Epeus' epigone

Edifying exquisite equine entrapments

Wednesday, 17 November 2004

Value destroyed

Fortune.com:
Harder to fathom is the MSN TV 2 Player's inability to play music that has been downloaded through a PC from MSN's own Music Store. The Player had no problem with PC-created MP3 files and tunes ripped into the Windows Media Audio format from CDs but choked on music bought from MSN itself. An MSN representative said the incompatibility arises from the digital rights management (DRM) copy-protection system employed by the MSN Music Store to fend off pirates.
Posted by Kevin Marks at 01:14 0 comments Links to this post

Thursday, 11 November 2004

For the Fallen

For Remembrance Day, I have a special audioblog. This is Laurence Binyon, reading For The Fallen from the British Library's splendid collection The Spoken Word – Poets
With proud thanksgiving, a mother for her children,
England mourns for her dead across the sea.
Flesh of her flesh they were, spirit of her spirit,
Fallen in the cause of the free.

Solemn the drums thrill; Death august and royal
Sings sorrow up into immortal spheres,
There is music in the midst of desolation
And a glory that shines upon our tears.

They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted;
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall not grow old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

They mingle not with their laughing comrades again;
They sit no more at familiar tables of home;
They have no lot in our labour of the day-time;
They sleep beyond England's foam.

But where our desires are and our hopes profound,
Felt as a well-spring that is hidden from sight,
To the innermost heart of their own land they are known
As the stars are known to the Night;

As the stars that shall be bright when we are dust,
Moving in marches upon the heavenly plain;
As the stars that are starry in the time of our darkness,
To the end, to the end, they remain.
Posted by Kevin Marks at 11:11 0 comments Links to this post

Wednesday, 10 November 2004

BBC MP3s

Tom, our man on the inside at the Beeb:
There's this show on Radio 4 called In Our Time that's concerned with the history of ideas. Each week Melvyn Bragg brings together three guests (serious guests at the top of their fields) and they have a discussion around the major themes. It's kind of awesome if you're interested in science or history... Starting from shortly after last week's episode, now you can download and listen to the whole programme in non-DRM'd, easy to understand, iPod (and other media player) -compatible MP3 format!

Finally my campaign is bearing fruit. Get that In Our Time Electricity episode now.
Posted by Kevin Marks at 19:08 0 comments Links to this post

Monday, 1 November 2004

Counting blogged votes

Having talked about vote links for well over a year now, it was about time someone started counting them, especially with tomorrow being election day in the US, and it might as well be me.
Presenting the Technorati Blogger Vote Count.
Instructions on how to add votes to your blog are there. Note that you can vote for or against each candidate individually.
Posted by Kevin Marks at 20:41 0 comments Links to this post

What's wrong with this picture?

David Weinberger says:
When your wifi card doesn't work under XP, after spending three hours futzing with drivers, I suggest you try this:
Control Panel > Administrative tools > Services. Look for Wireless Zero Configuration. Click on it. If it's stopped, start it. If there's no start or stop button, double click on it and change "Startup type" to "Automatic."
Or you could get a Mac which, because it is a closed environment, tends to be easier to live with.

No David, the Mac is easier to live with because it's designers don't assume they control (or should control) all networking. Stuart, who invented Zero Configuration Networking, would say on seeing that Configuration dialog:
Which part of "zero configuration" did they not understand?
Posted by Kevin Marks at 10:19 0 comments Links to this post
12/01/2004 - 01/01/2005 10/01/2004 - 11/01/2004 Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

This is my personal blog. Any views you read here are mine, and not my employers.

Subscribe to my Events

Atom Feed

 

Support the Open Rights Group
Technorati search

mediAgora
encourage copying, expect payment

Kevin Marks
My Shared Stuff

People's thoughts I read:

Daily

Rosie
San Jose Young People's Theatre
Dave Weinberger
Doc Searls
Gonzo Engaged
AKMA
Tomalak's Realm
Cory & friends
Denise Howell
Dave Winer
Charles Wiltgen
Shelley Powers
Jonathon Delacour
Dorothea Salo
James Lileks
Megan McArdle
Tim Oren
Suw Charman
Halley Suitt

Weekly

Andrew Marks
Blogsisters
Arts & Letters Daily
Bricklin, Frankston & Reed
Marek
Steve Yost
Jeneane Sessum
Brian Micklethwait et al
Donna Wentworth - CopyFight
Chris Locke
Arnold Kling
Jonathan Peterson
Dana Blankenhorn
Tom Matrullo
Gary Turner
Marc Canter
St Luke's Chapel (Michael Penfield)

Sporadically

As the Apple Turns (back at last)
Small Pieces
Stuart Cheshire
RageBoy
Nonzero
Neil Gaiman
Thomas Vincent
Brad deLong
Andrew Odlyzko
Frank Paynter
ProSUA

No to Mickey Mouse Computers

powered by blogger

Blog Archive

  • ▼ 2009 (11)
    • ▼ June (2)
      • Celebrities - social objects or fake friends?
      • Farewell to Google
    • ► May (2)
      • Faces call the trust code in our brains
      • Press Release Use Causes "Serious" Brain Damage, M...
    • ► April (1)
      • WSJ dubbed internet parasite by WSJ editor
    • ► February (2)
      • A load of Thunderer
      • OpenSocial WeekendApps
    • ► January (4)
      • Mark Cuban's Big Lie
      • Notes on Charlene Li's Future of Social Networks S...
      • Hold your breath while Googling to save the planet...
      • MacWorld wishlist
  • ► 2008 (29)
    • ► December (2)
      • My twittered notes on the Leweb Social panel
      • Cycling to new layers of freedom
    • ► November (3)
      • OpenSocial’s birthday today
      • Missing the point of OpenID
      • Blogging's not dead, it's becoming like air
    • ► August (1)
      • Social Disease, or making magic?
    • ► July (3)
      • Open Source and Social Cloud Computing
      • Here Comes Everybody - Tummlers, Geishas, Animateu...
      • Shortening URLs, or getting inbetween?
    • ► June (3)
      • Google as a restaurant? Watch Gordon Ramsay
      • I'm with the stupid network
      • How not to be viral
    • ► May (5)
      • Miasma theory - wrong in the 1840s, wrong now
      • An API is a bespoke suit, a standard is a t-shirt
      • Talking about OpenSocial all over the place
      • Portable Apps, not data?
      • Mixing degrees of publicness in HTTP
    • ► April (2)
      • Digital publics, Conversations and Twitter
      • Comcast's Bialystock and Bloom Business Model?
    • ► February (3)
      • Be Organic, not Viral
      • The Social Cloud
      • LIFT Conference starts
    • ► January (7)
      • Sheet music redux
      • Fear of the new - the Internet, Tea, and MapReduc...
      • OpenSocial Hackathon next week in SF
      • Identity Theft is not a crime
      • memes, dreams and themes
      • URLs are people too
      • Tardy blogging
  • ► 2007 (45)
    • ► November (3)
      • Do not fold, bend, mutilate or Kindle
      • Open Rights Group - Happy ORG day
      • OpenSocial and Social Software history
    • ► October (4)
      • All bloggers are above average
      • AtomPub is an RFC
      • Bladerunner and Middlesbrough
      • Storytelling and performance
    • ► September (4)
      • iPod progress
      • Bubbles and Facebook
      • Journalists slumming online
    • ► August (10)
    • ► July (3)
    • ► June (8)
    • ► April (2)
    • ► March (6)
    • ► February (3)
    • ► January (2)
  • ► 2006 (119)
    • ► December (13)
    • ► November (8)
    • ► October (16)
    • ► September (10)
    • ► August (3)
    • ► July (6)
    • ► June (24)
    • ► May (3)
    • ► April (10)
    • ► March (7)
    • ► February (8)
    • ► January (11)
  • ► 2005 (101)
    • ► December (10)
    • ► November (13)
    • ► October (9)
    • ► September (8)
    • ► August (7)
    • ► July (7)
    • ► June (8)
    • ► May (12)
    • ► April (7)
    • ► March (6)
    • ► February (1)
    • ► January (13)
  • ► 2004 (53)
    • ► December (8)
    • ► November (5)
    • ► October (6)
    • ► September (7)
    • ► July (5)
    • ► June (3)
    • ► May (2)
    • ► March (3)
    • ► February (7)
    • ► January (7)
  • ► 2003 (196)
    • ► December (12)
    • ► November (14)
    • ► October (21)
    • ► September (23)
    • ► August (19)
    • ► July (11)
    • ► June (14)
    • ► May (9)
    • ► April (22)
    • ► March (20)
    • ► February (16)
    • ► January (15)
  • ► 2002 (225)
    • ► December (15)
    • ► November (21)
    • ► October (22)
    • ► September (12)
    • ► August (11)
    • ► July (28)
    • ► June (19)
    • ► May (29)
    • ► April (18)
    • ► March (19)
    • ► February (17)
    • ► January (14)
  • ► 2001 (13)
    • ► December (2)
    • ► November (11)

About Me

My Photo
Kevin Marks
Kevin Marks works at Google. From September 2003 to January 2007 he was Principal Engineer at Technorati responsible for the spiders that make sense of the web and track millions of blogs daily. He has been inventing and innovating for over 17 years in emerging technologies where people, media and computers meet. Before joining Technorati, Kevin spent 5 years in the Quicktime Engineering team at Apple, building video capture and live streaming into OS X. He was a founder of The Multimedia Corporation in the UK, where he served as Production Manager and Executive Producer, shipping million-selling products and winning International awards. He has a Masters degree in Physics from Cambridge University and is a BBC-qualified Video Engineer.One of the driving forces behind microformats.org he regularly speaks at Conferences and Symposia on emergent net technologies and their cultural impact.
View my complete profile