Friday, March 31, 2006

Posting to the Sequim Magazine BLOG

DRUG companies have outsourced about half of all clinical drug trials
to Indian, China and Brazil, where it is easier and cheaper to find
poor suckers willing to taken unproven drugs for a fee.

About 46 THOUSAND vets of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars have already
gone to VA centers seeking treatment for mental health problems.

News that hurts.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

News - audio and video streams

News - audio and video streams: http://www.freepint.com/gary/audio.htm

Chilean salmon for $4.84 a pound

Global fishiness
How can Wal-Mart sell Chilean salmon for $4.84 a pound? An excerpt
from "The Wal-Mart Effect."

Editor's note: In 2006, the name Wal-Mart may have more polarizing power than any other corporate brand. The world's most powerful company is an economic juggernaut, political flashpoint and social
phenomenon. In "The Wal-Mart Effect," a thoughtful, comprehensive examination of how those famous "everyday low prices" are changing the world, Fast Company writer Charles Fishman offers up a compelling look at the company that, more than any other firm, is driving the global economy.

http://www.salon.com/tech/books/2006/01/23/walmart_effect/index_np.htm
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Monday, March 27, 2006

Inside Firefox - The Inside Track on Firefox Development

Inside Firefox - The Inside Track on Firefox Development: "March 26, 2006
Writing for Busy People

Back when I was in University, many of the lecturers stressed time and time again the importance of succinct, well organized writing. They said over and over that this was the best way to have your thoughts read and understood by decision makers. In fact, they scared us by saying that 70% of us would become managers sooner or later!

Well, I can tell you that's sage advice. It's great when people make contributions in the form of ideas and proposals, but it's even better when they're written for busy people. Here are some examples:

* Making important points up front
* Clear taxonomy of headings, and lots of them
* Writing clearly and succinctly
* No long, unbroken paragraphs or tracts of text.
* Preferring bulleted lists with clear points to paragraphs.
* Use of emphasis in formatting to make important things clear

These days, I find I don't have a lot of time to read everything carefully, so the better structured a document is, the more I get out of it. I frequently find I miss entire subsections or points of documents, even when there's relatively little text, because of incomplete organization. My eyes definitely glaze over when i see a large block of unbroken text with few headings. "

Monday, March 20, 2006

Day of Reckoning for the Current Occupant

By Garrison Keillor
The Chicago Tribune
Wednesday 15 March 2006

Spring arrived in New York last week for previews, a sunny day
with
chill in the air, but you could smell mud, and with a little
imagination you
could sort of smell grass. I put on a gray jacket, instead of black,
and
went to the opera and saw Verdi's "Luisa Miller," a Republican opera
in
which love is crushed by the perfidiousness of government. A helpful
lesson
for these times. I am referring to the Current Occupant.

The Republican Revolution has gone the way of all flesh. It took
over
Congress and the White House, horns blew, church bells rang, sailors
kissed
each other, and what happened? The Republicans led us into a reckless
foreign war and steered the economy toward receivership and wielded
power
as if there were no rules. Democrats are accused of having no new
ideas, but
Republicans are making some of the old ideas look awfully good, such
as
constitutional checks and balances, fiscal responsibility, and the
notion of
realism in foreign affairs and taking actions that serve the national
interest. What one might call "conservatism."

The head of the National Security Agency under President Ronald
Reagan,
Lt. Gen. William Odom, writes on the Web site NiemanWatchdog.org that
he
sees clear parallels between Vietnam and Iraq: "The difference lies in
the
consequences. Vietnam did not have the devastating effects on US power
that
Iraq is already having." He draws the parallels in three stages and
says
that staying the course will only make the damage to US power greater.
It's
a chilling analysis, and one that isn't going to come from the
Democratic
Party. It's starting to come from Republicans, and they are the ones
who
must rescue the country from themselves.

I ran into a gray eminence from the Bush I era the other day in an
airport, and he said that what most offended him about Bush II is the
naked
incompetence. "You may disagree with Republicans, but you always had
to
recognize that they knew what they were doing," he said. "I keep going
back
to that intelligence memo of August 2001, that said that terrorists
had
plans to hijack planes and crash them into buildings. The president
read it,
and he didn't even call a staff meeting to discuss it. That is lack of
attention of a high order."

Over the course of time, the Chief Occupant has been cruelly
exposed
over and over. He sat and was briefed on the danger of a hurricane
wiping
out a major American city, and without asking a single question, he
got up
from the table and walked away and resumed his vacation. He played
guitar as
New Orleans was flooded. It took him four days to realize his
responsibility
to do something. When the tsunami killed 100,000 people in Southeast
Asia,
he was on vacation and it took him 72 hours to issue a statement of
sympathy.

The Republicans tied their wagon to him and, as a result, their
revolution is bankrupt. He has played the terrorism card for all it is
worth
and campaigned successfully against Adam and Steve and co-opted whole
vast
flocks of Christians, but he is done now, kaput, out of gas, for one
simple
reason. He doesn't represent the best that is our country. Not even
close.

He openly, brazenly, countenanced crimes of torture at Guantanamo,
Abu
Ghraib and Bagram. He engaged in illegal surveillance, authorized the
arrest
of people without charge and "disappeared" them to foreign jails. And
he
finagled this war, which, after three years of violence, does not look
to
be heading toward a happy ending. And now it's up to Republicans to
put
their country first and call the gentleman to account.

The Current Occupant is smart about handling a political mess. The
best
strategy is to cut and run and change the subject. You defend the
Dubai
ports deal in manly terms until you lose a vote in a House committee
and
then you retreat - actually, you get the Dubai people to do it for
you -
and that's it, End of Story.

Harriet Miers was fully qualified one day and gone the next.
Social
Security was going to be overhauled to give us the Ownership Society,
and
then the stock market went in the toilet and Republicans got nervous,
and
suddenly it was Never Mind and on to the next new thing.

Let's bring the boys home. Otherwise, let's send this man back to
Texas
and see what sort of work he is capable of and let him start making a
contribution to the world.

(Garrison Keillor is an author and the radio host of "A Prairie Home
Companion."

Friday, March 03, 2006

BitTorrent - Introduction

BitTorrent - Introduction BitTorrent is a free speech tool. BitTorrent gives you the same freedom to publish previously enjoyed by only a select few with special equipment and lots of money. ("Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one" -- journalist A.J. Liebling.) You have something terrific to publish -- a large music or video file, software, a game or anything else that many people would like to have. But the more popular your file becomes, the more you are punished by soaring bandwidth costs. If your file becomes phenomenally successful and a flash crowd of hundreds or thousands try to get it at once, your server simply crashes and no one gets it.

DenverPost.com - Search - FAST

DenverPost.com - Search - FAST Teacher caught in Bush "rant"
The Overland High educator is on administrative leave. Cherry Creek's superintendent said a balanced viewpoint will be given to students.
By Karen Rouse
Denver Post Staff Writer

An Overland High School teacher who criticized President Bush, capitalism and U.S. foreign policy during his geography class was placed on administrative leave Wednesday afternoon after a student who recorded the session went public with the tape.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

CBN NEWS - Focus- 'Crunchy Cons' Value Family and Family

CBN NEWS - Focus- 'Crunchy Cons' Value Family and Family Crunchy cons is a term coined by journalist Rod Dreher, who realized after he and his wife got hooked on the superior taste of organic foods, that he himself might be a crunchy con -- or crunchy conservative.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Posting to the Sequim Magazine BLOG

Participatory Culture is excited to announce that we've just released
the beta version for Windows of our video player. With this last piece
falling into place, we're also announcing a new name for this free and
open-source internet TV platform: Democracy.
You can download the Democracy player for Windows right now, free as
always, on our new community website:
http://www.getdemocracy.com/

The Next Big Things for Newspapers: Podcasting, Vodcasting

The Next Big Things for Newspapers: Podcasting, Vodcasting: "By Steve Outing

(February 20, 2006) -- Podcasting and vodcasting may not yet be entirely mainstream, but with the popularity of Apple's iPod portable music player (and competing brands) and its podcast-ready iTunes music software, that's not far away. Ergo, these new media formats should become part of any newspaper's content strategy. Indeed, for a small but growing number of newspapers, they already are."

Creative Types Really Do Get More Action, But Are They Any Good? -- New York Magazine

Creative Types Really Do Get More Action, But Are They Any Good? -- New York Magazine

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Just a reminder so you won't forget


My name is Mary Jo Kopechne


I would have been 65 years of age this year.

Read about me and my killer below:

When Sen. Ted Kennedy was merely just another Democrat bloating on Capitol Hill on behalf of liberal causes, it was perhaps excusable to ignore his deplorable past.

But now that he's become a leading Republican attack dog, positioning himself as Washington's leading arbiter of truth and integrity, the days for such indulgence are now over.

It's time for the GOP to stand up and remind America why this chief spokesman had to abandon his own presidential bid in 1980 - time to say the words "Mary Jo Kopechne" out loud.

As is often the case, Republicans have deluded themselves into thinking that most Americans already know the story of how this "Conscience of the Democratic Party" left Miss Kopechne behind to die in the waters underneath the Edgartown Bridge in July 1969, after a night of drinking and partying with the young blonde campaign worker. But most Americans under 40 have never heard that story, or details of how Kennedy swam to safety, then tried to get his cousin Joe Garghan to say he was behind the wheel.

Those young voters don't know how Miss Kopechne, trapped inside Kennedy's Oldsmobile, gasped for air until she finally died, while the Democrats' leading Iraq war critic rushed back to his compound to formulate the best alibi he could think of.

Neither does Generation X know how Kennedy was thrown out of Harvard on his ear 15 years earlier -- for paying a fellow student to take his Spanish final. Or why the US Army denied him a commission because he cheated on tests.

As they listen to the Democrats' "Liberal Lion" accuse President Bush of "telling lie after lie after lie" to get America to go to war in Iraq, young voters don't know about that notorious 1991 Easter weekend in Palm Beach when Uncle Teddy rounded up his nephews for a night on the town, an evening that ended with one of them credibly accused of rape.

It's time for Republicans to state unabashedly that they will no longer "go along with the gag" when it comes to Uncle Ted's rants about deception and moral turpitude inside the Bush White House.

And if the Republicans don't, let's do it ourselves by passing this forgotten disgrace around the Internet to wake up memories of what a fraud and fake Teddy really is.

The Democratic Party should be ashamed to have this national disgrace from Massachusetts as their spokesman.


  



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Friday, February 17, 2006

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Vlogging takes off and boosts hope for citizen journalism

Vlogging takes off and boosts hope for citizen journalism: " Highlight: Amanda Congdon, co-writer of 'Rocketboom,' discusses the surge in interest surrounding 'vlogging,' or blogging with video content, usually in the form of a video diary or reality show."

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Web Design Reference Guide

Web Design Reference Guide Finding Your Blogging Voice
Last updated Feb 3, 2006. By Dave Taylor
-What writing style will produce the best results on your blog?

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Schneier on Security: Is the NSA Reading Your E-Mail?

Schneier on Security: Is the NSA Reading Your E-Mail?: "Schneier on Security-A weblog covering security and security technology. December 26, 2005 Is the NSA Reading Your E-Mail? - Richard M Smith has some interesting ideas on how to test if the NSA is eavesdropping on your e-mail."

Thursday, January 26, 2006

FAQ: The new 'annoy' law explained | CNET News.com

FAQ: The new 'annoy' law explained | CNET News.com

Create an e-annoyance, go to jail | Perspectives | CNET News.com

Create an e-annoyance, go to jail | Perspectives | CNET News.com: "Annoying someone via the Internet is now a federal crime.

It's no joke. Last Thursday, President Bush signed into law a prohibition on posting annoying Web messages or sending annoying e-mail messages without disclosing your true identity."