Home

Bio & Disclosures

Discussions


xFruits

2007 Events

 Monday, July 8, 2002 Permanent link to archive for 7/8/02.

New Yawk stories 
 Here's my Linux Journal report on my recent enounters with e-ThePeople and MeetUp, two very cool efforts HQ'd in NY.
Another retransmitter 
 The Canakit and its beautiful case.
Cast your peers (even if they can't act) 
 Peercast News - A Way.Nu Production exists, its slogan explains, Because Internet Radio is dead and corporate rock still sucks.
 Jonathan Peterson is behind both Peercast News and Way.Nu. Lotta good stuff on both.
Here's your tea. There's your harbor. Have at it. 
 The Final Rule and Order of the Library of Congress Copyright office on the Determination of Reasonable Rates and Terms for the Digital Performance of Sound Recordings and Ephemeral Recordings was submitted to the Federal Register today.
 On the positive side, it puts in one place, in HTML, the government's whole freaking story. No .pdfs or any of that other nonsense. Makes it easy to search for answers to questions like this one, which I got from a reader today:
 Do these webcasting fees only apply to acts signed to RIAA labels?
 I don't think so, but I can't tell. Does anybody know fersure? [Later...] Tom Poe has one answer.
Imbalance of powers 
 Helen Thomas: Bush acting as imperial president. She's the highest-mileage journalist on the White House case. Thanks to The Reader for the pointer.
 By the way, The Reader also points to a Commerce Department public workshop on digital enterteinment and rights management.
Toward a Commons understanding 
 Kevin Marks has come up with MediAgora, which defines market roles for creators, customers, promoters and sources in the Net's new creative commons. Among Kevin's own sources are The Cluetrain Manifesto, Gonzo Marketing, and Kevin's father, John Marks.
 MediAgora is consistent with the Creative Commons initiative, but concentrates more on how the market itself works: who does what, who pays whom, stuff like that.
 There's a Mediagora Weblog too. Check it all out.
Meetings of Twains 
 J.D. has been visiting the subject of blogging by professional journalists. He's asking (and answering) questions like, Should newspaper bloggers be subjected to the editing filter?
 We both answer no.
Isn't the market a wonderful thing? 
 Streamer is a modest but radical Internet radio transmission alternative that's getting some press because it can't be taxed, regulated or even traced. I was slow to cover it because it runs only on Windows, even though it's GPL'd.
 But I see Slashdot reports on a similar system called OPENdj. (Thanks to JY for the link.)
 And once again we see what happens when fucked-over consumers give themselves the power to produce what the big fucking producers won't.
Microclimate 
 There's a cloud in our back yard, which is bordered by the house and two huge oak trees. As a shape, the three dimensional space above the lawn isn't more than 50 feet across, but right now I can barely see through it.
 I just looked around the other sides of the house, and the air is clear in those directions. To the front, which faces North, the Santa Ynez mountains are dimmed by a bit of haze, but no clouds. The marine layer of low fog extends from the beach to our street. It's several hundred feet overhead, accompanied by this one rogue companion here in the yard.
 I'm tellin' ya, we never had this shit in New Jersey.
Doing the math 
 Last night the kid and I were out on the roof again, looking at stars — a retun to our old nightly routine, which had been upstaged by welcome guests and festivities over the last few days.
 While I was setting things up, he hugged his favorite stuffed animal, Moo. "She's very old," he said.
 "I think she's about the same age as you."
 "She's five."
 "Yep. Something like that."
 "I love her so much."
 "I can tell."
 "It's a really big number."
 How Big?
 He was quiet while I continued to set up the rocking chair and the laptop next to it, running CarinaSoft's Voyager III (extremely recommended — try the download and run some of the demos... it's amazing).
 "Eight hundred thousand," he finally said.
 I sat in the chair and he climbed on my lap with Moo, and we went to the Heavens Above site, where we took a look at the roster of satellites that would pass overhead over the next few hours. The first one we saw was almost too faint to see as it slowly moved past two of the kid's favorite stars: Alcor and Mizar, the bright & dim pair in the Big Dipper that served as eye tests through the millennia when correction was impossible.
 The two stars make a visual double, but the kid wanted to know if each of the stars was itself a double. Zooming in on them wth Voyager didn't answer the question, so we checked with Google and found that Mizar is in fact a double-double: four stars. I had thought that Alcor was also a double, or maybe even a double-double like Mizar, but learned that's not the case.
 Still, the kid ran with it.
 "If Alcor and Mizar are both double-doubles, then they are eight stars."
 "That's right. But Alcor is a single. With Mizar's four, that makes five stars."
 But he wouldn't be deflected. "And if you've got two more stars that are also double-doubles, you've got two eights."
 "That's right. Which is how many?"
 "Nineteen."
 "Really. How'd you get to that number?"
 "It's one less than twenty."
 "But two eights are sixteen."
 "Right."
 I started to explain, but he wanted to track the next satellite. After we saw it wasn't due for another twenty minutes, I told him it was time to sleep. He agreed, and I said it was time to say our prayers. I started by reminding him that many, many people loved him. "How many?" he asked. I started to count, and before I got to four he was asleep.
Net radio listeners to RIAA: eat shit and die 
 Steven Levy in Newsweek: Labels to Net Radio: Die Now. A sample:
  Instead of instating the kind of royalty already paid to songwriters by both broadcast and Web radio‹about 3 percent of revenues‹the tariff on digital music is based on the number of listeners. So it's possible for the fee to exceed revenues, especially in a fledgling business where ads are scarce.
 And another:
 So why are the record labels taking such a hard line? My guess is that it's all about protecting their Internet-challenged business model. Their profit comes from blockbuster artists. If the industry moved to a more varied ecology, independent labels and artists would thrive‹to the detriment of the labels, which would have trouble rustling up the rubes to root for the next Britney. The smoking gun comes from testimony of an RIAA-backed economist who told the government fee panel that a dramatic shakeout in Webcasting is ³inevitable and desirable because it will bring about market consolidation.²
Whoa-fi 
 Says here in the New York Times that Tme Warner Cable in New York is sending nastygrams to cable broadband customers warning them not to share their bandwidth over wi-fi.
 So, once again, rather than trying to understand why customers might want to share a little bandwidth with strangers and other friends, and maybe coming up with ways to help or leverage the massively altruistic social phenomenon that the whole freaking Net in fact is (as, for example, the equipment guys are doing), the Industrial Content Distributariat does the utterly predictable.
 By the way, one reader suggests "wavechalking" makes more sense than "warchalking," and offers an acronym: Wireless Access / Visual Evidence.
One reason I'm no longer a Verizon customer 
 CRM Viewpoint: Which Customers Don't Count.
Link of the day 
 Sandbox, a brand new blog.
Catch it before it's too soon 
 Nice interview with Chris Locke over in High Water. Missed it while I was outa town. A sample:
 ...when a true revolution, or true paradigm shift, happens in science, the old guard is not brought along. They jump out of windows and shit. They kill themselves or they are so marginalized that they are never heard from again and eventually they die.
 That was from last Fall, not that it matters. We're dealing in durable verities here.
 Back in the present, the man remains deeply in Love.
 Related, sort-of: Sandhill's interview with Halley.

discuss



Copyright 2009 The Doc Searls Weblog

Membership : Join Now : Login

Create your own Manila site in minutes. Everyone's doing it!

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Archive: July 2002
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
 
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
 

Jun   Aug

Blogroll

 
Search archives

Santa Barbarians
Edhat
SB Independent
SB Newsroom
Kevin Barron
Blogabarbara
Craig Smith
SB*Free Press
Joe Andieu
Patrick Gregston
John Quiimby
Das Williams' dad
Katy Pearce
Taymar Pixley
Lisa Gates
Cookie Jill

Everybody else
Spot-on
RageBoy
MysticBourgeoisie
David Weinberger
Miscellaneous
Dave
Berkman
John Palfrey
IT Garage
Bret Fausett
Susan Crawford
Bruce Sterling
Steve Lewis/Bubkes
Hak Pak Sak
Brad Kava
Brad Templeton
Sheila Lennon
Don Marti
Steve Urquhart
Wes Felter
Brad DeLong
Tom Evslin
Brian Oberkirch
Dean Landsman
Hugh MacLeod
LAist
Jeremy Ruston
Geoff Jones
Vaspers the Grate
Sig Rinde
Chris Albritton
Ronni Bennett
Thomas Hawk
Kevin Bedell
Howard
Bryan
Deep Fun
BoingBoing
edhat
Terry Heaton
Jay Rosen
Kim Cameron
George Lakoff
Scott Rosenberg
Larry Lessig
Jim Thompson
Jeff Jarvis
David Isenberg
Stephen Johnson
Tim Oren
Geoff Moore
Rex Hammock
This is Broken
Max Sawicky
Stuart Hughes
Dave Pentecost
John Perry Barlow
Mary Hodder
Dan Gillmor
Steve Gillmor
Dean Landsman
John Stodder
Seth Finkelstein
Renee Blodgett
misbehaving.net
Ruby Sinreich
Ed Cone
Julie Leung
Ted Leung
Ken Coar
Flemming Funch
Mike Sanders
Marc Canter
Joi Ito
Ethan Zuckerman
Doug Kaye
Jon Lebkowski
Judith Meskill
Allen Searls
Esther Dyson
Christopher Lydon
Russell Beattie
Tim Bray
Brian Millar
Mark Pilgrim
Michael Hall
Backup Brain
Frankston, Reed
Britt Blaser
Brent Simmons
Loic Le Meur
Leslie Winer
Mike Taht
Eric Raymond
Volokh Conspiracy
Steven Levy
Lisa Rein
Skywave
Epeus' epigone
Glenn Reynolds
James Taranto
Frank Paynter
Ross Mayfield
Dana Blankenhorn
Ken Bereskin/Panther
Daily Wireless
Filchyboy
OxBlog
Bryan Field-Elliot
Rajesh Jain
Oliver Willis
Gary Turner
Michael O'Connor Clarke
Jennifer Balderama
Kevin Werbach
Amy Wohl
Phil Windley
Fulcrum
Real Joe
Greater Democracy
Mitch Ratcliffe /biz
Mitch Ratcliffe/soc
Wayne Robins
VivaCapitalism
Cut on the bias
Howard Greenstein
The Poor Man
Mickey Kaus
Dave Sifry
Buzz Bruggeman
Ben Hammersley
Matt Jones
Paul Andrews
John Robb
Schoolblog
Tom Shugart
Matt Welch
Blur Circle
Denise Howell
JY
BlackHoleBrain
Chris Pirillo
Marek
Tony Pierce
Chris Nolan's
Spot On

Wil Wheaton
Meg
Brian Linse
Dan Pink
Dawn Olsen
Craig
Yoz
The Head Lemur
Ev
Jeremy Zawodny
Susan Kitchens
K5
Anu Gupta
Jonathon
Fishrush
Dave Ely
Euan Semple
Eric Norlin
Paul Boutin
James Lileks
David Williams
Mary Wehmeier
Bruner Blog
Halley Suitt
Webword
Ann Salisbury
Om Malik
Moxie
J's Notes
Meesh
NUblog
TBTF
Cam
Seth Finkelstein
Tom Matrullo
Chip Hoagland
Deborah
Fortboise
J.D. Lasica
Photodude
Phil Wolff
Andre Durand
Eric Hansen
Mike McBride
Jeneane Sessum
Chris Nolan
Gonzo Engaged
Michael Mussington
UseTheSource
Wes
Adam
Sam Ruby
Miguel
Frank Field
Rebecca Blood
Joshua Allen
Cluetrain
JOHO
EGR
Searls site
Scoble
AKMA
Kottke
Tomalak's Realm
Tim O'Reilly
Mitch Kapor
Bill Quick
Dan Bricklin
Lou Josephs
Alan Reiter
N.Z. Bear
Todd Morman
Zeldman
Glenn
Joshua
Rex Hammock
Matthew Thomas
Brian Dear
Baylink
Burningbird