I received few days ago 300 CDs from UbuntuLinux (see photos on Flickr).
Our initial idea (as LinuxTrent) was to distribute these CDs in the Fair Trade Shops in Trentino along with TheOpenCD translated in Italian (see project, in Italian). However, there will be a fair in Trento called Fa’ la cosa giusta (Do the right thing), 4-6 november 2005, and we are probably going to distribute the CDs in that occasion. I just wanted to let you know that you can order Ubuntu Linux CDs at shipit.ubuntulinux.org and that this can be a good way to reach people that are not likely to cross their ways with Free Software (and alternatives). Happy spreading!
Yearly Archives: 2005
Changing sex, one page at a time
Some months ago, I read this post at Terranova which made me think a lot.
Suppose a disgruntled programmer were to run some code that flipped the sex of every player character in EverQuest. Further suppose that this programmer did such a thorough job that it would take a week before all the characters could be flipped back.
The players would complain, obviously, but would they actually play for that week? Would they learn anything from the experience?
It is incredible how easy is to “play with reality” and test any hypothesis when you can change at will these virtual worlds (but in which real humans “lives”, and some for many hours every day…)
Now from a post of Zephoria at Misbehaving, I come to know that Ping created a service that swaps the gendered pronoun information on every web page (“he” becomes “she” and viceversa, but there are a lot more swappings). Check it at Regender.com. I tried it on my blog and I kind of realized that I don’t often use 3rd person pronouns. But you can try, for example, on regender the Book of Genesis from the Bible for a different take on who created what.
In the beginning Goddess created the heaven and the earth….
Besides jokes, I think it can be an interesting mental exercise for realizing how society imposes on us some ways of thinking, and how they could be different if just … Well, call it “one day of regendered navigation”, if you like.
Flickr’s approach to polysemy: clusters
Some words (tags) have more than one meaning. Flickr now let you see the different meanings of tags. Some examples: jaguar (the car, the animal), bush (the president, the flower (greeny), the tree, the graffiti/art on bush the president), europe (france, italy, travel, germany), hot (summer and heat, red and pepper, sexy and woman, water and wet, fire and flame), turkey (the country, the food, the holiday), white (flower and nature, clouds and sky, snow and cold, light), tiger (the MacOSX interface, the animal), cameraphone (pictures of cameraphone, pictures taken with cameraphone, the food (probably a very often photoed object), the cat (probably a very often photoed object)), freedom (sky and free, peace, bird), sadly one of the clusters of italy is church.
Description of this new feature at Flickr Blog along with another new feature: interestingness.
Forecast: Ajax Office available in less than one year
My little forecast: I think that in less than one year there will be a Suite Office usable “inside” your browser, entirely written in Javascript and AJAX, using the DOM model of XHTML.
UPDATE: AjaxOffice is now on sourceforge.
UPDATE My office mate told me that there are already many Free Software HTML text editors such as FckEditor, TinyMCE (longer list at HTMLArea). So I guess we just need Google (or Yahoo!) to provide the service and the possibility to store files on their disks. END OF UPDATE
Many usable pieces are already there (usually as Free Software javascript libraries): toolbar, menubar, drag-and-drop, edit-in-place, window, resize images.
What is peculiar is that
– writing this suite is not too complicated
– there are so many people (thousands or more) with enough skills for easily doing it
Using “release early, release often” phylosophy and a Free Software licence (such as GPL), we could have a big number of hackers working all together at the “Ajax Office”, adding functionalities, correcting bugs, …
You can easily imagine that having a reliable Office Suite that works inside your browser is a great opportunity for normal users (who will need Microsoft Office? but also OpenOffice…).
But you can also imagine having Google (or Yahoo! or another big player) offering the Ajax Office interface AND the ability to keep your files on their disks and access/modify/print them from every computer in the world just via a browser. And not having to bother with backups. Similar to what happens now with Gmail (almost infinite storage for your emails and the ability to access it via any computer just with a browser). Jeremy already thinks that Gmail is faster and better than Thunderbird (desktop email program). I think one of its next posts will be “Ajax Office (or Goffice) is better than Microsoft Office (and OpenOffice)”. [Oh yes, there are huge privacy issues.]
Anyway that would be killer! A totally new way to use computers and the web. And I want to see Microsoft shares that day! I’m just dreaming or is it a reasonable forecast? My bet is for the second. So, I see you here in less than one year.
Attention Trust and my cloud of related concepts
I was reading an explanation of AttentionTrust.org goals and got a bunch of related concepts on my mind. For now I throw them to you embedded in bold in this chaotic post, in future I guess there will be a microformat for giving semantics to the relationships between these concepts. [I also guess that for most of the concept words, you can lead to the related wikipedia page and find a compelling ongoing description (and probably a greasemonkey script that converts all the words that are no links to links to wikipedia page is already available somewhere)]
From AttentionTrust.org: a Declaration of Gestural Independence:
if the attention I pay to others is valued in proportion to the amount of attention earned by me, then an accounting system is set in motion which quotes something like the social share prices of individual attention.
PageRank of attention, actually better named AttentionRank.
Cyberspace is where the new kind of economy comes into its own. Like any economy the new one is based on what is both most desirable and ultimately most scarce, and now this is the attention that comes from other people.
Attention is scarce because each of us has only so much of it to give, and it can come only from us — not machines, computers or anywhere else.
Unlike the old matter-based wealth, the new wealth is nothing you can hope to put under lock and key. You get it by reaching out into the world.
Attention Economy, Whuffie
Wealth therefore comes to you by expressing yourself fully. The best guarantee you have for attention going to you for what you do is living your life as openly as possible, expressing yourself as publicly as possible as early as possible (hence it makes sense to put out drafts, early versions, so there are witnesses for everything you do.)
free software phylosophy, release early, release often
So the new privacy and the old are direct opposite. The new privacy means having no secrets, which you don’t normally need to have, because little that was previously shameful or had to be concealed is so now…
sousveillance
What people do demand as privacy now is freedom from having to pay attention, not from being seen but seeing what they don’t want to.
daily me / tiranny of the majority
The first move in establishing an open market for Attention was to declare a set of basic rights: Property: I own my attention and I can store it securely in private.
Mobility: I can move my attention wherever I want whenever I want to.
Economy: I can pay attention to whomever I wish and be paid for it.
Transparency: I can see how my attention is being used
These represent our rights as attention owners.
(…) In any case, by virtue of recognizing the above-listed rights, members of the AttentionTrust (both individual and corporate) express their participation in a free, open market for exchanging their attention.
alternative economy, emerging democracy
Like so many Web applications, but on a much grander scale, Google takes what I am looking for (literally my attention) and turns it into a commodity called a keyword, which in turn gets pooled and traded by advertisers and publishers who don’t give me anything in return but do subsidize my use of Google search, my storage in Gmail, etc.
Interesting discussion of what Google company really is (related to the scary list of what Google knows about you).
And yes, I’m paying attention to the post I commented here and, recursively, if you paid attention to this post, I’m asking/suggesting to pay attention to the post I commented here. Are you paying something to me? Am I paying something to you? Is there anyone out there reading this? If not, who is paying who? Well, I guess some answers will come from AttentionTrust.org and for now I just paid attention…
Ruby on Rails Rules
After seeing at AAAI05 what Jesse is able to do with Ruby on Rails, I decided I have to learn it.
Rails is a full-stack, open-source web framework in Ruby for writing real-world applications with joy and less code than most frameworks spend doing XML sit-ups.
So far so good, it has been a great-great pleasure meeting this joy-toy. My suggestion for get going:
1. See the incredible “how to build a blog engine in 15 minutes with Ruby on Rails” video. [Even if you don’t want to start learning a new language/framework, trust me, check the video, you won’t regret it.]
2. Read the “Four Days on Rails” step-by-step tutorial (and create the code along).
3. Read the Really Getting Started in Rails, if you still have some doubts, especially if you haven’t used Ruby before (I didn’t) and don’t want to learn completely the language (I don’t). [info: Ruby is a language, Rails is a framework for building web applications that uses Ruby]
Wikipedia Statistics
Wikipedia Charts are very cool. They show the evolution in time of the number of Wikipedians – Articles – Database – Links – Daily Usage. See the All languages or for the Italian version. There are so many data you could design a lot of interesting tests. This also reminds me of this event:
Wikimania 2005 – The First International Wikimedia Conference, August 4-8, 2005, Frankfurt am Main.
ArteSella (nature art) slideshow
Today I visited ArteSella, an International Exhibition of Nature Art that is very close to Trento. I’m not very good in explaining how magic this exhibition is so I guess I’ll let the images speak. Or, if you prefer, the Artesella Flickr slideshow. If you want to come in Trentino for a rejuvenating period, you know who to ask for …
From ArteSella site:
Arte Sella is an international biennial exhibition of contemporary art which began life in 1986. It takes places in the open, in the fields and woods of the Val di Sella valley (near Borgo Valsugana in the Province of Trento). Since 1996 the Arte Sella project has been laid out along a path in the woods on the southern slope of the Armentera mountain. The route, named ARTENATURA (“Art in Nature”) is designed to enable visitors to view the artworks and at the same time enjoy the natural site itself (with its different types of woods, rocks and trees …)
The idea of the exhibition is not just to display works of art but also to show the creative process involved: the works are followed day by day as they are created and the artists are called upon to express their relationship with nature from which they draw inspiration – a relationship based on respect.
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Faletti: “Open Source leads to Barbarity”
[again news about Italy in Italian]
In article on La Stampa, Faletti speaks about his free appearance in a Television Spot campaign of the Italian Government to fight piracy of multimedia content. There is no need to say that the spot costs public money to be broadcasted in televisions and that this becomes private money of Berlusconi who owns Italian private televisions.
Anyway the point I want to make here is another: the spokeman of the campaign against piracy, Faletti, is so informed that says:
«Io invece penso che l’open source sia il sistema migliore per precipitare nella barbarie.».
(I think instead that Open Source is the best way to fall into Barbarity.)
Let me state it again: this is the man chosen by Italian Government to explain to Italians (via television) what is piracy and how to fight it.
Incredible article about Windows Longhorn on Repubblica.it
[I usually don’t post link to discussions in Italian, but this is too funny/sad. If you don’t undestand Italian, you can skip this]
L’articolo su Repubblica.it Longhorn, il nuovo Windows su misura per l’era Internet e’ totalmente non plausibile, inverosimile e inconsistente.
Leggete il post di Paolo Attivissimo Repubblica parla di Longhorn, parte il festival della castroneria per farvi una idea delle imprecisioni (e anche per farvi due risate).
Nel seguito l’email che ho scritto di getto (e magari con errori grammaticali) all’autore dell’articolo, Giuseppe Turani [ g.turani AT repubblica.it ] prima di leggere il chiaro post di Paolo Attivissimo. Se vi va di invitare Turani a scrivere un articolo chiarificatore (o almeno a capire che ha scritto inesattezze) potreste inviargli anche voi una email.
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