Archive for February, 2003

Imported from MozDawg without title

Full Stop

Due to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune (read: the Dell LatitudeXPi 166MHz laptop I got from my last contract 5 years ago gave up the ghost when I tried to re-install Win95 *sigh*) I no longer have connectivity … raw deal after 3 decades of CMC (read: no box and no connection = no development). But being on disability sucks in any number of ways, and this isn’t the worst of it.

Expect to see me posting about my new discourse system [working title: Miss Peebles] real soon now. In the meantime, peek at these two sites, and ponder how we create knowledge, exchange knowledge, and what happens if corporate entities dictate those processes.

  • Nupedia is an free, ever-expanding, open content general encyclopedia … public peer-reviewed … created by volunteer scholars the world over.
  • Wikipedia is an international, open content, collaboratively developed encyclopedia. As of January 2003, it covers a vast spectrum of subjects and has over 106,000 articles in English as well as about 37,000 articles in other languages.

How WikiPedia and NuPedia relate.


Imported from MozDawg without title

A funny thing happened while I was comparison shopping habrashi


(if you don’t ask why, I promise not to tell. Deal?)

Out of curiosity I visited the homepage and made out a few characters, viz.: “JavaScriptsâšÃ† DOM âšÃŒÅ½Ã?â˜Â¬âœxâšÃ?…âšÃ �IE âšÂª?Ã…â˜Â¬?H Opera⠚ÆâšÃ Å’Ã… ÔâšÃ ‰â˜Ã¥âš JâšÂ«” … easily enough to be curious as to how that would make front-page news on this site.
The associated link brought me to this browser comparison run by GreyMagic Security.
In their news section I found this under-stated little gem about M$ and it’s communication tactics:

“MS02-068 was released Wednesday. Fixing the “external” object caching flaw. Strangely though, the vulnerability is rated “moderate”. It allows reading of any cookie on any site you visit, reading of any file on your system and the execution of arbitrary commands, yet, somehow, it is rated “moderate”, the second lowest possible rating.”

Makes me want to go back to browsing tooth-brushes in Japanese, that does.



Imported from MozDawg without title

Readerware Features“, the page recounts: “Simply enter a list of ISBN numbers, select the web sites you want to search and hit Run. Readerware does the rest, it will search the sites, extract the data and import it into your local database. It gets even easier …” Easier? Easier yet? Hard to imagine!


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Gillmor’s eJournal – Dan Google Buys Pyra: Blogging Goes Big-Timewoww!
“I couldn’t be more excited about this,” said Evan Williams, founder of Pyra, a company that has had its share of struggles. He wouldn’t discuss terms of the deal, which he said was signed on Thursday, when we spoke Saturday. But he did say it gives Pyra the “resources to build on the vision I’ve been working on for years.”

… Wow!!

EvHead’s version of events


Imported from MozDawg without title

A glimpse of our history: On the Move April 2000: From 9:02pm Apr 8 to 11:14AM Apr 12

with the help of folks in the IndyMedia sys-admin and tech groups, I just pulled off a lovely bit of historic recovery: from the files on my venerable auld Dell laptop [please don’t let me fall into the gutter, friends] I dredged and re-activated the raw stock I was cutting from during the A16 anti-IMF/WB event in Washington DC … 9 glorious pages of linked stories! (Only 1 posted just now.) Not bad for a global organization that had pulled itself together in a very few months!
*beaming smile*


Imported from MozDawg without title

Space Shuttle Columbia and Her Crew at nasa.gov keeps providing new data, particularly the callouts in STS-107 Ground Track Charts (1.5Meg PDF). I’m working on getting that into my interactive cartoon … lots of detail.
e-mail concerning landing gear is … trenchant.
That’s all for right now.

Oh yes, I did a little survey of page layouts to see if anyone was doing my style of page using CSS only … none found. See “Knees – web pages below the waist


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