Global Security Watch > Imagery and Privacy
[O'Reilly Radar] By nat I recently did press call with Tim, talking about the Where 2.0 conference. We covered the popularity of Google Maps, the big changes coming...
Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.
[North of the latte line] Jordie Albiston: winner of Poem of the Millenium: . A salute to Geoff Dean and his contemporaries Christopher Koch and Tim Thorne appears in the editorial... include(d) Tim Thorne, Steven Edgar, Kathryn Lomer, MTC Cronin, Liz Winfield, Karen Knight, Peter... and turns it into a well-written poem fragile in its bird-flight of imagery. Several poets used
[O2b.net] o2b.net : Tim Murtaugh: The really nice things about the underscore hack is that it’s unintrusive, yet easy to spot by eye. It can be placed immediately following the item it’s overriding, so I can easily tell what is being “fixed.” In addition, making sure to throw IE6 into quirks mode means I get IE5 & 6 compatability at the same time, and the high quality of the other browsers we support (Firefox, Safari) means that I only have to hack for IE. (Not to say I don’t have other browser-related problems, but I’m able to fix them without CSS hacks.)
[Radar.oreilly.com] O'Reilly Radar > Nathan Torkington: I just confirmed Stephen Randall from LocaModa to speak at Where 2.0 about mobile marketing (give the web site a day or two to reflect his addition to the program). He won't be talking exclusively about what LocaModa's doing, though their work is fascinating: they're turning phones into remote controls for the TVs you see in airports, Wal-Mart, etc. By connecting phones to TVs (e.g., each TV has an SMS number) you can turn the TVs into blogs, let viewers respond to advertisements, and much more.
[Genecowan.com] Just as I thought | Gene Cowan's weblog: The company rejected the ad, said Paul Meyer, president and chief executive of Clear Channel Outdoor, after concluding issues of terrorism and war were too sensitive for New Yorkers after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
[Maccompanion.com] macCompanion Blog: “Apples directory services are based on LDAP, making them inherently compatible with all systems that browse and update directories through LDAP network interfaces. Apple added to OS X Server 10.4 the ability to masquerade as a Windows Server 2000 PDC (Primary Domain Controller) or BDC (Backup Domain Controller), making it a Windows server peer. Its easier to enable than is a domain controller in Windows: In System Admin, I selected PDC as a role, typed in a Windows domain name, and after several seconds the domain appeared on my Windows XP and Windows 2003 machines, indistinguishable from native Windows...”
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Imagery, Gis, Global Security Watch