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Archive for 2003
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Cory on The Hollywood Agenda @ SXSW
I'm watching a webcast from SXSW, not even sure which one, but it looks like Cory Doctorow talking and sounds vaguely EFF-ish.
Log-a-lyzing
I've got opus (my dual 200 linux box) chewing through 96mb of apache logs, doing reverse DNS lookups, and combining the separate files into a single file I can feed to AWStats (I'm using the logresolvemerge.pl script included with awstats). The combined file is up to 218mb right now!
She's back!
Jodi returns from a long absence with not one, but 4 (count 'em!! 4!) new posts on her newly re-designed site!
The Core and The Gap
Thomas P.M. Barnett writes for the Navy War College on the new understanding of the world from the Pentagon's viewpoint. It explains a lot of where our government sees the world going, and what our place in it will be.
Since the end of the cold war, the United States has been trying to come up with an operating theory of the world and a military strategy to accompany it. Now there's a leading contender. It involves identifying the problem parts of the world and aggressively shrinking them. Agree or disagree, this is one to read.
Argh! Debugging Cheetah template engine
I'm trying to use the Cheetah template engine - a python-based engine along the lines of Velocity - and debugging the template is getting very very annoying.
World Of Ends
In their typical in-your-face way, Doc Searls and David Weinberger take some time to explain the internet to the business crowd.
My First Published Site
Courtesy of the Internet Archive, I've obtained a 95%-complete copy of my first published website, circa 1996. Cool, eh?
Writing Is Hard!
BTW - I worked on the corporate weblog piece for quite a while, tweaking it, taking out sections wholesale and gutting others to make it read better. Jim Roepcke and Robert Scoble were my guides, and I'm super grateful for their thoughts and time.
Weblogs and Corporate Product Support
I've been thinking a lot lately about the role of weblogs in product development, promotion, and support, especially as an addition to the traditional role of mailing lists in developing user communities.
9600bps from PHX
Damien is stuck in PHX airport (we were supposed to get together but events prevented it) and he's blogging it over Bluetooth and his cellphone. Hehe. Cooool.
Moving
Dave is talking about preparing to move across country. In October of 2001, I was doing the same thing. There's something exciting, scary, and altogether bigger than oneself about moving to a new life. All the best, Dave!
Knowledge: Give To Recieve
[via Jim] Napsterize Your Knowledge: Give To Receive: MarketingProfs.com article on the new dynamics of coporate marketing and information. Tangentially related to the points I make in Corporate Product Support: The Weblog Generation.
New Apple Music Service - Non-MP3, Label-Approved?
non-mp3-label-approved tags: "" tp_commentcount: "0" tp_favoritecount: "0" tp_urlid: 6a010534988cd3970b0120a5b3600c970c
It looks like Apple may be announcing shortly a new music service for Mac/iPod owners, using label-approved music and non-mp3 format. Argh.
Apple had so much going for it - the whole digital hub thing, iTunes, iPod. Do they know it was MP3 support that made iTunes so frikkin popular? I wonder if they will continue to support MP3? I guess we'll see what happens.
More links: San Jose Mercury, Mac Observer, Slashdot.
[via Chris]
New Apple Music Service - Non-MP3, Label-Approved?
non-mp3-label-approved
It looks like Apple may be announcing shortly a new music service for Mac/iPod owners, using label-approved music and non-mp3 format. Argh.
Apple had so much going for it - the whole digital hub thing, iTunes, iPod. Do they know it was MP3 support that made iTunes so frikkin popular? I wonder if they will continue to support MP3? I guess we'll see what happens.
More links: San Jose Mercury, Mac Observer, Slashdot.
[via Chris]
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