This is a combination of multiple themed blogs throughout the years. Now it's just a catch-all. Enjoy.
Thursday, June 28, 2001
Wednesday, June 27, 2001
Monday, June 25, 2001
Sunday, June 24, 2001
Thursday, June 21, 2001
Wednesday, June 20, 2001
- Clifford Stoll's Home page - Clifford Stoll takes a critical look at technology in his three books, Cuckoo's Egg, SIlicon Snake Oil, and High Tech Heretic (hear him on the connection).He also makes cool looking klein bottles.
- Neil Postman's The Disappearance of Childhood - discusses how with the advent of the internet and mass media, the distance between the information a child and an adult has access to is shrinking, therefore causing the difference between actual childhood and adulthood to shrink.
- Gates' Grand Design - Bill talks about Windows XP.
- PR Newswire
Tuesday, June 19, 2001
Story idea- Fund analysts are the rock stars of the '00s. They set business trends in America's culture of business. Driving around, spending money to make money, spending on savings, living off caffeine and adrenaline. Power-lifting and jogging until they drop. They are the trend setters, the cultural arbiters of our time, these neo-yuppies on their never-ending quest to economize and slim down both their companies and their bodies, until they are one and the same. Their image is their substance.
Monday, June 18, 2001
Thursday, June 14, 2001
Flyswat
Wednesday, June 13, 2001
KurzweilAI.net - new way of describing the net. Check out the singularity and evolution's exponential growth rate.
Found the above on DC Denison's Weblog.
Tuesday, June 12, 2001
Old News:
Sexual harassment at Juno -- Internet companies, with 20-something managers fresh out of Ivy league schools, are not much different from mature companies (and possibly worse), when it comes to sexual power plays in the workplace. Well researched article.
Monday, June 11, 2001
Unix-related help sites
(research for work)
UNIX Reference desk from geek-girl.
Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing (FOLDOC)
X Windows
The WorldWideWeb Acronym and Abbreviation Server
The X consortium
I'm following some marketing campaigns and the companies behind them. Check this one out--Newsboy promo, by New York-basedThe Hired Guns.
This one started me out on this track: Harley promo by Umbrella Marketing (Mesa, AZ).
Thursday, June 7, 2001
Microsoft messaging tactics recall browser wars - Tech News - CNET.com
release, and the condensed press release in the href="http://www.gilbane.com/news.htm">Gilbane
Report, now CNet has written the first article on
Bitstream's new href="http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1004-200-6217963.html?tag=mn_hd#">Thunderhawk
browser. Here comes the buzz...
exits DSL/Cable Arena
The phone company will control all wire access, including
cable. AOL will buy AT&T next, to form AOLT&T.
Microsoft will buy Sprint and MCI, and the new
conglomeration will be called MCIMicroSprint. Cellular
One, Cingular, Verizon, Voicestream and the rest of
the baby bells will combine to form Cellularizonstreamular.
Funny how they don't include company information and financial results. In my opinion, that information adds value, even if it were one click away...
File under further complication of the net:
I wonder when a law will be passed requiring people and businesses to get permission from a site before being able to create a link to it. This link got me thinking, if copyrighted works require permission, why not links?
Publishville.com -- Flash in the pan or another way to publish books? You decide.
Handspring Trade-In Program -- Palm did this before, when Jeff Hawkins and Donna Dubinsky were in charge. I got $75 for trading in my first Palm.
Last night I watched the DVD commentary for Fight Club with David Fincher, Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, and Helena Bonham Carter. There are three commentaries on the disk -- another with Chuck Palahniuk and Jim Uhls, and the last with the digital effects guys. It was better than the commentary on The Matrix, which supposedly had Carrie-Anne Moss, the editor and the digital effect supervisor. But when I listened to it, it sounds like Carrie-Anne left after the first half-hour, and the editor sounds like a dolt. The only reason for listening is for the sardonic comments by the visual effects supervisor.
In Fight Club, the commentary was edited so that there is talking nonstop throughout the film. Helena was recorded seperately, but she's edited in so that it doesn't effect the commentary, except for one part in the project mayhem flashback scene, where the globe in the fountain is destroyed and rolls into the coffee shop. Helena is edited in, and when she's finished, the commentary reverts back to Edward Norton and Fincher talking, only I can't follow what they are talking about because I don't know what they are referring to.
There's one point, the bar scene with Tyler and Jack when they first meet, when Ed and Brad are talking about Rosie O'Donnell's reaction to the movie -- how it disturbed her and how it wasn't kind of her to give away the ending on national television. They talk about whether it's good or bad to be trashing her on the DVD. Ed says that anyone watching the commentary who has gotten this far is a true fan... anyone listening he assumes is cool. I like that.
Overall, I give the commentary an 8/10. Although I liked it, sometimes the stars talked over one another, and there wasn't a set plan of what they were going to talk about. They also were watching the movie with no sound -- I don't know if that affected what they were commenting about or not. But it was good, and I recommend listening to it.
Next is track 2, with the writers...
Wednesday, June 6, 2001
Tuesday, June 5, 2001
Do Analysts Eat Donuts?
Do analysts like to be negative about a good thing? I remember back in '94 when technology stocks were on the rise. I was buying and selling Iomega and Netscape almost daily. Stocks, which previously never went up more than a point or two a day, were suddenly shooting skyward 5-10 points a day. This overenthusiasm spread in the nineties until some stocks were rising 30-40 points a day. Now that small investors have taken Peter Lynch's advice to buy companies they know, analysts are eager to bring down Krispy Kreme from its sugar high(TheStreet.com: The Hole in the Krispy Kreme Craze).
The difference with KKR is that management is taking expansion slow enough that they're not going to become another Boston Market (Boston Market was a successful Massachussetts gourmet fast food restaurant that sold roasted chicken and sides. The food was good, and fast, but unfortunately, the stores expanded too quickly and the chain eventually went bankrupt and had to scale back.).
Krispy Kreme donuts have been popular since the store started selling them in 1937. This is not a recent fad that will blow out like an overstuffed jelly donut. Krispy Kreme will become the Starbucks of the '00s. I know I'll be eating at least one a day once they open up a store in my area.