Word for the day:
- To mask one’s goals with “patriotism”; and
- To make so confused or opaque as to be difficult to perceive or understand: “A great effort was made… to obscure or obfuscate the truth.”
Usage: The law was patriobfuscated.
by timlangeman
Word for the day:
Usage: The law was patriobfuscated.
by timlangeman
Dave Winer’s been promoting OPML for a while now. He said it’s the googlish way to do directories. I thought it was a cool idea but I didn’t see tools or applications.
Now, SharpReader allows me to save my rss subscriptions as a file. Aaron Swartz has a description of his Subscription Syndication Script. It references Joshua Allen’s OPML and XSLT page.
I have a feeling we’ll being hearing more about OPML.
by timlangeman
Many took Alan Greenspan’s comments about the role of law in shaping markets as a caution against overextending intellectual property rights.
I’m promoting a “Calculation Debate” for the Information Age. Greenspan’s cautious endorsement can only help.
by timlangeman
World of Ends got a lot of links a few weeks ago but today I was reminided how foundational the idea of “centrality” is to our world view. We all want to avoid being “marginalized”– relagated to the periphery. Disconnected. Irrelevant.
Bloggers have words to describe this quest for status:
Weblogs don’t change power laws. Everyone has a voice, but don’t expect to be heard right away. I can imagine the Dave Winer’s frustration writing about weblogs for years before he got much attention. On the scale of history, 5 or 10 years is a revolution, but to the individual, revolutions can still feel like an eternity.
One of the advantages weblogs have in promoting a cause is the ability to archive fragments of vision. These fragements may go unnoticed for a while, but eventually they’ll start to pile up. Some of them will be too abstract or unactionable, but by constantly refering back to these fragements, you could can build something large, one day at a time.