Projo Subterranean Homepage NewsBottom-up journalism from the pros: News, tech and culture by Sheila Lennon |
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Ants on parade: I've been mesmerized by Airport Monitor: This is Logan International in Boston. Arrivals are in blue, departures in green; the black ones are "in transit." This is jerky realtime -- everything moves every few seconds. Click on a plane and it turns red; you'll be shown its type and altitude. Logan's runways, close up. Zoom levels range from 4 to 90 miles. This is JFK International in New York. If your first thought was about terrorists seeing this, they do already know there are planes in the air. Airports offer this Passur product free on their sites to people wondering if weather has grounded their planes, or those they are to meet, and to the surrounding neighborhoods. From the "Top 10 Reasons Why Airports Choose Airport Monitor" page: Lowering call volume, workload at the noise and operations offices Massport offers a link on the Logan page right under Arrivals and Departures. Links of the day: Google Finance: I see financial stories as a list of raw headline links, but Google Blogoscoped's Philipp Lenssen sees more. Opposite? Tip for finding music on Google. BBC: Pentagon plans cyber-insect army. Truly weird.
That's a Swedish Koenigsegg CCR, $540,000. One of the most interesting panels at SXSW Interactive 2006 was The Future of Darknets, moderated by JD Lasica. And while the concept of Darknets - communities using private subnetworks to communicate and collaborate out of view of the larger internet - is indeed fascinating, the panel was not interesting because of the intended topic. In fact, we never actually got to hear much about DarkNets, much to my disappointment, because the panel was hijacked the moment one panelist said, "Hello, my name is Kori Bernards, and I'm from the Motion Picture Association of America." Gawker Owner Nick Denton Opens Storefront Headquarters on Crosby Street. -- New York Magazine Watch bloggers type! The 'Hotbed of Tech' Times? Dan Gillmor, former tech columnist at the San Jose Mercury News in Silicon Valley, suggests that Yahoo buy the local paper, orphaned in the Knight Ridder sale. Back to the good ole days: The Raleigh (N.C.) Times closed in 1989, but The News & Observer reports (A downtown spot to toast the bygone times) that the building lives on:
via Romenesko, who's chock full today of post-Knight-Ridder sale news and journalistic soul-searching in its wake. Trapped in between life and death. Seattle Times:
Amazing story. |
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