Gmail strips out the "." in email addresses so, for instance, "beetlebailey@gmail.com" and "beetle.bailey@gmail.com" are effectively the same. One advice I heard from before is to give out something like "beetlebail.ey@gmail.com" for signups. Once that becomes compromised, you can automatically filter all messages to that address to trash or spam.
...how we're talking about an e-book writer today making a fair bundle, and just a few Slashdot articles earlier, we learned that the creator of Trumpet Winsock made very little money from his creation twenty years ago.
As far as the Philippines goes, Shirky has got it wrong. Shirky claims that text-messaging mobilization brought Joseph Estrada down. Not true. Estrada's political capital was on a steady decline owing to accusations of corruption and shady deals. Then he had a falling out with his ally, a prominent politician and gambling lord, who tattled on their agreements. Estrada was impeached for, among many other reasons, forging a signature. From there, it was downhill all the way to the precipice: opportunistic politicians made backroom deals, army and police generals withdrew their support, the judiciary colluded, and Estrada's then-vice president Gloria Arroyo took over.
Text messaging? All it did was whip up the mob which provided cover for what can be called, for all intents and purposes, a coup d'etat.
In the latter years of Gloria Arroyo, herself rocked by corruption scandals, all sorts of people tried to use social media to mobilize the crowds: blogs, Facebook, Twitter, what have you. Apart from the noise and the wasted electrons, did it result in her fall from power? No. Because business, congress, judiciary, and the military did not want any turbulent transition.
Social media did play a small role in bearing enough public pressure on Arroyo whenever she and her cronies tried constitutional change and term extension, but only as far as drawing attention of the international media (and the US and Chinese governments) to possible unrest and instability.
As to the actual transition, we did it the old-fashioned way: elections.
I use mGSD (formerly known as MonkeyGTD) for my to-do lists. It lets me keep track of tasks and organize them by projects and by action. It even has some support for dependencies. I can keep it on USB and it's portable between systems. It does take just a bit of effort to understand how to get into it, but once you do, it's pretty intuitive.
For organizing notes, I use Tiddlywiki, the platform on which mGSD is built on.
For keeping track of web sites, I mostly rely on Google Reader.
And for the stuff that I want to remember, I blog. Yeah, I know, blogging, especially the personal kind, doesn't get a whole lot of respect anymore, but I've been able to look back into entries five years ago and say, "Whoa, I did that."
I'm still looking for a good solution for keeping track of files and documents.
A bit of observation and recommendation: I'm just wrapping up a semester teaching World Literature which, in its short span, attempted to cover stories and poems from various times and cultures. Since many in the class seemed inclined to fantasy, I decided to throw in Gaiman ("Snow, Glass, Apples") in the same class as I was teaching Gabriel Garcia-Marquez ("A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings") While the class seemed quite taken with the Gaiman story at first, we actually found more to discuss with Marquez. The Gaiman story seemed pretty straightforward (and on subsequent rereading, had several unexplained plot points), the Garcia-Marquez had more depth. I like to think the class enjoyed the Marquez story more (though the Gaiman story was all right.)
Anyhow, bearing this in mind, I respectfully submit my own list:
Ray Bradbury ("All Summer in a Day" struck me the most)
Stanislaw Lem (check out "Microworlds" for his dissection of scifi -- one thing that struck me about Lem was his focus on the evolution of language)
Kurt Vonnegut,Jr. (obligatory, almost)
Iain M. Banks
Jorge Luis Borges
Ursula K. Le Guin ("The Dispossessed")
Richard Matheson ("I Am Legend")
Walter Tevis ("The Man Who Fell to Earth" and "Mockingbird")
Walter M. Miller Jr. ("A Canticle for Leibowitz", plus several great short stories)
It has happened. H5N1 avian influenza outbreaks in the mid-2000's come to mind. It's just that you have longer latency via airplanes compared to fibre-optics, but oh, they'll get there.
All your base are belong to us!
Kidding aside, I agree with you about capturing the spirit. Apart from the adventure game (which I think you imply), there's also the tactical combat game. (For me, the best Star Trek tactical combat game was Starfleet.)
Are adventure games and tactical combat games candidates for blockbuster hits? Not likely. But I would like to see them in smaller, casual games.
Add to that the fact that most gaming magazines (at least the ones I read five years ago) tend to be atrociously snarky whose writers suffer from an excess of personality. Not fun to read at all.
The list seems to mix up categories. Some listed are cities or states, but some are entire countries. Where in Finland, Japan, Taiwan, or Romania, exactly?
I beg to disagree. A search of publicly available documents shows that NavyStar has Windows and DOS components. Fujitsu's ITSEC certification report (No. P230), in particular, shows Windows XP, Windows XPe, and DOS clients. See diagram on page 10.
Also, the article doesn't say that the servers were hit. Only that the system was based on a server cabinet and cable-networked PCs. As I understand it, NavyStar is a hardware platform of ruggedized PC components.
I'll second that. When I install Ubuntu, I prefer using the Alternate Install image. That's because the machines I'm running on just cover the minimum memory requirements (256MB). Plus, it also allows me to do a minimal command-line only install (other parts to be added later.)
If you eat a lot of chicken, you're going to grow boobs. That's from the hormones they inject into the chicks to make them grow fast.
Gmail strips out the "." in email addresses so, for instance, "beetlebailey@gmail.com" and "beetle.bailey@gmail.com" are effectively the same. One advice I heard from before is to give out something like "beetlebail.ey@gmail.com" for signups. Once that becomes compromised, you can automatically filter all messages to that address to trash or spam.
...how we're talking about an e-book writer today making a fair bundle, and just a few Slashdot articles earlier, we learned that the creator of Trumpet Winsock made very little money from his creation twenty years ago.
He would know, of all people. It's that simple, really.
...outsource it to Facebook.
Bwa ha ha ha ha!
Now that Tron: Legacy has made kaboodles of money, will it be long before we see a remake of Automan on TV?
Eternity ain't what it used to be.
As far as the Philippines goes, Shirky has got it wrong. Shirky claims that text-messaging mobilization brought Joseph Estrada down. Not true. Estrada's political capital was on a steady decline owing to accusations of corruption and shady deals. Then he had a falling out with his ally, a prominent politician and gambling lord, who tattled on their agreements. Estrada was impeached for, among many other reasons, forging a signature. From there, it was downhill all the way to the precipice: opportunistic politicians made backroom deals, army and police generals withdrew their support, the judiciary colluded, and Estrada's then-vice president Gloria Arroyo took over.
Text messaging? All it did was whip up the mob which provided cover for what can be called, for all intents and purposes, a coup d'etat.
In the latter years of Gloria Arroyo, herself rocked by corruption scandals, all sorts of people tried to use social media to mobilize the crowds: blogs, Facebook, Twitter, what have you. Apart from the noise and the wasted electrons, did it result in her fall from power? No. Because business, congress, judiciary, and the military did not want any turbulent transition.
Social media did play a small role in bearing enough public pressure on Arroyo whenever she and her cronies tried constitutional change and term extension, but only as far as drawing attention of the international media (and the US and Chinese governments) to possible unrest and instability.
As to the actual transition, we did it the old-fashioned way: elections.
It seems to me that a DSLR nowadays functions mainly as bling. Photography is a distant secondary function.
I use mGSD (formerly known as MonkeyGTD) for my to-do lists. It lets me keep track of tasks and organize them by projects and by action. It even has some support for dependencies. I can keep it on USB and it's portable between systems. It does take just a bit of effort to understand how to get into it, but once you do, it's pretty intuitive.
For organizing notes, I use Tiddlywiki, the platform on which mGSD is built on.
For keeping track of web sites, I mostly rely on Google Reader.
And for the stuff that I want to remember, I blog. Yeah, I know, blogging, especially the personal kind, doesn't get a whole lot of respect anymore, but I've been able to look back into entries five years ago and say, "Whoa, I did that."
I'm still looking for a good solution for keeping track of files and documents.
...but it's more likely he'll forget where he hid it.
...is a laser?
Anyhow, bearing this in mind, I respectfully submit my own list:
It has happened. H5N1 avian influenza outbreaks in the mid-2000's come to mind. It's just that you have longer latency via airplanes compared to fibre-optics, but oh, they'll get there.
All your base are belong to us! Kidding aside, I agree with you about capturing the spirit. Apart from the adventure game (which I think you imply), there's also the tactical combat game. (For me, the best Star Trek tactical combat game was Starfleet.) Are adventure games and tactical combat games candidates for blockbuster hits? Not likely. But I would like to see them in smaller, casual games.
...this one got a smile out of me.
Add to that the fact that most gaming magazines (at least the ones I read five years ago) tend to be atrociously snarky whose writers suffer from an excess of personality. Not fun to read at all.
Facts are the enemy of the truth!
Try http://ngoinabox.org/, They offer four versions, but the most apropos is their Base Edition, with more detailed info here http://base.ngoinabox.org./ For donation tracking, the component they use is CiviCRM - http://civicrm.org/.
Maybe a "FIRST POST" comment should automatically be attached to every article?
And here I was thinking Rorschach. :-D
At the thirteenth installment? Doesn't seem so final at all.
The list seems to mix up categories. Some listed are cities or states, but some are entire countries. Where in Finland, Japan, Taiwan, or Romania, exactly?
I beg to disagree. A search of publicly available documents shows that NavyStar has Windows and DOS components. Fujitsu's ITSEC certification report (No. P230), in particular, shows Windows XP, Windows XPe, and DOS clients. See diagram on page 10.
Also, the article doesn't say that the servers were hit. Only that the system was based on a server cabinet and cable-networked PCs. As I understand it, NavyStar is a hardware platform of ruggedized PC components.
I'll second that. When I install Ubuntu, I prefer using the Alternate Install image. That's because the machines I'm running on just cover the minimum memory requirements (256MB). Plus, it also allows me to do a minimal command-line only install (other parts to be added later.)