Monday, May 05, 2003


Suppose you are a professor, a publisher, or a software/hardware company that provides materials used for instruction in a college (private or public), technical college, or university.  Suppose further that the legislature passes a law requiring you to provide, on ten days notice, an electronic version of those materials so that students who are "print access disabled" can access the material (and, there electronic version can have no differences in content/context from print version). 

What would you do?

See HB 1020 of the Georgia General Assembly.


comment []
1:51:41 PM    

Shades of Net Force!

Chris Gulker is researching a crawler called Cyvelliance. He thinks it's working for the music industry and watching sites of their critics, including this site. [Scripting News]


comment []
1:41:04 PM    

Some material for the e-book study...

"Free Science, Engineering and Medical Books Online" [Daypop Top 40]


comment []
10:04:57 AM    

From Scripting News, Don Park is working on some aggregator ideas -- but has some really cogent thoughts on aggregation in general.


comment []
8:14:23 AM