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Sunday, February 25
[07:30PM EST]
Seen on the Techcrunch forums...
– via CrunchForums : What does an average joe do … The notion made me smile. Now all I have to do to beat my competitors is to beat them in the next iteration. I'm going to do 3.0 search and see if I can beat google
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Sunday, January 28
Sunday, January 7
[06:35PM EST]
(I'm cleaning off an old computer today and came across this. I wrote this over a year ago - didn't bother to finish it for some reason. There are a bunch more of these. I'll post the more finished ones over the next few days...) To borrow a phrase from the software industry, ICANN's GNSO has a big ole' hairy bug in the design of its constituency structure. The problem lies with its recognition of the Intellectual Property Constituency as a legitimate constituency of the GNSO. Here's why this is a problem. Here's a list of the current constituencies that make up ICANN's GNSO; a. gTLD Registries (representing all gTLD registries under contract to ICANN); - ICANN Bylaws, Article X, Section 5 The Registry and Registrar constituencies are a special class of business - these are the only "providers" of registration services in the GNSO tent. The rest of the constituencies, loosely, are the "user" constituencies. The Internet Service and Connectivity Providers constituency (ISPC) represents the interests of telco's, the Commercial and Business Users constituency (BC) represents the interests of commercial users of all stripes (small and large businesses) and the Non-commercial users constituency (NCUC) represents non-profits, NGOs and other similar non-commercial interests. The Intellectual Property Interests constituency sticks out like a sore-thumb in this structure; even its title, reflects the problem. The IPIC is an issue driven constituency. Each of the other constituencies has organized around a very different dimension - what they use the DNS for. The IPIC on the other hand, takes a different tack and has been organized around the very narrow concern of "intellectual property interests relating to the DNS". (Added to summarize the rest that didn't get written: So why is this a problem? The IPIC is issues based - their entire reason for being is to look out for intellectual property interests. Lots of different players have intellectual property issues - Tucows has patents, copyrights and trademarks for instance - but because we're not a part of the IPIC, our views on these subjects are marginalized. Having an intellectual property issues constituency makes about as much sense as having a religious issues constituencies.) Now playing: "Devil Baby" from the album "The Ragpicker's Dream" by Mark Knopfler. C | T (79) | #Friday, January 5
[12:01AM EST]
Does anyone know off the top of their head whether or not I can get rid of my Rogers Cable subscription but keep my Rogers Internet service intact? I’ve been thinking of migrating from cable TV to iTunes TV – the television portion of my cable bill is over $80 per month. In AppleLand, that same cake will get me 40 or so television shows. Suffice to say that the cost/benefit picture doesn’t look great for the cable operators in this new world order. I’d consider moving to Bell DSL, were it not for the fact that I’m using Vonage and have no Bell service to the house (also on cost grounds). If I could get Bell DSL w/o having to use Bell dialtone, that might be an option to. Neither the Rogers nor the Bell website have any information on this – why would they want me to make an informed decision. If you have any thoughts, please leave me a note in the comments. Many thanks in advance. C (3) | T (507) | #Tuesday, January 2
[03:48PM EST]
Dave tackles the issue of who invented RSS head-on. In the dustup over Microsoft's RSS patents, some of the mainstream press brought up, once again, the issue of Who Invented RSS. But RSS doesn't have an inventor. It wasn't invented. Something else happened, something harder than invention, imho -- an activity that we don't have a word for in the English language.
- via Scripting News
Monday, January 1
Sunday, December 31
[12:05PM EST]
I don't normally blog about world politics, but screw it. This is bugging me. Someone asked me yesterday why some Iraqi's would be denouncing the execution of Saddam Hussein and others would be rejoicing it. I responded that he controlled a multi-ethnic state through fear, repression and hate, and those that opposed him were tortured, terrorized or executed while those that agreed with him (generally those who shared his ethnic background) were mostly left alone and enjoyed a comparatively good lifestyle. "But didn't he only kill 140 people?" was the next question. So I explained the Kurdish massacre and his other atrocities. "He was," I finished. "As ruthless and terrible as Hitler, but far less successful." I'm blogging this because I think that we've lost sight of something important. Somewhere along the way, Bush's atrocities have take a more prominent place in our minds. Bush is guilty of his own sins, and the world will be a better place when he is out of office, but I don't think he deserves to be deposed and hung either. Saddam Hussein was not the pathetic old man hiding in a spider hole that we've come to remember him as. He was a tyrannical despot that deserved to die. The world is a better place without him. C | # |
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![]() "Random Bytes" is a produced for and by Ross Rader. Everything else is just a happy byproduct. The views expressed here belong to me and not my employer.. Contact Me
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