26 November 2002
The five dumbest things on Wall Street this week (well, last week): http://www.thestreet.com/_tscs/markets/dumbestgm/10055556.html
12:30:41 PM  #   your two cents []
How mushrooms will save the world. Cleaning up toxic spills, stopping poison-gas attacks and curing deadly diseases: Fungus king Paul Stamets says there's no limit to what his spores can do. [Salon.com]
7:52:26 AM  #   your two cents []
Court blocks state DVD-cracking suit. The California Supreme Court hands Hollywood a setback, ruling that a Texas resident who posted controversial DVD-cracking code online can't be sued in the Golden State. [CNET News.com]
7:51:28 AM  #   your two cents []
A Computing Pioneer of the 1970's Joins Hewlett-Packard. Alan Kay, a personal computing innovator who was a leader of Xerox's pioneering Palo Alto Research Center in the 1970's, has joined Hewlett-Packard as a senior researcher. [New York Times: Technology]
7:48:47 AM  #   your two cents []
Wither goest Comdex?. With organizer likely to file for bankruptcy, trade show's future questioned [InfoWorld: Top News]
7:48:10 AM  #   your two cents []
The Censor and the Artist: A Murky Border. A conference on free expression and the arts at Columbia University last week focused on new limits on artistic freedom in a high-tech culture. [New York Times: Technology]
7:47:47 AM  #   your two cents []
Bill Vaughan. "A citizen of America will cross the ocean to fight for democracy, but won't cross the street to vote in a national election." [Quotes of the Day]
7:47:06 AM  #   your two cents []