...so i'm not really particularly familiar with the way C-SPAN anchors conduct their interviews, but wow... reading the transcript, the anchors go off on really weird tangents.
the nytimes website needs google for the traffic google brings into their pages, so they can't turn away their spiders. but then, they don't want the spiders either because of copyright violations.
why should this be google's problem anyway?
There's really a problem though about getting the word out to people, in pretty much the same way the popularity of libraries today has been dropping. A good idea would be a separate advocacy site to come up with lists of texts in the project (i.e. What's New?, Most Popular, etc.) to help people wade in immediately.
...so i'm not really particularly familiar with the way C-SPAN anchors conduct their interviews, but wow... reading the transcript, the anchors go off on really weird tangents.
the nytimes website needs google for the traffic google brings into their pages, so they can't turn away their spiders. but then, they don't want the spiders either because of copyright violations. why should this be google's problem anyway?
There's really a problem though about getting the word out to people, in pretty much the same way the popularity of libraries today has been dropping. A good idea would be a separate advocacy site to come up with lists of texts in the project (i.e. What's New?, Most Popular, etc.) to help people wade in immediately.