categories: x-pollen
5:17:21 PM
say what []
The lead characters of the movie Monsters, Inc. were illegally copied from characters drawn by cartoonist Stanley Miller in the early 1960's, according to a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California against Disney Enterprises, Inc. and Pixar Animation Studios, Inc., the producers of the movie. ... Disney and Pixar allegedly came into contact with Miller's work in 1997, when they reviewed a treatment for an animated movie Miller had proposed.
categories: x-pollen
11:18:29 AM
say what []
I'm still reading it, but he makes some good points about the economics of cyberspace and the climate of the blogosphere.
It seems to me, though, that many tech bloggers lean left (or libertarian) just as many post 9/11 instabloggers lean right (or libertarian). It's just that the tech bloggers are less engaged politically, at least in the sense that they have other things to blog about than Robert Fisk's latest anti-Bush screed.
He makes the point (among others) that bloggers are mainly commenting on pre-filtered news (and talking points):
As Andrew Orlanski pointed out, "If I was in a position of power, I'd be delighted to see news reporters supplanted by blogs, because blogs — for all their empowerment rhetoric — are far easier to divert and confuse than a few persistent and skilful reporters."
He also makes an interesting analysis of the link "economy" among bloggers as a form of advertising. Then again, he quotes the New Statesmen on the relative influence of Glenn Reynolds and Andrew Sullivan in the blogosphere in which InstaPundit is said to have "only 40,000 readers a day."
I suppose a newspaper would see that figure as paltry and unsustainable from the advertising-pages perspective, but since when is 40,000 people a small number? If you sell that many books you can make half a year's pay. Newspapers may serve 10 or 100 times as many people but they are not written by just one person alone! (End of digression.)
At Corr's own blog, MentalSpace, he hosts a Political Blog Map plotting bloggers on the 2-D cartesian grid, based on the Political Compass quiz.
The sample of bloggers shown is small, but it begins to bear out my sense that the slant online is toward libertarianism and away from authoritarianism, more than a left/right divide. Then again, we need other dimensions, because where does communitarianism come in?
Full disclosure: RFB (or, in my political guise, Bite Media) scored -2.62 on the economic left/right axis (minus is left, plus is right) and -6.26 on the authoritarian/libertarian axis (minus is liberty, plus is authority).
categories: metablog
10:43:23 AM
say what []
categories: x-pollen
10:17:22 AM
say what []
I wonder if the RSS aggregator's Post button could be modified similarly?
categories: metablog radioactive
9:52:40 AM
say what []
javascript:i=0;if(document.styleSheets.length>0){cs=!document.styleSheets[0].disabled;for(i=0;i<document.styleSheets.length;i++)document.styleSheets[i].disabled=cs;};void(cs=true);.
Now you can toggle CSS on and off for any page (with any browser).
categories: fireweaver
9:47:47 AM
say what []

My Feeds:
A Supposedly Staggering Infinite Work of Heartbreaking Illumination I'll Never Read (rss)
Christian Crumlish (xian): salonika (rss)
Christian Science Monitor (rss)
Comments for usernum 1111 on server http://rcs.salon.com/rcsComments/comments (rss)
David Harris' Science News (rss)
Don W Strickland: RadioFAQ (rss)
Govenor Cashmore's Diary (rss)
John Robb's Radio Weblog (rss)
Macromedia - Designer Developer Center (rss)
Macromedia Resource Feed (rss)
New York Times: International News (rss)
She's Actual Size, Nationwide, Believe (rss)
Washington Post: Editorial (rss)
Washington Post: Front Page (rss)
WIL WHEATON DOT NET: Where is my mind? (rss)
xBlog: The visual thinking weblog | XPLANE (rss)
Here's how this works.
| October 2002 | ||||||
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | ||
| Sep Nov | ||||||