Old Reliable Run 2005
I just signed up for the Old Reliable Run 10K, which takes place in downtown Raleigh on November 13, 2005. You can sign up too at active.com. It's been over 10 years since I've run a 10K and despite my daily 3-mile run I still feel pretty out-of-shape, so I'll be happy just to finish without walking. Now I need to figure out my training program and find some good 4, 5 and 6 mile routes. I can tell that BoulderRunning.com's Google maps based route planner is going to come in handy. It opens up in Boulder, but appears to work anywhere in the US.
del.icio.us links [August 03, 2005]
- State of the Blogosphere, pt. 1
Doubling every 5.5 months (not counting spamblogs) and 55% of blogs are active - Intro to Atom
On atomenabled.org - Snell's Atom overview
Technical overview of the popular Atom Syndication Format - Windley paraphrases Graham
"Open source and blogging show us what real work looks like" - Blog 500
Jason: "Iâm sick of the Technorati 100" - Rating OSS
Steve: "I'm not so sure about is this proposed rating system for OSS apps" - Boycott IE7
Slashdot: Windows Guru Calls For IE7 Boycott
Can't trust Trusted Computing
Cory Doctorow: It means that the price of being a Mac user will be eternal vigilance: you'll need to know that your apps not only write to exportable formats, but that they also allow those exported files to be read by competing apps.Cory can't trust Apple anymore and he's got a point. But no matter what OS you use, you still have to be vigilant. Even without DRM and so called Trusted Computing built into the OS, app developers can screw you over and lock you down. Look at Intuit's CDilla spyware/DRM fiasco for example. I'm prepared to be vigilant, so this news alone won't stop me from buying a new Mac.
RackSpace vs. the jackboots?
From the EFF statement: "Rackspace may claim to provide its customers with 'fanatical support,' but in this case it looks like it was more interested in serving the government," added Kevin Bankston, EFF attorney and Equal Justice Works/Bruce J. Ennis Fellow. "Despite these new revelations, a key question remains: Did government agents intentionally mislead the web host into thinking it had to hand over complete copies of the Indymedia servers?"
To summarize the story: when the US government requested the server logs for the grassroots media network IndyMedia from internet service provider RackSpace, RackSpace couldn't find the files. So RackSpace handed over IndyMedia's servers. I wonder how the government agents worked their magic? Did they threaten to declare RackSpace an enemy combatant and lock the whole company up without a trial?
Raleigh/Cary blogger meetup tonight
Tonight at Cafe Cyclo. As usual, Josh has the details. I may not be able to make it tonight, due to the Roller 2.0 demo, which I abscent-mindedly scheduled for the very same time.
Status, cc:world
My status report was easy this week because I only worked on one thing. I spent all of last week working on Roller 2.0/Group Blogging and hope to be feature complete by (internal) demo time, i.e. tomorrow. I'll put together a standalone demo too, so you can check it out.
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