Categories
Digital Culture

Here’s a depressing Media story

So…a couple of really brilliant guys who do a little online comic called Penny Arcade decided before Christmas that they were going to show the world that gamers weren’t a bunch of backwards introspective adolescents hiding in their parents basements, but instead were giving, fully-grown members of society who wanted to spread the joy of games.

To this end, they started Child’s Play, a site through which donations could be made for children in the Seattle Children’s Hospital.

Here’s where the Media royally screwed up. After they showed up with more toys than you could believe (actual figures in a minute) and local Seattle media picked up the story, somehow it was reported that the donations were from a “local catholic school” and that the toys were valued at “nearly a thousand dollars.”

Here’s the scoop…this couple of cartoonists and gamers raised over $200,000 worth of toys. Two. Hundred. Thousand. Dollars. They had $16,000 worth of Game Boy Advance SP’s by themselves, not counting the rest of the toys.

Really impressive, and they aren’t making nearly as big a deal out of it as they should.

Categories
Digital Culture

Coolest SWF _ever_

From BoingBoing, the Gollum Rap.

Categories
Digital Culture

Have a few extra dollars after the holidays?

Then consider helping out the Wikipedia. As the organizer posted in a letter, they are short of operating expenses for a new server, and since it’s a free (as in beer AND freedom) service, those of us that use it might be convinced to pony up a few bucks for the priviledge.

Categories
Digital Culture

A New Year

Well…we’re T-minus 5 hours or so ’til 2004, which sounds weird to me. 2004 seems like some bizarre future-year, where we jet around in flying cars wearing silver jumpsuits.

But…it’s here, and we’re minus the flying car (Except for the Skycar, which I want) and the jumpsuit (thankfully, those went out in the ’70s).

Hope everyone has a great New Years, and stays safe. Looking forward to seeing everyone back in Chapel Thrill.

Categories
Digital Culture

Cool =

Finding an envelope in a Civil War era book sealed by the author.

Scary = determining that the envelope contains smallpox scabs from vaccinations.

Categories
Digital Culture

Becoming a regular on Wired.com…

…is our very own Paul Jones. He’s asked what he wishes would happen, and what he thinks will really happen, in tech in 2004. He’s in the same article as Tim O’Reilly, Howard Rheingold, and Nuala O’Connor Kelly (chief privacy officer for the Office of Homeland Security)….color me impressed!

Congrats, Paul!

Categories
Digital Culture

Excellent new utility

Originally seen on Lessig’s Blog, here’s a useful utility that will be overwhelmed with illegal stuff in about 2 days:

Dropload
A place that you can drop a file, and the site sends an email to the recipient of the file and he/she can then pick it up. 50 Meg limit, no child porn or copyright violations, please.

Categories
Master's Paper

Back in Town

So this morning at 6am, I threw Bets on a plane to San Diego. Come back to town, run around like crazy for a day, then throw my wife on a plane.

Sounds like just the time to start thinking about school again. 🙂

So in that vein, I’ve decided to start trying to work out aspects of my Master’s Paper on this blog.

My first idea: to try to tie the economics of Open Information (Creative Commons and such) to Communications Theory and the idea that when you increase the node count (or the number of open information sources) the overall usability of the system increases. It may even be possible to use that theory to determine the “magic number” of sources that will be the critical mass for Open Information to be as useful as traditional copyright. All very theoretical, all very nebulous, and all very much like the stuff I did for years in Philosophy. But interesting (at least to me).

Categories
Personal

Nicholas was…

older than sin, and his beard could grow no whiter. He wanted to die.
the dwarfish natives of the arctic caverns did not speak his language, but conversed in their own, twittering tongue, conducted incomprehensible rituals, when they were not actually working in the factories.
Once every year they forced him, sobbing and protesting, into Endless Night. During the journey he would stand near every child in the world, leave one of the dwarves’ invisible gifts by its bedside. The children slept, frozen in time.
He envied Prometheus and Loki, Sisyphus and Judas. His punishment was harsher.
Ho.
Ho.
Ho.

–Neil Gaiman, from his collection Angels and Visitations

Just a little happy christmas note from one of my favorite authors!

Categories
Personal

Merry Christmas!

Or whatever the appropriate Winter Solstice celebration is for your particular religion/belief.

🙂

Hope to see everyone safe and back in Chapel Hill soon!