Defn: google
google |ˈgoōgəl| (verb)
To be so arrogant you think you can use lawyers to change the English language.
See also King Canute
{ Monthly Archives }
google |ˈgoōgəl| (verb)
To be so arrogant you think you can use lawyers to change the English language.
See also King Canute
Paris, October 2006 is a jumble of photos taken during a family weekend in, er, Paris.
Technorati Tags: photography
If like me, you have occasion to explain Wikipedia.org to the great unwashed, you may have found yourself descending into a contradiction because although “anyone can edit it”, the power come precisely because “anyone can edit it!” Well help is at hand in shape of the raft of cohesive arguments and fascinating discussion on the Wikipedia:essays and Policies and Guidelines pages. See, it’s not all Complete Bollocks.
Technorati Tags: wikipedia
Thanks to a dose of man flu, I’ve not been sleeping well, and the other night found myself counting sheep, Yan, Tan, Thethera, Mether, Pip, Azer, Sezar, Akker, Conter, Dick. Where the heck had that come from? The following evening we sat down to watch a documentary about Jake Thackray (Yorkshire’s answer to George Brassens) in which he sang a Swaledale shepherd’s song “Yan Tean Tethera“. Spooky!
Sophia Anitoplis is a small set of photos taken during last week’s W3C XML Schema Patterns for Databinding Working Group meeting.
Update: how did I go for so long spelling Sophia Antipolis as “Sofia Antipolis” :-(
Technorati Tags: databinding, flickr, photography, w3c
Good luck to Jonathan in his new (ad)venture! What with Sanjiva, Paul, Dims, James Clark, and now Jonathan WSO2 has to be one of the coolest companies around.
Technorati Tags: WSO2, Web Services, WebServices
It’s worrying how often in exploring use-cases for Identity such as “wouldn’t it be cool if after a day out with two families, we’d be able to better control of who can see the photos of each other’s kids?” I’d actually be describing use-cases for Digital Rights Management. Yet DRM is intrinsically evil, no? Well it seems that Microsoft are still in love with it, despite Cory’s excellent talk and the much hyped Zune player apparently will come with a new viral DRM system. Time will tell if customers find this enabling or simply infuriating. I’d bet on the latter. Of course if you’re French and want to copy stuff you might as well turn yourself in now.

Kudos to Yahoo! for finally starting to roll out BBAuth, a simple consistent authentication scheme across their services. This is one of a number of different but similar attempts at providing a simple Web based identity scheme. Dare squints hard and spots the difference between this and Google’s Web Proxy Authentication (photo), but I’ve lumped them together with the Atom PP technique as “HTTPS/URI Hashing” in a recasting of Patrick Harding’s Diagram (above). BBAuth does enable interesting interactions between third-parties, federation if you will, such as MOO printing private photos from my flickr stream. But I still feel it’s not a lot further to the top right than say Passport (photo).
Technorati Tags: Google, HTTP, HTTPID, identity, infocard, openid, CardSpace, xtech, Yahoo!