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Other Good Stuff
Radio Blogs
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Thursday, May 30, 2002
Monday, May 6, 2002
This from DiveIntoMark: Time to upgrade to Movable Type. Movable Type 2.11 is out. (Here's what's new.) If you have a weblog already and are unsatisfied with your software or hosting, now would be an excellent time to move to CornerHost and migrate to Movable Type, the best personal publishing system in the world, hands down. It can import your current weblog from Blogger or Greymatter, and soon from Radio.
Those already running a previous version of Movable Type can just grab the upgrade file and follow the upgrade instructions (there is a CGI script you need to run once, then delete). Those not already running it should really look into it.
Movable Type requires a hosted server with Perl installed and the ability to run CGI scripts. I use and highly recommend CornerHost, where such an account will cost you $100 per year. You can save a little money by going with someone else, but the guy who runs CornerHost provides really amazing customer service. Besides, cutting corners on your web hosting is a false economy, as anyone with poor web hosting will tell you.
The software itself is free for personal use. Installation is not difficult, but if Unix scares you, you can choose to pay $20 to get it installed. This is a one-time fee and is completely optional. Most people simply install it themselves; it's not that hard, and the instructions are excellent. [diveintomark] 3:47:07 PM
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Wednesday, May 1, 2002
I'm falling and I can't move up!
Something strange is going on over in Rankings land. Between yesterday and this morning I have fallen from 70 to 82 in the Radio Community Server Rankings by Page Reads. At this pace, I will be off the Rankings list in a few days.
I guess that means that there are some Radio bloggers who are getting a lot of hits. That's good. But wow. Who turned up the gravity? 11:31:55 AM
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Big Media Companies are a Threat to the Internet
I used to think there were a lot of "Chicken Littles" running around saying the BigCos were going to take over the Internet. I never believed it to be possible. The Internet is just too big and diverse for a few large companies to exert a considerable amount of control over it, right?
Now I am starting to wonder if that assumption is valid. The DMCA is the most obvious example of using legislation to control our access to content, but it won't stop there. Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, imagines a time when the BigCos will be able to control how we use the Internet, what content we will be able to see, and when we will be able to see it.
How will that be possible? By controlling Broadband access and using legislation as their weapons.
Jeff Chester made this telling comment in June, 2001:
"The Internet was founded as a nondiscriminatory network where no single entity would be able to slow down, speed up, or distort communications. As the Internet moves to broadband, network operators are given more control over content flow."
That's a scary thought. Imagine a time when the broadband providers decide it is in their corporate interests to sensor content, or control your access to Internet content as closely as they control access to their broadcast content (ie., decide when and what content you can view).
The DMCA and CARP are legislative attempts to control access to content. Consolidation, as in the AOL/Time Warner merger, has the potential give a few BigCos control over huge chunks of Interenet infrastructure, content, and users.
Beware. The Chicken Littles say the sky is falling. This time they might be right. 11:05:23 AM
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Save Internet Radio
DMCA strikes again. This time it is causing problems for Internet radio stations.
Legislation that may be enacted on May 21, 2002 could kill most Internet radio stations by requiring them to pay royalties far in excess of those levied against broadcast radio stations on a per listener basis. On top of that, the royalties are retroactive back to October 1998.
Motto of the BigCos: "If you can't beat 'em, kill 'em with legislation." 10:27:29 AM
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Monday, April 29, 2002
Thursday, April 25, 2002
Tuesday, April 16, 2002
Outlines vs. outliners. This is exactly backwards. Everything should be text first, all else second. The fact that some plain text documents can be thought of as an outline is useful knowledge when building an IDE, but it's not important enough to make the text substantially more difficult to edit outside that IDE. No amount of convenience is worth giving up the simplicity of plain text editing. [diveintomark] 12:01:30 PM
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Tuesday, April 9, 2002
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