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What an amazing day. I wish I could put this weather on hold for Saturday.
- jim 9-21-2000 6:51 pm [link] [add a comment]

The NYTimes has put together a panel discussion (no sign-in BS) on file sharing technologies and their impact on more traditional media business. Hilary Rosen (RIAA), David Boies (Napster lawer), Gene Kan (Gnutella programmer), Kevin Smith (film director), Esther Dyson (cyber bigwig), Senator Orin Hatch, and some 17 year old average internet consumer kid. Surprisingly, to me at least, is how much Sen. Orin Hatch seems to understand. He's talking the correct talk (Is that PCPC talk?):

"The Internet generally (and peer-to-peer file sharing technology in particular) is dramatically shaking up the traditional relationships between artist and audience, as well as the entities that mediate between them. It makes possible direct dissemination of creative works with essentially no reproduction or distribution costs. That is very exciting, but frightening to the mediators who have added value by helping with the previously costly processes of copying and distributing. Artists can still benefit from many promotional, business and financing services in the wired world, so we are not necessarily facing the extinction of record companies and movie studios, obviously. But I hope that we are moving toward a system where artists and the audience drive the process more, have more choice. That is the hope. If the business mediators can find supportive, value-adding roles (as they should be able to), and if the artists and the audience can have a more direct relationship through this media, we need not have an adversarial relationship. Quite the contrary. I believe this technology can foster a closer relationship between performing artist and audience than we have ever had since Edison separated artistic performance from live performers. I hope to help that happen."
I hope he can help it happen too. But really, politicians mostly need to not stop it from happening. Seems like the technology will take care of the rest.
- jim 9-21-2000 2:57 pm [link] [1 comment]

Here's the archives to a good mailing list for would-be Mac OS X system administrators.
- jim 9-20-2000 11:15 pm [link] [add a comment]

Just purchased tickets for the big Thanksgiving adventure. More exciting details to follow...
- jim 9-20-2000 10:18 pm [link] [6 comments]

Progress has stalled slightly on the new office. Hopefully tomorrow it will be back on track. Supposedly the plumber is coming to move all the pipes (running along the ceiling) into one group to be boxed in next to the one large support beam. This will give us another few inches of headspace which seems like a very good thing seeing as it is a basement space. I'm thinking everything will progress a little quicker once this unforseen step is taken care of.
- jim 9-20-2000 10:17 pm [link] [add a comment]

being assembled
- jim 9-20-2000 10:13 pm [link] [add a comment]

The John Perry Barlow article in the new Wired is worth the read.
- jim 9-17-2000 3:48 pm [link] [add a comment]

Bill Gates, Linus Torvalds, and Steve Jobs have joined channel #Newbie Bloggers. I'm sure it reflects poorly on my mindset, but this is the funniest thing I've read in weeks. LOL.
- jim 9-17-2000 3:43 pm [link] [1 comment]

I'm going to take this to mean 26 more hours until Kuro5hin is back on the web. In hopefully unrelated news, (dig the msnbc headline copy:) hackers amass new zombie army, making ready the forces of evil for another round of DDOS attacks. CERT has the advisory, noting holes in rcp.statd (whatever that is) and wu-ftpd. I knew we shouldn't have let a bunch of rappers from Staten Island write the FTP code. D'oh. Slashdot debates the issue.
- jim 9-17-2000 3:16 pm [link] [add a comment]

Blogs are over, done, finished, washed up, old news, and totally, completely, uncool; long live blogs.
- jim 9-17-2000 2:34 pm [link] [add a comment]

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