My Eco-Footprint: it requires 4.47 Earths to support each member of the present human population at your standard of living.
Hey, it’s still only only 64.57% of an average North American’s footprint
My Eco-Footprint: it requires 4.47 Earths to support each member of the present human population at your standard of living.
Hey, it’s still only only 64.57% of an average North American’s footprint
A friend sent me this Internet Week Opinion piece: Reasons To Shun Open Source-ry . It is without contest the worst thing I’ve ever read regarding Linux and open source issues ever.
The point seems to be « Linux is not ready for the enterprise ». I’ll let you judge if it proves the point. Or any point.
Enters SMS agriculture says SPU newslog: farmers in Kenya will be able monitor prices for their products via their mobile and SMS. The hope is that this will avoid farmer’s exploitation by middlemen since previously, knowing commodity prices required travelling to markets.
Anil Dash on the flash mobs phenomenon I discussed earlier.
Those who are worried about the weblog fad flaming out, fear not. Mobs are truly the flagpole-sitting of the new millennium. As Joshua astutely observed, Flash Mobs are striking in that they are an affinity event for people who have no affinity group. A Meetup for people who like Meetups. How much more meta can it get? None. None more meta.
+1 for the Spinal Tap reference, and for the semi self-serving lament to the effect that flash mobs coverage in the media does not mention weblogs.
[via SmartMobs]
Keeping the Net neutral is the title of this Salon piece.
For those with a subscription, it explains why cable compagnies should be made common carriers, for me it’s just a teaser that I agree with.
Update: Frank has a nice exerpt.
[via Greplaw]
First International Mobile IPR Workshop: conference of Rights Management of Information Products on the Mobile Internet in Helsinki.
A team from SIMS at Berkeley is presenting a paper that evaluates and proposes DRM schemes for compulsory licensing.
Mary Hodder also did something that was on my to do list: a chronological list of the public conversation and articles about the compulsory licensing issues that have been going on lately. Very much appreciated and helpful. Thanks.
[via bIPlog]
Nice summary of the draft directive by the Foundation for information policy research .
[via Emerging Technologies → Ross Anderson]
Cyberpresse reports that a bunch of people threw rubber ducks in the fountain in front of Place des Arts while chanting « coin coin ». This was Montreal’s first flash mob.
It seems to be quite the rage this week-end, even the BBC says so. Might be the heat, or just the desire to cling onto the vacations.
Personally, I don’t get it. I’m not saying i wouldn’t participate ever, but I wouldn’t get out of my way to participate. Unless it’s totally absurd or original, or perhaps even meaningful or artsy.
I do get a feeling that this stuff is either about using all those telecom technologies that surround us in a personal, self indulging way, or about expressing free will in a very unproductive way.
Not that any of this is bad of course, it’s kinda fun and new and different. It means people have nothing too important to worry about. Which is good. I guess.
Keep yourself informed of the upcoming flash mob events in Montreal or just get a feeling of the flash mob scene.
I like fonts. I mentionned it before.
MeFi points to a little movie about the history of a font, Cooper Black. I don’t particularly like Cooper Black, I often used Hobo instead, and Hobo does make an appearance in the movie.
Cute and instructive. Take 2 minutes and watch it.
I remember getting Hobo bundled with some software, can’t remember which, in my Mac Plus days (which extended way past the usefull life of said Mac Plus). Does the licence allows me to still use it many years later, on a different OS without the original software present anywhere in sight?
I certainly was aware that some members of Congress wanted to snuff out the grass-roots phenomena of people’s swapping copyrighted songs on the Net. But I assumed that the crime of file-sharing, joyfully committed by an estimated 60 million pirates, was mainly a problem of lost revenues for the music industry. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, giving the opening testimony, argued otherwise, calling file-sharing networks a grave security risk to this nation. In reality, the hearing was nothing but one of several signs of a new hardball offensive against file-sharing for the same old reasons: protecting the business model of the record labels.
[…]
My guess is that the vast majority of those 60 million file sharers would never steal a physical object from the store. In a mixture of self-interest and rebellion they’ve taken the measure of the record industry’s karma (overpriced CDs, a history of ripping off artists), noted that stealing files isn’t like stealing stuff (maybe they’ll buy a disc later) and concluded that file-sharing isn’t that bad….
Lucid editorial on the RIAA’s war says the EFF.
[via Algorhythm → EFFector]
A4, the paper, not the Audi…
A good and passionate, yet rational, explanation of ISO paper sizes, or why, even though a document on legal paper looks nicely intimidating, our system sucks.
[via Boing Boing]
J’ai eu une excellente expérience de magasinage chez Zellers à la Plaza Côte-des-Neiges dimanche après-midi.
Prix raisonnables, bonne sélection de produits, étalages en ordre et, ce qui m’a désarçonné, personnel courtois, super serviable et disponible.
J’admets que je suis surpris, je m’attendais pas à grand chose.