When you control your own site, you get a little more freedom over what kinds of things you can post.
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Check out @pmarca's stream today. This is also stuff you get to know well if someone you care for is immunosuppressed.
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From CaringBridge, this time last year: "every part of us is looking forward to - and hoping for - that moment where she can breathe again." Here's to a year of moments.
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This time last year I was sitting with my family in the hospital, waiting to find out if they were going to save my mother's life with a lung transplant. Today, I'm hoping to take her to the beach. It's been a difficult, sometimes heartbreaking year, but she is amazing, and I am so grateful for her persistence, the rock-like support she gets from my father, the values and strength of my whole family, and the skills and intelligence of the surgeons, nurses and doctors. And mostly that she's here.
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There's an interesting opportunity for a company to offer free equivalents to Google's Android tools and license them to whomever wishes to bundle them onto their handsets. Nokia Here, oddly, could be a contender for this. Maps are important, and Google is using them as leverage.
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What are some company team pages (with separate photos for each member) that you like?
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I have one of those robot massage chairs, but could use the real thing. Can anyone recommend somewhere in SF / the East Bay / Santa Rosa?
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Two valid reminders that startups aren't the only fruits: a co-op run service last night, & great discussion of non profits this morning. Easy to forget round these parts sometimes.
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Another great evening at Homebrew Website Club. I'm once again feeling privileged to get to hang out with the #indieweb community.
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Location: Quip SF, 988 Market St. (at 6th), 7th Floor, San Francisco, CA
Are you building your own website? Indie reader? Personal publishing web app? Or some other digital magic-cloud proxy? If so, come on by and join a gathering of people with likeminded interests. Bring your friends that want to start a personal web site. Exchange information, swap ideas, talk shop, help work on a project, whatever ...
Also see: the main page on IndieWebCamp, including details of the Portland side of the event; the event on Facebook.
This event is hosted by Ryan Barrett.
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Startups should elevator pitch their cultures. "Terry Gilliam's Brazil meets Bret Easton Ellis". "JD Salinger meets Doogie Howser, MD".
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On the left, a screenshot by Tantek Çelik, featuring Nixon. On the right, my screenshot. Why do we get such different image results?
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I complain about Obama's civil liberties stance, but to be fair, even climate change is still controversial for some people. It's an uphill battle.
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Not watching the State of the Union. He actually makes me livid at this point. I'm getting pizza.
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Net neutrality is the principle that "Internet service providers and governments should treat all data on the Internet equally, not discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment, and modes of communication." In other words, all of my Internet data is treated the same, whether it's from Netflix, Skype, Baidu, your personal website, or a startup nobody's heard of. If I'm competing with Netflix, I can't pay your access provider to have my movies stream faster than theirs.
When net neutrality rules were adopted in the US by the FCC in 2010, the conservative Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund disingenuously painted it as follows:
The Federal Communications Commission's new "net neutrality" rules, passed on a partisan 3-2 vote yesterday, represent a huge win for a slick lobbying campaign run by liberal activist groups and foundations. The losers are likely to be consumers who will see innovation and investment chilled by regulations that treat the Internet like a public utility.
These rules were themselves a compromise, which neither pleased conservatives like Fund, nor net neutrality advocates. However, it did ensure that Internet traffic saw some protection.
Fund was flat-out wrong. The Internet should be a public utility; whereas some have tried to paint net neutrality as being a set of anti-business principles, they in fact protect the Internet as an open marketplace for innovation. The rules ensure that businesses will not be penalized on the network for being new, and allow new technologies and approaches to flourish. Removing these rules allows ISPs to control the market, whereas a utility Internet ensures that free trade is possible.
Verizon, the US telco formerly known as Bell Atlantic, had been fighting to overturn the FCC ruling for commercial reasons:
And in court last Monday, Verizon lawyer Helgi Walker made the company's intentions all too clear, saying the company wants to prioritize those websites and services that are willing to shell out for better access.
She also admitted that the company would like to block online content from those companies or individuals that don't pay Verizon's tolls.
On January 14th, Verizon won.
The implications are that net neutrality is dead and buried, and that carriers can begin to charge the fees for access that Verizon referred to. In turn, this may open the floodgates for unequal access to the Internet everywhere; although the FCC only has jurisdiction over communications in the United States, enough of the Internet is transmitted over the domestic backbone to make a difference.
Not only does that affect the quality of the Internet and the ability for new Internet businesses to operate - it also, together with last year's extensive NSA revelations, disproportionately affects American Internet businesses. One of the founding principles of the Internet's architecture is that traffic can be re-routed; why wouldn't other nations begin to work around the United States's compromised network?
All is not necessarily lost. Michael Copps, a former FCC commissioner, recently wrote that broadband should be reclassified as "telecommunications".
On Wednesday, Copps wrote a blog post titled, "The Buck Stops At The FCC," calling upon the commission to "reclassify broadband as 'telecommunications' under Title II of the Communications Act." The effect of that move would be to designate Internet service providers as "common carriers," making them subject to increased FCC regulation.
Common carriers "transport goods or people for any person or company and [are] responsible for any possible loss of the goods during transport" - as opposed to contract or private carriers, which may refuse to carry anyone else's goods. This would effectively turn the Internet into the utility John Fund was so afraid of.
Without this step, we are playing fast-and-loose with the most opportunity-creating technology in all of communications history. Without this step, we are guaranteeing an Internet future of toll-booths, gatekeepers, and preferential carriage. Without this step, we stifle innovation, put consumers under the thumb of special interests, and pull the props from under the kind of rich civic dialogue that only open and non-discriminatory communications can provide.
Lest we think it's as simple as this, the EFF recently released its opinion that the FCC can't - and shouldn't - save net neutrality. Granting the organization power over the Internet itself gives it too much power to regulate what has been, traditionally, an open, international medium:
Internet users should be wary of any suggestion that there is an easy path to network neutrality. It’s a hard problem, and building solutions to resolve it is going to remain challenging. But here is one guiding principle: any effort to defend net neutrality should use the lightest touch possible, encourage a competitive marketplace, and focus on preventing discriminatory conduct by ISPs, rather than issuing broad mandatory obligations that are vulnerable to perverse consequences and likely to be outdated as soon as they take effect.
The Internet is a marketplace; there can be no doubt about that. I think that the incumbent businesses coming out against net neutrality tend to be ones deeply entrenched in old technologies: after all, both telephone and broadcasting are effectively technology businesses. They just happen to be ones whose underlying technologies are obsolete. Their businesses are hurting because something better has come along, which is meeting the needs of consumers in a more efficient way, and they're struggling to adapt.
Too bad. The Internet will win, and with it, consumers. There is nothing to be gained by restricting it; certainly not in the long term. Net neutrality will create wealth, it will create jobs, and it will set the stage for innovation for decades to come.
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I'm curious about a few things: where people are following me from, and what kind of things they expect from me. It's not so much about what I <em>post</em> as a way to gauge the interests of my community. Most of those questions relate to products and context.
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I genuinely really like her music, but I'm also ideologically glad that a pop star like Lorde exists. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Belewo58nCA
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@joshuajuran That's totally a folksinger I could get behind.
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I grew up on American folk music. My fondest memories are gathering with my extended family in Massachusetts to sing informally. I knew the lyrics to This Land is Your Land or Charlie and the MTA long before I knew the words to anything they would play on the radio.
I also grew up with progressive values. On the American side of my family, there have been union leaders, college professors, thinkers and writers; people who cared about social justice, for whom the works of people like Pete Seeger were meaningful. As the New York Times writes:
His agenda paralleled the concerns of the American left: He sang for the labor movement in the 1940s and 1950s, for civil rights marches and anti-Vietnam War rallies in the 1960s, and for environmental and antiwar causes in the 1970s and beyond. "We Shall Overcome," which Mr. Seeger adapted from old spirituals, became a civil rights anthem.
He was in a group called the Almanac Singers, which also included Woody Guthrie, another legendary progressive folksinger. Their album Talking Union and Other Union Songs was admitted to the Library of Congress as a historically significant recording. Union Maid is on that album, as well as a famous recording of Which Side Are You On?; but it's the lyrics of Talking Union itself that I think are particularly brave. It was originally written in the 1940s, in the midst of World War II - and then re-released at the height of the McCarthy era!
If you want higher wages, let me tell you what to do;
You got to talk to the workers in the shop with you;
You got to build you a union, got to make it strong,
But if you all stick together, now, ‘twont be long.
You'll get shorter hours,
Better working conditions.
Vacations with pay,
Take your kids to the seashore.
He was the kind of artistic hero who embodied the values I aspire to, and who does not seem to exist anymore.
Over on MetaFilter, I commented:
He was, sadly, blacklisted for being a communist, and recognized as a living legend by the Library of Congress. An anti-war singer, a champion of workers rights, a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and a children's entertainer; an undeniable part of America's cultural history. I enjoyed this full-length concert with his half-sister, Peggy.
Here's his version of If I Had a Hammer, which he co-wrote; there's also a Smithsonian Folkways episode about him, which is an hour long and a free download.
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Pitch: Varista. Uber meets Sightglass Coffee. Summon a single-origin pour-over coffee with an app; is brewed en route. Surge pricing, ofc.
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@bobpoekert Perhaps they could charge non-Teslas? Also, battery exchange could remain proprietary.
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Werd I/O © Ben Werdmuller. The text (without images) of this site is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.