web
May 9, 2007 7:49:55.211
It seems that Second Life is having problems with illicit materials being passed through their system - which is a direct result of Linden Labs deciding to allow complete anonymity (on the back end - anonymity within Second Life could be maintained) on the part of users.
I'm wary of demands for authentication, but it all depends on what you're trying to build. Based on the article I linked to, Linden Labs is going through some fairly extreme contortions due to that policy. It's not clear to me why they don't just return to a policy of demanding a real credit card linked to a real address - seems to me that such a demand is a gate mostly for people who are unwilling to pay anyway.
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web2.0, second life
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tv
May 9, 2007 8:16:39.755
It looks like justin.tv is paving the way for the next stage in reality tv - it's even got a catchy name now: Lifecasting:
Valleywag says that Natalie Portman is working on a “lifecast” of her personal and working life, a la Justin.tv’s 24-hour streaming EdTV experiment. Said news, apparently, was leaked via a Twitter message by someone whose firm had been approached to fund her new venture (allegedly Silicon Valley VC oufit Charles River Ventures). This wouldn’t be the only time that Silicon Valley has met Silicone Valley, of course, but it still seems a little far-fetched to me -- but then, so did Justin.tv.
Ingram is right to be skeptical of anything coming out of ValleyWag, but even if this story is a bust, I suspect the trend itself will start rolling.
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smalltalk
May 9, 2007 11:56:05.468
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screencast
May 9, 2007 12:46:31.094
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itNews
May 9, 2007 20:32:23.742
This sounds encouraging:
Comcast Corp. Chief Executive Brian Roberts dazzled a cable industry audience Tuesday, showing off for the first time in public new technology that enabled a data download speed of 150 megabits per second, or roughly 25 times faster than today's standard cable modems.
Here's what I want to know: will they still be limiting the upstream bandwidth to single digits? Recently, Verizon came through our area and installed FIOS. I was interested, until they came by and offered me exactly the same service Comcast does, at exactly the same price. You want me to buy something new? Offer me value somewhere!
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web
May 10, 2007 7:55:04.615
Adtech is reporting that click through rates for banner ads are dropping:
ADTECH, global providers of ad server technology has today revealed the results of its latest browser analysis and has revealed that just two out of a thousand viewed banners trigger a reaction from European Internet users. The current click-through rate of 0.18 per cent is the lowest since ADTECH started banner analyses in 2004. Then, the average was 0.33 per cent.
This isn't a huge surprise - I can't recall (other than by accident) the last time I so much as looked at a banner ad, much less clicked through one. The entire model is shifting to things like Google's AdSense, which tries to push up ads that you might actually be interested in (although even there, I wouldn't be surprised if click through rates are low and dropping).
What advertisers really need is "just in time information" - an ad for a product at the point that I'm looking for to buy something. AdSense delivers some of that - but the thinking in some parts of the industry is still reflective of the TV "broadcast model":
Freytag continued: “The decreasing numbers overall in my opinion are due to the fact that the users have increasingly gotten used to online advertising during the last years. Banners are now commonplace on the Internet. New formats, such as video ads are needed to draw attention and generate clicks. Layer and Leaderboards in contrast have a high reminder potential even beyond the Web.”
That's the kind of thinking that leads to those cover up Flash ads (is there anything more annoying on the web right now?). I think there's going to be a lot more suffering in this sector before the old-line advertising bromides die off.
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advertising
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screencast
May 10, 2007 9:26:09.476
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movies
May 10, 2007 11:25:51.973
SciFi Wire reports that a new Terminator flick - possibly the start of a new trilogy - is on the boards. If they stay with the idea of showing us the post-SkyNet future, that could work. I just hope they don't get all Lucas-esque on us, and get high on their own fame and deliver the equivalent of the last three Star Wars flicks (utter dreck), or - gosh forbid - the hash that was the last Matrix movie.
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scifi
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PR
May 10, 2007 12:56:21.576
Looks like the lawyers and the media are starting to figure out that they've (the lawyers) received an involuntary promotion into PR. It's really too bad that lawyers suck at PR:
Some of Hollywood's more aggressive lawyers are learning a painful lesson: The Web doesn't have a delete key.
That lesson was especially humiliating for them last week, when a key that could unlock copyright protections on some high-definition movie discs became Topic A on the Web -- precisely because a movie industry trade group tried to squelch any mention of it.
The day when a threatening letter from a lawyer was enough is on its way out - in the meantime, it looks like an awful lot of companies are going to find out that the legal department is not a place where positive PR happens.
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law, marketing
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product management
May 10, 2007 19:12:17.710
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media
May 10, 2007 19:22:48.573
I thought it was pretty stupid of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune to move humorist James Lileks from column work to beat reporting, but Mike Malone captures the real problem:
One of the reasons for this intense reaction is that for most of us in the rest of the world, the only thing we know about Minneapolis these days, and certainly about the Star-Tribune, is what we read in Lileks.com. In other words, James Lileks is far bigger than the newspaper that employs him, is its single most effective bastion against falling subscription revenues, and is its most powerful marketing and promotion tool.
That's the reality, and I have to wonder if the owners of the paper get that: their brand is now less valuable than the Lileks brand. They could have worked with him; my guess is that they'll be working without him soon. Like buggy whip peddlers in 1925, they don't seem to have any idea what that noise in the distance means...
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newspapers
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media
May 10, 2007 19:58:15.031
I hadn't thought that newspapers could get dumber, but hey - I was wrong:
“We seek a newspaper journalist based in India to report on the city government and political scene of Pasadena, California, USA.”
...
James Macpherson, editor and publisher of the two-year-old Web site pasadenanow.com, acknowledged it sounds strange to have journalists in India cover news in this wealthy city just outside Los Angeles.
But he said it can be done from afar now that weekly Pasadena City Council meetings can be watched over the Internet. And he said the idea makes business sense because of India’s lower labor costs.
Local news outlets have exactly one area in which they can add value: local news. Turning that into a copy/paste exercise with remote staffers just makes the local news into the same kind of dull sameness you see in wire service copy/pastage - no value add, no reason to read it at all.
If a local news source wants readers, it's going to have to do local news coverage. This is what you call "penny wise and pound foolish".
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newspapers
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smalltalk
May 11, 2007 7:50:33.734
Huw has started up a series of articles comparing Ruby and Smalltalk - at the language/usage level, not at the "religion" level. This is interesting if you're a Smalltalker wondering about the Ruby hype, or a Rubyist interested in that Smalltalk thing you keep hearing about.
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ruby
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screencast
May 11, 2007 8:48:41.068
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cst
May 11, 2007 10:17:31.951
Andre Schnoor (who spoke at the User's Conference last year), has pushed out a new Look Policy for Cincom Smalltalk. I copied this from the vwnc mailing list:
This package implements the Look & Feel "Chimera". Chimera was designed to provide a platform-neutral, minimalistic look, inspired by Swing and AWT. The idea behind Chimera was to provide a consistent design on all operating systems (Windows and OSX currently). The emulated native looks are instantly recognized as being not the "real thing" - so why pretend? A slick custom design has proven to be a viable solution for many applications that can not deal with native widgets for whatever reason.
Chimera comes with some performance optimizations under the hood, most notably faster and smoother window updates, especially for tab controls and resizing splitters. It was tested for VisualWorks 7.4.1. Chimera has no prerequisites and integrates with the VisualWorks L&F framework. After loading the package, go to the VisualWorks settings panel and select "Chimera Windows XP" for Windows and "Chimera MacOS X" for a Mac. Although both versions run on either platform, font sizes and menus look best on the designated machines.
I pushed a copy up to the public store - just load the package CGN Chimera Look. Here's BottomFeeder running under the Chimera XP Look (click for a larger image):

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smalltalk
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PR
May 11, 2007 10:55:48.410
David Meerman Scott has just released a new book on PR and marketing (comes out in June, actually - I've pre-ordered it). Looking down the list of thank you's on the the page, it looks like I got a brief mention. How cool is that? I'm looking forward to the book.
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marketing
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media
May 11, 2007 11:45:18.916
Matthew Ingram finds another nail in the coffin for newspapers: Facebook is launching classified ads:
It’s clear to me, as it is to Scott, that one of the things that makes Facebook so powerful as a competitor in this particular space is the social aspect it brings. Does anyone feel like they have really connected with someone through their newspaper classifieds? Unlikely. But Facebook and other social networks -- including craigslist -- are more like the bulletin board at the local campus centre, multiplied by a million. That is a powerful force.
What's absolutely killing newspapers is the loss of income from the classifieds. That used to be a gold mine, and it allowed them to become lazy in other areas (see yesterday's post, for instance). Now their private gold mine has been hauled off, and they have absolutely no idea what to do. Their various money-saving schemes range from the stupid to the insane, and then they go and blame Google. As if a search engine that lets me find a news source is a problem.
The upshot of this is, an awful lot of newspapers are going to disappear over the next few years, as team after team of executives fail to understand (and cope with) the problem: witness the Minneapolis Star Tribune, deciding to put a talented columnist on the news beat, for instance. Will they retain Lileks? I seriously doubt it, and that loss is going to hurt them. Smaller (and larger) versions of that are going to be played out in newsrooms across the country, and it will be painful to watch.
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newspapers, management
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gadgets
May 11, 2007 12:09:13.776
Robbie Bach, President of Microsoft's Entertainment & Devices Division, had some things to say about the Wii that I found somewhat surprising:
I'm actually not -- the product has gotten more broad-base acclaim that I would have expected. It's a very nice product, but it actually has a relatively specific audience and a fairly specific appeal, frankly, based on one feature, which is the controller itself. And the rest of the product is actually not a great product -- no disrespect, but … the video graphics on it aren't very strong; the box itself is kind of underpowered; it doesn't play DVDs; there are a lot of down-line components [that] aren't actually that interesting.
...
So the challenge for us is how do we drive to more casual users, and how do we bring more casual experiences to Xbox and Windows? And the challenge for them is figuring out, "Hey, how do I broaden beyond a casual demographic?" We'll see how that plays out.
See, that's a complete misunderstanding (or misstatement) of where Nintendo is at - they aren't really trying to go after the crowd that wants to play Halo, or Gears of War. They recognized that the market for casual games (at an affordable price) is much, much larger than the one for "hard core" games. They don't need to broaden their audience; they just did that by offering better game play. I think Nintendo is quite happy to let MS and Sony duke it out in the "we lose money on each sale of expensive hard core systems" space. While they do that, Nintendo just quietly cashes checks.
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marketing
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stupidity
May 11, 2007 12:54:00.745
Just when I thought the approaches taken to DRM couldn't get stupider, I find out I'm wrong. Witness the tools at Media Rights Technologies: they claim that all the big players in the media player space are violating the law by not using their product:
A California company that makes technology designed to prevent ripping of digital audio streams has accused Apple, Microsoft, RealNetworks and Adobe Systems of violating federal copyright law by "actively avoiding" use of its products.
Media Rights Technologies and its digital radio subsidiary BlueBeat.com said in a press release on Thursday that it had issued cease and desist letters to the high-tech titans. They argue that the companies have manufactured billions of copies of Windows Vista, Adobe Flash Player, Real Player and Apple's iTunes and iPod "without regard for the DMCA or the rights of American Intellectual Property owners."
Geez - about all I can come up with on that is this: there's a business strategy that Tony Soprano would appreciate.
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DRM, copyright
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tv
May 11, 2007 19:22:07.502
Looks like the next season of Battlestar Galactica will wrap things up:
When asked about the next season of Battlestar, Olmos had this to say, “This will probably be the most extraordinary season of Battlestar, it’s the final season so, it’s definitely going to be the most vicious.”
While I'd like to see more of the show, I'm happy to see it go out on top.
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galactica, scifi
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tv
May 12, 2007 0:12:47.306
The producers behind Galactica have just contradicted Olmos:
Contrary to comments by Edward James Olmos (Adm. Adama) at the Saturn Awards on May10, no end has been announced for the award-winning show. Battlestar Galactica is preparing to film its fourth season, one that will include 22 episodes, rather than the previously announced 13.
Hmm
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logs
May 12, 2007 10:19:59.978
Summer is fast approaching, and it's time for another look at the logs. BottomFeeder downloads are back to a more normal rate - 188/day. The details:
| Platform | BottomFeeder Downloads |
| Update | 402 |
| Windows | 386 |
| Linux x86 | 123 |
| Mac X | 78 |
| CE ARM | 60 |
| Mac 8/9 | 58 |
| Solaris | 45 |
| HPUX | 33 |
| AIX | 28 |
| Linux Sparc | 25 |
| Windows98/ME | 22 |
| SGI | 15 |
| Linux PPC | 15 |
| Sources | 14 |
| CE x86 | 6 |
| ADUX | 5 |
On to the HTML page accesses:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| Mozilla | 48.4% |
| Internet Explorer | 42% |
| MSN Bot | 4.3% |
| MSRBOT | 2.6% |
| Opera | 1.7% |
| Other | 1% |
And finally, the Syndication numbers:
| Tool | Percentage of Accesses |
| Internet Explorer | 40.4% |
| Mozilla | 16.9% |
| BottomFeeder | 11.5% |
| Other | 8.7% |
| Net News Wire | 3.6% |
| Google Feed Fetcher | 3.5% |
| BlogLines | 3.4% |
| Vienna | 2.9% |
| Feed On Feeds | 2.6% |
| Safari RSS | 2.2% |
| Liferea | 1.7% |
| NewsGator | 1.6% |
| Python | 1% |
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management
May 12, 2007 17:33:08.329
In an article about Open Source software and its impact on vendors, I think I ran across one of the stupidest paragraphs I've ever seen - here's Dana Blankenhorn:
Many of these vendor fears are wrapped up in the phrase "intellectual property." What you do for me becomes my property. But why should it? Why should you, as an employer, continue to profit from the work I perform as your employee?
It's called a paycheck. If you want to have full ownership of what you do, then you do it as an independent, and take the risks that come with that. If you want to take the security of a paycheck, then you also take the restrictions that come with that. It's not that complicated - TANSTAAFL pretty much sums the whole thing up.
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stupidity
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podcast
May 12, 2007 19:53:33.320
This week, Dave, Michael, and I spoke a little bit about Smalltalk Solutions (which took place 2 weeks ago), and that led into a conversation about Cairo and Pango. We also delved a bit into UI frameworks, after Arden Thomas' talk at the show came up. We held the talk to about thirty minutes - as usual, if you like it, please head on over to Podcast Alley and vote for the show, or leave a review on iTunes. Feedback? Send it to smalltalkpodcasts@cincom.com
Technorati Tags:
smalltalk, cairo, pango, sts2007
Enclosures:
[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/audio/2007/industry_misinterpretations-05-12-07.mp3 ( Size: 11627492 )]
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travel
May 13, 2007 11:15:19.303
Scoble sums up his travel advice with this:
Anyway, the new rule we recommend? 1:30 for any domestic flight and three hours for any international flight. If you can add more, do. There’s nothing more stressful than seeing a super long security line or, worse, being caught in traffic on the way to the airport knowing you are about to miss the only flight of the day.
Maybe I'm just lucky - I never allow that much time at the airport, unless the airport in question is Heathrow (it's often miserable to get through). When I fly from BWI, I usually don't leave the house until an hour before the flight, leaving 40 minutes or so at the airport.
As to what he says about checking bags - the best advice I can give is this: make it fit in two bags so that you can completely avoid baggage check. Nothing adds time to your trip like checking and retrieving bags.
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web
May 13, 2007 11:22:03.552
Scoble talks web stats:
The thing is these services rely on toolbars (I can’t even use any of the toolbars on the Macintosh for some reason, and how many of you even have one of these folks’ toolbars loaded? None of my friends do and I’ve been checking). Or they rely on “panels” of Web users that they survey regularly. Do you know the selection mechanisms? How do they know they are getting a representative sample? Clearly very few people who run Web companies find their stats accurate. Yet we’re supposed to believe in them?
Looks like everything old is new again - we still have this problem with TV shows. The thing that isn't getting across yet is the difference between the mass audience that advertisers would like (this is the business model they know), and the niche audience they actually get.
The mass audience was an artifact of the lack of choice in early media. When all you had was 3-5 TV stations and a radio dial, you picked one of the available poisons. Now? Your choices are virtually unlimited: 500+ TV channels, internet radio and TV, time slicing (TiVO, podcasts) - it's no longer a finite entertainment menu. The people doing the stats act like it's a finite menu though, and the advertisers behind them play along with the fiction so as to preserve their current behavior.
Sometime soon, reality is going to crash the party.
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advertising, management
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management
May 13, 2007 22:59:21.128
How can you tell when the well of new ideas is empty, and all that's left is a desperate attempt to preserve existing revenues?
Microsoft claims that free and open-source software violates more than 230 of its patents, according to a magazine report published Sunday.
Microsoft isn't "dead", but they have turned off all of the intellectual lights...
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law, patents
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DRM
May 14, 2007 7:46:30.462
Even the mainstream content owners realize that they're losing the PR war over DRM; witness HBO's CTO Bob Zitter, who wants to find a friendlier sounding acronym:
Speaking at a panel session at the NCTA show in Las Vegas Tuesday, Zitter suggested that "DCE," or Digital Consumer Enablement, would more accurately describe technology that allows consumers "to use content in ways they haven't before," such as enjoying TV shows and movies on portable video players like iPods.
When you have to replace the original term with a euphemism, it's not a good sign for your side of the argument. But hey - here's a question: If DRM is now "Digital Consumer Enablement", what should we do with the loaded term "piracy"? I rather like "User Friendly's replacement: "Consumer Choice Enhancement"
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subscription, advertising, video, stupidity
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itNews
May 14, 2007 8:31:22.048
It's not your Dad's spam-bot anymore:
Leading AV researchers at Kaspersky have now identified three criminal gangs which are participating in an increasingly desperate battle of the botnets. This turf war is, as all turf wars have a habit of doing, turning nasty and it is the average computer who is getting caught ion the crossfire. No longer are the gangs happy to settle for a slice of the spam pie, they want it all. And that means control over as many compromised third party computers to create the biggest of mega zombie botnets. To accomplish this, the gangs behind the Bagle, Warezov and Zhelatin worms are turning their attention to ridding those compromised computers of rival gang malware infections in order to install their own and gain that control.
I can't tell whether life is imitating art, or whether it's the other way around...
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spam, security
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sts2007
May 14, 2007 10:39:33.057
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screencast
May 14, 2007 11:20:06.287
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we take a look at starting an image using command line options. The options used are mostly useful for deploying applications - in our example, a web application server.
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deployment, smalltalk
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web
May 14, 2007 11:47:21.446
I just about fell off my chair when I saw Forrester predicting the death of online video sales:
"In the video space, iTunes is just a temporary flash while consumers wait for better ways to get video. They're already coming," said Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey, the author of the study, who also called the paid download video market a "dead end."
Umm, sure. Let's see... I can watch free content streamed on my PC with ads, or I can buy an AppleTV or an XBox360 and watch on that big screen I invested in. Furthermore, I can carry the video content with me that way (iPod or Zune, respectively). With the free services? I get to watch on my PC, not transfer it anywhere, and have the devil's own time getting it to display on my big TV.
There's also a cultural shift this guy isn't noticing - my daughter and her friends seem much happier to download video (and watch on their iPods) than to stream the video (with ads). The other thing missed by Forrester: the iTunes model has much better support for narrow-casting than does the broadcast ad supported one. I expect to see things sliding toward subscription and away from the broadcast ad model over time - simply because the generic ads are so poorly targeted. I expect to see ad supported subscriptions via iTunes (and similar services) winning, and the broadcast model losing.
I'd recommend this podcast by Glenn and Helen Reynolds for more on this topic.
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subscription, advertising, video
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PR
May 14, 2007 16:44:26.230
I've been sitting on this post for awhile; I forgot that I had flagged it as something worth noticing. I think James Governor is correct though: most marketing and PR departments are wasting time and resources, pumping out information no one cares about (or reads). Most of the websites they maintain are all about "being sticky", having people fill in forms in exchange for downloads (etc). Instead, you want to offer information with plenty of linkage outside your site - if you have good information and products, people will come back for more. You also want syndication (RSS/Atom) everywhere, because the highly connected influencers all use syndication technology - if you don't offer your content that way, they simply won't bother with you - and make sure it's full content, too!
Anyway, go read James Governor's thoughts on PR/Marketing and IT - I think it makes a lot of sense.
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marketing, social media
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smalltalk
May 14, 2007 17:24:21.320
Here's a nice post explaining one of the ways that Smalltalk's live object model helps you out in ways you might not think of: ad-hoc testing - just grab the models directly. This is from a post that goes into testing a new part of a web app:
So I have two choices: (1) I can create the whole GUI that lets one enter data or (2) I can put some extra code in my program to populate the data, for testing.
The problem with 2 is not big, just that I'm wasting time writing stuff I will have to take out later, just so I can test. Choice 1 doesn't have that problem, but it does break my focus. I have to stop working on what I am really interested in: the display pages, to work on a data input page(s).
But Smalltalk has another option (my favorite in fact): I can simply navigate through the live web site objects (via 'find instance of') until I find pages and insert the model data directly.
There are so many little ways like this that Smalltalk just saves you time and trouble.
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development
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development
May 14, 2007 18:13:45.419
This is the kind of problem you run into when you put live object systems onto dead VMs: people start trying to fix the wrong things. Here's Charles Nutter, complaining about ObjectSpace (which is apparently how Ruby manages "all instances") - he wants to get rid of it for JRuby:
There are no plans currently for ObjectSpace to be removed from Ruby in a future version. But there's a problem...in addition to being pure overhead in JRuby (which you can turn off completely by using the -O flag), ObjectSpace limits evolving development of the Ruby garbage collector, breaks heap and memory transparency, and poses yet more problems for threading.
There are many issues here. First off, the JRuby thing. By having to add ObjectSpace governors for all objects in the system, JRuby pays a very large penalty. We're forced to do this because the JVM (and most other advanced garbage-collecting VMs) does not allow you to traverse in-memory objects nor retrieve the object that is associated with a given ID. In general this is because the JVM does all sorts of wonderful and magical things with objects and memory behind the scenes, and the ability to ask for all objects of a given type or pull an object based on some ID number at any time cripples many of these tricks.
The base problem is that the JVM sucks for hosting dynamic languages, and this is just one of the many ways it sucks. Before Charles tosses this feature overboard, he might want to have a look at my last post for an idea as to why such functionality is valuable. Here's a thought - add proper support for dynamic languages to the JVM.
Tossing the baby out with the bathwater isn't really an answer - at least, not a serious one. Down that road you get Java with Ruby syntax, which just doesn't sound that interesting.
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live objects
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copyright
May 15, 2007 8:40:14.493
While reading this CNet story on a proposed extension of copyright law, I flashed on the scene in the original Star Wars flick where Leia first learns about the Death Star - right after she explains that more oppression will only lead to more rebellion.
That's about how I feel about the RIAA's and MPAA's latest wet dream - some of the provisions are just insane:
Criminalize "attempting" to infringe copyright. Federal law currently punishes not-for-profit copyright infringement with between 1 and 10 years in prison, but there has to be actual infringement that takes place. The IPPA would eliminate that requirement. (The Justice Department's summary of the legislation says: "It is a general tenet of the criminal law that those who attempt to commit a crime but do not complete it are as morally culpable as those who succeed in doing so.")
How do you define "attempted" copyright infringement? My guess is that this is an attempt to get rid of all "fair use" rights in one fell swoop. Just consider what the goons at HBO have to say about HD content, and you'll understand what they're playing at here. Amazingly enough, it gets worse:
Create a new crime of life imprisonment for using pirated software. Anyone using counterfeit products who "recklessly causes or attempts to cause death" can be imprisoned for life. During a conference call, Justice Department officials gave the example of a hospital using pirated software instead of paying for it.
That example is so contrived as to be nonsense. I'm hardly in favor of copyright infringement (heck, Cincom sells copyrighted software!) - but life imprisonment? But wait - there's more:
Allow computers to be seized more readily. Specifically, property such as a PC "intended to be used in any manner" to commit a copyright crime would be subject to forfeiture, including civil asset forfeiture. Civil asset forfeiture has become popular among police agencies in drug cases as a way to gain additional revenue, and is problematic and controversial.
Oh boy - a local cop overhears you at the grocery store, talking about a song that a friend mailed you. Next thing you know, they're breaking down your door and taking away all of your equipment. Is it just me, or are music and movie folks suffering from a completely overblown sense of their own importance?
Update: Scoble wonders just how deep the rabbit hole goes.
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law, DRM
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screencast
May 15, 2007 10:02:09.632
On today's Smalltalk Daily, we take a look at what's coming next for the code browser in Cincom Smalltalk.
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smalltalk
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vacation
May 15, 2007 10:08:34.435
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media
May 15, 2007 13:37:37.968
Matthew Ingram notes that the newspaper moguls are still in complete denial:
“Don’t believe all you’re being told about the death of the press: more people all over the world are reading newspapers. What’s more, they’re still a powerful medium for advertising,” he says in a piece for The Independent. In other words, just ignore the dramatic declines in readership and the stories of newspapers laying off thousands of people or putting themselves up for sale. Just a flesh wound.
Someone needs to ask these guys a simple question: How many people 25 or under do you ever see with a newspaper?
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newspapers
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events
May 15, 2007 14:40:39.739
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web
May 15, 2007 23:19:35.711
It was bound to happen sooner or later - what's a cross between Twitter and Digg? Why, Truemors - a site for posting "rumors" in Twitter style. Perfect for hit and run trash...
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copyright
May 16, 2007 8:13:32.933
The more I think about the proposed copyright law, the dumber it sounds. Wired weighed in this morning:
The bill would also make it a criminal act to export pirated materials, as opposed to merely importing, and would grant the feds wiretapping authority when investigating copyright and trademark cases, a power the government does not currently have. Thanks to a new "attempt" provision that wouldn't require the actual commission of a violation, the bill could conceivably be expanded, in an extreme case, to interpret a computer full of music next to a spindle of blank CDs as an act of piracy.
You might say that such an intepretation sounds nuts, but consider how far the push against tobacco has gone since the early 1960s (and never mind what you think about that - just consider where things were then, and where they are now. Then look at the proposal on copyright again).
So along those lines - based on the way the RIAA sees the world, owning CD's and having software like iTunes installed could easily be construed as an attempt to infringe copyright.
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law
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cst
May 16, 2007 9:13:57.719
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screencast
May 16, 2007 10:24:26.858
On today's
Smalltalk Daily, we go through the new icons in the Refactoring
Browser. Have a look at the image below (click through for a bigger
image) - that's what I'm talking about.
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smalltalk, development
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esug2007
May 16, 2007 11:43:35.422
The ESUG guys have some advice for getting to Lugano, the location for ESUG 2007. Timing for me is bad this year, which is a shame - I'd love to visit Lugano :(
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DRM
May 16, 2007 11:49:40.667
This is interesting - even as asinine new copyright proposals get floated, there are signs that DRM for audio is dying the death from a thousand cuts: Amazon is joining the party:
"Our MP3-only strategy means all the music that customers buy on Amazon is always DRM-free and plays on any device," Jeff Bezos, Amazon's chief executive, said in a statement. Users will be able to play their music on virtually any device, including PCs, iPods, Zunes and Zens, as well as burn the songs on CDs for personal use.
Someone explain this to the CTO of HBO - but be sure to use small words.
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music, copyright
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general
May 16, 2007 17:48:40.931
My wife wanted to extend the gardens in our back yard - so this morning I headed outside with a shovel to get the grass up. I did that rather than rent a turf cutter because:
- My car is way too small to carry one
- Getting them to deliver it would have been $50 each way, plus the cost of actually renting it.
So, four hours later, I had this:

Now I'm thinking that the $100 would have been totally worth it - and my back will be only too happy to second that tomorrow...
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events
May 16, 2007 23:43:32.312
Andres Valloud will be speaking about unit testing in Smalltalk at UBA in Buenos Aires this Friday at 7PM. Follow the link for details.
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smalltalk
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