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open source, open genomics, open creation
10 June 2008
Peter Suber Writing Suberbly
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Peter Suber is widely acknowledged as the linch-pin of the open access movement, but an ironic consequence of this is that his own writings ...
2 comments:
The Battle of the Non-Papers
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For anyone with any lingering doubts about the absurdity of intellectual monopolies and the organisations who peddle them, enter the non-pap...
Recursive Publics: Hardly a Two-Bit Idea
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For some years I have contemplated – and even planned out in some detail - a kind of follow-up to Rebel Code , which would look at the ways ...
Open Enterprise Interview: Bernard Dalle, Index Ventures
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On Open Enterprise blog .
Nearly Perfect Neelie
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Looks like Neelie really gets it these days: “I know a smart business decision when I see one — choosing open standards is a very smart bus...
UK's Second City in Second Life
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Whatever happened to Second Life? Well, somebody's still using it, apparently : to create a geo-coded map within Second Life that enabl...
I Came, ISO, I Didn't Conquer
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The OOXML farce continues : Four national standards body members of ISO and IEC – Brazil, India, South Africa and Venezuela – have submitted...
09 June 2008
Politics 2.0
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This is why we will win: It used to be so easy - the government could just set up a plan, push through it, let the media do its part. But t...
My Oh EMI
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This is getting interesting. After appointing a top Googler as its "digital president", EMI Music has now nabbed Cory Ondrejka, ...
RMS Adds a Little Oyster Sauce
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A few weeks back, there was much rejoicing in the open source world over the following story : Open-source software helped London's Oyst...
4 comments:
Walking Three Tightropes
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On Open Enterprise blog .
The New Pirate's Dilemma
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The Pirate's Dilemma : The Pirate’s Dilemma tells the story of how youth culture drives innovation and is changing the way the world wor...
Buy Windows XP, Get Vista Free
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On Open Enterprise blog .
08 June 2008
No ID Card Function Creep? Pull the Other One
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Here's an interesting blast from the past , courtesy of that nice Mr Charles Clarke, one-time home secretary: This letter was sent about...
1 comment:
06 June 2008
GFDL Smackdown: RMS vs. Beijing Underground
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Seems like the Beijing underground authorities have infringed on an image from Wikipedia, which uses the GNU Free Documentation Licence: ti...
ACTA's Unspeakable Acts
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It seems that the Mighty behind the imminent ACTA are aware that what they are up to is literally unspeakable: I’ve recently heard through...
2 comments:
Open Hardware is...Hard
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The Economist does one of its periodic "what's going on in that wacky world of open source" pieces, mercifully not as fundame...
Bill Gates' Closed Source World
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Here's a frightening thought: Bill Gates is not so much giving up on his misguided closed-source approach to software as moving on to ap...
10 comments:
Expensive Oil and the Analogue World
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Fascinating stuff : We usually think about technological improvements in productivity as benefiting the highly skilled and educated, and dis...
2 comments:
Asus the Unstoppable Innovator?
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On Open Enterprise blog .
05 June 2008
Mozilla Dot T-shirt
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This is why Firefox is unstoppable: T-shirts .
Welsh TV over IP: Yeah, But Why?
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As someone who has a Welsh name and not a little Welsh genetic heritage, I'm a big fan of expanding the provision of material in Welsh. ...
What's Wrong with this Picture?
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Ignoring the parodistic language , that is: Essentially, with the Internet, capitalism gifts the masses with a false commons where people ca...
Where's Walt? On Firefox 3
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Walt Mossberg wields much power in the US, so the following is significant: My verdict is that Firefox 3.0 is the best Web browser out ther...
2 comments:
04 June 2008
Openness in the Middle Kingdom
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The most senior Chinese official jailed for sympathising with the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests has urged the leadership to make public the...
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