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Friday, March 3, 2006 |
Tech problem: gulker.com's trusty Radio blogging software needs a bit of expert attention. We'll be off the air for a bit - not that anyone is likely to notice given our current infrequent update schedule. We have fantasies about drifting into lone genius blogger status... just fantasies, mind you...
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10:36:01 PM
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Saturday, December 4, 2004 |
Joe Ferris: this sketch by Rick Whitehurst was in my email tonight. Brought Joe right back. Happy holidays, Joe, wherever you may be...
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8:31:05 PM
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Friday, February 13, 2004 |
Joe Ferris' Wake: Doug E. Lewis writes that Joe's wake will be held Saturday, February 21st from 1 to 5 PM at The Old Town pub in Pasadena. No-host bar, food provided by volunteers (see Doug if you want to pitch in). Open mike for musicians, spoken word and whatever moves friends and colleagues. Doug asks that all spread the word...
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7:28:26 PM
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Wednesday, December 17, 2003 |
The gentlemen of letters (see Sam Pepys' blog, below) were indeed the original bloggers. They lived in the first age in which a reliable network - European postal service - was available. The likes of Pepys (1633 - 1703), Galileo (1564 - 1642), Locke (1632 - 1704) and Descartes (1546 - 1650) could, and did, write to their contemporaries. They also sent each other essays, papers and occasionally whole books.
A custom began, in which the recipient of a missive from one of these savants would call friends and interested observers together in salons or coffee houses to read the letters and sometimes draft a response. Thus was born the Royal Society in England, and similar groups elsewhere on the continent.
For the first time in history, discovery was shared, and investigators, then known as natural philosophers, could rely on other bright and inquisitive minds to vet their work, suggest improvements and so forth. The system was remarkably like open source software development and other modern phenomena that have arisen from our new global network. Even more remarkable, I think, given that perhaps only 10% of the world could read in the 17th century.
I am of the opinion that blogging and related network communications are giving rise to a new age of letters: the first one helped spark the Renaissance which pretty much completely altered the political, religious and economic fabric of the West, if not the whole world. One can only wonder what the results of the new network will be....
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10:14:53 AM
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Samuel Pepys' diary is now available as a 'blog, complete with RSS feed. The diarist of the events that arose on the occasion of the first global network - postal service - is now available on the newest global network. Nice...
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9:56:53 AM
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Thursday, November 20, 2003 |
Bill Joy on open source: "Open source is fine, but it doesn't take a worldwide community to create a great operating system. Look at Ken Thompson creating Unix, Stephen Wolfram writing Mathematica in a summer, James Gosling in his office making Java. Now, there's nothing wrong with letting other people help, but open source doesn't assist the initial creative act. What we need now are great things. I don't need to see the source code. I just want a system that works." Lone genius hackers see thing differently...
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9:34:11 PM
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Tuesday, September 23, 2003 |
Couldn't buy this stuff if you wanted to. Greg Bryant, Workspot co-founder and quintessential innovator, responds to an Infoworld article cited below. The global network may be the best idea ever, imho... where else would you get such an impassioned, and informed, exchange of ideas? And please, everyone, feel free to rant on that theme...
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9:45:25 PM
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Sunday, July 27, 2003 |
Lone Genius Blogger circa 13th century: Mechthild of Magdeburg was a beguine mystic who kept a vernacular diary of her spiritual revelations that was widely circulated by copying out in longhand. She was a blogger in a time before printing and postal service, much less electronic networks, existed.
She journaled her experience including visionary insight into spirituality, love songs and responses to critics who reacted inamicably to the notion of a woman writing about anything, much less faith. She wrote from her 30s until the time of her death.
Her writing is collected in the book 'Flowing light of the Godhead', which contains 267 passages ('posts') from a few lines to a few pages long. What we call blogging is actually a very old form...
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7:48:27 PM
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Opinions expressed on this site are stricly the author's own
Updated 4/29/06; 1:31:45 PM
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Updated 4/29/06; 1:31:45 PM
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