Soundbites

Microsoft Office - Proprietary
Open Office - Freedom
another case of
OPEN VERSUS CLOSED
 

“(the switch) aims to
transform the state from an information technology

‘Tower of Babel to an IT United Nations.’”

-Peter Quinn in Business Week, Massachusetts’ chief information officer testifies at a recent legislative hearing on the proposal to transofrm the information technology of the state government from Microsoft’s proprietary file formats to an open-source proprietary-freUnited Nationse formatEscher Tower of Babel OpenDocument that Office does not currently support. The move is intended to keep government documents accessible as software evolves and independent of Microsoft’s future behavior.

 

=Cogey

In Space

AP reports…on the BBC, Boston News and elsewhere…

Digital Copernicus Nicolaus Copernicus face has been digitally generated from the remains of his skull found last August in a grave in Frombork Cathedral in Poland, where he worked and died. The likeness of the reconstruction to existing portraits strongly confirm the findings.

Copernicus, a clergyman first, astronomer in his spare time, is most famous for his heliocentric theory that the Earth revolves around the Sun and not that Earth was at the center of the universe like the prevailing Ptolemaic model indicated.

His work seismically shifted the foundations of astronomy work to come, it was continued in Tycho Brahe’s work, further developed by Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei.

It would’ve surprised Copernicus to know that the heavenly bodies he so admired as the work of God would lead to conflict with the church. In 1632 Galileo published Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief Systems of the World – Ptolemaic and Copernican, a dialogue between Simplicio, advocating the Copernican model, and Salviati who advocated the Copernican. This eventually led to the Inquisition charging Galileo with Heresy and lifelong imprisonment. As the apocryphal legend goes, as the church denied his theory that the Earth revolves around the Sun and condenmed him, Galileo muttered under his breath “Eppur Si Muove” (“And yet, it does move”).

Copernicus would be even sadder to find that today religious fundamentalism on the rise is just as divorced from the natural sciences and clings on to ignorant superstitious counter-reasoning (i.e. ‘intelligent design’).

On other astronomy news of theological importance…

 

… from Scientific American and NASA

“NASA’s infrared Spitzer Space Telescope snapped pictures of a distant quasar in the Spitzer telescope captures earliest stars when universe was 100 million years old Draco constellation”

“We think we are seeing the collective light from millions of the first objects to form in the universe,”

“The objects disappeared eons ago, yet their light is still traveling across the universe.”

The top picture is the original photograph. It shows all the stars and objects we already knew about.

But after removing all of these objects we end up with the bottom picture. Clearly, it’s not nothing, the hazy clouds are nascent stars, the first to be formed in the universe.

Before them, it was mostly hydrogen and helium chaotically crashing into each other in the darkness. Then came this warm starry glow, the earliest light from these earliest nascent stars.

=Cogey

Also at Forbes

Check out the Special Report at Forbes on

(free tedious membership required)

They have great interviews with Noam Chomsky, Stan Lee, Ray Kurzweil, Jane Goodall, Kurt Vonnegut, Steven Pinker, Vincent D’Onofrio and even David Copperfield among others as well as excellent articles categorized by “technology”, “science”, “commerce & culture” and “on the other hand” where I found find the following Penny Arcade strip.

Penny Arcade at Forbes November

=Cogey

New Blog Squad Growing 2 Shake Up da Status Quo

A survey of the blogosphere landscape indicates that tevironment conditions are just right for the sudden sprouting of new blogs.

Jimena and Nacho (at jimeynacho.blogsome), who’ve been blogging since at least July ‘05, set Adan up with the basics to start blogging (at sapereaude.blogsome), and so he splashes onto the scene this week with a call for discussion on a Forbes article about… blogging.

After the tedious registration process for a free Forbes account I finally got through to the article he passes along: The attack of the blogs by Daniel Lyon.

I agree with Adan that an analysis of blogging makes for a fitting first wave of activity on any new blog. This article however I think is just ridiculously luddite and paranoid.

Is blogging journalism ? Should the same rights and responsibilities be conferred on bloggers ? Are conventional news outlets doomed ?
Questions like these pop up all the time when discussing blogs. But in the article these aren’t seriously addressed. On The attack of the blogs the author leans toward denying any journalistic validity to bloggers and has apparently no faith in any real contribution from them. (… us!)

It begins:

Web logs are the prized platform of an online lynch mob spouting liberty but spewing lies, libel and invective. Their potent allies in this pursuit include Google and Yahoo.

His article expounds on this shocking viewpoint, showing us why bloggers are evildoers terrorizing companies and some of their key executives.

Companies without a conscience are inevitably whining, after all, over months, years or decades they’ve invested shitloads carefully tailoring brand images and building P.R. propaganda machines to dominate consumers. It’s only natural that they’re going to feel threatened when they no longer have unchallenged control over mass-media. Their tangled webs of spinned news are no longer one-way messages delivered across corporate-interest media. Blogging enhances the power of the Internet to liberate previously dispersed voices to critique mainstream stories, verify the facts and instantly share alternate versions to the polished feel-good fables P.R. departments spin. Speaking up and being heard is easier now as blogging technology tears down obstacles that keep individuals apart.

When walls come down, visibility is greater. The pet peeves that quirky individuals kept to themselves because of the low diffussion of their niche interests now form the basis for online communities. In the information age people, not just companies, are mass media empowered. If brands want to retain their good reputations they’ll have to be more careful about all of their behavior unless they want their sins broadcast globally by decentralized think-tanks studying their every move. This inmense 24-hour, 365 days a year newsroom is evolving the capabilities to bring down companies and executives, and especially in these early years it will do so indiscriminately, breaking innocent public figures who haven’t acquired the savvy to come clean on the blogosphere witness stand and testify in their own defense.

Most celebrities have accepted that with their success comes fame (and infamy) and ruthless scrutiny. Politicians have always known to guard their public image. Increasingly we’ll all become public figures, our words and deeds will ever more comprehensively be recorded for posterity. Like celebrities we’ll all habituate to the scrutinous politics of image control and adopt better coping philosophies like “there’s no bad publicity”. Millions of high-schoolers blog daily and know first-hand about blog character assassination (in their case amplified by the power of instant messaging, cell phone texting and hallway gossipping). But none of them characterize blogging as a whole as a libelous medium or deny the benefits blogs bring. For kids growing with(in) the web, blogs are not only an essential space all of their own, they are a fact of life.

Rumors are necessary to an open society. This dynamic exchange between individuals is a healthy sign of democracy. In the beginning there is porn and sensationalism. They sell well. But smut and tabloid reporting only paves the way for better content and a maturing sophistication in the readers. If people want reliable information they’ll know better than to follow anonymous rumors on tabloid blogs.

It’s only a matter of time for society-at-large to acclimatize to the ecology of the blogosphere and demand quality. For trustworthy information users will eventually turn to established bloggers who’ve earned their reputation through an uncompromising journalistic work-ethos. They will be a threat to many companies and ‘public figures’ because they will dare explore where no corporate-paid journalist is allowed to go, and readers will believe them because they will have earned their trust.

There’s trouble in blogland, for sure. One of them is the rise of splogs, the blog equivalent to blogs, whose only purpose is to clog the web with phony blogs and advertise. These blogs pop up on search engines and distract us from real blogs but the biggest problem is they’ve started leaving ‘comments’ on real blogs.

Another situation in the blogworld is that with the present business model revenue means getting as many eyeballs and mouseclicks on embedded advertising. With noone to hold Joe Blogger accountable for fair, unbiased fact-checking, he can turn to demagogy and dishonesty, anything to hook more readers. But Joe Blogger can fuck up once or twice before he’s exposed and readers move on to more reliable bloggers. Any blogger can be demoted to crackpot at any time. The price of an unhealthy obsession with ratings is greater contempt for the truth. Journalists are committed to diffusing the truth and their day to day activities don’t constantly remind them of the importance of ratings and advertising, presumably they focus on truthful reporting and hope to be approved for publication. The blogger is reporter, editor and salesman all at once.

Independent blogging and journalism from news organizations are related disciplines that share some of the same goals and have different means of attaining them, the first will not replace the latter, but will eventually attain equal importance in citizens’ media.

Shouldn’t bloggers have the right to earn some of the same rights, privileges and responsibilities that journalists get ? How could ‘blogger’ become a title as legitimate as ‘journalist’?

Despite the alarmist cries on Lyon’s Forbes’ article, not all bloggers, not even most, are rumor-mill witch-hunting lynch mobs. Silencing blogs or filtering free spech is too high a price to protect sensitive brands from criticism that would exist with our without blogs but which, thanks to blogs, has a powerful voice to enfore its right to free spech. Blogging is a form of having private conversations out in public, and regulating these conversations amounts to censoring free spech between consenting parties.

Most bloggers don’t even care about creating momentum for social change. Most bloggers like to keep an open journal for friends and family to stay connected and updated on everday minutiae. Regulating blogs means regulating these communications as well.

Free* blogging is the new human right.

*”free as in ‘free spech’ not free as in ‘free beer’”

=Cogey Strangehill
strangehill@gmail.com

Keep on Blogging!

On blogging

Now that I’ve articulated a little bit of the why and the what of my brand spanking new blog, it was only suitable that I’d stutter at the question of how ?
How to deal with technicalities like the following:

– uploading a flash animation. How ?
– uploading a podcast. How ?
– adding my flickr badge. How ?
– uploading video clips. How?
– incorporate some dhtml, javascript, xml. How ?
– use technorati tags. How ? what are they and how do I work them ?

Flash and Flickr and Video can wait for now… the podcast however is already under way.

Ivan (at myspace.com/werrlay) and I are cooking up PoV cast, where we’ll ramble about movies, music, comics and more.

As an immediate solution, and probably a permanent one (if hosting our mp3 files on wordpress isn’t as feasible), we’re setting up shop at blastpodcast.com and this: http://feeds.blastpodcast.com/povcast/index.xml is our feed for you to tune in.

Just copy and paste the address into your iTunes subscribe window and you’re set to receive what’s sure to be one of the best podcasts around. in spanish. in Mexico. about movies and stuff. Check it out.

PoV cast Subscribe and you’ll get a great Brazilian tune by Gilberto Gil. This means you got it, and a few days from now you’ll get our first official PoV cast.
(you should also visit povcast.wordpress.com to check for updates)

But the thing that’s still missing that I sorely need to incorporate here is some sort of code that gives the user the option to toggle between posts written in english and equivalent posts written in english. I’m not talking about some translating program, just a way to click back and forth between two different versions of a text.
Now, I’ve been looking through the documentation for wordpress over at codex.wordpress.org and from what I understand, I need to install some plug-ins on my wordpress in order to do this kind of multi-language interface.
So how can I do that ? any ideas are greatly appreciated.

So, till all the kinks are worked out and the podcast is up, enjoy this mostly-hypertext blog.

=Cogey Strangehill
strangehill@gmail.com