Projo Subterranean Homepage NewsBottom-up journalism from the pros: News, tech and culture by Sheila Lennon |
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Firefox Portable: Take your browser, bookmarks, extensions and saved passwords with you on a thumb drive. Like having no hands: Doc Searls, whose Cluetrain quote, "Markets are conversations" approaches mantra status, wants to focus on what happens post-marketing, when we already know what we want. In a conversation with a minister over the meaning of another's obscure use of the word "gestures," Doc clarifies it as customer "intent" and calls for software to mobilize us: We need to serve market (not marketing) relationships that arise from decisions customers have already made to buy something. They have money in hand, and the intention to book a hotel, or rent a car, or buy a basketball backboard, or whatever. Marketing's job is done. Of course this makes sense. (Ever spend a whole evening looking for the best price on anything at umpteen sites?) Interesting: The blog item itself turns another relationship around: Lots of programmers develop an interesting technology, find a use for it and take it out there, but we may not need yet another music recommendation engine or synchronize-your-calendar tool. Doc knows what he wants, but not knowing how to program is like having no hands. Who will help him build it? (I feel the same way much of the time. I'm brimming with ideas I have no idea how to turn into instructions to a computer. The tools and interfaces available shape and limit what we all can do: Hammer, meet nail. How do we wangle a screwdriver and a drill and a thingamabob that doesn't exist yet?) Really nice ads for Nike Italy. Some recall Art Deco posters of the '30s, but this is my favorite: Click image to see a very large version This comes via the stylish ComputerLove. Have you no shame? Bush: Dems Have Become Obstructionists. AP. Well, yeah, that's why they're called the opposition party. Our American system is built on a system of checks and balances, all designed to obstruct attempts by any body to seize absolute power. At least it's supposed to work that way. Among the provisions of the new "antiterrorism" bill that permits us to terrorize, selected from yesterday's Times list, are these new lows in American civilization: Enemy Combatants: A dangerously broad definition of “illegal enemy combatant” in the bill could subject legal residents of the United States, as well as foreign citizens living in their own countries, to summary arrest and indefinite detention with no hope of appeal. The president could give the power to apply this label to anyone he wanted. Democrats largely went along, out of fear of being branded unpatriotic or soft on (bad guys) in lurid campaign ads. Are they hoping to repeal it if they win? Bugs: How HP bugged e-mail at CNet: "Hewlett-Packard employed a commercial service that tracks e-mail paths to bug a file sent to CNET News.com reporter, an HP investigator said Thursday." Advocacy groups to Congress: Forget HP. What about NSA? -- also at CNet: WASHINGTON--The spying scandal that rocked Hewlett-Packard's boardroom may be disconcerting to many onlookers, but Congress would be better served if it devoted the same sort of scrutiny to the Bush Administration's warrantless terrorist surveillance program, advocacy groups and some politicians said Thursday. Breaking: House approves warrantless wiretap law, 232-191. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House approved a bill Thursday that would grant legal status to President Bush's warrantless wiretapping program with new restrictions. Republicans called it a test before the election of whether Democrats want to fight or coddle terrorists. There always seem to be only two choices, one blustering and one absurd. Does anybody coddle anything besides eggs and babies? No matter. It's just campaigning: ...(Senate) Leaders concede that differences between the versions are so significant they cannot reconcile them into a final bill that can be delivered to Bush before the Nov. 7 congressional elections. |
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