Four short links: 3 January 2011
january 2011 by cloudseer
RSS is Dying and You Should Be Worried -- If RSS dies, we lose the ability to read in private.
What Could Have Been Entering The Public Domain on January 1, 2011? -- a list of the works that won't be entering the public domain in the US because the copyright term was extended in 1976. Think of the movies from 1954 that would have become available this year. You could have showed clips from them. You could have showed all of them. You could have spliced and remixed and made documentaries about them. (You could have been a contender!) Instead, here are a few of the movies that we won’t see in the public domain for another 39 years .... This list will be viewed two different ways by different groups, reinforcing instead of changing their views: copyright minimalists will say "what a tragedy" but copyright maximalists will say "look at these great works we protected, they're still earning money for their creators therefore they're still valuable and thus worth protecting". (via Bill Bennett on Twitter)
ProxClone -- cloner for proximity cards, cost of parts around $30. (via Hacker News)
2011 Is The Year of Server-Side Javascript -- explanation of why the author will be doing back-end coding in Javascript this year. Good to see an honest assessment that it's still early days for server-side Javascript: Most of the libraries out there are young, buggy and incomplete. I got Node.js to segfault a few times. There’s no killer framework on the same caliber as Rails, nor anything that comes close to ActiveSupport and a decent standard runtime library (hmm that gives me an idea). But then, it’s not much different than what Ruby was five years ago, or Java back in the late 90′s. We’ve all got to start somewhere.
copyright
hacks
hardware
javascript
programming
rfid
rss
security
shared
from google
What Could Have Been Entering The Public Domain on January 1, 2011? -- a list of the works that won't be entering the public domain in the US because the copyright term was extended in 1976. Think of the movies from 1954 that would have become available this year. You could have showed clips from them. You could have showed all of them. You could have spliced and remixed and made documentaries about them. (You could have been a contender!) Instead, here are a few of the movies that we won’t see in the public domain for another 39 years .... This list will be viewed two different ways by different groups, reinforcing instead of changing their views: copyright minimalists will say "what a tragedy" but copyright maximalists will say "look at these great works we protected, they're still earning money for their creators therefore they're still valuable and thus worth protecting". (via Bill Bennett on Twitter)
ProxClone -- cloner for proximity cards, cost of parts around $30. (via Hacker News)
2011 Is The Year of Server-Side Javascript -- explanation of why the author will be doing back-end coding in Javascript this year. Good to see an honest assessment that it's still early days for server-side Javascript: Most of the libraries out there are young, buggy and incomplete. I got Node.js to segfault a few times. There’s no killer framework on the same caliber as Rails, nor anything that comes close to ActiveSupport and a decent standard runtime library (hmm that gives me an idea). But then, it’s not much different than what Ruby was five years ago, or Java back in the late 90′s. We’ve all got to start somewhere.
january 2011 by cloudseer
Copyright is hard
april 2010 by cloudseer
Copyright is hard. Dan Catt spots Adam Liversage (Director of Communications for the BPI, and hence right in the middle of the DEBill) suggesting his wife violate copyright on Twitter.
bpi
copyright
dancatt
debill
shared
from google
april 2010 by cloudseer
Four short links: 7 April 2010
april 2010 by cloudseer
SproutCore -- open-source HTML5 application framework (i.e., lots of Javascript goodness) that'll work with any backend. To code for this, you put most of the logic in the front-end and leave the back-end much simpler.
RDF for Intrepid Unix Hackers -- an interesting series, showing how to use common Unix tools to manipulate RDF data from the commandline. (via Edd Dumbill)
How to Thrive Among Pirates (Kevin Kelly) -- a look at how indigenous movie-makers make money in countries like China, India, and Nigeria where piracy is rampant. In short, they make cheap movies, sell near the price of inferior-quality knockoffs, and take advantage of unique experiences that movie theaters offer (e.g., air-conditioning).
On Complaints (PublicStrategist) -- a very good analysis of complaints departments and expectations of people who complain. But there is also a vital question of what the organisation thinks the purpose of a complaints process is. If it is a safety valve, a means of finding and correcting the most egregious failures or a means of channelling immediate anger and dissatisfaction into a swamp of unresponsiveness, then it can’t provide any broader value. That’s where the Patient Opinion model starts to look really attractive. It is deliberately and carefully constructed to elicit feedback, not just complaints. More than half the stories it gets told are positive, even some of the most harrowing, and it therefore creates a picture which is as clear about what is valued as it is about what is seen as in need of improvement.
business
copyright
gov20
html5
javascript
opensource
piracy
programming
rdf
unix
web20
shared
from google
RDF for Intrepid Unix Hackers -- an interesting series, showing how to use common Unix tools to manipulate RDF data from the commandline. (via Edd Dumbill)
How to Thrive Among Pirates (Kevin Kelly) -- a look at how indigenous movie-makers make money in countries like China, India, and Nigeria where piracy is rampant. In short, they make cheap movies, sell near the price of inferior-quality knockoffs, and take advantage of unique experiences that movie theaters offer (e.g., air-conditioning).
On Complaints (PublicStrategist) -- a very good analysis of complaints departments and expectations of people who complain. But there is also a vital question of what the organisation thinks the purpose of a complaints process is. If it is a safety valve, a means of finding and correcting the most egregious failures or a means of channelling immediate anger and dissatisfaction into a swamp of unresponsiveness, then it can’t provide any broader value. That’s where the Patient Opinion model starts to look really attractive. It is deliberately and carefully constructed to elicit feedback, not just complaints. More than half the stories it gets told are positive, even some of the most harrowing, and it therefore creates a picture which is as clear about what is valued as it is about what is seen as in need of improvement.
april 2010 by cloudseer
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