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Archive for » November 14th, 2005«

Sony DRM: The "other" company responds

This my last post this today, I promise…

Here’s further details on the Sony DRM from the point of view of First 4 Internet, the company that actually created the software. This one’s technical.

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Sony DRM Timeline & an Open Letter

Corry Doctorow offers up a timeline of the Sony DRM situation and an open letter from the EFF.

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Ranking the bibliobologosphere

PubSub now has “communities” which rank blogs on a particular topic based on links to those blogs. Stephen Cohen is editing The Librarian List. Rankings are updated dailybut right now I’m down at #49. Not bad in my opinion. I’m still in the top 40% and I’m tied with Stephen Abram so I’m in good company.

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Another Sony Update

They’re released another update (service pack 2a) which will allow you to remove the DRM completely along with a “we’re not evil” statement. This version does not require ActiveX and therefore is easily downloadable by non-IE users.

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The next conference: CIL2006

I’ve been asked to do a post-conference workshop on RSS for Computers in Libraries 2006. (Washington, DC Hilton, March 22-24) Negotiations are still in progress and any assistance with travel funds will be greatly appreciated.

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More Sony DRM News

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Passwords

Need a random, cryptic password? Check out Secure Password Generator from the WinGuides Network.

CAL2005: Patrica Schroeder & Me

If you’ve read my notes from the recent CAL conference, you mayhave noticed that I was able to ask the first question of Ms. Schroeder after her keynote address. Here’s a more complete version of that event.

Ms. Schroeder finished her talk on the topic of Google Print and then opened up for questions. I’d been prepared for this and I quoted back to her the following line from a Novebmber 3, 2005 Washington Times article:

…nor has Google defined what a “snippet” is: a paragraph? A page? A chapter? A whole book?

I then informer he that all she had to do was go to the Google Print homepage and click on “About Google Print” to see that Google does, in fact, define exactly what a “snippet” is: “a few short sentences of text around your search term” and that a screenshot of such snippets is available.

Ms. Schroeder’s response was pure politician. She quickly said that what was in the article wasn’t what she meant at all. What she “really meant” was that “Google gets to define what a ’snippet’ is and what if they decide it’s something else in the future.” She added that no company should have that right over materials that aren’t their’s in the first place. She then proceeded to thank me for “allowing [her] to clarify that.”

Thanks Ms. Schroeder, you managed to completely deflect the question. Next time, get it right in the first place.

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Doctor Who: Cybermen Revealed

The BBC has released the first photo (right) of the new Cybermen design. Additional details can be found on the BBC site.

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XHTML/CSS book update

The latest from Neal-Schuman:
“It’s at the printer; they’re estimating a Dec. 1 date.”

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