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Bye-Bye Hilary Blogging for Business Web Conferencing by Microsoft Disrupting Book Business JDF Development Tools RIAA: We Don't Need No Stinkin' Judges RSS and Big Media Spycatcher Free Mickey Mouse Lessig Coverage Why Feminism Disappeared Print-on-Demand Guide SBC Communications Patents Web Links Focused Performance Business Blog IFPI Sings Piracy Blues Windows Data Session Toolkit Theme Design
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Wednesday, January 22, 2003Now Living at a Printer Near YouWow, this really is Future of Print stuff...
Inkjets "print" living tissue. Inkjet printer technology doesn't get enough credit. From vendors who fill the reservoirs with edible inks and lay down photorealistic images on sheet-cakes to "Napster fabbers" who lay down successive layers of goop to make three-dimensional images, and let's not forget the doomed odorama startup that mixed perfumes in inkjet carts and vaporized them to create aroma-on-demand tech for PCs. Now, though, we have "tubes of living tissue" coming out of inkjets. Bye-Bye HilarySo long to the most hated woman in America -- Valenti may be next. Hilary Rosen (RIAA) and Jack Valenti (MPAA) have become lightening rods -- the personal faces that millions associate with the heavy-handed tactics and vitriol of the music and film industries. Not a good thing for industries that need millions of consumers to survive.
The days when lobbyists like Rosen and Valenti could play their games in relative obscurity have passed. You can no longer be a high profile lobbyist and not take the heat for behaving badly. Rosen and Valenti behave very badly. Ten years ago there was no Google, there were no weblogs, and there weren't millions of angry, connected consumers tracking a despised lobbyist's every move. Today their every word echoes for weeks around the globe. Rosen's resignation doesn't change anything. It's a PR ploy for an industry that sees itself caught between two equally distasteful ends, and desperately needs the public to stop thinking they are the worst kind of thugs and unmitigated assholes.
[...] Rep. Rick Boucher, D-Va., a leading advocate of consumer rights to copyright works, said it was too early to tell whether Rosen's departure would fundamentally change the industry's stance toward the Internet. It will be very interesting to see how the search for Rosen's replacement proceeds. I wonder how much competition there will be for her job?
Hilary Rosen resigns. Hilary Rosen has resigned from the RIAA, citing her desire to take care of her kids. I've heard rumors that she's been frustrated with the intransigence of her employers at the RIAA, their unwillingness to adapt to new circumstances -- certainly, that sounds more plausible to me than "I want to take care of my kids." (Thanks, Jeremy!) [Boing Boing Blog] Blogging for BusinessWeblog technology has many implications for the problem of improving visibility and communication within companies and between customers.
Blogging for Business. Web Conferencing by MicrosoftPlaceWare works, I watched a nice Geoffrey Moore presentation sponsored and delivered by them. What will happen when it gets hit with the vaunted Microsoft "(barely) good enough" philosophy? I remember how great the first Microsoft version of Visio was... NOT. At least some printer will be happy when an entire new wave of MSCE training materials will get sold. Whatever happened to that disaster called NetMeeting?
InternetNews.Com Microsoft to Acquire PlaceWare. ""We look at this as a long-term thing," Microsoft Information Worker Group lead program manager Dan Leach told internetnews.com. "We make big bets and long term bets... and this is one of them. I wouldn't be surprised if Web conferencing becomes even more commonplace in the next five years."" [snowdeal.org | conflux] Disrupting Book BusinessAllConsuming and booktalk are encouraging experiments in social network development around books. There are important lessons here for every aspect of the book business.One particular thought is about Amazon, whose real value has been in their prowess with complex e-commerce systems, marketing, and connecting customers. Amazon's profitability as a retail sales company remains suspect, even after years of effort and hundreds of millions in expense. Now accessible web services like AllConsuming and booktalk could prove to be enormously disruptive to Amazon -- by developing a robust, non-commercial, community-based network around books -- that supplants the company's own customer community. Which is more valuable -- tracking and managing data about books you have, want or love; or OneClick™ shopping? Developments like booktalk can potentially democratize one of the few remaining differentiators among major book retailers, putting even more pressure on already thin margins.
booktalk JDF Development ToolsJDF is the emerging XML standard for open workflow and connectivity in the print industry. OAI's JDF Development Platform is the first third-party toolkit to become available, and it simplifies the complex JDF architecture through the use of visual programming tools.
Objective Advantage Releases Initial Version of the JDF Development Platform Tuesday, January 21, 2003RIAA: We Don't Need No Stinkin' JudgesNo one can legitimately defend the wholesale pirating of copyrighted material, which makes it hard to oppose the RIAA in this particular case. The problem, as we all know, is that the moment it becomes clear the courts will uphold the RIAA's right to unrestricted subpeona -- anyone, anytime, anywhere, without proof -- that's exactly what they'll do.They will swamp the courts and ISPs with tens of thousands of requests to identify the user of every IP address they can record. It will be the most massive abuse of the legal system ever recorded, and will cost innocent citizens millions in aggravation, lost services, and access. Thank you, U.S. District Judge John D. Bates, for unleashing this scourge upon the earth.
Ruling A Blow To Online Music Pirates. CBS News Jan 21 2003 5:09PM ET RSS and Big MediaRSS explanation for the average web user -- an excellent complement to Mark Pilgrim's What Is RSS?.
RSS Redux. It's RSS day here at TSL! Well, I suppose every day is RSS day at TSL since I couldn't possibly maintain my site without it, but an article over at the American Press Institute is also singing its praises:The Next Front[ier] in the Disruption of Traditional Media[The Shifted Librarian] SpycatcherAdvanced computer monitoring system under development by military.
Spycatcher. How to Catch Spies Spying Your Computer Free Mickey MouseAnother pro-public domain editorial, this time from the Washington Post. I have two questions:
And Free The Snow White 7!. Washington Post editorial entitled "Free Mickey Mouse," advocating "fix" of copyright system. [The Trademark Blog] Lessig CoverageWe don't see too many pro-consumer pieces in the mainstream media regarding the issues of copyright, but this article in the Boston Herald takes the side of the public domain.
Capital Focus: Copyright idea emerges. Boston Herald Jan 20 2003 12:07PM ET Why Feminism DisappearedPatrick is going to get himself in trouble, asking questions like this...
It's feminism's core moral idea: women are due the same rights and dignity as men. So what are the West's feminists doing to help their sisters under Islam?.... Print-on-Demand GuideI'm not familiar with this guide, but the press release makes me think it's targeted to authors/small publishers seeking digital print services for books. I think it is a collection of pay-for-inclusion profiles of digital print service providers.NOTE: The term "print-on-demand" is broad, generic, and used to denote almost any form of digital print. By itself, the term has become almost useless as a descriptor of any particular service. I prefer the term digital print for describing the print technology, and demand-driven to describe a zero-inventory, post-sale manufacturing service.
Print-on-Demand Guide updated for the new year!. The premiere reference guide "A Basic Guide to Fee Based Print on Demand Publishing Services" has just been revised for the New Year. [PRWEB Jan 21, 2003] Monday, January 20, 2003SBC Communications Patents Web LinksDying telco resorts to extortion as survival tactic -- sues small company for using links in frames. Honestly, someone should <strike>kill the f***ing lawyers that come up with this crap</strike> conscientiously object to such legalistic acrobatics.
US company claims millions over site-nav patent. Focused Performance Business BlogFrank Patrick's Focused Performance weblog is a source of management ideas and problem-solving strategies based the Theory of Constraints. TOC is a management methodology based on the principle that in reality any system has very few constraints, and that correctly identifying and eliminating those constraints is the key to superior performance. TOC methods are applied in manufacturing, project management, operations, product development, and marketing.I found Frank via the Ryze Network. Here are a few excerpts from his weblog: Eight P's of Project Integrity -- Today seems to be a day to catch up with some of the other blogs I read regularly (several of which are highlighted in the "Blogroll" you'll find on the right side of this page). In Reforming Project Management, Hal Macomber's got an interesting endeavor going, which he calls "Project Integrity Day." In a later post, Hal talks about integrity in these terms... [Link] IFPI Sings Piracy BluesMore denial, misdrection, and scapegoating from the music industry as they avoid examing the issues any competent business exec would study -- changing demographics, slowing economy, poor product quality, and outmoded business practices. Following the lead of the US, Euros will seek laws to make their customers into criminals.
Online piracy costs jobs: music industry. Windows Data Session ToolkitWe'll have to see just how user-hostile this Microsoft DRM offering is in practice, but anyone want to bet it somehow prevents MP3 files in favor of Windoze&trade Media Player formats?Microsoft joins music piracy fight. Silicon.com Jan 20 2003 7:30AM ET |
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
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