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Web Struggles for Bertelsmann
rinetd: Cool Tool for Using Radio Remotely A Busy Writer's Guide to Radio Renderers Discussion on Radio Category Templates On the Road Again Workplace Monitoring Being Revisited in Canada Diligence, Skepticism, Refusal to Buy The Internet Isn't Cable TV Redux Euro Copyright Suit Winer on the Dangerous Troika Cringley on Palladium UAE Copyright Law Really, Really Stupid Copyright Trick AmphetaDesk Integration Seek and Ye Shall Find -- PicoSearch New Addition to the Home Page -- Blogroll Sound Approach to Copyright Protection Details on TCPA/Palladium A Dangerous Troika -- Government, Publishers, and PC Industry Common Failure in CRM and KM is Ignoring User Private RSS and User Authentication in Radio Teach Yourself RSS in 30 Minutes Flexing Our Muscles. Theme Design
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Sunday, June 30, 2002Web Struggles for BertelsmannThe web isn't like everything else and even the big publishers are having trouble figuring out how to make money. <blockquote>Bertelsmann suspends Pixelpark payments. Europemedia.net Jun 29 2002 3:32PM ET [Moreover - Media: Europe news] </blockquote>
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Categories: Books, Copyright, Future of Print rinetd: Cool Tool for Using Radio RemotelyThis little tip looks like the ticket for making all the Radio auto-subscribe stuff work if you are doing remote access. It fixes some of the Radio macros that direct back to local network addresses (127.0.0.1). Good for futures.
rinetd DESCRIPTION A Busy Writer's Guide to Radio RenderersThis might help me get an answer to rendering link and bookmark lists in Radio. I see more uses for outline renderers and for rendering outlines as lists. I don't know if I want to go as far as Mark Barrot at slam. Needs more investigation.More discussion: In-line macros in OPML files, What controls the template that is used to render files in categories.., viewOPML() in Radio. This last looks really good. Discussion on Radio Category TemplatesI had some difficulty understanding Radio's Category templates and this discussion thread with Lawrence Lee got me on the right path.On the Road AgainHeading out to beautiful, suave Lincoln, NE for the next few days so I'll be posting via Mail-to-Weblog again as I have time. While I'm traveling I'll also be getting my daily dose of American Invisible, Inc. Click on over and see what Hugh Madison is doing. It's a nice little break in the day and a clever switch from some of the more staid ideas in publishing. Dan Rosenbaum at Over the Edge was kind enough to pass on some info on how he gets remote access and what I need to make it work. I'll be putting Dan's suggestions to work over the next few weeks. Thanks Dan! I've got a temporary fix for my laptop woes. I've managed to scrounge an aging IBM ThinkPad 385XD. The thing is an absolute brick, but it looks like what the IBM CEs used to carry so I know it's rugged. It's a little slow, but it was free. And I don't need to do anything but web browse, e-mail, and a little word processing. This is just the ticket for someone in transition. When I return I'll be working on Radio again, trying to get some Categories setup. Lawrence Lee of Tomolak's Realm has been a great help in understanding just what makes the Category Templates work. I'll try to adequately document that when I start working. The Categories will let me better manage and organize content elements so I can begin focusing on my real objective, which is to track some of the warm undercurrents surging beneath the rather tepid surface of the print and publishing industries. There's a lot happening there that isn't readily observable. What is observable often looks very foolish. I don't see anyone really taking an unbiased view of the foolishness (maybe this is because consultants have to get paid and can't afford to piss everybody off. I'd like to get paid, too. But not if it means running around parroting Mr. Indu Strypundit and cheerleading for questionable ideas. Workplace Monitoring Being Revisited in CanadaIf an employer is paying for your equipment, you time, your services, and the place you are working they have some right to ensure you are not misusing said provisions. Beyond that, I'm not sure how far it goes.This is happening in Canada mostly because they have a Privacy Commissioner, a bureaucrat who needs something to do. We don't have that here so don't expect any similar thought process to taek place until monitoring practices are challenged by the unions.
globetechnology.com - Shift to more workplace privacy protection.[Privacy Digest] Diligence, Skepticism, Refusal to BuyI remember a speech someone gave at Stanford on the EULA for MS PassPort. They disected the the entire agreement and shwed how within it MS claimed ownership and use rights for everything that passed over the network and other insanely stupid clauses. It was hilarious -- except it was very real.Of course, MS changed the agreement shortly thereafter to something less onerous. Diligence, Skepticism, Refusal to Buy -- words to live by.
Slashdot | Microsoft Media Player "Security Patch" Changes EULA Big Time.[Privacy Digest] The Internet Isn't Cable TV ReduxWe already have the world's best streaming audio/video system -- it's called television. Leave the Internet alone.AOL's Ultravox set to enhance streaming media services. Europemedia.net Jun 29 2002 7:09PM ET [Moreover - Online portals news] Euro Copyright SuitSomething to watch.Online copyright suit could set deep link precedent. Copenhagen Post Jun 28 2002 11:26PM ET [Moreover - IP and patents news] Saturday, June 29, 2002Winer on the Dangerous TroikaDave Winer on the dangerous liason between Hollywood, government, and the PC Industy.
Scripting News - Microsoft, DRM and operating systems. Cringley on PalladiumRoberty X has the picture on the Microsoft strategy -- skepticism, folks, skepticism.
I, Cringely | The PulpitI Told You So - Alas, a Couple of Bob's Dire Predictions Have Come True . UAE Copyright LawInteresting clause in this decree from Abu Dabi that allows anyone to petition the Copyright Ministry for reproduction rights once a work is three years old. Authors to enjoy copyright protection. Gulf News Jun 29 2002 7:29PM ET [Moreover - IP and patents news] Really, Really Stupid Copyright TrickI just hope this guy has opted out of the gene pool.
Silence is intellectual property. John Cage's 4'33", a lengthy silent track on one of his avant-garde albums, constitutes an original work for copyright purposes. This means that other composers who include silent tracks have made a derivative work from Cage's silence. Cage's representatives have served producer Mike Batt with a legal nastygram asserting that he infringed on Cage's copyright with his 60-second silent track on the latest Planets album.[Boing Boing Blog] AmphetaDesk IntegrationThe last addition concerns a couple of image links I put in place -- one to make it easier for AmphetaDesk users to subscribe to my RSS feed and the other to link to my Powell's.com affiliate account.Radio seems to be a little persnickety about where images are located, and downright ornery about the syntax in img src tags. I have everything working properly on the Home Page, but I still don't have it right on all the category and support pages. I don't understand why. Now AmphetaDesk users can subscribe to my RSS feed with a single click on the XML_Pill icon, the same way Radio users can suscribe by clinking on the XML_CoffeeCup. AmphetaDesk provides clear instructions on integrating AmphetaDesk into a site. I just did a cut-and-paste of the code into my Home Page template. Again, the syntax is persnickety -- especially the placement of / at the end of things. Radio couldn't seem to decide if the image path needed / in front of it or not. I don't know Userland lingo or Frontier so this makes no sense to me. But I just looked for similar code examples, kept fiddling with it, and it finally worked. For the Home Page I did not put a / at the front of the image path. But, like I said, the image isn't rendering on any of the other pages. That may be the problem. It's the same with the Powells.com link. Everything works fine on the Home Page, but Category and support pages have a broken image link. I've submitted a query to the Userland Discussion group on this. Haloo! Lawrence Lee responded already and pointed me to the radio.macro.imageref macro to solve this little instability. Thanks Lawrence! It seems like the imageref macro may not work. I may have to point to the full path of the image on the Cloud site. A hard coded link will break when I transfer Radio to my own server because the path will change. Bummer. I don't like that but it will have to do. Update: Doh! Somebody slap me... The imageref macro generates the img src tag so there is no need to include it inside a tag. Thanks again to Lawrence for straightening me out. Seek and Ye Shall Find -- PicoSearchEverybody needs a search engine, and I got PicoSearch. Of course google.com is the hot search engine right now, but google searches the entire web. I needed some way to search just my pages. I had seen PicoSearch on a few other blogs so I decided to try it out.It was simple, painless, and quick (three of the finest words in the English language). Go to the web site, sign up for an account, point PicoSearch to the home page for your site, and let it build an index of your pages. That's it. Once the index is built you get an e-mail with account info and you can go back to the PicoSearch site, login and administer your account. There are a variety of buttons and logos you can choose, and there are several macros you can choose to go on your site and enable your search. I chose a simple query box. I copied the HTML text out of the window, pasted it into my Home Page template just above the calendarMacro, and Voila! I had a search engine for my pages. I had to go back to the template and enter a couple of break tags in the PicoSearch code to keep column with where I wanted it, but it was a snap. I had no problems with this one. If you don't mind having the PicoSearch logo on your site it's a no-brainer. Highly recommended. New Addition to the Home Page -- BlogrollBig additions for the Home Page today. Woo Hoo!First I started working with Links for Blogroll, RSS and Subscriptions. This is a way to store a separate list (Radio outline .opml file) that contains all the links to blogs (or other sources) you want to list on your site. Radio has a macro that reads the list, converts the contents to HTML, and puts it on your page. It's easier than hand coding the links and it's easier to update than a template. The other benefit is the macro adds a Link Header in your Home Page template that points to the OPML file, allowing others to quickly grab the entire list of your links and add them to their own. Now, I haven't actually used this yet, and I'm not sure I would. But Winer says the link enables new kinds of harvesters, crawlers, and directories. I trust him. There is discussion about some technical stuff I don't completely understand here. And Jake Savin's directions didn't work just as described. First, it didn't work at all to replace my <%navigatorLinks%> macro with the suggested BlogRoll macro. I could never get the Navigator Links to show up. I tried several times to to include the navigatorLinks macro into the BlogRoll files as instructed but it never worked. I finally left the navigatorLinks macro in and moved the blogroll macro to another location on the template. When I did that it worked. I got a little confused by the delay between making a modification and seeing it on the page. Sometimes I had to go to the Radio app to Radio --> Publish --> Entire Site and wait a while to get everything updated properly. But eventually it did. And it looks much better. You can format individual lines (nodes) in the outline using HTML commands so you can control font size and color, etc. And now I can easily add new sites, or recategorize old ones by just dragging them around in the Radio Outliner. Pretty cool. Sound Approach to Copyright ProtectionThe June issue of MIT Technology Review describes emerging copyright policing software that serves the rightful interests of copyright holders with no need for the invasive, user-hostile, all-pervasive activity management being foisted on us by the DMCA diehards.
In Digital Pirates Beware (subscription required), Wade Roush discusses: the latest digital fingerprinting technology to scan public computer networks for unauthorized copies of music files, still images, movies and software. And they can watch as those illicit files spread from hard drive to hard drivewhether or not the files bear the invisible digital watermarks often used to identify their original owners. My take on this, subject to some verification, is that these technologies can prowl the public P2P networks looking for specific files, generate some unique ID info based on the file, then catalog any other instances of that same file it may find. This provides content creators with an important tool to understand how much of their work is being pirated, where it's originating, and where it is spreading. More importantly, it puts the burden of proof where it belongs -- on the copyright holder -- without forcing prior restraint on honest purchasers. While Roush's article intimates that the fingerprinters can scan my hard drive I suspect this is true only to the extent that I participate in publicly accessible P2P networks. It's theoretically possible to get past my firewall, install software on my machine, bypass my ZoneAlarm Pro monitoring and sneak packets out to some nefarious agency, but not very damned likely. It's rather more likely that these guys are doing nothing more than scanning a directory I have voluntarily opened to public query by logging it into LimeWire, KaZaA, or similar sharing software. They have every right to scan it and that's the beauty of this approach. P2P systems only work to the extent that you open yourself up by being a peer, and once you are a peer you have given implied consent to having your "shared" files scanned by anyone who is interested. I like this idea. If you are trafficking in pirated software the copyright owners have as much right to shut down your P2P "storefront" as they do to shutter a street corner vendor selling stolen watches. This is the sort of enforcement that makes rampant pirating of stolen material unattractive to the average user, while leaving them free to use their own files as they see fit. It also leaves the P2P networks free of overwrought regulation and ill-conceived legislation, allowing for the development of innovative -- and legitimate -- uses. As usual, free enterprise has devised a snappy solution to a thorny problem without steamrolling users, while the bureacrats and bumbling behemoths have seen it as just one more chance to roll out a stupid world domination strategy. I'd be interested to hear if you think I'm off base on this one.
For more info on this stuff see: Details on TCPA/PalladiumAn FAQ on some of the less obvious implications of the Trusted Computing Alliance and it's connection to the anti-user DRM/Copyright Cabal.TCPA / Palladium FAQ. [Privacy Digest] A Dangerous Troika -- Government, Publishers, and PC IndustryThe eerie convergence of The War on Terror, the DMCA/Copyright Cabal, and the new Trusted Computing initiative from the PC industry is getting scary. There's no conspiracy here, at least not intentionally. But there is a potentially cataclysmic (if coincidental) overlap between what these three groups want to accomplish, and it has serious implications for our future. What these people are doing could easily lead us somewhere no thinking person wants to go.Lawrence Lessig first introduced us to this foul juxtaposition in his book Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace. And in this Reason Magazine interview about his newest book, The Future of Ideas, says, "In my first book I was quite pessimistic. It turns out I was not pessimistic enough." The problem is more than just starting down a "slippery slope". The motives for each of the three parties are quite different and, individually, their initiatives could be modified or repealed to a tolerable level. But when fate and circumstance align the goverment with two of the strongest economic powers in our nation to push for massive control architectures we have little means of fighting back save extraordinary diligence, a stoic skepticism, and an outright refusal to buy products that attempt to control our lives. The courts are supposed to watch the government, the govermnent should be providing some limited "general welfare" oversight on business, and business is supposed to be responsive to its customers. None of that seems to be happening right now. Houston, we have a problem...
Dave Winer at Scripting News found the tweney report for 2002-06-28: Broken trust. Common Failure in CRM and KM is Ignoring UserThe growing interest in addressing user concerns is one of the most important macro-trends in technology today, and it's an area where almost all large-scale technology deployments have failed in the past.One of my "altruistic" ventures is serving as EVP of CRM Association, where I'm active in the business users SIG. A common concern on the minds of folks who have made major investments in CRM systems remains the problem of user adoption. I point this out because it is so similar to what is happening with KM systems, and the underlying cause is also the same -- IT-centric planning, budgeting, implementation, and management. Until users are given priority in major IT initiatives, such projects will remain expensive and disappointing boondoggles. This article provides some interesting perspective on how the web services architecture can support user accomodation, and how important that will be in achieving long-term success in major CRM initiatives.
Web services though, won't solve the CRM conundrum. In order to turn the tide of CRM failures, "planning, governance, all things have to start with the user," Scott says. On the upside, Scott believes people are finally catching on to this new way of thinking about CRM, "and next year, there will be more successful deployments. Things are getting better, but it'll still be a couple of years before you really see the enterprise-wide, single view of the customer," he says. CRM's Fatal Flaws. line56 Jun 29 2002 2:53AM ET [Moreover - CRM news] Friday, June 28, 2002Private RSS and User Authentication in RadioHooray! Further research on the Radio News Aggregator led me to this tasty tidbit -- Subscribing to private RSS feeds. This is a really simple fix for creating private RSS feeds for business, friends, or family. I don't have any way to test it just yet as my weblog is hosted on the Radio Community Server. I think to use this I need to get my weblog sent to my own site where I can set htaccess and have Radio upstream approriately. I'll keep digging around and see if the same technique will work with the third-party aggregators. So much to learn, so little time. Teach Yourself RSS in 30 MinutesI picked this up on TSL today and it's a fantastic one-pager on all the RSS basics. The power of RSS just doesn't come clear until you start to use it regularly. Then, POW! the light goes off in your head and you can't get enough. The more we know about RSS the better off we'll all be. Spread the word. Go read it. Now.
RSS Tutorial. Publish and Syndicate Your News to the Web "In this workshop you'll learn how to create, validate, syndicate, and view your own RSS news channel. The emphasis will be the practical application of RSS XML/RDF metadata for dynamically publishing...." [via Serious Instructional Technology ] Now this is an excellent resource! Put up by the Government Information Locator Service (GILS) folks in Utah , this one-page tutorial gives a brief overview of RSS, what it looks...[The Shifted Librarian] Flexing Our Muscles.Flexing Our Muscles. Library Journal is having the same thoughts I am about the need for libraries to illustrate our buying clout to publishers. In an April editorial titled Inside Track: Where Are the Library Best "Sellers"? , Francine Fialkoff says: "In LJ we've already got Prepub Best Sellers and Subject Best Sellers, which tell us what libraries are buying. But what are patrons reading? Where is the Library Best Sellers list with the impact to match the ones above? The potential is... [The Shifted Librarian] |
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
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