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2003-02-27
Skirtrepreneurship
Googlejuicery In other transparent skirt news, yet another blogger -- UmamiTsunami -- agrees that even though these started out as a hoax, they're sure to become real soon. She writes: but the fact remains - someone needs to make this skirt, because i guarantee that hundreds, if not thousands, of american girls will want them. including me.The net reifies offbeat ideas. It's practically a Forbidden Planet. I tell ya. Beware the Monster from the Id! «» (0) comments
2003-02-25
Interwoven Celebrates Imbecilic Patent Grant
Prior Art Museum A system and method for file management is comprised of hierarchical files systems, referred to as "areas." There are three types of areas: work areas, staging areas, and edition areas. A work area is a modifiable file system, and, in a work area a user can create, edit, and delete files and directories. A staging area is a read-only file system that supports select versioning operations. Various users of work areas can integrate their work by submitting the contents of their work area to the staging area. In the staging area, developers can compare their work and see how their changes fit together. An edition is a read-only file system, and the contents of a staging area are virtually copied into an edition to create a frozen, read-only snapshot of the contents of the staging area. One use of the system and method for file management is as a website development tool.Um, that description would cover the use of any moderately-featured source-code control system for web development. That's the first thing anyone with experience in coding projects tried for controlling web content in the early-to-mid-90s. We used Microsoft SourceSafe to version our intranet and public internet websites at Activerse by late 1996 (maybe even earlier), and I'm sure many others were using other filesystem-backed version-control software similarly even earlier. Interwoven filed this patent in 1998. Sometimes the abstract isn't fair; the claims of a patent -- which are after all the only part that legally matters -- may elucidate the novelty and usefulness of an invention more effectively. But that's not the case here. Each of the patent's 13 claims just further describes what was already common practice for software and technical documentation development a decade or more ago -- and what many teams independently adopted as their practices for web file management throughout the 90s. Interwoven wasted their money pursuing this absurd patent for an obvious and non-novel system. Let's see if they waste any more money trying to enforce it -- or if instead this patent just goes into that limbo where it remains legally valid but not credible enough to risk enforcing. (I suspect that tens of thousands of granted patents, perhaps even a majority of all unexpired patents, fall into this same limbo category.) «» (0) comments
"Transparent" Skirts Likely Fakes -- At Least For Now!
Self-Fulfilling (Negating?) Hoaxery But now that the idea is loose, some enterprising souls, somewhere, will surely whip up truly transparent skirts, or the painted version, or both. It's the nature of the web to propagate, magnify -- and finally, reify -- such novel concepts. So these photos aren't so much a hoax as they are mockups -- a sort of product proposal, thrown out into the noosphere, and another example of the LazyWeb in action. «» (0) comments
2003-02-17
Iraqis On The War
Witnesses for the Prosecution But when it was suggested that they could hardly wish to be liberated by a country they distrusted so much � that they might prefer President Bush to extend the United Nations weapons inspections and stand down the armada he has massed on Iraq's frontiers � they erupted in dismay.Dr B Khalaf in The Guardian (UK): ...And why I will not [march] I write this to protest against all those people who oppose the war against Saddam Hussein, or as they call it, the "war against Iraq". I am an Iraqi doctor, I worked in the Iraqi army for six years during Iraq-Iran war and four months during Gulf war. All my family still live in Iraq. I am an Arab Sunni, not Kurdish or Shia. I am an ordinary Iraqi not involved with the Iraqi opposition outside Iraq.«» (0) comments
2003-02-15
More Evidence for Contagious Longevity
Infectious Optimism Ward Wow, Thursday featured a mini epidemic of stories with support for a pet theory of mine, that there exist a wide range of mostly-undiscovered viruses (and perhaps other contagions) whose net effects on health and longevity are positive. Below, I highlighted the discovery that a benign viral infection can interfere with HIV's damaging effects. Now, as reported in the Wired News article above, it turns out that people living to be over 100 are five times more likely to have a specific mutation in their mitochondrial DNA. Such DNA resides in the tiny mitochondria substructures inside each cell, and this DNA is generally believed to be inherited strictly from one's mother -- since the mother's donated egg cell (with its mitochondria) is the progenitor of every cell in the body, while the father's donated sperm cell is considered to merge its genetic payload with the egg nucleus and then drop out of the picture. However, here's the kicker about this specific longevity-correlated mitochondrial DNA mutation: To see whether the mutation is inherited, the team studied skin cells collected from the same individuals between nine and 19 years apart.How does someone acquire a mutation during their lifetime? Viruses. So while the chain of causation is still far from clear, these results are consistent with the idea that some of these centenarians were infected with viruses which changed their mitochondrial DNA, and perhaps even enhanced their health, during their lifetime. If this mechanism for improved health is confirmed, I want me some o' them viruses! Will the healthy elderly some day find their blood to be a valuable commodity -- an 'all-natural' patent medicine for an indeterminately wide spectrum of maladies? (Might any mysteriously effective traditional medical practices rely on the act -- even if not by conscious intent -- of transferring curative infections from old-aged medicine-men to their ailing patients?) «» (0) comments
2003-02-14
Anti-HIV Saluvirus Found
Infectious Optimism Ward
An ancient virus that has tagged along harmlessly through human evolution appears to improve people's chances of surviving AIDS by blocking HIV's ability to infect blood cells, new research shows.I think we'll find a lot of subtly beneficial contagions once we seriously start to look for them. It may become common practice someday to survey the full complement of commensal flora in healthy, long-lived people to find new beneficial infectious agents -- or even to intentionally transfuse the blood from healthy, long-lived people to the young or ill, in the hopes of transferring contagious good health, even without knowing precisely which agents are salubrious. (I've written about this before, where I also suggested the term saluvirus for health-giving viruses.) «» (0) comments
2003-02-11
MusicBrainz Outta Beta!
Launch Control The website has a fresh look and more details than ever before about the history, progress, and future of this public resource. The White Paper on MusicBrainz's plans to become a self-sustaining non-profit corporation is especially informative. New with this launch is also an innovative triple-licensing strategy. First, recognizing the important principle that facts are not copyrightable, MusicBrainz explicitly affirms that the factual information in its database is in the public domain, free for all to use. Second, in a compact with its community of volunteer contributors, it offers all original/derived/authored materials in its database under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License. Finally, when commercial initiatives seek to use the MusicBrainz data, case-by-case commercial licenses will be offered in return for financial sponsorship which allows the project to continue. This three-track approach attempts balances the public interest, contributor desires, and the long-term health of the MusicBrainz project, and could become a model for other not-for-profit community-authored projects. I'm rooting for this innovative model -- and if you are too, you can join me and other supporters by contributing your time, money, or expertise directly to MusicBrainz. (I just PayPal'd $50...) «» (0) comments
2003-02-10
"Creative" Mac-heads get cut all the slack...
Double Standards Department Dell spokesdude Benjamin Curtis was arrested late Sunday (2/9) in Manhattan on a marijuana possession charge. And yet Apple "switcher" Ellen Feiss still walks the streets as free (and probably as high) as a bird. «» (0) comments
2003-02-05
Warsharing? Sony Announces WiFi Portable File Server
Neologism Division German site Computerwoche ("Computer Week") has more information, in article: Sony announces WiFi Fileserver in the Walkman format (Google translation): MUNICH (COMPUTER WEEK) - Japanese electronics company Sony has a portable file server presented which, which kommunziert over Wireless LAN with PCS and PDAs. The "Fsv-pg1" works with a Linux based operating system and contains a 20-GB-Festplatte in the 2,5-Zoll-Format, 17 GB of it is available for user data. The equipment fits with masses of 83 x 155 x of 31 millimeters loosely into a hand and weighs 390 gram. For the enterprise all thing a power pack is necessary, the internal Akku serves only for baking UP purposes.You might call the kind of drive-by file sharing enabled by such devices "warsharing". «» (0) comments
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