projo.com

   Subterranean Homepage News

Advertising

2006 EPpy Winner -- Best multimedia

Providence, R.I., Clear 42°

Customize | E-mail newsletters | E-cards | MySpecialsDirect


my passport photo
about me
personal site

Blogroll

Jim Romenesko's Media News
Jorn Barger's Robot Wisdom
Doc Searls
Dave Winer
Cory Doctorow
Travelers Diagram
Ye Olde Phart
Blog Sisters
JD Lasica
Susanna Cornett
Dan Gillmor
Paul Andrews
Dave Copeland
Ft. Boise
The Magnificent Melting Object
Wayne Robins
Behind the news
Blogcritics
Tom Poe
Memepool
Slashdot
Shell Extension City
Daypop Top 40 Links
( blogdex )
Metafilter
peterme.com
FollowMe Here
kalilily time
Burningbird
Judy Watt
Obscure Store
plep
wood s lot
The Shifted Librarian
New World Disorder
CyberJournalist: News Weblogs
p h o t o g r a p h i c a . o r g
Mirror project

n e w s  w e  c a n  u s e
Microcontent News
E-Media Tidbits
Phil Agre
I Want Media
Through the Viewfinder

By Sheila Lennon
'
Bottom-up' journalism from the pros

August 23, 2002

Unwanted newborns can be given up without penalty:

The Safe Haven for Infants Act grants criminal immunity to anyone who leaves an infant 30 days or younger at a hospital, fire station or police station.

Sen. Catherine E. Graziano, a Providence Democrat who sponsored the legislation, said the bill was prompted by a series of incidents in which babies were abandoned or found dead. ... A wide range of groups — from Planned Parenthood to Right to Life — backed the proposal, she said"
-- The Providence Journal, June 29, 2001

I'm blogging this in response to two stories, one from AP today -- R.I. girl who left newborn outside charged with child endangerment and this story from Santa Cruz:

Santa Cruz's Deputy District Attorney wants the stickers placed on trash dumpsters thoughout the city. The idea is to discourage child abandonment.

Other states with Safe Haven laws are listed here.
Link to this item
| Comment

Wireless channel use sets up turf battle: The Portland Oregonian reported this week on a collision between Starbucks' wireless and Personal Telco, a nonprofit grassroots effort to build "city wide wireless networks which are open to, and maintained by, the public."

The world's biggest barista and a grass-roots group are squaring off in a wireless game of chicken at Pioneer Courthouse Square.

On one end stands Starbucks, which this week likely will begin marketing a paid service that lets its customers in Portland's living room connect their laptops wirelessly to the Internet. On the other is Personal Telco, a local group of computer hobbyists, which has provided the same service for free in the square since February.

Sure, there's room on the wireless spectrum for peaceful coexistence. But Starbucks, using wireless carrier T-Mobile, is transmitting its signal on the same channel Personal Telco has used for the past six months. Neither has budged.

The result? Both Starbucks customers and Personal Telco members may face slower speeds on the suddenly crowded channel. ...

Now, (Personal Telco members) can inadvertently connect to the Starbucks paid service. ...

The group's New Users Guide may be of general use to those wondering how to get started with wireless.

Meanwhile, Starbucks doesn't foresee wireless Internet access in its Rhode Island stores this year.
Link to this item | Comment

Windows 2000 workarounds: Both from John Lettice at The Register:

Win2k SP3, the 'snooper' licence, and the workaround

How to defang Win2k SP3's auto updating

Link to this item | Comment

Your choice here: Doc Searls responds to yesterday's question, "Who can start a list (of candidates and officeholders who are clueful and friendly to the Net?" by pointing to the American Open Technology Consortium (AOTC) site. There's not a lot there now but its subtitle is "Educating politics about technology " so it sounds like a natural for the future.
Link to this item | Comment

Blog the Vote, Baby: And Shelley Powers, at Burningbird (aka Burningzilla), reminds in a post worth reading in its entirety,

I have a set of issues that are important to me. They include our policies in the Middle East, our environmental policies, health care in the world, women's rights, fair trade, and so on. Copyright is in the list, but it's wa-a-y down.

This will emerge. People who agree on tech issues are often far apart on everything else -- like the so-called tech bloggers and war bloggers.

And then there are the promises politicians make to get elected that are forgotten by the dawn after the Inauguration Ball.

Tricky territory to come.
Link to this item | Comment

August 22, 2002

Future-building: While targeting members of Congress who represent corporate interests over those of Netizens may send a message, there's positive action possible as well: How about identifying candidates and officeholders who are clueful and friendly to the Net, with the intention of supporting them because they represent us?

Who are they? Make it clear that a voting bloc will support and help finance them because of these positions, and that this bloc will extend that support to other candidates who adopt these positions.

Who can start a list?
Link to this item | Comment

Photos: Rock 'n' Folk Musicians of the Sixties:

John Byrne Cooke experienced the 1960s within the music of the counterculture. As a member of the Charles River Valley Boys bluegrass band in Cambridge, Massachusetts, his musical home was the legendary Club 47, one of the principal wellsprings of the folk-music boom. When folk gave way to rock and roll, John moved to San Francisco, home of the Haight-Ashbury and acid rock, to become the road manager for Big Brother and the Holding Company and Janis Joplin. Through it all, he was taking pictures... via wood s lot

Link to this item | Comment

Janis Ian vs. the recording industry on file sharing: The San Jose Mercury News interviews the singer who wrote The Internet debacle - an alternative view:

"She credits Napster and its progeny with sparking renewed interest in her music, at a time when she can't be heard on contemporary-hit-obsessed radio stations. And she says her decision to offer free music downloads had done the opposite of what the industry predicts it would do: It caused a 300 percent spike in merchandise sales." via Dave Winer

Link to this item | Comment

Online 'Spoofing' Turns the Tables on Music Pirates: From The Washington Post,

"All this smacks of desperation," says Eric Garland, president of BigChampagne, a company hired by major labels to measure online file-sharing traffic. "When you've got a consumer movement of this magnitude, when tens of millions of people say, 'I think CD copying is cool and I'm within my rights to do it,' it gets to the point where you have to say uncle and build a business model around it rather than fight it."

Link to this item | Comment

Wi-Fi and free lunches: After running into an open Wi-Fi connection in a sandwich shop in an unnamed new England town, John Patrick writes, at News.com:

Has the "free lunch" arrived? In the Internet's early days, many people thought it was free. That misunderstanding eventually got cleared up. So it is that community wireless networks will hopefully continue to spread. All that's now needed are business models that can make this happen.

Link to this item | Comment

Letter from Larry #4, Part 2: Larry Novick, the new expat who's writing from Cape Verde, had mentioned sending a photo essay, so I didn't think it too strange when I had only captions and jpgs from him. "What happened to the text?" he wrote the next day. Oops. That email went wide.

I've put the photos and the text on one page. Here's how it starts:

August is the holiday month here, which means that most establishments close at 3 p.m. Monday through Friday and don't open on Saturday. This translates to a mass exodus to the beaches, neighborhood cookouts and of course, music, music, music. The festivities started on my corner Friday evening with grilled fish and beer, continued with music at a neighbor's courtyard... More...

Larry also looks ahead to the Baia das Gatas Festival, the concert founded after a local showing of the movie Woodstock:

Tomorrow, Cesaria (Evora) arrives and preparations for the Festival at Baia das Gatas begin. The town is already filling up with tourists and the international press. The immediate effect is there is no small change or parking places. There's a real cosmopolitan feel as the Italian and French are all about (Haven't run into any Yanks yet). I'll keep you updated on the happenings.

Earlier Letters from Larry: August 5, June 25, May 23
Link to this item | Comment

Internet to reach South Pole: My colleague Tim Barmann sends this along.

Soon, the Internet's reach will extend all the way to the South Pole. In what will be one of the most dramatic and challenging engineering tasks ever

carried out in Antarctica, a fiber optic cable will be laid across nearly 2,000 kilometers of polar ice. It will take years to design and construct, but when finished it will revolutionize communications with the South Pole.

The pole is the only permanently inhabited place on Earth that cannot see geosynchronous communication satellites, a fact that severely restricts communication with the base. The U.S. National Science Foundation has just issued a request for companies to bid to build the trans-Antarctic fiber optic line that can be useable by 2009.

Link to this item | Comment

August 21, 2002

Starbucks offers Wi-Fi access -- but not here: News.com reports,

Starbucks is now serving up high-speed wireless Internet access at about 1,200 of its coffee shops, the company said today.

The Seattle-based coffee shop operator has surrounded the shops with a local area network supplied by T-Mobile, which is the wireless division of Germany's Deutsche Telekom, and computer maker Hewlett-Packard, the three companies said in a joint statement.

The three aim to offer the wireless Net access at up a total of 2,000 cafes in the United States as well as Europe, including Berlin and London, by the end of the year.

The network uses the Wi-Fi communications standard that allows computers with the correct equipment within a short distance of the network hub to log into the Internet.

Rhode Island is not on the list today, although Boston is. An employee at the Wayland Square coffee shop had never heard of the program, but promised to inquire of the mothership when it would come to his store. We inquired ourselves, and are awaiting a call from Seattle with a date for Rhode Island and nearby Massachusetts shops.

Today's rollout goes live at Starbucks stores in Atlanta; Austin, Texas; Boston; Connecticut; Denver; Dallas-Ft-Worth; Houston; New York; New Jersey; Philadelphia; Portland, Ore.; the San Francisco Bay area; and the Seattle-Puget Sound region. Additionally, stores in southern California, including Los Angeles; Chicago; Maryland; Pittsburgh; Virginia; and Washington D.C., are scheduled to go wireless before the end of 2002.

If you're in one of the favored areas, the free software is at http://www.starbucks.com/hotspot;

24-hour free passes from the wireless ISP, T-Mobile, are available there, too. Other locations where T-Mobile access works -- mostly airports -- are at T-Mobile's site.

If you'd like to learn more about Wi-Fi, I gathered some links a couple of weeks ago here.
Link to this item | Comment

"Let's Start Here": Stanford Law professor Lawrence Lessig and Userland blog pioneer Dave Winer are hammering out a dialogue that includes positions on copyright that Ernie the Attorney sums up well. Also at issue is a speech Lessig gave that made Doc Searls bristle: "But if you don't do something (political) now, this freedom that you built, that you spend your life coding, this freedom will be taken away. ... But you've done nothing."

The snippet below from Lessig's blog yesterday, written after a series of emails with Dave, makes me jump in:

"Right now we have a culture where the most creative and important builders of freedom in the 21st century have zero political savvy and (so far) zero political effect.

"How? Here's the simplest thing we could do: identify 2 luddite members of Congress -- one Republican and one Democrat. Organize and defeat them in November. If Congress saw bad ideas cost seats, they'd begin to do something about their bad ideas."

I think an even simpler thing, with far greater potential impact, would be to create together a National Online Computer Course called "Let's Start Here."

Many non-techies, perhaps most, can only click and type inside programs -- they use AOL, email, shop and consume the web like a Disney movie, clicking from Google to look up information, but they don't know how to copy and paste. Others are afraid to download anything at all.

Teach more people how to use this architecture. Show them what you've built and how we use it, in language so clear they just get it.

Teach them how to do what they're going to lose if they don't act. And then get them tell their friends (some of whom will be politicians and neighborhood activists) and get upset and use the traditional political channels -- rallies on TV, sound bytes, letters to the editor.

Give them simple, free blogware so local groups can form online. Make it a movement. Stop the war.

The Chicken Little theory of history says that if enough citizens believe the sky is gonna fall and they go to the king and demand action, whether the sky is falling or not the king must act; if he doesn't, the king will fall.

Votes are the one thing with more power than Hollywood money.
Link to this item | Comment

Tara Sue Grubb
Libertarian candidate for Congress from N.C.
The first Congressional candidate to blog: Meanwhile, Dave Winer is championing the candidacy of Libertarian candidate Tara Sue Grubb, who's running against Howard Coble (R-N.C.) for a House seat. Dave's intention is "to elect Ms. Grubb as the first Representative that the Internet helped elect (to balance the help that Coble and others get from Hollywood)."

Here's Dave's description of her:

"I had an hour phone talk with Tara Grubb. She sounds great. Next step, get a website going. She's going to send me some of her writing, and a picture. She's quite a contrast to Coble. A young mom, 26 years old. Daughter of a Vietnam vet. All her brothers were in the military. She's been broke and homeless. 13,000 people in her district have lost their jobs recently. Very ambitious, but seems quite sincere in wanting to reform politics. Her only issue is the Internet."

Coble, along with Rep. Howard Berman (D-Calif.), from Disney's district, last month introduced the Peer-to-Peer Piracy Prevention Act (.pdf) — a bill that, if passed, would authorize copyright holders to covertly hack into Internet users' computers and use technological weapons, such as viruses, against anyone whom they have a "reasonable basis" to suspect is engaged in copyright infringement.

Coble's hometown paper, The Greensboro (N.C.) News-Record, in an Aug. 10 editorial, suggests, Coble should retool Internet piracy bill:

Howard Coble obviously means well. But a bi-partisan bill he is co-sponsoring to combat Internet burglars effectively could make the entertainment industry judge, jury and executioner of alleged cybercriminals and would permit them unfettered access into anyone's home computer.

The Sixth District congressman from Greensboro, who is chairman of the House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property, supports a measure that would give record companies and other entertainment industries the right to invade our personal computers, based merely on the suspicion that we might have illegally downloaded copyrighted material.

That would be tantamount to allowing Sears or Kmart to invade your home if they believe you have shoplifted merchandise from one of their stores. And if they should accidentally bang a door or shatter a window in the process, well, no harm, no foul.

The language of the measure grants the entertainment industry Internet policing powers and specifically absolves these companies of any legal liability for "disabling, interfering with, blocking or otherwise impairing files" on personal computers.

Ed Cone, a journalist-blogger in Grubb's North Carolina district, doubts the Libertarian neophyte can beat Coble, but notes, "Already, she is the first candidate for U.S. Congress to have a Weblog, and that alone is noteworthy. "

Grubb writes her new blog, Tara Grubb For Congress Radio Weblog, in her own energetic voice. She gets instant feedback from the comments feature, where one voter asked,

Hello Tara,

I'd like to know your position on the proposed FedEx hub at the Greensboro airport. As you may be aware, the federal government is prepared to poney up $108,000,000.00 for a third runway to be used exclusively by FedEx, the state is prepared to spend $36,000,000.00 to relocate a perfectly good road in order to accommodate the third runway, and the state and county have offered $90,000,000.00 in tax incentives. All of this to bring to fruition a project that will add to our air pollution problem, diminish our drought-plagued water supply, and subject thousands of cititizens to thunderous overnight noise. Where do you stand?

She answers the question today, and gets tips on better technique from yet another commenter. (This is gonna be fun!)

In 1994, I wrote, "Politicians who venture online will find a well-informed constituency already there, and can expect to account for their actions publicly and often."

And now it's happening. Spread the word.
Link to this item | Comment

August 20, 2002

Court Upholds Stoning for Nigerian Mother: Amina Lawal Kurami's appeal was rejected. She will be stoned to death for bearing a child out of wedlock. The father denies being the father (and apparently has no DNA). Here's the NYT version (reg. req.) (photo):

An Islamic high court in northern Nigeria rejected an appeal today from a single mother sentenced to be stoned to death for having had sex out of wedlock.

The woman's lawyers said they planned to file an appeal to a yet higher Islamic court. If that failed, they could appeal to the Supreme Court, where the case would force a showdown between Nigeria's constitutional and religious authorities...

In court today, Amin Lawal clutched her baby daughter and burst into tears as the judge ruled.

Ms. Lawal, 30, was first sentenced in March, having given birth to her daughter more than nine months after divorcing. The man she identified as the child's father denied the accusation and was acquitted for lack of evidence last spring.

Nigerian writer and Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka and the Muslim Council of Britain's Professor Dawud Noybee explained their opposing views on Lawal's case for the BBC.
Link to this item | Comment

"The life of the Dead: Band insider Dennis McNally talks about his new 600-page biography of the Grateful Dead, and answers questions about their long, strange trip."

In Salon, Douglas Cruickshank interviews the Grateful Dead's biographer-in-residence, Dennis McNally.

McNally: "They did things often for completely odd reasons. As an example, taping. They permitted taping for no other reason than that they didn't want to be cops. They were lousy cops, they were antiauthoritarian to the core, and it was too much work, too much bad vibes, too much everything. And, frankly, they were realistic and said, It's impossible to stop taping unless you strip-search every member of the audience, which ruins the atmosphere, of course.

"But the serendipitous result was that they doubled their audience..."

You may download .pdfs of the introduction and first chapter of McNally's What a Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead.
Link to this item | Comment

Segway isn't really "IT": Dean Kamen's "IT'' was disappointing. After some who had seen it said "IT" would change the way we live, it turned out to be just a scooter. But that may not have been "IT."

Graham Hayday at ZDnet reports,

According to a posting on the 'ginger-chat.com'' site, the Segway Human Transporter (SHT for short) cannot be the same thing as the much-hyped mystery invention originally known as Ginger and IT.

The claim revolves around inconsistencies between the description of Ginger contained in publicity for a book written by journalist Steve Kemper and the actual scooter-like invention. There are also some alleged patent irregularities.

"...Bob Metcalfe, founder of 3Com (and inventor of Ethernet) and someone not known for participating in hoaxes, also claims to have seen Ginger -- and says it's not Segway.

Metcalfe told the New York Times earlier this year: "Some months ago when speculation was running high, I said that Kamen's IT was more important than the Internet, but not as important as cold fusion, had cold fusion worked out. The IT I was talking about, which I did not disclose, was NOT Segway. That's all I can say."

"...Another posting on the ginger-chat site points out that the series of images of the machine on the official Segway.com site changed subtley in June this year. Originally, there was a bloke standing on the now-familiar two-wheeled scooter; now, there is one image which appears to be the same bloke floating above the ground. "

Metcalfe is the man who served up the intriguing analogy, " 'If I invented metal, and came out with the first spoon, which would be the big invention, the spoon or metal?'"

Suppose the scooter was just the way to test a stabilizer? The bulky prototype might lead to a wearable device that would lose the scooter. When pigs fly... (so can I?)

Here's a prediction from the owner of the "ginger-chat. com" site, registered only as Spliff:

"After many months of debate, research, and contemplation I have decided that I can't be sure what makes GINGER/IT hover/fly but I have a gut feeling that it does. In a nutshell this is what I believe Ginger is going to be: It's going to be a Personal hovering/flying vehicle that employs some type of revolutionary propulsion system. In order to maintain air control and balance as it hovers/flies it will advantageously employ technology similar to "Dynamic Stabilization" found in Kamen's iBot wheelchair. Finally, Ginger will be powered by Kamen's Stirling engine. It will change the world. "

That iBot wheelchair was touted by none other than ... Bob Metcalfe, in InfoWorld magazine: "Dean Kamen's IBOT is not a wheelchair -- users wear it, processors and all."
Link to this item | Comment

Newspaper ads are down again, causing worries: Felicity Barringer (NYT, reg.req.) reports,

"While many in the newspaper industry were somewhat optimistic just a month ago, after a mildly encouraging ad-page performance in the second quarter, there is now cause for second thoughts. Gannett reported yesterday that at USA Today, the nation's largest-circulation newspaper, ad volume was off 16 percent in July, compared with the same period in 2001. Advertising volume at The New York Times dipped 5.7 percent compared with July 2001. The drop in advertising has caused many newspaper chains to reduce their workforces; some have eliminated more than 10 percent of jobs in the last two years."

One Southern CEO noted, "The big dark cloud for all our newspapers is Kmart and what's going to happen with them. Over all, they are our second-largest advertiser."

Kmart is just the most recent example of the Walmart effect: Warren Bufffett's retail chain doesn't advertise, but when it moves into an area it causes the death of competitors who do.
Link to this item | Comment

Sidebar: J-students are probably asking: "Too late to switch majors?"

A University of Georgia report says starting salaries in journalism/communication jobs are down, benefits are reduced, jobs are less plentiful, and the satisfaction with those jobs is declining. The average starting salary for a 2001 journalism/communications graduate with a bachelor's degree was $26,000, down from $27,000 for '00 graduates. For graduates with a master's degree, the average starting salary dropped to $30,120 from $31,304 in 2000.

Here's a press release, a summary of the results and the full report (pdf) -- The Annual Survey of Journalism and Mass Communication -- compiled by the Grady College's James M. Cox Jr. Center for International Mass Communication Training and Research at the University of Georgia.
Link to this item | Comment

TV travelogues online: Mike Goldfein of Belo Interactive does a TV-spot-like spot that begins, " Whatever happened to all those old travel documentaries that, decades ago, used to be a staple of saturday afternoon TV?"

The answer: They're at Adventure TV. Some are virtually ads for tour companies, Goldfein warns, and others use every cliche banned in travel sections (Paradise, Mecca), but the visuals are great. Today's featured video a jaunt through Vietnam's Mekong Delta, and "Titicaca: Lake of the Incas" leads the the weekly features bill that changes on Wednesdays.
Link to this item | Comment

August 19, 2002


Neighborhood cookout in Mindelo, Cape Verde. Click to see larger photos and captions.

Letter from Larry #4: Onetime New Bedford Standard Times reporter Larry Novick and his wife Victoria left Providence in May, retiring to Victoria's native Cape Verde. Here's his fourth report on adjusting to life as an expatriate.

This is the neighborhood's weekend cookout which starts shortly after 3 p.m. Friday. Everybody comes out and by 10 p.m., there might be four grills going with fresh fish and chicken and, of course, lots of beer.

Because of the heat, the festivities continue until after midnight and as the charcoal turns to embers, somehow more beer appears and disappears and there's a lot of a capella singing.

Earlier Letters from Larry: August 5, June 25, May 23
Link to this item | Comment

Pop-ups put down: Earthlink to help block the ads

EarthLink Inc. said Monday it plans to offer its subscribers software to block Internet pop-up advertisements as part of a wider campaign to set itself apart from competitors. ... It will also block so-called pop-unders, ads that appear under the browser window.
Link to this item | Comment

Cultural divide: A T-shirt worth having!

Chinese newspaper tries to shame men into putting on their shirts
Beijing Youth Daily says its survey reveals that shirtless men are harming the city's image. In an effort to get men to cover up, the paper is running a daily photo spread of bare-chested men. (The eyes of the "shamed" are covered with black bars.) Men who spot themselves in the Youth Daily can go to the paper's office to claim a free T-shirt proclaiming, "Civilizing Beijing Begins with Me." (Los Angeles Times) via Romanesko

Link to this item | Comment

"Public Relations Tactics": How to pitch a blogger, from the PR Society of America.

It is crucial not to spam bloggers and to be aware of their likes and dislikes before you drop them a line. Canned, conventional pitch letters can be seen as offensive. Their preferred means of communication is e-mail and their address is often prominently featured on the site. When communicating with blogs, make sure to be completely open and honest about why you are contacting them, disclosing your organizational affiliation. Keep it to the point and always make sure to include a link to a published story or item that they might consider featuring. Do not ask bloggers to link to your client's site or latest press release. Bloggers are sensitive about becoming mouthpieces for other organizations and companies, which is the reason they began blogging in the first place. via JD Lasica

"Nice doggie..."

Link to this item | Comment

Dog days: Shelley Powers, aka Burningbird, writes a blog I read for the sheer pleasure of experiencing her voice and her thoughts. Today she speaks for me as well:

This time of year, the Dog Star--Sirius, in the constellation Canis Major--starts appearing in the sky just before dawn for those of us in the Northern Hemisphere, after hiding behind the sun for most of the summer. The ancient Greeks and Romans believed that it was Sirius in combination with the Sun that causes so much of the heat we feel at this time of year. Those crazy Greeks and Romans.

Regardless of how we got the term, these days are the worst of our summer and it shows. The Southern Hemisphere webloggers are just going to have to carry the rest of us for a week or two.

Link to this item | Comment

Subterranean Homepage News
by Sheila Lennon
features & interactive producer of projo.com

 

Advertising


Advertising
Table of Contents
Home page
PROJOCLASSIFIEDS | PROJOCARS | PROJOHOMES | PROJOJOBS | OBITUARIES | IN MEMORIAMS
Rhode Island News | Business | Lifebeat | Multimedia | National / World news | Opinion | Sports | Weather | Your Turn

News tip: (401) 277-7303 | Classifieds: (401) 277-7700 | Display advertising: (401) 277-8000 | Subscriptions: (401) 277-7600
© 2006, Published by The Providence Journal Co., 75 Fountain St., Providence, RI 02902.