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Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: Rescue Orphan Works!
Posted By: Harold
The Copyright Office has begun an
important proceeding on ways to allow works where copyright status cannot be determined (called “orphan works”) to become accessible to the public. The good folks at Public Knowledge
have this useful blurb and links. For my take, see below . . .
[Read More!]
Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: CUWIN Makes Cool Device
Posted By: Harold
The good folks at the
Champaign Urbana Wireless Network have just relased a very cool open source program that, when attached to a device built with components you cna buy in any electronic store, become a node in a mesh network. For less that a grand, you can “unwire” a whole neighborhood. Their press release is reprinted below.
The great significance of this from a Sausage Factory point of view is that federal policy in this area is completely unprepared for the ability of a few folks ona shoe string to develop a new, disruptive technology. Spectrum policy is usually about big companies or well financed start ups. The “two guys in the garage” model is not usual in spectrum, because it is so tightly regulated. That unlicensed spectrum and open source free people to do this sort of thing is yet another good argument for more unlicensed spectrum.
[Read More!]
Inventing the Future: Inventing the Future: electronic discourse done right
Posted By: Stearns
Maybe we don’t have to choose between persistence and spontaneity, between synchronous and asynchronous.
Consider threaded blogs vs live chat. The former has a permanent record and structure, and people can collaborate asynchronously, but lacks spontaneous give and take. The latter is spontaneous, but lacks permanence (unless someone saves a transcript, and manages their collection of transcripts, and the sharing of same with others). But do these have to be different mechanisms? Maybe we can have everything with a single interface, so people don’t have to choose?
[Read More!]
No on Gonzales
Posted By: John
Wetmachine is a technocentric place. We talk about, mostly, science and technology and their relation to society. My own particular hobbyhorse is unforseen side effects of technology, especially negative side effects. I guess you would say I'm a dystopian, happiest whenever some new technopolistic horror happens and I can say “See! See! I told you we never should have angered the gods by making fire!”
I don't generally post political rants here. (I have a diary at
daily Kos for that.)
But I'm going to add my puny voice to the chorus opposing Alberto Gonzales for Attorney General, because there are limits, after all, to my perverse delight in seeing technophilia run amok. Gonzales truly is an Orwellian character, a minion of Older Sibling and a cog in the machine that is hell-bent on turning my beloved United States of America into a high-tech Ociania--replete with a prole-filled gulag and a worldwide secret army of faceless enforcers brought up on videogames and armed to the teeth with gizmos, gadgets and all the latest in mind-fuck technology.
A vote for Gonzales is a vote not only for torture and the debasement of a proud American tradition that began, literally, with George Washington. A vote for Gonzales is a vote for the gulag, an the corruption of our republic that inveitably goes with it.
No on Gonzales.
outsource top management
Posted By: Stearns
This essay by Dick Gabriel is cute, short (one page), and worth reading. Dick has a long history of thought-provoking good-news bad news jokes: this one's about outsourcing and executive compensation.
By the way, Dick was great Lisp programmer at Stanford who founded a great Lisp company and sold it to his competitor to go work in computer science labs. Then he dropped out of tech at to get an MFA in poetry at a relatively advanced age. He writes, talks to anyone who will listen, and is a great curmudgeon. Reminds me a lot of John. Check out the
photo. Better yet, check out his other writings at his Dreamsongs site.
Inventing the Future: Inventing the Future: learning the system
Posted By: Stearns
Dear Diary,
I’m off to Japan Tuesday for
the big conference. Better take a snapshot of what I’ve been doing, because I expect my world to change by the time I get back. My first six weeks on this radical Croquet project were spent with very general learning of what’s what. Drinking knowledge from a firehose. For the next six we’ve been prototyping some of the features from conference papers written by my boss, Julian, and his counterpart at U. Minnesota. We’re going to demo these at the conference, and we go on right after Alan Kay’s keynote address. Yikes. Good thing Julian gives great demos! I imagine the conference organizers know that and put him in that slot accordingly. (Cast of characters
here).
[details below the fold]
[Read More!]
Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: Will the Last Powell Out Please Turn Off the Lights?
Posted By: Harold
Michael Powell has announced his resignation as Chair of the FCC. Hardcore libertarian fiscal conservatives — such as the Wall St. J. and the CATO Institute — mourn his departure. By contrast, most public interest folks celebrate and condemn his legacies. Industry people, always wary of burning any bridges, give carefully guarded statements. And, of course, everyone speculates on who will be next chair.
As for my views? See below of course!
[Read More!]
Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: ALERT! NEBRASKA PROPOSES TOTAL BAN ON MUNI SYSTEMS
Posted By: Harold
The incumbents go for speed over finese in this latest round.
LB 157, just introduced in the NE legislature, proposes a flat out ban on municipal systems. Critically, this has been designated “emergency legislation” so that it can move through the legislature swiftly and with minimal debate. Apparently, the idea that citizens might have a say in their own governance is an “emergency” in Nebraska — at least if you are a legislator who is also a wholly owned subsidiary of the Telco and Cable lobby.
Here's hoping the people of Nebraska find out what's going on soon enough to act!
stay tuned . . . .
Newsflash: Titan sounds like old Atari 2600 games
Posted By: Gary
Being somewhat of a space nerd, I've been following the progress of the Huygens probe mission for the last few days (besides, watching space press conferences streaming via the web is more fun than working, even if they are largely in French and German).
One of the instruments on the Huygens was essentially a microphone, and in addition to the
pictures that look like they were taken with a first generation Logitech webcam, the ESA have
released MP3s of sounds recorded through the microphone. I was anxious to hear what another planet sounded like... boy was I shocked to learn it sounded a lot like the bleeps and hisses that passed for sound in the old
Atari 2600 game console from the 70's and 80's.
[Read More!]
Feynman Nine
Posted By: John
In my technoparanoid thriller Acts of The Apostles (which you can download for free by clicking on the left), two characters named Dieter Steffen and Pavel Isaacs develop a nanomachine for rearranging human DNA. There are implications for Gulf War Syndrome, and hints of a plot to lure the Americans back to Iraq for a second war, where they'll be beaten. (Acts was published in 1999). They call the machine Feynman Nine.
Recently sometime-Wetmachiner Ron sent me these links:
Feynman Nine becoming reality, and and one of the leading bioinformatics molecular biology researchers around is indeed named
Pavel in
real life. He's working on algorithms for rearranging genomes.
At some point in the future I'm gonna compile a compendium of all the stuff I made up for that book that has since happened.
Or else I'll get Ron to do it — he's been sending me “Acts of the Apostles technology sitings” for years.
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