"If you’ve used the infamous file-sharing program Napster, you know that while it’s very cool, you still have to wait for the song to download before you can listen to it. A new Silicon Valley start-up called Friskit has come up with something way cooler than file-sharing: stream-sharing. Go to Friskit.com, type in the name of the artist, genre or song that you want to hear, and a few seconds later your chosen music starts playing. How? Friskit searches the Internet for Web sites that stream music (in RealAudio, Windows Media or MP3 formats), then serves them up to you one after the other with very little wait (and no hard-drive clutter, since there’s no downloading). Even better, the interface is so simple and elegant that anyone can use it—something the major record labels with their billion-dollar revenues haven’t been able to manage."one big caveat - the web interface doesn't render properly with mozilla.
"Undermining Darwin, humiliating one of the most popular science authors alive in Gould, relegating mathematics to the bargain counter - Wolfram knows the scientific community may savage him. He has, he says, intentionally tackled each scientific discipline only enough to pique the interest of its members but not enough "to spoil everybody's fun." Still, he predicts, "People in specialties will be convinced I missed the point." That's why, he says, he's included in the book "a complete history of their field" - as if that's going to do anything but infuriate them more.if nothing else, a new kind of science should at list stir-up the pot a little, which is often a good thing.
For all of his scientific brilliance and real-world success, there is something shockingly naive about Wolfram. He honestly thinks that he can attack the foundation of the modern world, the life's work of millions of scientists, and the heart and soul of academia?and not suffer more than a brief, grumpy backlash before he is lauded as the new King of Science. He also is convinced that his New Science is so simple and so self-evident that he will be invited on talk radio shows all around the country - no doubt explaining the nuances of cellular automata to Howard Stern and his fans."
as some of you know, we have dogs. what most of you don't know is that mauja [inuit for "light, deep snow"] the malamute has been sick since thanksgiving. he hasn't been able to keep down any food and has generally been acting pretty pathetic. " Hackers exploiting a loophole in America Online's signup process have begun taking their pick of AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) accounts, hijacking them virtually at will.
The technique emerged early this month on AOL-Files, a meeting place for AOL hackers, where it was born as a harmless hack that allows users to establish AOL accounts with screen names that are -- unconventionally -- indented.
The more sinister applications of the bug became clear later. "It wasn't until recently that anyone noticed that it could be used to hijack Instant Messenger accounts," says Adrian Lamo, founder of Inside-AOL and a longtime chronicler of AOL's foibles. "And it only became a significant problem in the past week.""
"On the Semantic Web, the target audience is the machines rather than humans. To satisfy the demands of this audience, information needs to be available in machine-processable form rather than as unstructured text. A variety of information models like RDF or UML are available to fulfil this purpose, varying greatly in their capabilities. The advent of XML leveraged a promising consensus on the encoding syntax for machine-processable information. However, interoperating between different information models on a syntactic level proved to be a laborious task. In this paper, we suggest a layered approach to interoperability of information models that borrows from layered software structuring techniques used in today's internetworking. We identify the object layer that fills the gap between the syntax and semantic layers and examine it in detail. We suggest the key features of the object layer like identity and binary relationships, basic typing, reification, ordering, and n-ary relationships. Finally, we examine design issues and implementation alternatives involved in building the object layer."
Riding on the open-source wagon"In a market overflowing with Internet-enabled applications, vendors increasingly are counting on the magic words "open source" to attract venture capitalists, partners, and customer interest.Those nagging open source details
But are software vendors using open source merely as a way to stand out from the crowd? Or do open-source versions of applications merit consideration above and beyond the buzzword factor?"""Basically, their message is, the only way to run your business is to have one very-powerful database," Error said. "Maybe you can have one back-up [database] server for redundancy, or if you really want to get crazy you can adopt their parallel server product, but most companies can't afford that. [Oracle] is really neglecting the whole distributed idea, that you can partition a database across multiple machines and take advantage of the scaling effects that come as a result."Choosing Open Source: What Does It Mean?
In other words, the same market forces that three years ago forced many Internet Service Providers to use Linux and Apache as Web servers have created the opportunity for growing open source marketshare in the database market as well.""So I guess if I had to formulate a succinct answer to Joe's question, I'd have to say this: Linux is not behind Windows because Linux isn't following Windows. We're doing things a different way, the correct way. We admit bugs when they happen and do our best to fix them. Our feature sets are not dictated by marketing and PR departments. We give back to the community. We help each other. We foster the belief that stability and correctness are fundamental to design. We do not lie to our users or to each other. Money is nice, but it's not our primary motivator. We are proud, passionate, nettlesome, partisan, opinionated, occasionally muleheaded and foul-mouthed. Linux is a belief system and a philosophy as much as a body of software.Inside Red Hat: An interview with the CEO
I choose to belong to this society because I want to stand for something. I want my code to stand for something besides profit and loss.""People don't buy operating systems. They buy solutions to a business problem. I think back on this because there were 14 applications running on Red Hat Linux at the time of our IPO. Today we guesstimate that there are between 5,000 and 6,000 applications."Open-sourcing the Apple
"The place that we have is at the root-directory level of Linux. So imagine our capability: being able to get inside of somebody's network architecture, server architecture, with complete open source solutions that allow me to automatically configure systems for you, with over 600 different open source products and packages that have been certified by Red Hat. That can be mirrored and delivered to you all online.""A powerful OS that runs popular applications would represent a Unix that has finally grown up. And it would present us with a truly interesting question: Should Microsoft be worried? I say yes, because Mac OS X can potentially challenge Windows both in usability and in industrial reliability; but, no, because Apple's slice of the market is still too small, and Microsoft's sway with developers and independent software vendors is too high.Setting Up Shop: The Business of Open-Source Software
Apple's chances would increase greatly if instead of merely incorporating portions of an open-source operating system in Mac OS X, the company fully committed to the open-source software development model and freed all of its OS source code.""Commercial software companies face many challenges in growing their business in today's fast-moving and competitive industry environment. Recently many people have proposed the use of an open-source development model as one possible way to address those challenges. This document investigates the business of commercial open-source software, including why a company might adopt an open-source model, how open-source licensing works, what business models might be usable for commercial open-source products, what special considerations apply to commercial products released as open source, and how various objections relating to open source might be answered. The target audience is commercial software and hardware companies and individual software developers considering some sort of open-source strategy or just curious about how such a strategy might work."
"BlogVoices is a free discussion system for Blogger-powered blogs.i have been toying with the idea of adding a new sub.section that will include a discussion component and this makes my life alot easier [if it works, i haven't tried it out yet].
BlogVoices is provided to members of the Blogger community who (1) do not have the resources to create a discussion system for themselves or (2) choose not to pay for the built-in system available in Blogger Pro. "
"Our exploratory user study on the use of a major portal site in Belgium shows that a category of "skeptical Internet users" has abandoned searching the web. The skeptical Internet user has made a return-on-investment evaluation of his Internet experience, and has come to the conclusion that the return on some sites is just not worth the investment of his personal time and energy. What about your site?"
just in time for summer - look snazzy and support the site at the same time by buying some snowdeal schwag!
“The stranger has been a fundamental touchstone of cultures at least since Abraham and Sarah invited weary road travelers into their tent only to find out that they were angels in disguise. The Odyssey, too, is a meditation on strangers and hospitality: Odysseus experiences different ways of being a stranger on his way home while the suitors abuse every rule of hospitality in his own house. It's easy to see why strangers are so important: a culture's attitude towards them expresses its understanding of its position in the world of social groups. In our culture, we're suspicious of strangers. They're a threat. They lurk in shadows. On the Web, however, strangers are the source of everything worthwhile. Strangers and their utterances are the stuff of the Web.”
the hyperlinked metaphysics of the web
valid xhtml 1.0 ?
This site designed by
Eric C. Snowdeal III
.
© 2000-2002