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An old rigid civilization is reluctantly dying. Something new, open, free and exciting is waking up.

This is my dynamic, frequently updated homepage. This is a NewsLog, also known as a WebLog or Blog.

Everything is evolving, so don't assume too much.

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Adina Levin
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Nancy White
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Merlin Silk
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Nova Spivack
Dan Brickley
Ariane Kiss
Vanessa Miemis
Bernd Nurnberger

Sites to watch:
Action without borders
BoingBoing
Co-intelligence Institute
Disclosure Project
Disinfopedia
Disinformation
Edge
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Explorers Foundation
Forbidden Science
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Friendly Favors
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Emmanuelle
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IokanaaN
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Guillaume Beuvelot
Ming Chau
Serge Levan
Jean Michel Billaut
C'est pas Mécanique

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A Quote I like:


I live in Toulouse, France where the time now is:
01:02

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Other sites around 43.592N 1.4119W


Contacting Me
I get many hundreds of e-mail messages per day and my inbox is becoming increasingly useless to me. So, if you write to me, don't count on an answer unless we know each other really well, or your communication is short and clear. Oh, I'm very friendly and approachable, but I don't have hours enough in my day to read everything.
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Thursday, November 7, 2002day link 

 Universal Replay
pictureDave Winer says: "Kevin Werbach is at a meeting with lots of bigshot media execs in NY and reports that they love to talk about TiVO as a threat, or a competitive factor or something they want to sue out of business. One thing they never get about TiVO is the profoundness of the feature that skips backwards and lets you replay a snippet. I've come to want that feature in every audio and video device I own from the car radio to the walkman, my iPod (amazingly it doesn't have it), and even with people I'm talking with, both in person and on the phone. "You said that in an interesting way, now what exactly did you say?" Listen the same way I read. And would you tell them for me that I do this with their friggin commercials too -- when they're interesting or especially depraved. Maybe they'll get the clue that it's time to stop programming us with their commercials and start educating and entertaining."
[ | 2002-11-07 02:00 | 1 comment | PermaLink ]  More >


Wednesday, November 6, 2002day link 

 PhotoReading
pictureMany years ago I took a class in speed reading. I could read a 150 page novel in about 20 minutes or so, and retain the content better than with normal reading. That was pretty cool, and would have been great if I had had a job of reviewing fiction books. For non-fiction I found that the technique screwed up my ability to actually understand and apply what I was reading. So I gave it up.

But today I could really use some kind of technique for digesting large amounts of information. I have stacks of books I haven't read, because there aren't enough hours in the day. I'm considering PhotoReading. I've read the book, but it seems like I probably need to take a seminar to really get it. Anyway, it is different from the traditional speed reading approach, where one forces one's eyes over the text in a certain rhythm. In speed reading one reads a line at a time. In photo reading one does a page at a time, and the point is apparently to just be very relaxed and quickly glance at each page. And then using certain techniques for being prepared to take in the content, and for retrieving it from one's subconscious mind afterwards.
[ | 2002-11-06 21:15 | 42 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

 NewsLog Changes
I'm changing various things in the NewsLog program here, so I apologize if things look strange for a few days. Or if I temporarily break somebody else's log. But there should be some more features and flexibility when the dust clears.
[ | 2002-11-06 21:40 | 1 comment | PermaLink ]  More >

 The Reichstag Fire
pictureIt is always a good idea to remember the past in order not to repeat it. About 70 years ago, the Nazi Party gradually came into power in Germany through a series of steps and events. One pivotal event was the 1933 fire in the Reichstag (Parliament), which gave an aggressive political party the setting it needed to make its moves, at the great expense of civil liberties. This page gives a simple rundown of the events. Or see this page which outlines the Nazi takeover in a bit more detail.
[ | 2002-11-06 23:58 | 10 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

 Tuesday, November 5, 2002
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  • Steve Barth, Editor of Knowledge Management: "How do we balance conversation and contemplation? Is there a difference between the interactive creation of knowledge and the internal processes? It isn't knowledge until it has been integrated with our existing knowledge and beliefs, right? So as our daily intake of ideas and information increases, do we need more "quiet time" for processing input?"

    Yeah, I guess. Or we need ways of making our incoming information less confusing and disjointed. The reason we're overloaded with information and we need time to process it is that it is mostly a badly structured mess. We don't have good ways of sharing information, or of having a conversation in a *structured* way. So it is mostly just a lot of words, and then you need to afterwards go and figure out what it all *means*.

  • Dave Winer: "An idea is in the air in blogging land, a global identity system so you don't have to re-enter your name, email address and weblog url in every comment system you visit. Of course the idea has been around for a while, but perhaps there's a will to implement it now."

    Hm, doesn't have to be global. A site just needs to know which other sites it is willing to accept logins from. E.g. NCN could happily accept a statement of identity from Friendly Favors. But a common protocol for carrying this out would be nice.

  • Recently, a bunch of small companies with online stores were being sued by a company called PanIP, which claims to have a patent covering pretty much all automated commerce, and which successfully has extorted money from these companies. Well, they do indeed have such a patent, which shows how screwed up the patent system is. If they went after somebody with significant resources, the patent would quickly be invalidated. But they go after small people that they can scam into paying them a few thousand dollars, but who can't afford to defend themselves. One small company, however, a little chocolate manufacturer named DeBrand, is figthing back and is organizing people for that purpose. The website is youmaybenext.com. Help them if you can. Or buy some of their chocolates, so they can afford to defend themselves. PanIP on the other hand is owned by some guy named Lawrence Lockwood. Remember the name, so you can avoid ever doing business with him.
    [ | 2002-11-05 23:35 | 4 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Monday, November 4, 2002
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  • Jon Husband at Wirearchy talks about Knowledge Management (KM):
    "There's a core issue in KM - that of the gulf separating Tacit Knowledge (TK) and Explicit Knowledge (EK), with proponents arguing that TK is only really shareable ("manageable" ??) via conversation, dialogue, communitites of practice, and so on."

    "[...] Knowledge Management will never be fully addressed by having an integrated information system that makes whatever you need accessible when you need it - context, questioning, interpretation and fit-for-purpose will always have an essential role to play, and so what better than a Knowledge Buddy - a collaborator - with whom to have an argument, or with whom you can share a major breakthrough."

    "What about looking to the dynamics of effective friendships to inform this dialogue further?"
    Hm, yeah. I happen to be looking for an integrated information system that makes knowledge a more widely sharable commodity. But, yes, there are many things we will only become aware of by having a good conversation, by having a very specific problem to solve, or by having somebody who knows us well prod us in the right way. So maybe we can't solve the problem of knowledge sharing without being very aware of what relationships people have. Maybe we need to provide better tools for dialogue at the same time as we're thinking about sharing knowledge. Maybe knowledge can't be shared at all before it is known what it will be used for. Maybe there IS no knowledge before we know who will be using it, in what context, in relation to which other people. Until then we might only have information. Then, the moment a specific person takes on a specific job, he will need to get available information quickly re-configured into knowledge that is helpful in that situation.

  • Evacuated Tube Transport (ETT) is a new kind of transportation system, where passenger capsules move very fast through airless tubes. Apparently it would use less energy and space than existing approaches, and it would be cheaper. ...I guess I would be more optimistic about this if I hadn't been eagerly reading about the imminent construction of ultra-fast tube trains back when I was a kid, more than 30 years ago, and it obviously didn't happen. But maybe the circumstances are right now. See some pictures here.

  • Google decided from one day to the next to index all links pointing to my newslog here. So, I must have increased in status somehow. I'm now Flemming # 3.

    "Let he who would move the world, first move himself." --Socrates
    [ | 2002-11-04 22:01 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Sunday, November 3, 2002
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  • Designer Bruce Mau wrote An Incomplete Manifesto for Growth. Some wonderful points about creativity and process.
    "Harvest ideas. Edit applications. Ideas need a dynamic, fluid, generous environment to sustain life. Applications, on the other hand, benefit from critical rigor. Produce a high ratio of ideas to applications."
  • Dead But Awake. There are many recorded cases of people remaining conscious even while clinically dead, and able to recount details they couldn't otherwise have known, once they're resuscitated. A pair of researchers are planning a study that should prove this more conclusively.

  • Science News has a good article about the math of different voting methods. The U.S. has probably the worst possible voting scheme - plurality - which is essentially that one only looks at the voter's first choice, and the winner takes all. That will easily give results that don't match the will of the people. George W. Bush is a good example, even though it took a bit of additional cheating to get him where he is.

  • Only technology revolution can save the Earth. Scientists are looking for technologies that might provide sufficiently massive amounts of carbon emission-free energy. Nuclear fusion, solar power satellites, wind, biomass, hydrogen, super-conducting electricity grids, etc. Regulation and incremental improvements aren't going to stop global warming, it seems.
  • "A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects." -- Robert A. Heinlein, Time Enough for Love, 1973

  • [ | 2002-11-03 16:12 | 4 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Saturday, November 2, 2002
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  • I'm working on various changes in the NewsLog program. Not as easy as I thought it was. First of all I'm trying to better accommodate the format I'm trying to use myself here, of posting many little stories that add up to one daily issue published to my log. That's how most other weblogs, like Radio Userland, tend to be working. But it is a different underlying structure. And I'm trying not to break the way most people use this program right now, creating less frequent, but bigger, stand-alone articles.

  • Various U.S. news media had to run corrections of their reporting of the anti-war protest rallies last weekend. They had at first tried to pretend that it wasn't much at all. Just a few thousand scattered people. But they were barraged with complaints about their deceptive reporting. So, now, for example, the New York Times wrote:
    "The demonstration on Saturday in Washington drew 100,000 by police estimates and 200,000 by organizers', forming a two-mile wall of marchers around the White House. The turnout startled even organizers, who had taken out permits for 20,000 marchers. They expected 30 buses, and were surprised by about 650, coming from as far as Nebraska and Florida. A companion demonstration in San Francisco attracted 42,000 protesters, city police there said, and smaller groups demonstrated in other cities, including about 800 in Austin, Tex., and 2,500 in Augusta, Me."
  • I saw "Bowling for Columbine", a feature film documentary by Michael Moore. Powerful, excellent movie making about America's obsession with guns. Very provocative and direct. See it! It doesn't really give the answers, but mostly it adds up to the fear that is being promoted 24/7 in the U.S. media, and how it pervades the system from the top down.

  • When asked "Why is it so difficult for us westerners to understand the earth as a living system?", Elisabet Sahtouris answered:
    "It goes back to the Cartesian worldview, I think, in which Descartes proposed that God was a great engineer and his creations were mechanisms. That meant that all nature was an array of mechanisms created by God, the engineer, who then put a piece of his God-mind into his favorite robot -- man -- so that he, too, could create machinery. Now, whether you like it or not, that was a rather complete worldview that accounted for everything.

    "When the scientists decided that they didn't need God in their worldview, they eliminated God from their Cartesian worldview but kept the idea of an array of mechanisms. Now how do you explain the origin of mechanisms without a creator? By definition, a machine cannot exist without a creator. If they are there and couldn't have been assembled on purpose by an intentional creator, the only alternative is to say they came together by accident. So you got these bizarre theories that literally say that if enough parts of a Boeing 747 blow around in a whirlwind in a junkyard eventually one will assemble itself. This is going to appear to us as perhaps the most bizarre and perhaps harebrained concepts of how things work that has ever been proposed in the history of the world. And I think it will be seen that way in the very near future, because it is fundamentally an illogical point of view. The problem was that they thought you had to choose between God, the purposeful inventor, and accident. We had no theory of self-creation as a perfectly natural, biological, universal event. Now we do, so we don't have to invoke either hypothesis."
    Right on! The idea that everything in the universe sort of sprung into existence randomly and accidentally is just as wacky as the idea that some ornery guy with a grey beard commanded it all into existence. I think the idea of a self-creating, living universe is more simple and useful and satisfying than any of those. And if we all understood that a little better, there would be much less reason for us to fight each other.

  • Picture is by Burningbird
    [ | 2002-11-02 16:44 | 3 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Friday, November 1, 2002
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  • Gaia Theory: Science of the Living Earth - an excellent introduction to Gaia theory. It is the idea that the Earth is essentially a living organism. It was championed mostly by James Lovelock and then by Lynn Margulis. There is a lot of evidence for how the Earth regulates itself, to keep the contents of the atmosphere, the saltyness of the oceans, and many other things stable enough to support other life forms. Dead rocks don't do such things.
    James Lovelock: "For me, the personal revelation of Gaia came quite suddenly - like a flash of enlightenment. I was in a small room on the top floor of a building at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. It was the autumn of 1965 ... and I was talking with a colleague, Dian Hitchcock, about a paper we were preparing ... It was at that moment that I glimpsed Gaia. An awesome thought came to me. The Earth's atmosphere was an extraordinary and unstable mixture of gases, yet I knew that it was constant in composition over quite long periods of time. Could it be that life on Earth not only made the atmosphere, but also regulated it - keeping it at a constant composition, and at a level favourable for organisms?"
    See good interview with Elisabet Sahtouris. Life is recognized by a quality of autopoiesis:
    "Autopoiesis is a Greek word, of course, meaning literally "self-creation." The definition goes: A living entity is any entity that constantly creates itself. This really distinguishes it from a mechanism, because a machine is not constantly creating itself. In fact, if it changes itself at all it's probably broken and you would rather it didn't do that; while a living thing is always changing, or it's dead."
  • Cass says "Real quick, a book Ming might like: Leadership and the New Science". Yes, he's right, I like it very much. Meg Wheatley is great. Well, actually I've only listened to the audio book version, but several times.

  • That brings up: How do I know if somebody says something about me or to me in their weblog? I do seem to have a sixth sense about it, but I probably can't rely on that. There is a proposed standard approach to that, which might tell me automatically, called Trackback Ping, developed by Movable Type, one of the major weblog designers. Note to self: I need to implement that in this program.

  • A number of years ago, before there was anything called search engines, there was an all-knowing being known as Kibo. The web hardly existed yet, but 100's of thousands of messages were posted every day on thousands of different UseNet Newsgroups. And it was said that no matter where you posted a message, if you said anything at all about Kibo, he would instantly know. I didn't quite believe, so I tested it. I mentioned his name in some obscure newsgroup. And, indeed, before long there was an answer from him. He seemed to be able to have an off-the-wall conversation about anything anytime. At the time it seemed quite magical that he would know everything anybody said about him, and a whole wacky religion, called Kibology sprung up around him. Well, all that went on was that he had a program that searched the UseNet feed going into some particular server for the word "Kibo". That was a novel idea at the time. Nowadays anybody can do the same in Google Groups any time they want.

  • Consumers Shun Copy-Protected CDs. Study finds music fans support copying for personal use, backup.

    "The problem is never how to get new, innovative thoughts into your mind, but how to get the old ones out." Dee Hock
    [ | 2002-11-01 14:54 | 4 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Skeptics and Dogmatists
    picture One of the types of deception that personally makes me the most angry is that carried out by socalled Skeptics.

    Not that there's anything at all wrong with being skeptical of outlandish claims. I'm skeptical too when I'm presented with new information that doesn't match my previous experience. And I'm skeptical about my own beliefs, and I'll often look for reasons to revise them towards something better.

    But there are very influential Skeptics who aren't really skeptics at all, but rather people who use deceit to protect and perpetuate a certain, very conservative, worldview.

    I was about to write a lengthy article about that. But there are others who've said roughly what I'd like to say. See Debunking the Debunkers for example.
    [ | 2002-11-01 03:17 | 22 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

     Thursday, October 31, 2002
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  • Years ago, when I had a job where I didn't have much to do, I developed the habit to sit down and meditate at regular intervals. To be precise, I set my watch to beep every hour on the hour, and then I would just close my eyes and sit there for five minutes or so, trying to just be there, attentive, but without thinking. I did that for years. It accomplished that I would always be both calm and acutely attentive. It also accomplished that I didn't lose touch with my spiritual existence, and any difficulties in the material world had much less strength. Anyway, I need to do something like that again. Particularly since I haven't been smoking for quite a while, I otherwise tend to get overly caught up in the stress of the day's work. I'm setting the beeper on my watch now.

  • Chris Locke, aka RageBoy, is a crazy guy and a creative genius. One of the three authors of The Cluetrain Manifesto. He has a very irreverant and very visually interesting weblog. "... And to the engineers I said, no corporation has ever fallen in love. But they had no idea what I was talking about. I said, what is happening on the net is people falling in love with the world again. Listen..."

  • A small company is working on an elevator to space. It is no longer science fiction. It is now possible to manufacture a material that is strong enough, carbon nanotubes, to consider making a 62,000 mile long cable, leading from a floating platform straight up to geo-stationary orbit.
    [ | 2002-10-31 12:30 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Wednesday, October 30, 2002
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  • Elisabet Sahtouris presents these lessons from nature:

    1. All living systems self-organize and maintain themselves by the same biological principles

    2. Among the principles essential to the health of living systems are:
      a) empowered participation of all parts, and
      b) continual negotiation of self-interest at all levels of organization

    3. Humanity constitutes a living system within the larger living system of our Earth.

    4. Therefore essential to the health of humanity are:
      a) empowered participation of all humans, and
      b) negotiated self-interest among individual, local & global economies


  • Real Networks has released the source code for their audio and video players, and their server software will follow. May the Force be with them.

  • In an experiment today, a scientist in London and one in Boston were able to lift an object, by providing a finger each, through a system providing sophisticated tactile feedback for virtual experiences. I.e. they can feel pressure and movement and the texture of surfaces. So they can virtually shake hands. That's a bigger deal than it might sound. They've found that it requires feedback about 1000 times per second in order to be practical. And you can't do that over the normal Internet.

  • Caine Learning has an excellent wheel of Brain/Mind Learning Principles. An excellent foundation for thinking about how we learn.

    "An emerging field in cognitive science called theory theory deals with our innate propensities to act as scientists. For example, Gopnick and Melztoff (1997) argue convincingly that infants are born with the capacity to develop theories and hypotheses about how the world works. Even before they acquire language [they form] their hypotheses and make predictions. Gopnick and Melztoff give one example of very young infants watching a ball moving along a trajectory, then disappearing behind a screen. By following the infants' eye movements, the researchers note that the infants make predictions about where the ball will emerge, and seem surprised and confused when the ball emerges somewhere else. (Incidentally, this experiment contributed to evidence that many of the capacities that Piaget spoke about seem to be present at birth, or develop much earlier and in different ways from the ways in which he described)."

  • Thich Nhat Hanh (1976): "'mindfulness' refers to 'keeping one's consciousness alive to the present reality'"
    [ | 2002-10-30 01:53 | 2 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Tuesday, October 29, 2002
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  • John McPhee: "The summit of Mt. Everest is marine limestone." You know, 'marine' as in 'under water'.

  • Chris Corrigan is posting lots of great stuff about self-organization and open space principles. He quotes a friend who writes about the book Education on the Edge of Possibility: "... They hypothesize that the reason most educational reforms don't foster much real change is because the underlying beliefs/rules aren't changing. They posit the idea that self-organization is happening all the time, AND that we naturally self-organize around those beliefs/rules that we hold to be true. (This last part is new to me. Can't quite get my mind completely around it. Don't know if I agree with it. Is that what we mean by self-organization as we use the term here?) One example is hierarchical beliefs self-organizing into hierarchical social structures. ..." Hmm, very interesting. There's obviously something to that. That's not the self-organization I'm looking for either, but of course it is true. People organize into hierarchies because they believe that's how things are. So, minds need to change. We of course can't just order people to self-organize in a networked pattern, if they don't believe in it.

  • Shawn Murphy is working on Nooron, which is a self-organizing knowledge management system. I'm excited about what he is working on. I met Shawn in Utah over the weekend and we have much in common in terms of what we see needs to be done. But he's probably smarter than I am. Nooron is in part based on PyOKBC, which is a Python implementation of Open Knowledge Base Connectivity, a standard proposed by Stanford Research Institute's Artificial Intelligence Center. So, this is about a fundamental approach for defining and storing any kind of knowledge. The details are probably hard to explain to people who haven't been looking for such a thing.

  • Shawn has some thoughts on Goodness is Not Enough. We're talking about ratings there. Most things you can rate on the net gives you some kind of 1-10 scale that doesn't really tell you what it is you're rating. But, to be general about it, what you're rating is the "goodness" of some resource. But that isn't really all that useful. We need much more flexibility. People should be able to rate resources based on whatever they have an opinion on. They should be able to self-organize, rather than being limited by too few, too general options.

  • Future Form is a project of designing the Workplace of the Future. You can contribute to some degree, by leaving online comments. I'm not sure what that will do.

  • The U.S. Army is planning to use NanoPaint to cover vehicles within just a few years. It would change color or paint scheme with the push of a button, or might even make a vehicle appear invisible.

  • Hillary Rosen, representative for RIAA, the music industry's organ made a pathetic case in a debate against free music. You know, listening to music for free is essentially a threat to the future of music itself. Not!

    "Hydrogen is an odorless, colorless gas that after 13 billion years produces people." --Carl Sagan
    [ | 2002-10-29 04:02 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Monday, October 28, 2002
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  • Another great day yesterday of hiking in beautiful nature in Utah while talking about big subjects. And a rather long drive back.

  • Singularity Watchers are futurists who pay attention to accelerating technological change. Particularly to the growing idea that many accelerating technological trends, such as processing power, artificial intelligence, and nano-technology are heading for a point where advances are practically instantanous, and we humans potentially can no longer keep pace with what we created. There are many different ideas about that, of course. My friend John Smart is very up on these things. Ray Kurzweil wrote The Age of Spiritual Machines. Many smart people are talking about it. I don't know. No doubt that things are accelerating, and most likely that leads towards a point of profound transformation. But somehow I can't get worried about computers becoming smarter than me and taking control. Because I don't think *I* am a computer, for one thing.

  • Extropians are people I usually get along well with, and there are many fascinating things to discuss. But I don't think I'm an extropian exactly. Extropians tend to be techno-geeks who are very interested in and optimistic about the future, and who usually are very into cryogenics, artificial intelligence, life extension, enhancement of the human body and mind, and quite a number of other things that might allow humans to transcend themselves, primarily in a material kind of way. And I guess it is the material part that I look somewhat differently at. I'm not very concerned about dying and then disappearing. I don't particularly want to download my mind to a computer, other than in the form of a personal organizer, and I certainly wouldn't want to have my body frozen down so I can get it back in a hundred years. I'd rather have a new one next time, and I'd rather be free to be a somewhat different person next time, rather than getting the same personality back. That would be a bit boring. I mean, I'm not THAT great.

  • I wouldn't mind enhancing my mind and my body with technology, though. I'd like a personal organizer that automatically keeps track of all information in my life. Infrared or X-ray vision would be nice. Shooting out spiderwebs from my hands so I can swing between tall buildings - that could come in handy too.

    "The Future's So Bright I Gotta Wear Shades" --Timbuk 3
    [ | 2002-10-28 14:59 | 0 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Saturday, October 26, 2002
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  • I've been spending the day hiking in Utah, and having fascinating discussions with a bunch of great people. Futurists, scientists, geeks. A six mile hike today through Bell Canyon, and a trip to Goblin Valley, with bizarre rock formations. And now lucky that I'm here with some serious technogeeks, as one of them installed a wireless network in the motel so I can be online.

  • I think I have a renewed understanding of how important it is for me to assist people in more fully living out their dream in the moment, doing what they're here to do. That's to a large degree what NCN is about, for me at least: helping people be more actualized, as individuals and groups, doing their thing. And I'd like to highlight and celebrate when it happens.
    [ | 2002-10-26 22:10 | 7 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Thursday, October 24, 2002
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  • Richard Caetano is thinking about how we structure our thinking, and about how we represent truth. He believes that "Truth is Localized". Several apparently contradictory truths can exist because they apply to different branches of a logical tree. I might be opposed to using fossil fuel, but I might love my sports car. Those truths can co-exist if they're sort of attached in different places. Interesting discussion, but I wouldn't necessarily look at it like that. It is more a matter of how we abstract a more primal reality into symbolic form. If we forget that we're over-simplifying the process oriented reality into objects and then further into abstract labels and ideas, and further into our reactions to these, then we might run into logical problems at some point. It can sometimes be a philosophical trap to try to solve a problem logically at an abstract level, when the components don't really exist at that level. I can say "I like red!" when I'm shopping for Ferraris, and I can say "I hate red!" when I'm trying to drive it through stoplights in downtown L.A. If I just look at the words, and treat them as reality, it seems like I'm contradicting myself. It is simply two similar sentences that are being used about very different realities. They're abstracting very different things. Simply put: the context is different, and I'm not contradicting myself, because I'm talking about different things. The words don't tell you that.

    Then Cass at ThoughtsOnThinking suggests that maybe perceptions, viewpoints, and opinions are "localized". Hm, I wouldn't say that either. It all depends on how far you abstract. Everything can be abstracted endlessly. I might make a very specific observation, expressed in a set of perceptions, checking my watch, writing down what I see and hear, and that might be very localized. Or, my mind might have some wires crossed and I have generalized certain perceptions, so they exist separately from anything to perceive. E.g. I might go around and see clearly that people are being mean to me, and they're whispering to each other about me, and they're getting ready to finish me off.

    But all that does indeed throw some wrenches into a project of trying to invent universal data structures - ways of storing any kind of information in an ordered fashion. We can't just say that colors belong over here, and feelings belong over there. Because the meaning of any information depends ... on a lot of factors in the people who will use them, including their context, their intention, their modus operandi, and the level of abstraction involved.

  • Building Online Communities. Some good learnings from techie communities.

  • Oblivion awaits. Hilarious writeup of what the record industry's actions would sound like if discussed as strategies. "Their combined efforts have gone beyond killing their e-businesses and are close to destroying an entire industry."

  • Tomorrow morning I travel to Utah for a retreat with a small group of futurists. A couple of days of hiking and deep dialogue about big things. I might or might not get online.

    "I always wanted to be somebody, but I should have been more specific." --Jane Wagner
    [ | 2002-10-24 22:38 | 2 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Wednesday, October 23, 2002
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  • Biomimicry is a fascinating subject. It is essentially that you look to nature for ways of building and manufacturing stuff more efficiently, from easily available materials, with no polluting byproducts. Nature is in no way primitive. Human engineering is a bit primitive. Even the smallest plants or animals can carry out manufacturing feats our most skilled engineers often can't accomplish. Look for example at one of our "advanced" high-tech materials, Kevlar, which is used for bulletproof vests. It is created from petroleum-derived molecules poured into pressurized vats of concentrated sulfuric acid, and boiled at several hundred degrees Fahrenheit, and the process wastes a lot of energy and produces toxic byproducts. Now hear what Janine Benyus says about nature:

    "Nature takes a different approach. Because an organism makes materials like bone or collagen or silk right in its own body, it doesn't make sense to "heat, beat, and treat." A spider, for instance, produces a waterproof silk that beats the pants off Kevlar for toughness and elasticity. Ounce for ounce, it's five times stronger than steel! But the spider manufactures it in water, at room temperature, using no high heats, chemicals, or pressures. Best of all, it doesn't need to drill offshore for petroleum; it takes flies and crickets at one end and produces this miracle material at the other. In a pinch, the spider can even eat part of its old web to make a new one."

  • Janis Ian: Music industry spins falsehood "On the first day I posted downloadable music, my merchandise sales tripled, and they have stayed that way ever since." ..."Many artists now benefit greatly from the free-download systems the RIAA seeks to destroy."

  • MySQL AB is a successful open source business. "In our business model, we have an ecosystem around MySQL, which is huge worldwide. As a company, we are very small in the middle of it. This is very different from the traditional proprietary model. In the past, if you had a fantastic product like Lotus did with Lotus Notes, then you owned or controlled as much as 60% of the surrounding ecosystem, including services, books and education, yourself. We donÂ’t mind that our ecosystem is 200 times larger than our company is. ThatÂ’s why our cost level is ridiculously low. When it looks like weÂ’ve done something, itÂ’s usually someone else who did it."

  • EContent Magazine: The Siren Song of Structure: Heeding the Call of Reusability "Fusion executive editor Adam Gaffin is clear about the value of breaking down news stories into their atomic bits and sending those elements out to different places. He says, "Granularity is good; it helps us auto-generate syndication feeds, wireless editions, and email newsletters with embedded headlines." Granularity also enables you to put different elements of a page into separate workflows."

  • American Conservative: Iraq: The Case Against Preemptive War. "Administration's claim of right to overthrow regimes it considers hostile is extraordinary -- one the world will soon find intolerable..."

  • U.S. Ranks 17th in Freedom of the Press, behind Slovenia and Costa Rica. Doesn't say anything about whether the press is speaking the truth, though.

    "You know, the press is free for those who own one." -- Lowell Bergman
    [ | 2002-10-24 00:09 | 3 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Tuesday, October 22, 2002
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  • Marc Strassman wants to be Mayor of the San Fernando Valley, where I live. He runs his campaign online and he wants to be an E-mayor, really, promising universal broadband access, online voting, and open source software. But The Valley hasn't actually seceeded from Los Angeles yet. Might happen next year.

  • Hm, looks like some of the NCN NewsLogs have caught the attention of the WarBloggers. That's a very active faction of right-wing webloggers on the net who for one thing just LOVE The War, and who generally have a strangely homogenous ideology. I'm not sure if it is Rush Limbaugh's listeners or what. The above article describers them like this: "They also tend to have certain ideological characteristics: to a man (and woman) they are as scathingly intolerant of any and all dissent on the War question as they are vehement in their contempt for Arabs – all Arabs, as such – and blind support for the state of Israel. It's frightening, really, with so many sites – there must be hundreds of these little war-bots spawned in cyberspace, springing out of the psychic ether like Myrmidons and lunging at anyone who doesn't toe the Party Line." Indeed that's pretty much how it looks. They're out prowling for people they call "idiotarians", and a typical site of theirs is "The Anti-Idiotarian Rottweiler". "Idiotarians" seems to be the derogatory term for people with a different ideology, like peace activist, or people with a more balanced view of the middle east than George Bush has. And they do spend some time out looking for such people so they can sort of virtually lynch them. In different times it would be like "Let's go kill ourselves some niggers", or "..beat up some commies", or "hippies" or "faggots" or fill in your own slur. OK, this is the Internet, so all they can really do is to ridicule you in their own weblog, or leave nasty comments in yours, if you allow them to. Nothing much to worry about really.

  • I was talking the other day with a friend who moved to the U.S. from the Czech Republic just a few years ago. And he mentioned that one of the first surprised reactions he had when he got here was "Hey, this is just like Communism!" You know, lots of unfeeling bureaucracies, a government run by rich party bosses, a corrupt system where power is for sale, and lots of little people who can't really do much about it. The propaganda is just different here, and you have to work harder to survive.

  • Seems like Google comes and looks at my page here every single day. That's quite an honor. Obviously because it has noticed that I update it every day. I can't figure out, however, why it only goes one level deep. It indexes what is linked directly from right here, but it doesn't get the second level. Which means it hasn't yet picked up all articles in my NewsLog. I wonder if it is a question of time, or a question of how well other people link to the front page.

  • "Tardigrades are among the hardiest of multicelled animals, maybe the toughest little critters of all. Dry them out and they go into a state of suspended animation in which they can live for - well, no one knows. The can be frozen at temperatures near absolute zero, heated to 150 degrees, subjected to a high vacuum or to pressure greater than that of the deepest ocean, and zapped with deadly radiation." --Chet Raymo. A Little Reminder of Reality's Scale
    [ | 2002-10-23 01:46 | 8 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Monday, October 21, 2002
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  • Look at the World Game Institute's What the World Wants chart. It shows the costs of globally eliminating certain major problems that are facing humanity, seen in relation to the global military spending. It suggests that one-third of the $780 billion spent every year on the military could ultimately: Eliminate Starvation and Malnourishment, Provide Health Care & AIDS Control, Provide Shelter for everyone in the world, Provide Clean Safe Water, Eliminate Illiteracy, Provide Clean Safe Energy through Efficiency and Renewables, Retire the Developing Nations' Debts, Stabilize Population, Prevent Soil Erosion, Stop Deforestation, Stop Ozone Depletion, Prevent Acid Rain, Prevent Global Warming, Remove Landmines, Provide Refugee Relief, Eliminate Nuclear Weapons, and Build Democracy. There are detailed plans and budgets as well.

  • A key breast cancer test can no longer be done in British Columbia, Canada, because a U.S. company, Myriad Genetics, holds a patent on the two genes tested. Myriad wants $3500 for each test, more than 3 times what it previously cost. Gene patents are evil.

  • My 3 year old daughter got an e-mail today from Broderbund Software advertising a program for preparing her last will and testament. The subject of the message was "Hurry Nadia! Only a FEW DAYS LEFT!" Excuse me?! I'm glad she can't read, or I would have to explain that to her. Mass marketing is stupid. Not to mention, frequently offensive, as it mostly hits the wrong people with stuff they don't want and didn't ask for.

  • Max and Alana came by today. They met each other online in NCN and really connected. She was in Minnesota, and he flew over from New Zealand to meet her, and they've found a special magic together and are very much in love and are going to get married. They've been driving around the states a bit, and will go together to New Zealand in a couple of days, to live a new life. It is always wonderful to meet people not only that I've only known virtually before, but who really have clicked with each other. And knowing that I had just a little bit to do with that. That alone makes it worth just about any amount of abuse from the few people who're angry that I didn't provide them what they were looking for.

    "I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I intended to be." --Douglas Adams
    [ | 2002-10-22 01:37 | 6 comments | PermaLink ]  More >

  •  Sunday, October 20, 2002
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  • Mitch Kapor is working on a new program which will be an open source Personal Information Manager in the spirit of Lotus Agenda, making it simple to keep track of and share email, appointments, contacts and tasks. It is well worth watching anything Mitch Kapor puts his mind to. In addition to Agenda, he earlier created Lotus 1-2-3, and he's one of the founders of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

  • Designing organizations for flow experiences: "There is a name for the experience when people are so focused that it amounts to absolute absorption in an activity, providing a sense of discovery, a creative feeling of pushing to higher levels of performance — into a new reality. The experience is called... flow!"

  • I occasionally look in search engines for the main websites I maintain, and also for my own name. Maybe because I'm a little vain, but also to measure what effect I have on the Internet world. I'm Flemming #5 in Google. And then I run into a cute little piece like this. My French is not very good, but I think it says that the guy is happy about having met a very good friend through NCN, and then he quotes a piece I wrote about "Learning". I'm not sure where I wrote that, but, hm, it's kind of nice. It is hard to appreciate my own writing, other than when I run into it years later, or somebody else quotes it.

  • I once ran into a fellow who was fond of making mini-books out of short texts that he liked. Something like 2" x 1.5" and with 8-20 pages in each. Very unusual format, which he created on a normal printer, by printing many of the little pages double-sided on a regular size paper, and then cutting them out, folding them and stapling them together, like a magazine. And it was actually really nice to read a short text that way, and it was a very handy thing to give to people when you meet them. He had made a couple of my articles into those mini-books, and there too I had that experience, of being able to appreciate something I had written, because it was repackaged in a very digestible way. Now, if I could just remember his name ...

    "Imagination is the beginning of creation. You imagine what you desire, you will what you imagine, and at last you create what you will." -- George Bernard Shaw
    [ | 2002-10-21 01:48 | 2 comments | PermaLink ]  More >



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