Why Bother With Safari on Windows?

There’s only one problem with that scenario — Safari sucks. A lot of Mac users won’t run the browser (I’m one of them), so why would anyone run it on Windows?On my Mac, Safari is buggy and unreliable. It’s always crashing, and it doesn’t offer basic features like remembering all the tabs you have open after you quit (or more likely, after it crashes). Until now, it didn’t even warn you before closing multiple tabs, although the new version of Safari fixes this.

Who in Their Right Mind Would Run Safari on Windows?

I’ve found Safari to be a pain on the Mac and, aside from testing purposes, I run Firefox on the Mac.  I think that after the honeymoon, most will realize that Safari on Windows is just pointless.  How about just selling us OS X as a stand alone OS for the Intel platform.  Now that would be exciting, and real competition for MSFT.

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Emory Gets Into Print-on-Demand

Print-on-demand books boosted in partnership

Emory is launching a new model for digital scholarship through a partnership with Kirtas Technologies Inc., a maker of cutting-edge digital scanning technology. The partnership will enable Emory to apply automated scanning technology to thousands of rare, out-of-print books in its research collections, making it possible for scholars to browse the pages of these books on the Internet or order bound, printed copies via a fast, affordable print-on-demand service. The project is limited to materials in the public domain.

Amazon will handle the PoD aspects of this project.  The project is not a part of the Google digitalization project, but rather represents a stand-alone effort.  I think this is a better idea than letting Google do it.  Certainly the text will be indexed by Google, but the project remains under the control of the University.  This aspect makes it a scholarly project with roots in archiving and education, not a a quasi-commercial operation that is really rooted in drawing ad dollars.  I hope more universities step up and take these projects in house.

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Law School Topsites

A topsites list ranks a group of related sites by popularity. Webmasters join the topsites list and are given a button to put on their site and link back to the topsites list. Aardvark Topsites PHP is a free topsites script built on PHP and MySQL.

Aardvark Topsites PHP – A Free PHP Topsites Script

OK, suppose we put topsite buttons on la wschool websites to see who is most popular?  Would it mirror the rankings we know and love? Would it reflect admissions trends?  size of alumni community?  Something to ponder…

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But, Will Yahoo! Pay $12 Million For It?

How to Change the World: By the Numbers: How I built a Web 2.0, User-Generated Content, Citizen Journalism, Long-Tail, Social Media Site for $12,107.09 – Article does a great job describing just how easy it is to get a site up and running these days.  And, most importantly, it includes all of the current buzz words.  The truth is, it has always been this easy.  All the money that gets poured into startups is mostly to finance lifestyle stuff I think.  If you want to change the face of the web, go ahead, fo it:)

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Blogging With Word 2007

This is a test. You bet it is. So, here I am editing an existing post with Word 2007.

I created this post and published to the blog, then used the ‘Open Existing’ to bring it back. Certainly cool.

Denise wants me to include a picture, but I can’t get it to work.

  • Let’s try a list
  • Second item
    • Second level
  • Oh boy

Bold. Big and bold.

There needs to be a link here.

But What Does a Wikipedia Cite Look Like?

More than 100 judicial rulings have relied on Wikipedia, beginning in 2004, including 13 from circuit courts of appeal, one step below the Supreme Court. (The Supreme Court thus far has never cited Wikipedia.)
“Wikipedia is a terrific resource,” said Judge Richard A. Posner of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in Chicago. “Partly because it so convenient, it often has been updated recently and is very accurate.” But, he added: “It wouldn’t be right to use it in a critical issue. If the safety of a product is at issue, you wouldn’t look it up in Wikipedia.”

Courts Turn to Wikipedia, but Selectively – New York Times

So, in 3 years 100 cases cited Wikipedia.  Out of how many thousands of published decisions?  How many cases cited Playboy?  Most are trial level opinions which carry little weight.  It is an interesting development though and will certainly cause discussion in the legal research and writing community:)

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All Those Feeds Got you Down?

Scripting News: Most RSS readers are wrong – Dave is mostly right here.  RSS is not email, you don’t need to read every article that floats by.  It is the same as a newspaper or magazine, scan and read.  That is what I do with 95% of the feeds I read.  Sometimes, I miss whole weeks worth because other things have my attention.  But don’t sell the power and importance of RSS short.  The other 5% of the feeds are critical to what I do.  Those feeds present information about systems I run, status of projects I mange and participate in, feedback on the work I do and more.  The 5% are more important than email.  The ease with which RSS is implemented allow me ot use it monitor all sorts of things that are way beyond news.

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Novell, Microsoft in Landmark Deal

Here’s the text of an email sent to Novell customers this evening:

Today, Microsoft and Novell announced an historic new initiative. Important primarily because it means a lot to the communities we serve. Most notably, our customers. (See full press release).

Let me begin by quickly outlining what we just announced. Microsoft and Novell, starting today, have agreed to build and market solutions so that Novell’s technology works on Microsoft and vice versa. Specifically, customers will now be able to run virtualized SUSE Linux Enterprise on Windows or Windows on SUSE Linux Enterprise. This landmark agreement also calls for both Microsoft and Novell to provide patent coverage to each others’ customers for our respective products. Why is that important? It’s important because you shouldn’t have to spend a lot of time worrying about legal matters around which operating system to choose. You also shouldn’t have to worry about barriers such as intellectual property agreements, who owns which patent portfolio, and indemnification. None of those issues move your business forward. Now many of those barriers have been removed.

I am also proud that earlier today Novell and Microsoft demonstrated, by our words and actions, that we can work together for the mutual benefit of our customers. Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s CEO, was very passionate and genuine in his support for this agreement. He spoke about how it will help our customers leverage both the Microsoft Windows platform as well as our SUSE Linux Enterprise platform. He mentioned how it will give customers like you choice and flexibility in building their technology environment. Choice and flexibility, something our customers often complain are in short supply. We’re determined to change that.

I’d like to build on what Steve said, and today I had the opportunity to make some of these points in person to the assembled press, analysts and industry experts. This agreement between us and Microsoft is a key cornerstone to our overall Novell promise to deliver the open enterprise to you, our customers. One where we can leverage a mixed environment- with open source and open standards based software- on your behalf. It’s an agreement that will accelerate Novell’s stated goal of helping you reduce cost, manage complexity and mitigate risk.

I titled this a \u201clandmark\u201d announcement, and I truly believe it is. Transformational in its scope and important to us and our customers on a number of levels. You may wonder how this changes our relationship with Microsoft. It’s no secret we’ve competed with them in the past. And we still will. However, it’s also important for us all to remind ourselves that all organizations, particularly in our industry, need to adapt and change. Further, for whatever differences we’ve had with Microsoft over the years, we actually share a number of the same values. A strong belief in building customer solutions, and an unwavering belief in the power of technology and innovation. And now, with this announcement, the ability for you to deploy the applications you want on the operating system of your choice for a total solution. All in a way that best fits your business needs.

This is the beginning of a new and exciting chapter for Novell. We know you want technology that features interoperability, choice, flexibility, and sustainability. We know you like to see your vendors working together on YOUR behalf. In fact, that is what this Microsoft/Novell agreement is all about. Working together to do a better job for you.

I’m truly excited about this transformational announcement. The payoff will be better results where it counts most. On helping you grow and innovate, and in turn delivering on your promise to the communities you serve.

Best regards,

Ron Hovsepian
CEO, Novell

The message also included links to a webcast of the announcement and more infomation.  In a nutshell  Novell and Microsoft will develop and deploy virtualiztion technolgoy that will allow Suse inside of Windows Server and vice versa.  This will be cross marketed.  There is a pledge to continue development of XML standards to allow MSFT Office and OpenOffice to share data and documents.  And in an odd nod to SCO v. IBM, they agreed in indeminify each other’s customers against any patent infringement that comes up in using Novell and Microsoft products together.

All in all, truly remarkable.  As we see more networking functions move into the cloud of the internet, desktop and network operating systems become less relevant.  I think this agreement acknowledges that trend.  It is Microsoft and Novell saying, ‘Look, use what you need, not what we tell you need’.  Now if only there are enough IT managers and admins to truly take advantage of this new world.

See What Google Sees

We show you the number of pages Googlebot’s crawled from your site per day, the number of kilobytes of data Googlebot’s downloaded per day, and the average time it took Googlebot to download pages. Webmaster tools show each of these for the last 90 days.

Official Google Webmaster Central Blog: Learn more about Googlebot’s crawl of your site and more!

Ever wonder what Google sees when it crawls your site and how often it crawls?  You can find all of this info and more using Goggle Webmaster Tools.  The tools are free and easy to use and let you look at some of the data Google collects about your site.

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Berkman, LexsiNexis Get Cozy on Training eLawyers

Harvard Law’s Berkman Center and LexisNexis Partner to Study Law School Curriculum

LexisNexis Media Relations – September 20, 2006 News Release

Wow. Interesting headline. There are a couple of killer quotes though. For instance,

A white paper created by the Berkman Center under the supervision of John Palfrey will be released at the end of the year.

and the intriguing,

The Berkman Center, one of the premier research centers in the world focusing on the intersection of law and technology, includes among its ranks such notable faculty as Charles Nesson, Charles Ogletree, John Palfrey, Jonathan Zittrain, William Fisher, and Lawrence Lessig. This project is unrelated to work and opinions on copyright and in no way represent an endorsement by LexisNexis of those views. This partnership is an example that business and academe can work together for the benefit of legal education while agreeing to disagree on other issues of import.

Cool, another white paper. That’ll help. And LN wants to make sure that nobody thinks its endorsing any of this Open Source, Creative Commons crap. Good position.

Well that’s enough snarky for the moment.

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