Categories
Digital Culture

Buy Cory’s Stuff

Anyone wanna own some of Cory Doctorow’s stuff? Well, you’re in luck. He’s selling off a ton of things before jetting to the UK. Pickup in San Fran only, though (too bad, really…that’s a nice skull.

Categories
Digital Culture

Live Pelt

Oh my. Originally seen on Jason Kottke’s blog. This is both brilliant and disturbing…the artist Kelly Heaton skinned 64 Tickle Me Elmos and made a vibrating fur coat from them.

Even more interesting…she’s a local girl. She has ties to the MIT Media Lab but is the current Artist in Residence in the Computer Science Department at Duke.

Does anyone have any idea if she’s done any local exhibitions? I’d love to see some of her stuff.

Categories
Digital Culture

Turtles all the way down…

Someone has now written a plugin for the game The Sims called SliceCity which lets the your Sims play something akin to SimCity.

So you’ve now got real people in the real world, directing simulated people in the simulated world, creating simulated worlds with simulated people.

*boggle*

Categories
Digital Culture

Uncovering the secret past with the power of google…

In doing some research on The University of the South I happened to run into a link to an interview by our very own Catherine Pellegrino.

Who knew that Catherine was at one time an articles editor for a sci-fi web journal?

Very, very cool. Color me jealous.

Categories
Digital Culture

Some fun from the TSA

Just an example of the fine, fine work our TSA employees are delivering to the American public. This was a someone’s suitcase at RDU which had been searched, then taped back together…evidently there was some difficulty in re-sealing it.

Categories
Digital Culture

Check it out

Pictures from the 2004 Betsy College Tour.

Categories
Digital Culture

One fellow’s thoughts on Moveable Type

From kuro5hin, one especially venom filled post about bloggers (and MT in particular).

Categories
Digital Culture

Funny things from the Penn State/Napster Deal

There’s a story on The Chronicle of Higher Education about the current state of P2P sharing on campuses. They spend a lot of time talking about the deal Penn State brokered with Napster 2.0 in order to allow their students to stream music from the service. I have so many problems with this…here’s a quick rundown.

“Under the terms of the deal, students pay nothing to listen to streaming audio of any of the 500,000 songs in the Napster library, or to download the songs to their computers for the duration of their subscriptions to the music service.”

Ummmm….correct me if I’m wrong here, but don’t the students pay the freaking fees that the University used to pay Napster? To claim that “students pay nothing” is just bad journalism. As well, note that they don’t ever own the music…they can stream it, or download it “for the duration” of the deal.

“They must pay 99 cents a song to put music on a compact disk or transfer it to a portable MP3 player. “

So, if they want to actually do anything useful with the music, they have to buy it at the same cost as everyone else. No free ride here.

“Some 17,000 students who have Windows computers at the university’s State College campus were eligible to join the service…”

Windows only…Mac and/or Linux users? No music for you!

And here’s the best part, for those copyright scholars out there…

“University officials worried that a frenzy of downloading activity could cripple the university’s computer network, but Mr. Vaught says the university used packet-shaping and mirror sites, which replicate the content of Napster servers, to control the impact of downloads and keep students who stream music from monopolizing the network.”

“….technology officers had to set up a server that could store a trove of commonly downloaded songs locally in order to keep the campus network from becoming overloaded..”

So, in effect, the University is mirroring the Napster servers, AND is serving the music locally? What in the heck allows this? I mean…I’m sure that there legalities that allow this (licensing via Napster) but I bet that the RIAA would take a hard look at random mirrors of tons of music content on University servers.

Categories
Digital Culture

Soon to be on every librarian blog in existence…

…the University of Washington in Seattle is going to be offering a class in Google.com via its Information School (formerly the School of Library and Information Science).

Categories
Digital Culture

Funniest Blog Ever

Just discovered this guy at Bad News Hughes. His latest post showed up on BoingBoing, but everything on the site is hilarious. The guys has a great writing style…I laughed out loud reading some of his stuff.

Check it out.