The New Face of BLOGDIAL WTF?! (do we get to wear uniforms?)
Sunday, February 19th, 2006Can we get an RSS feed? I can’t find one! Will our posts be named too? CD!
Can we get an RSS feed? I can’t find one! Will our posts be named too? CD!
from here.
MeasureIt is brilliant.
I’m a biologist, an Apple/Unix geek, an audiophile, an avid reader and film buff, and an amateur (in both the inept and unpaid senses) photographer. I lived and worked in Oxford (the one in the UK, for any US readers) for 13 years, which was quite an experience. You can see some of the photographs I’ve taken around Oxford on my photoblog, Wings Open Wide. I’ve just moved to the heart of England—Birmingham, Land of the Brummie—and I will no doubt be comparing and contrasting the two cities.
I apparently do not have the gene for interest in make-up, clothes or celebrities. Believe me, I’ve tried to be interested. I’ve even bought so-called “Women’s magazines”, convinced that I can’t be so psychologically different from the rest of female-kind. But eventually I realized that I just do not have any interest in them, and now I just head straight for the computer/hi-fi magazines aisle. This makes time spent in the hairdressers very dull. […]
The Click That Broke a Government’s Grip
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, February 19, 2006; Page A01
BEIJING — The top editors of the China Youth Daily were meeting in a conference room last August when their cell phones started buzzing quietly with text messages. One after another, they discreetly read the notes. Then they traded nervous glances.
Colleagues were informing them that a senior editor in the room, Li Datong, had done something astonishing. Just before the meeting, Li had posted a blistering letter on the newspaper’s computer system attacking the Communist Party’s propaganda czars and a plan by the editor in chief to dock reporters’ pay if their stories upset party officials.
No one told the editor in chief. For 90 minutes, he ran the meeting, oblivious to the political storm that was brewing. Then Li announced what he had done.
The chief editor stammered and rushed back to his office, witnesses recalled. But by then, Li’s memo had leaked and was spreading across the Internet in countless e-mails and instant messages. Copies were posted on China’s most popular Web forums, and within hours people across the country were sending Li messages of support.
The government’s Internet censors scrambled, ordering one Web site after another to delete the letter. But two days later, in an embarrassing retreat, the party bowed to public outrage and scrapped the editor in chief’s plan to muzzle his reporters.
The episode illustrated the profound impact of the Internet on political discourse in China, and the challenge that the Web poses to the Communist Party’s ability to control news and shape public opinion, key elements to its hold on power. The incident also set the stage for last month’s decision to suspend publication of Freezing Point, the pioneering weekly supplement that Li edited for the state-run China Youth Daily. […]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
And there we have it; the pressure to break and destroy censorship is inexorable. Google is completely right to go into China now. Had they waited even a month, the outcome might have been different. The Senators, Congressmen and pundits that are berating Google are total imbeciles.
The site OSx86 Project has removed all links to the above site at the request of apple. This is completely absurd. Links to content or software are not the same as hosting software, making a link is an act of publishing, and anyone that obeys DCMA requests to remove links to sites is as stupid as the law that requires them to de-link.
If you have a BLOGDIAL account, and you need to get access to your new WordPress account, email irdial.
Welcome to the new BLOGDIAL.
Same as the old BLOGDIAL.