A blog doesn't need a clever name
Cyberethics, Crypto, Community, Freedom, Privacy, Property, Philosophy, MP3, Online Ed, Copyright, Iran, other current topics and fun stuff
Last updated:
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Sunday, June 19, 2005

How to make money from podcasting.

Write an analysis of how it will grow and sell it for $1,500 a copy.

(via: Brand Noise)

[rexblog: Rex Hammock's Weblog]


1:12:57 PM    comment []

His excellency's voting machine.

So here it was. The robots of the supreme leader came in from behind and when nobody was expecting it, voted for Ahmadinejad, a populist conservative with a socialist economy.

Basij and Sepah forces, added to millions of the Guardian Council's representatives who were at the polling stations all five millions of them, voted for Ahamdinejad and made it possible for the supreme leader to actually run the country, directly, for the first time.

Even if Rafsanjani goes to the second round with Ahmadinejad, Khamanei's voting machine will act again and will make Ahmadinejad the new president of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The pro-reform youth are so disappointed and depressed. Nobody knows what will happen next. But Khamenei is the biggest winner of this game. He now has both the big turn-out (plus a middle-finger to Bush), and a quasi-president who is only a cover for his excellency.

Is it possible the Iranian leader has learned this from Mr. Bush's win?

[Editor: Myself (English)]


9:13:03 AM    comment []

Internet usage in Iran.

"If Iran's revolutionary leader,Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,were alive today,he'd undoubtedly have his own Web site,"this USAToday article contends."All eight of those allowed to run for president by Iran's clerical establishment in elections this Friday have official Web sites as well as other sites run by supporters.Internet usage is growing faster in Iran than anywhere in the Muslim Middle East, according to a recent Stanford University study.Although the Internet has not altered the power structure of the government,it has transformed campaigning and laid the groundwork for political change, Iranians inside and outside of the country say".

Internet boom alters political process in Iran

[Smart Mobs]
9:12:37 AM    comment []

Looking Long Term? Get Your Glasses. A recent academic study has found that few investors can focus on events more than five years ahead, even when those events are very predictable. By MARK HULBERT. [NYT > Business]
9:12:31 AM    comment []

Dan is covering The Annals of Corporate Misbehavior. [Dan Gillmor's blog]
9:12:03 AM    comment []

Iran Moderate Says Hard-Liners Rigged Election. The race for Iran's presidency was thrown into turmoil when a top vote getter accused conservatives of rigging the election. By MICHAEL SLACKMAN. [NYT > International]
9:11:33 AM    comment []

Can you believe Ahmadinejad has some votes in Holland Park polling station in London? [Editor: Myself (English)]
9:10:59 AM    comment []

Low tuition encourages career slackers?.

The students whom I met during a brief stop at University of Wisconsin in Madison seemed to have chosen majors that aren't very useful vocationally.  My friends who teach liberal arts at high-tuition schools in the Boston area report that their students are very focussed on getting into a high-paying career with an MBA or a law degree.  Two girls at U. of W. who stopped me to ask about Alex seemed like good examples of what happens when tuition is only around $3000/semester (in-state).  One was majoring in philosophy and headed for a Ph.D. program in philosophy.  The other was in women's studies and headed for graduate school at UCLA in women's studies.

Were these a statistical anomaly or is there a correlation between low tuition and students pursuing the intellectual life?

[Philip Greenspun Weblog]
9:10:50 AM    comment []

hoder on the Ahmadinejad effect.

One good thing about an Ahmadinejad term could be that it would end the apathy among the youth born after the Iran-Iraq war.

They are the best thing that could happen to the regime of Iran, for they have never struggled for their rights and ambitions. They are absolutely satisfied with what teh regime provides them with, be it cheesy Iranian pop music, or wheat alcohol.

[Editor: Myself (English)]


9:08:59 AM    comment []

Bush Denounces Iran's Election [Washington Post: Top News]

Iran poll to go to run-off. On CNN [NewsIsFree: Popular Items]


9:08:23 AM    comment []

Wes:

As we wait for the Supreme Court's decision in the MGM/Grokster case, Brad Hutchings wants to preserve some of the grey areas in copyright. Y'all don't fight too much while I'm at ICS next week.


9:03:52 AM    comment []

A Romp Through Theories More Fanciful Than Freaky. The authors of "Freakonomics" consistently mine illuminating truths by contrasting seemingly unrelated topics. By ROGER LOWENSTEIN. [NYT > Business]
9:03:13 AM    comment []

an iPod playlist to imprint the present and remember the past.

Maybe it's the librarian in me, but I find something enjoyable about organizing iTunes playlists for my iPod.

I have playlists for all sorts of things: driving (some music just does not work in the car), doing the dishes on a mellow evening, cleaning, exercising, good mood music for company (pleasant, but not too demanding or intrusive) and music that usually helps me get to sleep.

But nothing is perfect and there are few things about the iPod which can create a less than perfect music experience.

Firstly, if I am always listening to music for particular moods or circumstances, when I am going to listen and new music and how is that music going to imprint on my present circumstances? By imprinting, I mean when a particular piece of music becomes associated with a particular time/place/event/person in one's life. This isn't always a pleasant thing. Björk's Medúlla makes me recall my time working at Vodafone (not exactly pleasant for me) and reading Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (which is just plain weird). That said, I still think the association of songs in this way provides a helpful musical map to our lives, and that using an iPod can severely dilute this efffect.

The other problem, kind of touched on in my previous iPod playlist post, that it is so easy for good music to buried and lost in an iPod.

Naturally, I have found one answer to these two problems by creating a new kind of playlist. This is a hybrid smart list, containing two other smart playlists. The best thing is that it's self-updating and requires very little maintenance.

Ingredient 1: Smart playlist of recently added tracks. This is simple, choose "Date Added" in the last 3 months - or whichever period you like, it could also be a number of days or weeks. Make sure that the Live Updating box is checked, so that new things are automatically captured and the old ones will drop off.

Ingredient 2: Smart playlist containing good songs which aren't played very often. The first step here is to specify "My rating" as greater than 2 or 3 stars (depending on how picky you want to be). Of course you need to have most of your music rated for this to work effectively. One easy way of doing this is to make an Unrated playlist, containing only the unrated songs - so that you can rate them when you're ever in the mood. The second step is that this must be a limited playlist. For me it's limited to 25 songs, selected by the least often played. You might need to tinker with this number at some point to capture the ratio between old and new music which works best for you. Make sure that this list is also live updating.

Ingredient 3: Another smart playlist which combines the contents of the first two lists. At the top of the window, if you'll need to make sure that you choose "Match any of the following conditions", which is basically a boolean OR. Then for those conditions, choose "Playlist" is - and select the other two playlists, i.e. new stuff and good but less played.

I should really have some screenshots for this. Maybe I will when I'm in the mood, even if it involves bending my post-publication editing rules.

[explodedlibrary.info]


8:59:36 AM    comment []

A glimpse inside Microsoft's rating system from the anonymous Redmond blogger, Mini-Microsoft. Glad I don't work there, I'd be a 1.0 for sure. [Scripting News]
8:59:16 AM    comment []

Online editions.

"Nearly one-fifth of US web users who read newspapers now prefer online to offline editions,according to a new study from internet audience measurement company Nielsen//NetRatings,"reports News."The online edition of the New York Times' www.NYTimes.com,is the most visited US newspaper site.It had an audience of 11.3 million in May, up 25 percent from a year earlier,according to Nielsen//NetRatings.USATODAY.com had the second-biggest online reach, with an audience of 9.2 million in May,up 15 percent.Rounding out the top three was washingtonpost.com whose audience in May grew 10 percent year on year to 7.4 million".

http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,15640609%5E15318%5E%5Enbv%5E15306,00.html">Online news gaining favour

[Smart Mobs]
8:59:00 AM    comment []



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