Archive | February, 2003

How do I know I have a comment? Read my own blog? Dog food!

To my great surprise, there are _comments_ to stuff I’ve posted. I haven’t even bothered to check, since I’ve been talking to myself (luckily, I’m good at self-entertaining). Now I’ll have to remember to look. Dave Winer pointed out here that some means of finding out there are comments on your stories would be a good feature. Unfortunately, it looks like the comment thread on that posting ended up in the bit bucket. I think there was a more recent thread on this, but I haven’t found it yet…

Dan Bricklin’s SMBMeta Proposal

I’m not grokking what makes Dan Bricklin’s SMB proposal such a Good Thing. XML is nearly always a Good Thing, easy to produce, consume and transport. But how does this provide much more value than a vCard or vCard-RDF on your website? So, we each put a little smbmeta.xml file on our websites, and then register with whoever’s collecting business cards? Then, they can publish our site, if it meets their criteria. (SMB, by the way, is Small and Medium Businesses, in this case, not System Message Block). The aggregation issue is a new one, encouraging registrars to develop online directories.

The second question is why the smbmeta.xml has to be tied to a domain name? If you’re really talking about small businesses, paying for a domain name doesn’t make a lot of sense. Take “Rusty’s General Store” in downtown Contoocook as an example. It’s a one-woman shop selling pet supplies, food, grain, bird seed, and various related products. A web site? They have a phone. An answering machine was a new addition recently. But a web site is a questionable investment at best, even a business-card sized one. I like the idea of being able to submit an SMB metafile, or vCard-RDF, or equivalent, to get my favorite pet store a little extra business, but I don’t see where the tie-in between domain and directories necessarily applies.

Doh. Dan shoots down my argument in his white paper with:

Another lesson learned from the Internet in general is that while the cost to participate should be minimal, it should not be zero, because facilities that can be flooded for free will be. That’s why we insist that the file be located at the top of the domain: because domains cost money. The money to pay for a domain name is money a business would spend anyway — the marginal cost to a legitimate business is in fact zero — but nonetheless it’s a real cost that can help prevent spam.

Okay, I can see that. We do want to stop the flood that would be caused by a free service. And the cost of setting up a simple site on an existing system for a single page “Come visit our store: hours, directions and phone number” web site should be minimal, along with the costs of annual domain registration. To attract anyone other than the geeks, though, the system has to grow to a large enough size that customers are likely to find the directory entry.

And why not vCard? No phone numbers or email addresses, in order to prevent spammers from harvesting the list. Makes sense to me. I’ll be interested to see where this proposal goes.

What a Blog?

In trying to answer the question, “What’s a Blog?”, I ran into this site that looks jam-packed full of information on blogging: software, books and resources. Check it out.

Is the Prime Directive of Every Corporation to Monopolize Its Marketplace?

The buzz intensifies this week as everyone asks “What happens if Google becomes Big Brother?” and “What if they decide to take over the web?” Must all corporations reach a pinnacle where they betray the loyalty of their customers in pursuit of profit? Is Teoma just next in line? This sounds to me like more of the nonsense of “Is RedHat going to be the next Redmond?

Answer: Only if we let them. The market can create monopolies, and the market can exercise free choice to prevent them and encourage competition. Think Different. Get a second opinion. Try a different browser. Try a different search engine, a different operating system or a different database management system. Have a Dr. Pepper.

I’m still annoyed about the foundation Microsoft built its evil empire upon.,

says Dave Farquhar, over at his site. Gee, I think he forgot Stacker. Other than that, he’s got just about every “Why I hate Microsoft” item on the list. Pretty well-written, too. For those of you who haven’t read the history before, this is a pretty good summary of the anti- side of the equation. I was also amused by his footer line, which read “Thank you for supporting standards, freedom, and competition by using a non-Microsoft browser. This site is dedicated to you and others like you.” Why, thanks, Dave.

And, just in case you missed Mark Odell’s comment:

The MSBC Superlist of Anti-Microsoft Web Sites
Microsoft’s Rise to Power
Why I hate Microsoft

Watching Microsoft Like a Hawk
Boycott Microsoft
Reasons to Avoid Microsoft
The Bad Faith of Microsoft
Microsoft Monopoly
He Who Controls the Bootloader

Seventy-Six Trombones Lead The Big Parade, …

A picture named th-matthewkristincameronquartetimdb.JPGSaw the Matthew Broderick – Kristin Chenoweth made-for-TV remake of the 1962 classic Robert Preston – Shirley Jones “The Music Man.” A very impressive presentation. Music was good, dancing was well done. My resident music and dance critic enjoyed it. Broderick is no Robert Preston, but did an charming and slightlty different interpretation of the role. Kristin Chenoweth, at all of 4’11” , totally overpowered Broderick in the musical department.

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This work by Ted Roche is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.