July 30, 2001
What I find most ...
What I find most interesting about the SirCam virus is that I've received it perhaps 20-30 times at my work email address, but not once at my personal email address. I believe that this is because I removed all traces of my personal email addresses from the CamWorld web site, which prevents spambots (and the SirCam virus) from finding the address. It could also be that CamWorld readers (i.e. those people who know my email address and have it in their address books) are smart folks and don't use security-prone Microsoft products.
July 29, 2001
Note: I'm off to ...
Note: I'm off to Seattle for a week for a much needed pseudo-vacation, where I'll be attending and speaking at a conference. I'll try to keep the updates steady, but no promises.
I use Google almost religiously these days. Very rarely does it fail to find me the information I need. So, last night I was thinking about having some "I love Google" t-shirts made, and immediately followed up that thought with a search in Google. Of course, someone has already done it.
Today's inbox: 4323 messages. Maybe it's time I finally downloaded my email... (I read and respond to my email with Pine, but manage it with Microsoft Entourage.) I keep looking at procmail, and I prefer a server-side solution for managing my email, but because I'm limited in disk space at my hosting provider, I'd quickly run out. So, the next solution is to run my own mail server and point the DNS of one of my domains to it and then filter all of my email to it. But I'm reluctant to do this because my DSL may not always be up, thus preventing me from getting to my mail (and mail archives). Sigh...
Flak Magazine: An Open Letter to John McCain
July 28, 2001
Just-in-Time Journalism
Way back in 1994 I was part of a group of college journalism students who volunteered to cover a National Press Club event in Philadelphia. Our duties as volunteers was to record the events and sessions in realtime on large pads of paper that were propped up on easels in the front of the room. The idea was to help facilitate the speaker's session by recording what they were saying and writing down the important points, the audience's questions, and the following discussions.
The following year, we volunteered again to cover a similar event in Denver, only this time we hauled a couple of Macintosh computers along with us and covered the event as typical journalists would. During the day, we'd fan out to the sessions and keynotes, interview speakers and take notes. The evenings we'd spend in front of the Macs assembling an eight-page conference report that we'd get printed overnight at the local Kinko's. We'd then distribute this conference publication to the attendees at the next day's events and sessions. The feedback we received was amazing. People were ecstatic that they now had a record of the previous day's events (and the sessions they had missed), and many said that this kind of thing should be at every conference they attend.
Six years later. Doc Searls reports in near-realtime the debate between Microsoft's Craig Mundie and Red Hat's Michael Tiemann at O'Reilly's Open Source Conference in San Diego. The initial draft is rough and full of typos, but people don't care. For the thousands of people who could not attend the conference but wanted to know what was being said, this kind of "just-in-time journalism" is like a gold mine.
A few years ago this kind of reporting and journalism would have been nearly impossible, but with the advent of wireless Internet connectivity we're seeing it more and more often. The geeks and technology reporters (the ones with a clue, at least) are taking it upon themselves to shrink the time between the event and the report of the event to near-zero. With Web-based instant publishing tools like Manila, Blogger and GreyMatter writers and journalists can now publish in realtime the events as they happen.
Technology conferences and events are a natural point of origin for this new kind of "just-in-time journalism". Conference planners are now making it a point to have wireless Internet access available and those reporters with laptops and a wireless card can sit in the audience and quietly tap away, recording the event in realtime and publishing it on a web site. Delivering the information people crave, when they want it: instantly. In today's "instant access" society, on-demand information services may be just the thing to revive the current slump in online journalism and news. Think of it as a service. Perhaps even a service that people would pay for.
Let's think about this. Is there a business model here? Could some clever entrepreneur assemble small groups of journalists, equip them with laptops, and send them to conferences around the country and the world to record the events in a near-realtime manner? Setting up a wireless hub for those journalists to use at each conference is a trivial task. Building a web site with a content management system and Web-based publishing tools is also somewhat trivial.
Here's another idea. Create a web site that asks conference attendees to report in realtime the conference events. Sign up volunteers to sit in the audience and record the sessions in realtime, much like Doc Searls did earlier this week. This could even be a value-added service that conference planners offer to differentiate their conference from the competition.
The possibilities for expanding journalism the conference reporting are seemingly endless.
CamWorld Story: Just-in-Time Journalism. ...
CamWorld Story: Just-in-Time Journalism. Some thoughts on Web-based instant publishing.
JavaWorld: Will Mac OS X be your next development platform?
Congratulations to Jesse James Garrett and Rebecca Blood, who got married today. Your kids are going to be brilliant.
How To Tell If Your Head's About To Blow Up [via b3ta]
James Gosling: The Story of Java, a Play in Four Acts [via Lambda, the Programming Language Weblog]
More links about user-authentication, cognitive science, and how user interfaces apply:
- Advanced Cognitive Psychology: Project - User Centre Interface Design
- Truth, Beauty, and the User Interface: Notes on the Aesthetics of Information
- Déjà Vu: A User Study Using Images for Authentication
- Applying Usability Testing And Techniques To Develop User-Centered Security
- Book: More Than Screen Deep: Toward Every-Citizen Interfaces to the Nation's Information Infrastructure
- Why Johnny Can't Encrypt: A Usability Evaluation of PGP 5.0
July 27, 2001
Microsoft Research: Collaboration and ...
Microsoft Research: Collaboration and Multimedia Systems Group
USA Today: Anthropologists adapt technology to world's cultures. "She and two colleagues were doing fieldwork for their employer, Motorola, investigating how the company could best enter the emerging markets of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. They found that people in the Caspian Sea area have learned to read the numbers on bar codes to see where products were manufactured. The buyers believe that products from American companies are better if they were built in America."
White Paper: Design for what? Six Dimensions of Activity (PDF)
Understanding Interactivity: Steps to a Phenomenology of Human-Computer Interaction, by Dag Svanaes. (4MB PDF). This is a 294-page book that is definitely on my list of things to read next, perhaps on the plane...
Authentication architecture links:
- Evaluation of the GLOBUS authentication architecture
- The Nareau Project (Identity Management)
- Distributed single sign-on (SSO) system
- A White Paper on Authentication and Access Management Issues in Cross-organizational Use of Networked Information Resources
- iPlanet: Chapter 13, Developing Custom Authentication Modules
- Center for Democracy and Technology: Identity, Authentication & Digital Certificates
- User Authentication and Authorization in the Java(TM) Platform
- P-Synch: Open architecture for authentication
- 12 Key Readings - on authentication and authorization
- A Distributed Architecture for Resource Discovery Using Metadata
Adam Fields sent me this link: Zero Knowledge Protocols and Small Systems
TechWeb: Can Sharing User Data Speed E-Commerce?
Flying [dead] cows! [via Boing Boing]
Usability Issues in Agent Applications: What Should the Designer be Aware of
July 26, 2001
On my to-read list: ...
On my to-read list: The Journal of Experimental Fiction
From 1997: Multimedia Theory and Experimental Fiction
Doc Searls reports on Day One of the O'Reilly Open Source Conference.
First Monday: The IMLS Digital Cultural Heritage Community Project: A Case Study of Tools for Effective Project Management and Collaboration
Icon & Interface Design Studies (bibliography)
Journal of Design Science: A Web Site is a Public Place. Nice article that reminds me of the thoughts I had about wayfinding a while back.
Allen Cypher: Bringing Programming to End Users
Extending Document Management Systems with User-Specific Active Properties
What disturbs me the most about the Bush Administration's big "tax rebate" is that it's not really a rebate at all. In fact, it's an "advance payment" on this year's tax credit. This means that if you underpay your taxes this year, the $300-$600 you receive within the next few months actually works against you. Even for Republicans, this is a pretty sneaky accounting trick.
July 25, 2001
The Duke of URL ...
The Duke of URL reviews Yellow Dog Linux 2.0
IBM DeveloperWorld: Transitioning from Windows to Linux [via dangerousmeta]
How to keep bad robots, spiders and web crawlers away. This is excellent info. I'm constantly fighting bad mis-behaving robots and spambots that repeatedly hit CamWorld. [via Q Daily News]
Dan Gillmor: Diverse open-source advocates face common threats
At work, we are building a new intranet that we'd like to be more heavily used by our developers and application engineers. One of the things we want to do is display recent IRC chat logs in a web-based interface, preferably in a data chunk that gets parsed into the intranet home page template and department group home page templates. DiaWeblog sounds like what we need. Also see the Daily Chump Bot.
The Better Template Engine is another templating system written in Java (servlets).
Easy-to-read article about Apache vs. IIS Web servers, and points to Apache's minimalist design as credit for its excellent security record.
I just finished reading Stephen King's latest book "Dreamcatcher." It was typical King but was still a pretty good story. In the colophon he mentions he wrote the entire thing in longhand, all 600+ pages. Wow. I'm now reading an advance copy of "Angry Young Spaceman" by Jim Munroe, who used to work as the managing editor of Adbusters.
Nice timing! I just realized that Fray Day 5 is September 8, which also happens to be the last day of the Web2001 Conference in San Francisco. And since I will be in San Francisco that week to speak at the conference, I'll be able to attend Fray Day. Excellent...
July 24, 2001
Usability News: A Comparison ...
Usability News: A Comparison of Popular Online Fonts: Which is Best and When? (Read the whole issue of Usability News)
Lars Markussen: Problems with new Hotmail Design
US senator seeks to block XP release. Hmmm, which senator? Senator Charles Schumer (NY)
AOL-Time Wanrer invests $100M in Amazon. While this looks like a pure marketing move (and a good one), what I'd really like to see is AOL and Amazon (and maybe Yahoo too) join forces to create an open user-authentication technology framework to compete with Microsoft's Passport. I have a bunch of emails from earlier this year that outline something like this that I might re-purpose soon as an essay. Stay tuned. Update: Could "Magic Carpet" be this very thing?
i18ngurus.com is a directory of resources for internationalization and localization. Awesome!
A fun conversation from today's IRC server at work:
msussman: say - anyone in the new york office hear a sonic boom
around 6PM last night?
msussman: http://www.cnn.com/2001/US/07/23/flash.boom/index.html
susankny: not me
susankny: we were all in the office, too
cam farted at about that time....
susankny: oh. I saw that.
cam: uh-oh, the aliens have finally come
msussman wonders how cosmic cam's farts are...
shetech_h: cam: I'm an alien
cam: i knew it
shetech_h: cam: Mother! I'm finally coming home!
susankny: lol
micki_sf: okay - i walk away from my desk for 10 minutes and I come back
to galactic flatulence
cam is originally from Melmac
susankny: I'm sure we couldn't have heard a sonic boom over all of the
noise in NYC
micki_sf: marklar
cam: Heghlu'meH QaQ jajvam. nuqDaq 'oH puchpa''e'
shetech_h: mylar
shetech_h: KLINGON IS NOT ALLOWED!!!
micki_sf: oh god he's speaking Klingon
cam: hee!
micki_sf: beam my ass outta here
susankny: what?
susankny: how did you guys know that?
shetech_h: we're nerds
susankny: NERRRRDS!!
micki_sf: <--- geekstress x 10
shetech_h: heh
msussman: http://www.kli.org/tlh/phrases.html
micki_sf: aww come on - at least i didn't know WHAT he said
shetech_h 's name in Klingon is "rebQa"
msussman: "Today is a good day to die. Where is the bathroom?"
July 23, 2001
IBM DeveloperWorks: Automating UNIX ...
IBM DeveloperWorks: Automating UNIX system administration with Perl
P3P's Privacy Promises. "Have you ever taken the time to read a Web site's privacy policies? Wouldn't it be more efficient if the policies could be matched to your preferences automatically?"
July 22, 2001
I spent a few ...
I spent a few hours yesterday updating my portfolio, adding some of the work I've done over the past year and a half:
- Netscape's Theme Builder Tool (User Interface Design)
- Lizzard, the Mozilla-Based Audio Player (User Interface Design)
- Browser-based Helper Application (User Interface Design, Product Development, Functional Spec)
WebZine NYC2001 yesterday was good, about half the size of last year's event in San Francisco. Michael Moore's keynote was great, and I was able to meet him afterwards and recount my old, old story about being fired for publishing fiction online. I also met David Gallagher, Andy Wang, Dru Oja Jay, and chatted again with Victor Lombardi.
Web User Agents Listing and Descriptions
July 21, 2001
A few months ago ...
A few months ago I made the conscious decision to stop checking my Hotmail account because Microsoft had tied it to their Passport user-authentication servers, and I knew they were using cookies to track me. Then I read this article about Microsoft having trouble upgrading the interface to their Hotmail service and I was intrigued enough to go see what changes they'd made. (I figured I could always just delete my MS-centric/Passport cookies afterwards.) Holy crap, did Microsoft screw up the Hotmail interface. Gone is the very nicely-designed (and quite usable) interface that took advantage of minimalist HTML design. In its place is a WinXP-inspired monstrosity with HUGE tabs and way, way, too much blue. The worst thing about the whole experience, though, was that since I hadn't used my Hotmail account in more than 60 days, I had to re-activate it. And guess what? Yup, all of my old mail was gone. Poof! My folders were there, but every single one of them is empty. Over three years of email (mostly online store/travel order receipts, etc.) gone, just like that. If this is an example of Microsoft's upcoming "Web Services" I am not impressed. For free Web-based email, I'm sticking to Yahoo Mail. Yes, I know that Yahoo also drops cookies and tracks their users, but Yahoo doesn't have grandiose plans to tie their profile/personal data-acquisition system into an operating system and client-side applications (yet).
Howard Greenstein isn't impressed either, and he used to work at Microsoft. [via Talking Moose]
WebZine NYC2001 is today at Noon. I'm gonna try to drag my ass out of bed to make it. No promises. Noon? Hmmm....
Network Solutions (VeriSign) is up to more monopolistic tricks. Apparently, they are claiming that other domain name registrars are "slamming" domain owners and transferring domains without the owner's knowledge. Despite no solid proof that this is happening, they are using this excuse as an opportunity to change their domain transfer process, making it incrediby difficult to transfer a domain away from them to a competing and more competent/trustworthy registrar. In NetSol's new process, you have only five day to receive an authorization letter from them, get it notarized, and mail it back or your transfer request is cancelled. This is a direct competitive attack by NetSol against their competition in the domain registrar space. Unfortunately, the people that lose out the most by these actions are the consumers and domain owners who have to deal with the incredible headaches caused by NetSol's inane policies and processes. If NetSol was competent at all regarding the domain registration services they provide, domain owners wouldn't be trying so badly to transfer their domains to a competing registrar service.
Well, so much for the separation of Church and State. Hey Bush (er, GOP puppet), are you gonna wipe your ass with the Constitution next?
July 20, 2001
Damn, that Moose is ...
Damn, that Moose is smart.
I just don't get it. Over the past few years it seems that there have been dozens upon dozens of serious security holes in Microsoft's IIS server software. Every time, the company issues a patch, but often the damage is done. Now, if you are someone who is responsible for choosing what server software to run your site on, why on earth would you choose IIS, when it has such an incredibly bad history of security holes?
Again, I say "lame..." Just keep digging that hole...
css.nu: CSS authoring FAQ
July 19, 2001
Winterspeak: Viral software production ...
Winterspeak: Viral software production
Joel on Software: Good Software Takes Ten Years. Get Used To It
"Nope, we're not a monopoly. Oh yeah, and we're not anti-competitive either." Lame...
Michael Lewis: "Corporations do not dream up the technology that is going to undermine their business. Once that technology is dreamed up they have to assimilate it very quickly, or else they get put out of business by someone else who does." Hmmm, sounds like Microsoft.
O'ReillyNet: Embracing the Web Part 1: Distributed Computing
O'ReillyNet: Designing Internationalized User-Interface Components for Web Applications
Business 2.0: The New Corporate Structure -- Unstructured
Clay Shiry: Java is Essential to the Software Ecosystem
July 17, 2001
Join the Red Robot ...
Join the Red Robot World Domination! You can help the red robot take over the world. Here's a picture of me (at Heather's increasingly famous Mirror Project site) wearing my Red Robot t-shirt along with a bunch of weblog people.
Zimran Ahmed: Windows, a bad ownership experience. Microsoft's draconian licensing regime reduces its experiential edge over open-source software.
How to hide CSS from buggy browsers.
OSopinion: The Trouble with Mono
OSopinion: Through the Looking Glass of Microsoft's .NET
July 16, 2001
Are you going to ...
Are you going to be in town for MacWorld this week? I may be available for lunch or dinner (work schedule pending). Let me know and we'll set something up. Also: I will be in Seattle from July 29 to August 4 and should have some extra time if you'd like to get together.
This month's issue of WebTechniques has several excellent articles on building solid intranets.
IBM: International Components for Unicode for Java. Bookmark this. It will become important soon enough.
Interaction by Design: User Experience (UX) vs. Information Architecture (IA). Read all four parts.
Doc Searls: Whose hand is that in your pocket?
July 15, 2001
U.S. News: "Five years ...
U.S. News: "Five years ago, at the Netscape-Microsoft "browser war" peak..." What? Five years ago? That would have been mid-1996. In July of 1996, Microsoft barely had a Web browser if you can even call IE 2.0 a browser. IE 3.0, also a piece of crap, came out in August of 1996. The "browser wars" that journalists are so fond of writing about didn't really begin until IE 4.0 came out in October of 1997, and really only peaked after IE 5.0 was bundled with Windows in 1999-2000.
I have some ideas of who the Talking Moose is, but I am going to respect his/her anonymity and not voice them here. Regardless, the Talking Moose has plenty of interesting things to say. Go read.
O'ReillyNet: Why Michael Schwern is not a Java programmer
One of my coworkers calls this "one of the wackiest tinfoil hat stories I've seen in years." Ha ha.
Paper: Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS)? Look at the Numbers!
July 13, 2001
Yay, Friday the 13th! ...
Yay, Friday the 13th! One of my favorite days of the year since I was born on a Friday the 13th. I guess we'll see if the day gets any better as it progresses...
Web Accessibility and the DDA (UK)
Exploiting Common Vulnerabilities in PHP Applications
Configuring Mail Clients to Send Plain ASCII Text. Read this. Bookmark it. Send it to all your friends and coworkers. Make them read it.
MS Office XP - the more money I give to Microsoft, the more vulnerable my Windows computers are
Kent Dalhgren: Creatively building teamwork
Donald A. Norman: The Perils of Home Theater
I just learned that the founder of the Internet Scout Report, Susan Calcari, has passed away. An early pioneer in Internet research, she helped define the medium for us hardcore librarians and news/information junkies were. She will be missed.
July 12, 2001
Linux on the iBook2. ...
Linux on the iBook2. Read his Thoughts essay. Excellent... [via Axodys]
Yet another reason to be disgusted at Microsoft.
Washington Post: Nukes: A Lesson From Russia. Fascinating article about flawed Microsoft software that has caused inconsistencies in the accounting of nuclear arsenals. Whoah.
Borders.com Interview: Samuel Delany Talks About Dhalgren. Dhalgren is still one of the best post-apocolyptic sci-fi novels I have ever read. I'm pleased to see this book back in print after being so hard to find for so long. I spent lots of time between 1993 and 1996 scouring used bookstores for a copy and finally found one in a used bookstore on South Street in Philadelphia. Highly recommended.
What is a noomeejahoor?
July 09, 2001
Note: Taking a few ...
Note: Taking a few days off. Updates will resume when I get caught up.
Wired News: Mono, Opening Up .NET to Everyone [via Openwire]
Craig Burton: Redirection and Beyond. "I was embarassed by the Free and Open Source Communities' invitation to Microsoft to "join them." This is silly gentlemen. Embrace Microsoft through redirection, they will hate you all the way to the bank."
Ximian Announces Open Source Initiative to Develop a Linux Platform for .NET
O'ReillyNet: GNOME's Miguel de Icaza on .NET
WebZine NYC2001 is on Saturday, July 21. See you there.
Late last week while walking down 7th Avenue in Brooklyn I noticed a lot of red-and-white stickers plastered all over manhole covers and sewer drains. They looked very official. Only upon closer inspection do you realize that they say 'Spraying for Sewer Lizards' and feature a URL: www.sewer-alert.org. Rudimentary research shows that the domain name sewer-alert.org is registered to the Sci-Fi Channel. Apparently, it's some kind of promotion for a new series called The Chronicle. Update: readers have reported that these stickers and flyers are all over the Upper West Side as well.
July 08, 2001
Usability of Starbucks Website ...
Usability of Starbucks Website Affected by Cookies. [via Good Experience] This in interesting. Starbucks apparently is pointing the finger of blame at their partnership with Microsoft and their Passport technology that's tied into the Starbucks web site. While cookies aren't such a bad thing, it does raise some issues. How soon will it be before a Passport account is required before you can use certain non-Microsoft owned web sites? You may recall that Microsoft announced eBay as one of its earliest partners for Hailstorm/Passport.
InfoToday: New Web Site Content Options from New Content Aggregators
Citizens United Against Football is a organization dedicated to eradicating violence in sports, especially football. Bizarre.
July 07, 2001
Advogato: Mono Culture. An ...
Advogato: Mono Culture. An early discussion of Mono, the open-source alternative to .NET
CIO Magazine: The Secret to Software Success [via Massless]
Another example of how the market will decide Microsoft's fate. Companies (which make up much of the market) simply will not let Microsoft get away with such antics.
GeekNews: Fallout in the PHPNuke Community over Open Source
If you're going to be in California for the O'Reilly Open Source Conference, you might want to spend a few extra days and hit the Open Innovation Conference being held in Santa Clara.
MozillaQuest: Netscape 6.1 PR 2 Browser-Suite Coming Soon
CorpWatch: Microsoft, One World Operating System. An interview with the founder of NetAction.
NY Times Op/Ed: It's Good to Be the King (or Why Bush is Slipping in the Polls)
July 05, 2001
Building a Community Information ...
Building a Community Information Network: A Guidebook (Downloadable book)
First Monday: Intermittent Aberrations: Can Mature Companies Innovate?
Industry Standard: Microsoft Could Hold Passport to the Internet. Excellent article that explains in layman's terms the danger of a Microsoft-controlled Internet as co-opted by Passport/Hailstorm and Windows XP.
Scary thought: What if Microsoft requires a Passport account log-in before you can use your brand new Xbox this Christmas? What about UltimateTV? More scarier is the fact that that Microsoft wants to spend up to $3B to help Rubert Murdoch (News Corp.) purchase DirectTV from GE. If this happens, how soon before you have to have a Passport account to watch satellite TV? Scary, scary...
And let's not forget that Microsoft owns 10% of Comcast Cable Corp., 13% of UUNet, 10% of Progressive Networks (not anymore), WebTV, and has joint partnerships with BET and NBC. What else does Microsoft own? [somewhat outdated chart]. Another list from 1999. Microsoft is not just a software company anymore...
Linux Journal: The Appeals Court Ruling: What's in it for Linux?
Alternative viewpoint: Why Microsoft (mostly) shouldn't be stopped
Boycott Microsoft: A Modest Manifesto
Ximian (formerly Helix Code) to unveil open-source alternative to .NET
Non-Software Examples of Software Design Patterns
Who Are You? Who Owns You? A look at Amazon's privacy policy and issues with customer data. Maybe the braniacs at Microsoft should read this.
Mozilla Community Day. Unfortunately, I will not be attending the O'Reilly Open Source Conference this year, so will have to miss this.
July 04, 2001
Happy Independence Day! (U.S. ...
Happy Independence Day! (U.S. Readers)
Fiber-to-the-home advocacy group formed. This is a great idea, but I wonder how slow the telecommunications industry is going to move on it. Looking at how the big phone companies screwed up the DSL market, hoping for fiber-to-the-home may be just a pipe dream.
BusinessWeek: Innovation Drought
Shorewalker: Content Management links
July 03, 2001
The New Methodology (of ...
The New Methodology (of Software Development)
From 1992: What is Software Design?
AppleLinks: One Dead Opossum. Excellent essay on Microsoft's latest strategy. [via Have Browser, Will Travel]
Steve Gibson: Microsoft Does Not Understand Security. What This Means About the Future of Denial of Service. And Microsoft's response.
Steve Gibson: Why Windows XP will be the Denial of Service Exploitation Tool of Choice for Internet Hackers Everywhere
Mini-rant: Why is it that people haven't figured out how to do their own online research? I constantly get email from people asking me to help them research something I once pointed to or wrote about. I ignore most of these requests, but on a few occasions my curiosity got the better of me and I hit Google to see how easy it was to find the very information these people were looking for. And almost every time (with a few exceptions) I've been able to find it in under three minutes. Hello people, are you that clueless that you don't know how to do a search query? Or are you just plain lazy? Update: Tara emailed me and said to "tell them to read Research Buzz." Yeah!
I'm a monopoly. You're a monopoly. Wouldn't you like to be a monopoly too?
The Open Source Quality Project
The Federal Open Source Conference
July 01, 2001
Dan Gillmor: A revolutionary ...
Dan Gillmor: A revolutionary pursuit: freedom from Microsoft
Network Solutions is blocking domain registration tranfers.
The best part of the movie is Teddy the Supertoy. Overall, I found A.I. Artificial Intelligence too disjointed to really like it a lot. It was pretty well-made, but I felt that the ending was a bit forced and contrived. It could have been a much better movie. Haley Joel Osment deserves an Oscar, though.
Cool, I didn't know there were two sequels to the Brian Aldiss story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" which is the story A.I. is based on. I'll have to go buy the book these are in.
Salon: One Big Happy Channel? Excellent article on the deregulation of the Telecommunications industry.
Interview with a content management heretic.
WebTechniques: Transcending Client/Server
MozillaZine: Towards Mozilla 1.0
Merging Technologies. Some reflections on the AOL-Time Warner merger. Microsoft-Philip Morris? Yahoo-Nabisco?
AOL-Time Warner Merger Proves that Microsoft is No Threat. Hmmm...
OSOpinion: Alternative Payment Methods Get No Respect Online
Splinder: Some thoughts about Flurry. I really wih Guha would put his Flurry paper back up online...
Keller Schroeder & Associates: The Standards Shuffle
XMLMag: Microsoft's David Stutz: Perspectives on Peer-to-Peer
Open Source vs. Proprietary Software
Tom Christiansen: Diversity Compliance in Web Design
From 1997: XML, Java, and the future of the Web
ZDNet: Open source code: A corporate building block
Tim O'Reilly in Salon in 1999: "Just how close did we come to a Net ruled by Microsoft? The "server wars" show a grim counterpart to the browser wars."
World Wide Access: Accessible Web Design
SecurityPortal: Protecting Information From Exposure (Part I)