February 1, 2010

It’s doubtful that anybody reading this blog missed the news that Apple finally took the wraps off their much rumored tablet: the iPad. Trouble is, a bunch of folks seem to be upset about the features and specs, or something that made the buzz machine go meh. It’s just a bigger iPhone, complain the privileged [...]
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology |
5 Comments »
April 30, 2009
A caller to Clark Howard’s CNN show complains of being billed $62,000 by his cell phone provider for data usage. And Oklahoman Billie Parks has filed suit over a $5,000 bill.
Posted in Dispatches |
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March 31, 2009
Stefan Savage, speaking in a segment on March 13′s On The Media, asked: The question I like to ask people is, what are you going to do to the highway system to reduce crime. And when you put it that way, it sounds absolutely ridiculous, because while criminals do use the highway, no rational person [...]
Posted in Politics & Controversy, Technology |
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March 11, 2009

I’m flying Virgin America from BOS to SFO, and apparently all their planes on that route offer in-flight internet via Gogo. $12.95 buys 3Mbps down and 300Kbps up (at least early on when nobody else seemed to be using it). I can get my iPhone online for only 8 bucks, but as far as I [...]
Posted in Dispatches, Technology |
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February 24, 2009
You’d think the top search results on the matter would be newer than 1999, but that’s where you’ll find this NYT article and PubLaw item story, both from precambrian times. Worse, both of those articles suggest that my links to them may not be entirely kosher. The problem is probably that US courts have not [...]
Posted in Dispatches, Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology |
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April 11, 2008
Posted in Questionable...funny. Pointless. |
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November 6, 2007
NPR : Back to School: Reading, Writing and Internet Safety As students return to school in Virginia, there’s something new in their curriculum. Virginia is the first state to require public schools to teach Internet safety.
Posted in Blink, Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology |
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October 5, 2007

Note: this cross-posted item is my contribution to our Banned Books Week recognition. We’ve been pitting books against each other, hoping to illustrate that there are always (at least) two sides to every story. Most of the other books were more social or political, but I liked this pair. Wikinomics authors Don Tapscott and Anthony [...]
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology |
1 Comment »
September 13, 2007

Have You Thanked the Internet Lately? OneWebDay, our opportunity to celebrate “one web, one world, one wish” is just about a week away (though it falls on Yom Kippur). This video explains a bit and Tim Berners-Lee is planning his own video (worth mentioning: his net neutrality post). If things work out, I’ll be posting [...]
Posted in Dispatches, Technology |
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July 11, 2007
I wasn’t planning on posting much about Keen’s Cult of the Amateur, but I did. And now I find myself posting about it again. Thing is, I’m a sucker for historical analogy, and Clay Shirky yesterday posted a good one that compared the disruptive effects of mechanized cloth production to today’s internet. Yes, that’s actually [...]
Posted in Books, Movies, Music, Libraries & Networked Information, Technology |
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July 10, 2007
Andrew Keen‘s The Cult of the Amateur; How Today’s Internet Is Killing Our Culture is getting a lot of attention from usually quiet corners of the web, and I’ve had to quell the urge to write a story under the headline “Andrew Keen Tells YouTubers to Eat Spinach.” Keen’s argument rests on the belief that [...]
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology |
3 Comments »
April 4, 2007
This story in MIT Technology Review scares me. Instead of letting all computers within the network communicate freely, Ethane is designed so that communication privileges within the network have to be explicitly set; that way, only those activities deemed safe are permitted. “With hindsight, it’s a very obvious thing to do,” McKeown says. No matter [...]
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology |
2 Comments »
September 29, 2006
A comic from XKCD:
“I feel like I’m wasting my life on the internet. Let’s walk around the world.”
“Sounds good.”
[panels showing the world's great beauty, a truly grand adventure]
“And yet all I can think of is ‘this will make for a great Livejournal entry.’”
Posted in Questionable...funny. Pointless., Technology |
1 Comment »
July 25, 2006
Not A Pretty Librarian has kicked things off well with a first post titled “It Is Not A Tool,” covering an argument about which has more value to a teenager: a car or a computer. On one side is the notion that “She can’t drive herself to work with a computer.” While, on the other [...]
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information |
1 Comment »
April 4, 2006

It can be hard for library folk to imagine that the web development world might be as divided about the meaning and value of “Web 2.0” as the library world is about “Library 2.0,” but we/they are. Take Jeffrey Zeldman’s anti-Web 2.0, anti-AJAX post, for instance. Zeldman’s a smart guy, and he’s not entirely off-base, [...]
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information, Technology |
1 Comment »
The original iPod *was* lame.
Posted in Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology | Leave a Comment »