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open source, open genomics, open creation
Showing posts with label
guardian
.
Show all posts
Showing posts with label
guardian
.
Show all posts
28 August 2008
Words Fail Us
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linguistics professor and author shares a personal selection from the thousands of languages on the brink of disappearing How about if we al...
2 comments:
Ordnance Survey: Right Out of Order
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I always thought that the Ordnance Survey had a rather, er, Olympian view of things that was more suited to the top-down twentieth century t...
2 comments:
27 August 2008
Somebody's Heard the Music
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Some people in the music biz are finally getting it : The music executives behind Kaiser Chiefs and Primal Scream are backing a new website ...
04 August 2008
Open Source and UK Politics
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The new dividing line between Labour and the Tories is less about a left-right split than about an authoritarian approach on one side and a ...
2 comments:
05 May 2008
Czy Spadające Ceny Pamięci Flash Zagrażają Microsoft?
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One for my Polish readers (with thanks to Iwo Hencz ).
06 March 2008
Why Falling Flash Prices Threaten Microsoft
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In the Guardian .
7 comments:
03 March 2008
Really Googling the Genome
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When I wrote a piece for the Guardian four years ago called " Googling the Genome ", it was more of a metaphor than a specific wa...
2 comments:
28 January 2008
Free Music Goes Mainstream
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What's interesting about this piece in the Guardian describing how the music industry is finally waking up to the virtues of free is t...
4 comments:
10 December 2007
Towards Open Government Data
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One of the premises of this blog is that openness - radiating out from open source through open content, open access, open data and the rest...
1 comment:
11 October 2007
Best4C: Best4U?
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I was interested to read Vic Keegan's column in the Guardian today: This week I bumped into a number of people who had no office to go...
05 October 2007
Why Free Flies - and Galileo Doesn't
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Nice little piece by Charles Arthur in the Guardian today that pulls together a bunch of disparate stories (including my Alfresco profile ...
20 September 2007
eForum Follow-up
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While I was at the Westminster eForum last week I had the pleasure of meeting Vic Keegan finally. Vic used to edit the Technology pages on...
1 comment:
17 September 2007
Enclosing the Agricultural Commons
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Here's a nasty little threat brewing: Government ministers have given their backing to a renewed campaign by farmers and industry to in...
16 August 2007
The Idiots of OS (Ordnance Survey)
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This really makes my blood boil. After a year of negotiations, academic geographers have conceded defeat in their attempt to find a way to ...
27 July 2007
The Value of Free Content
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One of the constant themes of this blog is that there's plenty of money to be made by giving away things for free. Here's an intere...
30 June 2007
Irving Wladawsky-Berger: And Another Thing
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I interviewed Irving Wladawsky-Berger twice: once for Rebel Code , soon after IBM announced its support for GNU/Linux - arguably one of the ...
29 June 2007
iPlayer Frothing at the Mouth
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I've done my fair share of apoplectic frothing over the disgrace that is the BBC iPlayer, but here's a further helping , courtesy of...
17 May 2007
The Guardian Identifies Itself on ID Cards
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Good to see Charles Arthur coming out with a forthright attack on the madness that is the UK ID Card. Good, too, to see the Guardian retu...
15 March 2007
IT's Got to be Local and Open
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Nice story in the Guardian today about a local UK health system that works - unlike the massive, doomed, centralised NHS system currently ...
2 comments:
29 January 2007
Blogging Becomes Compulsorier
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I think it's a great idea to force journos to roll up their sleeves and interact with their readers; but this may be taking it a little...
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