Updated: 12/1/2003; 3:06:09 PM.
Blogging Alone
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Thursday, November 13, 2003


Thanks Rob another good find.

Ray Ozzie On Longhorn & Groove Networks.

Since the early days of his development of Lotus Notes, Ray Ozzie has competed vigorously with Microsoft while working closely with Redmond as a leading ISV on the Windows platform. Now, with Microsoft's significant investment in Ozzie's Groove Networks, the collaboration has broadened. In the aftermath of Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles, Ozzie spoke about Longhorn and Groove with eWEEK Contributing Editor Steve Gillmor. (eWeek)

[Rob Robinson's Idea Engagement Area]

3:51:28 PM    comment []  trackback []


I'm amazed at what we are seeing using Frontier/Manila as a web publishing service and our XML-RPC smart client technology. We are only scratching the surface of what is possible. Read the Buxton paper.

Scoble: "Dave Winer has done more to get me to move away from the Web than a huge international corporation that's supposedly focused on killing the Web." [Scripting News]


3:47:40 PM    comment []  trackback []


Nice coverage from Ed of an event that sounds magical. Great fun thanks sharing your day.

Democratizing Democracy

An interesting day yesterday at the O'Reilly meeting on emerging democracy. It was a small group, convened in one room to brainstorm about what the Internet means for the ways people choose their leaders and govern themselves.

Some participants, like Stewart Brand and Esther Dyson, have already seen a few revolutions come and go. I sat between Josh Lerner from the Clark campaign and Zack Rosen from the Dean campaign, and across from MoveOn's Wes Boyd -- folks who have hands-on roles in the current election season. Phil Windley brought the perspective of someone who has actually worked in government, David Weinberger added both big-think and practical experience from the Dean campaign. I'm leaving out a few folks, mostly because I have to leave for the airport soon.

Some of the conversation was philosphical and definitional -- hashing out questions of whether this this a new phenomenon, or a fresh way of approaching older ones. I don't think we settled that, although I lean toward the latter, which to me at least is no less exciting. Joi Ito, who kept reminding us that this is a global issue, took more of the opposite position.

We spent a lot of time talking about the tools of the trade -- Zack explained DeanSpace, Wes walked through some of how MoveOn does what it does, we covered everything from mail groups to blogs -- although blogs got relatively little attention. We took an interesting detour into the question of electronic voting, courtesy of David Dill.

Dinner was fun -- talking Trollope with Tim O'Reilly, North Carolina radio with Doc, enjoying my second meal in a few weeks with Britt Blaser.

Whatever Tim decides to do with all those notes he took -- a conference, a book, who knows -- this movement is way too big and important to be confined or defined by one group or one company. We couldn't do it if we tried. This is going to develop -- it is developing -- in the field, and take on a life of its own. That's kind of the point, I think.

[EdCone.com]

9:44:21 AM    comment []  trackback []


The Yahoo inteview question.

So I moved onto the "Yahoo Question."

You know: "the box on the left is your computer, the box on the right is Yahoo.com. You type yahoo.com into your browser and hit 'enter.' Explain to me what happens."

It only went downhill from there. [Eric Hancock's Radio Weblog]


8:21:12 AM    comment []  trackback []


That sounds cool. I don't have an audio indicator for my wi-fi detection but I want one.

Wardriving home.

I'm on the road again today, with the laptop listening for wi-fi again (thanks to the new car power adapter). On the way up two days ago, I was amazed how many signals were out there along the roadside, some in the middle of nowhere. But I failed to save the session file, so there isn't much more I can say about that trip. Today may be different.

[The Doc Searls Weblog]

8:16:36 AM    comment []  trackback []

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