Updated: 4/22/02; 5:45:23 AM.
Blue Ruin
Gin and milk.
        

Wednesday, April 10, 2002

I'm sorry for the long list of links. I keep a running file at work, but I keep forgetting to have RadioUserland autostart on my computer at home, so the updates never make it to the blog!

What's worse than a pop-under ad? Pop-under DOWNLOADS!!!

CIO Magazine has an interview with Internet Anthropologist Bonnie Nardi.

According to this article in Darwin Magazine, the Shell Corporation has taken my advice... well, the advice I've given lots of clients, and that I would have given them if they'd asked. They're experiementing with a very open discussion forum on their site which allows anyone to say anything about them, and allows any employees to answer. As the article says, "Shell's lack of control over the forum is precisely equivalent to the depth of its real commitment." The shape of things to come? I hope so.

Ivory Coast Witch Doctors have been placated. They threatened to put a curse on the national team if they weren't paid for their tremendous hard work in securing the country's 1992 (and only) victory in the Nations Cup. "In 2000, the team was locked up in a military camp, forced to frog march and attend lectures on patriotism after failing to go beyond the first round." Give me uninterested Laker fans any day.

Please file this under "NO SHIT SHERLOCK." MILITARY-style "boot camp" regimes for young criminals fail to reduce reoffending significantly but produce fitter, healthier and more self-confident offenders, according to a report.

Dark, thoughtful, pro-Israeli. This piece from the New Republic makes a lot of good points. On the subject, one which I (along with many many many others) have been brooding about for days/months/years, I finally actually read UN Security Council Resolution 242 and this very interesting collections of interpretations and clarifications which make it clear that the withdrawal by Israel is not from ALL territories occupied, but withdrawal to "recognized and secure" borders.

I just love WriteDesign.com. Here's a series of pages on "Graphic Organizing" techniques that I want to try and include in our brainstorming sessions in class this summer.

Oddpost Is a web-based email client that uses DHTML to almost perfectly mimic the functionality of Outlook. Wow this is cool.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I bring you LEISURETOWN (and for the record, no, I'm not sure I "get it" either.

Very nice how-to on interviewing clients to get information you need to design their database application. Rule 1: Be nice to the clients and don't make it seem like you're smarter than them. Good point! (also check out their "usability" articles.)

Who knew?

J. Bradford DeLong is an economist at Berkeley, who keeps an online journal worth reading. He also looks suspiciously like my step-father Ted...

A cool blog to read. You know, if you're into this kind of geeky scripting stuff.

I'm continually flabbergasted at the sheer volume of weirdness on the net. I think you should be too.

A Must Read: Bruce Sterling's piece in last month's Wired: "Driven by al Qaeda's atrocities, the US charged into the classic quagmire of Afghanistan, legendary death trap of military ambition. With the customary roll of thunder, out came the full routine of the modern American expeditionary force. First, a cautious, methodical, widely televised suppression of local air defenses. Then, once CNN became accustomed to the violence, some leisurely and terrible precision targeting throughout the theater, around the clock. In Serbia in 1999, US aircraft smashed stationary targets, like buildings and bridges. In Afghanistan, thanks to much faster satellite relays, they demolished rapidly moving tanks, fleeing Toyota trucks, and amazed guerrillas. It took only two weeks to chase Taliban and al Qaeda forces into Pakistan, Iran, and beyond."
6:54:03 AM    


© Copyright 2002 Chris Chandler.
 
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