Current Twitter Status

See status in context

Subsidized Fear

Terror Alert Level

Into The Past »

All Items Tagged With “news” (Subscribe to this tag)

Sudan - Freeing of Slaves | Creepy Sleepy

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Tuesday, March 18, 2008 @ 15:00 CDT by Daniel Andrlik

My friend Dan Patterson is a U.N. correspondent for Talk Radio News, and was recently sent on assignment to Sudan. He’s sent back several reports via a satellite phone, and this latest one deals with him witnessing the freeing of over 100 slaves in the Sudanese desert.

One of the many shocking things in this short report is when he reveals what was exchanged for their freedom after years of hardship.

View Link Source

Introducing EveryBlock

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Wednesday, January 23, 2008 @ 20:11 CST by Daniel Andrlik

EveryBlock is an awesome idea and an incredible service. I wish they had it for my town.

View Link Source

Torture school subjects children to lethal punishments - Boing Boing

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Friday, August 31, 2007 @ 10:02 CDT by Daniel Andrlik

This is just sick.

View Link Source

US attorney general Gonzales resigns | Special reports | Guardian Unlimited

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Monday, August 27, 2007 @ 09:09 CDT by Daniel Andrlik

Gonzales resigns just shortly after Rove leaves. Rats leaving the sinking ship?

View Link Source

OpenCongress

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Tuesday, February 27, 2007 @ 16:46 CST by Daniel Andrlik

This is a really awesome idea, although I’ll be curious to see how it gets used. I have not had a chance to really play yet, but it looks pretty slick.

View Link Source

Flickr Changes Have People Upset, But Why?

Blog Entry posted on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 @ 21:06 CST by Daniel Andrlik

Well, there has been a whole lot of hubbub on the net regarding Flickr’s announcement of an upcoming policy change, which if you are not a Flickr user you probably haven’t seen as it is only internally displayed. Essentially, Flickr members will be required to use a Yahoo login to access their account, plus the introduction of two new limitations.

The first is essentially the culmination of what users were told to expect when Yahoo acquired the photo sharing service, and most of the reaction to that is residual angst from Yahoo’s ad-filled past (or present) added with the frustration of having to create YAL. Ultimately though, this change is minor and most of the concerns regarding this that you’ll read in the official bitch thread seem to revolve around how the service will change. Since I signed up via my old Yahoo account (after brushing the dust off), I can tell you that there isn’t really a difference. You can still use a different email address, and you aren’t required to make use of other Yahoo services. I don’t have any problem staying logged in, and it saved me the trouble of making a unique Flickr login. Honestly, I would have preferred an OpenID based solution, but this isn’t any different than Google converting its acquisitions to a centralized authentication scheme, so it is really kind of silly to freak out about.

The limitations also seem reasonable. Users are restricted to 3,000 contacts, and limited to 75 tags per photo. Why you would need more than that beats me, but there are people out there with 5,000 contacts or more. This seems to be associated with the crazy social networking practice of friend collecting more than anything else. It seems there needs to be a change in contact practice here. A lot of users have been using the contact feature as a way of tracking activity in other accounts, rather than the primary use I see for it, which is to grant certain viewing privileges to particular users. That’s no one’s fault, that’s how the feature was advertised. However, it seems that would be best handled via feed subscription anyway.

The tag issue just seems silly as anyone using that many tags doesn’t really understand how to meaningfully tag content to begin with. Of course, some of this is due to Flickr’s ill-advised feature that allows other users to add tags to your photos. Sure you can restrict that, but that also restricts the ability for others to add notes to your photo. Notes are fun way to apply comments to particular parts of your photo, letting untrusted users add tags to your photos is just asking for trouble. It would be nice to see those two permission settings split into distinct options.

In theory, this is a bummer for the pro users as the services they paid for have changed, and it has ruffled a few feathers. It probably would have been a good idea to use this opportunity to create extra enticement to switch to a pro account, by imposing the limits only on free accounts or even leaving a pittance of extra contacts/tags on the pro accounts. Then again, Flickr would probably have their users crying foul over that as well. As Jeremy Zawodny points out, these things are tricky. It doesn’t help that Thomas Hawk, the CEO of Zooomr, while an avid, and concerned Flickr user is using this opportunity to try to draw users to his company’s service. Add that to Don MacAskill offering 50% off of memberships at SmugMug to Flickr refugees, and you have got a competitor feeding frenzy.

Honestly, I don’t understand what the big deal is, and I’m pretty sure that with a little patience and a few culture changes at Flickr that this will all blow over. After all, Flickr is the most popular photo sharing site on the net, and I expect that it will continue to be even after the “Old Skool” users either stop whining or leave for some other service.

Schoolyard penis seen from space | News crumb | EducationGuardian.co.uk

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 @ 10:04 CST by Daniel Andrlik

Not exactly the Great Wall of China…

View Link Source

The Reporter Is Real, but the World He Covers Isn’t - New York Times

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Monday, October 16, 2006 @ 08:52 CDT by Daniel Andrlik

Adam Pasick, a Reuters technology reporter, is heading up the news agency’s first virtual news bureau inside the online role-playing game Second Life.” Second Life is a phenomenon that continues to amaze me.

View Link Source

Let’s do for news what we did for software | Linux Journal

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Monday, October 9, 2006 @ 07:35 CDT by Daniel Andrlik

This is a pretty good article on citizen journalism from Open Source Linux guru Doc Searls. While I’m a fan of the concept, and support the idea of citizen journalism, I think the notion that all bloggers should be CJs to be particularly ridiculous. More on that some other time.

View Link Source

MySpace: The Business of Spam 2.0 (Exhaustive Edition) - Valleywag

Link bookmarked via Ma.gnolia on Monday, September 11, 2006 @ 22:29 CDT by Daniel Andrlik

Trent Lapinski’s expose on the origins of MySpace. It’s tone is really judgmental, considering that the majority of the revelations are pretty obvious assumptions that an astute user would make. That being said, the fact that the company was founded by spammers and a little reminder that the “viral success” is marketing bull is good to explain to all the folks flocking to it right now.

View Link Source

Into The Past »