Archive for April, 2005

Baqu

Friday, April 29th, 2005

This is chef Nobuhiro Okano, the chef at Baqu. Baqu is a Japanese / French fusion restaurant around the corner from the Technorati Japan offices near Yoyogi. Last order is 1AM so I often find myself there with the team after late meetings. Knowing that we’ll end up at Baqu helps me get through some of the meetings. Chef Okano always shows us his daily catch and is quite a performer customizing and whipping things up to suit his customer’s needs like a good DJ would. The restaurant doesn’t have a sign and is a bit hard to find, but there is a map on their site. He said that if you mentioned that you read about it on my blog, he’d give you free dessert.

I do not have any direct interest in this restaurant, but I know the owner quite well. I told the chef I’d plug his restaurant on my blog, and was rewarded with an extra large portion of soup. I apologize for compromising my ethics as a blogger… However, it’s a good restaurant and I’m happy to recommend it.

Comment - TrackBack

source: Baqu

Indiagames get Cisco and Macromedia as investors

Friday, April 29th, 2005

Indiagames continues to get funds. On Business2Blog:



Indiagames will announce tomorrow that it’s landed two big name investors—Macromedia and Cisco. One of India’s largest mobile content developers, the Mumbai-based company is majority owned by TOM Online, operator of one of China’s most successful Internet portals.






TOM, took an 80 percent stake (or about $18 million) in Indiagames this past December. Cisco’s share should amount to roughly 10 percent for $2.2 million, while Macromedia’s will come out to an 8 percent stake for $1.8 milllion.

But what is it that they gonna do with $4 million that they couldn’t do with $18 million they got from TOM.



source: Indiagames get Cisco and Macromedia as investors

Rasputina @ the Beachland Ballroom

Friday, April 29th, 2005

“Cello-rock ensemble”.

Enough said.

This post was written by George, source: Rasputina @ the Beachland Ballroom

Anti-muni broadband update

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

A query regarding Ohio House Bill 591 got me thinking about municipal wireless again and looking around the web. Here’s a link to the latest info from MuniWireless.com:

Ohio – HB 591 (Now lapsed, and not yet introduced new session, but still under discussion)

HB 591 would extend to municipal providers of telecommunications service, as defined in federal law, various requirements previously in effect for municipal providers of cable service. In addition, the bill would add a highly vague prohibition on cross-subsidization.

You might want to drop your state representatives a note. You can find their email addresses here.

This post was written by George, source: Anti-muni broadband update

OA and open-source science

Thursday, April 28th, 2005
S. Sadagopan, Open Source goes beyond software, Financial Express, April 29, 2005. Excerpt: ‘What is interesting is that the open source philosophy has deeply influenced many other segments of human endeavour. I will touch upon scientific publishing as one such segment in this column….One clear example of an alternative to ‘commercial publishing’ is the PubMed Central project of the US National Institute of Health (NIH). It is a free digital archive of citations and scholarly journals. It is not a replacement for publishing, but provides an alternative open and free resource for all humanity. The same group also provided GenBank, the highly successful genetic data sequence repository, that allowed researchers anywhere in the world to tap into the huge database of human genomic sequences….But what really excites me is the Cambia (Italian word for change) Project, that is building an alternative, BIOS (Biological Innovation for Open Society). Bios is extending the Open Source software movement to biological sciences (including agriculture and pharmaceuticals). Their Bio-forge…is another idea whose time has come. Bio-forge also has an excellent free, full-text access to some key parts of patents’ information. I find them to be the best among all online patent tutorials, database, white papers, etc). It will be interesting to watch this Open Source movement over the next decade, as it invades many other territories of human endeavor.’

source: OA and open-source science

Coffeehouse propaganda

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

From my friend Niko Angelis, a link to very funny flash film that if you’re at work (why are you reading BFD at work?! get back to work!) or around the family (get off the computer and spend time with your family!), you’d better put yer headphones on. I’m seriously LMAO.

This post was written by George, source: Coffeehouse propaganda

Get an MBA

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Not a Masters of Business Administration, but a Media Bloggers Association. From Wendy Hoke:

Hey George,
A freelancer friend of mine in Nashville sent me a link to this blogger
conference taking place in May.

http://blognashville.org/

It’s sponsored by Media Bloggers Association. Ever heard of them? Check this
out:

http://mediabloggers.org/about/

Thought BFD readers would be interested, given the never-ending
blogger/journalist debate.

Cheers,
Wendy

This post was written by George, source: Get an MBA

New OAI harvester for LIS

Thursday, April 28th, 2005
METALIS is a new search engine from AePIC for OAI-compliant repositories in library and information science. In addition to harvesting the metadata from these repositories, METALIS uses OpenURL to create dynamic links to resouces related to search results. For more details, see Susanna Mornati’s announcement.

source: New OAI harvester for LIS

More on trade embargoes on scientific editing

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

You probably thought this story was over and done with last year. Not so. Yesterday, three groups representing publishers and writers issued a joint press release on their lawsuit against the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Excerpt: ‘The Association of American University Press (AAUP), the Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers (PSP/AAP), and PEN American Center, the original plaintiffs in the pending lawsuit challenging the scope of OFAC’s authority to regulate publishing transactions with sanctioned countries, expressed both appreciation for Nobel Winner Shirin Ebadie’s participation in the suit as a co-plaintiff, and understanding of her recently-announced agreement to settle her complaint with OFAC in light of recent revisions to the OFAC regulations that will allow her book to be published in the U.S. However, in light of our concerns regarding OFAC’s continued assertion of authority to license such publishing transactions, the original plaintiffs are continuing to discuss these matters with the government and the lawsuit remains pending. In September 2004, the AAUP, PSP/AAP and PEN filed suit against the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), an agency of the U.S. Treasury Department, to strike down regulations requiring publishers to seek a license from the government to engage in the routine activities necessary to publish works originating in embargoed nations–regulations which violate the Berman Amendment exempting “information and informational materials” from such embargoes. As a result of the lawsuit, the government has since issued revised regulations and granted a general license to publishers to engage in all activities ordinary and incident to written publications originating in Iran, Cuba, and Sudan. These revisions have allowed many suspended publishing projects to go forward….OFAC still claims the authority to license and control First Amendment-protected activities, a claim which we believe to be untenable. Moreover, the general license that the revised regulations provide to publishers itself contains some troubling provisions. The license excludes the work of senior government officials in embargoed countries.’

source: More on trade embargoes on scientific editing

Profile of Michael Hart

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Hero of the global literacy revolution, The Star Online, April 28, 2005. An unsigned profile of Michael Hart, founder of Project Gutenberg (PG). Excerpt: ‘Specifically, PG intends to harness the world’s great literature, making it easily available to as many people as possible. The mission is to collect the largest possible number of works whose copyright had passed into the public domain, digitise them and make this new form of books widely and easily available for free. Prof Hart knows about the power and convenience of books and libraries, and he sees PG as building the biggest library ever. The project became his magnificent obsession.’

source: Profile of Michael Hart

19 national libraries in Europe resolve to digitize books

Thursday, April 28th, 2005
European libraries join forces against Google global virtual library, TurkishPress.com, April 27, 2005. An unsigned news story. Excerpt: ‘Nineteen European national libraries have joined forces against a planned communications revolution by Internet search giant Google to create a global virtual library, organisers said Wednesday. The 19 libraries are backing instead a multi-million euro counter-offensive by European nations to put European literature online. “The leaders of the undersigned national libraries wish to support the initiative of Europe’s leaders aimed at a large and organised digitisation of the works belonging to our continent’s heritage,” a statement said….The statement was signed by national libraires in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, Slovakia, Spain and Sweden. The British National Library has given its implicit support to the move, without signing the motion, while Cyprus and Malta have agreed verbally to the text. Portugal is also set to approve it.’ (Thanks to ResourceShelf.)

source: 19 national libraries in Europe resolve to digitize books

A new website for Tremont

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Tremonter.com

This post was written by George, source: A new website for Tremont

ExBe podcast

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Brent Gummow of Infinite Number of Sounds emails:

The first Experimental Behavior Podcast is a little over 30 minutes long and
discusses events and gives sonic samples from the the ExBe calendar events for
this week in Cleveland and beyond:

homepage:
http://www.experimentalbehavior.com

rss file:
http://www.experimentalbehavior.com/exbe_podcast1.rss

mp3 file: 30 megs.
http://www.experimentalbehavior.com/exbe_podcast1.mp3

There will be a thread setup on the messageboards for each episode where folks
can discuss and give me feedback (as well as suggestions for improvement).
There is also a “help” thread in the podcast area where community members can
assist one another with both listening and producing questions.

Sweet.

This post was written by George, source: ExBe podcast

It was video that killed the radio star

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Podcasting makes everyone one.

Will Kessel of CollisionBend.com emailed this article first. Valdis Krebs sent it to me today.

Thanks, guys.

This post was written by George, source: It was video that killed the radio star

Linked again

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Props to Tim Russo. He’s linked on Instapundit. Thanks to John Ettorre for the head’s up.

This post was written by George, source: Linked again

One Breakfast, two podcasts

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

I’m posting two recordings I did at DJ’s Restaurant on E. 105th Street in Glenville.

The first is Steve FitzGerald of LakewoodBuzz asking me about pizza, sex, and the Pope. We recorded it after recording this conversation, where we talk about less interesting thing like Cleveland politics, The Plain Dealer, and community.

Be warned. The second of the two is 80M and 1:30 long. The first is 26M and runs about a half hour.

Enjoy!

This post was written by George, source: One Breakfast, two podcasts

Caveat emptor

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

“Blogger Relations Practice” is what PR firm Issue Dynamics has created to “helped clients create, participate in, monitor, and advertise in blogs” according to Muniwireless.com. I’m looking around their site and 1). Don’t see a blog, 2). See one reference to a blog 3). See lots of rheotic about themselves:

“Our standard Internet and public affairs practices have been incorporating blog strategies into our client work plans for years now, and the blog slice of the pie has been getting bigger and bigger,” says Ken Deutsch, IDI’s Executive Vice President. “Looking at the needs of our clients and the attention blogs are finally getting in the business community now seemed the right time to launch a dedicated Blogger Relations practice.” IDI Blogger Relations clients have already included Fortune 50 corporations, national trade associations, advocacy groups and political party committees…

Pretty much your standard PR fair. Not to mention I don’t see any bloggers on their staff. Would would you trust an auto mechanic that didn’t own a car? It’ll be interesting to see how good their “blog monitoring” is. If I don’t get any comments on this post from ID Inc., I’ll know it’s all hype.

If you’re looking for some to guide you through blogging and the blogsphere, ask an expert. Same thing if you’re a PR company. Get in touch with me. I’ll point you in the right direction.

This post was written by George, source: Caveat emptor

FirebirdSQL: a robust database system

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

THE little known open source relational database management system FirebirdSQL is finally gaining momentum and recognition.

source: FirebirdSQL: a robust database system

Digital security magazine (IN)SECURE is here

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

(IN)SECURE Magazine is a freely available, freely distributable digital security magazine in PDF format.

source: Digital security magazine (IN)SECURE is here

Novell Takes Linux to China

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

Novell today announced a partnership with a leading Chinese organization to help expand and promote Linux adoption in China.

source: Novell Takes Linux to China