 2004 No Comments
HERMENEIA:Literary Studies and Digital Technologies
this looks like an interesting group
June 29, 2004 No Comments
best soda yet
the switch is soda, it is also pure juice, it is carbonated. it isn't sweetened. it is good.
June 28, 2004 No Comments
Tue, 29 Jun 2004 00:25:05 GMT
Waging War On Wal-Mart. George Will’s piece in the current Newsweek, “Waging War On Wal-Mart” argues that Zoning and other laws used to block Wal-Marts from opening are, in effect, tariffs serving domestic protectionism. Talk about protecting “a sense of community” often is avarice masquerading as altruism. It is rent-seeking—the use of government to… [Outside the Beltway]
—
if there was ever a thing to wage war on…..
June 28, 2004 No Comments
Tue, 29 Jun 2004 00:24:26 GMT
Group promotes “digital ubiquity” at home. “The job of connecting all the consumer electronics devices in your home is getting a boost with the formation of an alliance of some 145 consumer and electronics companies,” Michael Singer wrote on Wi-Fi Planet . “The consortium [is] now… [InternetPolicy.net]
—-
ubiquity is the big question here.
June 28, 2004 No Comments