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To Stet Or Not To Stet That Is the Question: related news
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not question stet stet
theodp writes "The NY Times' Virginia Heffernan confesses to being stumped by how to excerpt the language on message boards and blogs. For example, Heffernan notes she could quote kavya on Yahoo Answers word for word ('How is babby formed? How girl get pragnent?'), but worries that doing so makes kavya look like an idiot rather that the sweetly earnest 7-year-old that he or she might be. Is it better to paraphrase or revise the question into 'How is a baby formed?' For now, Heffernan is going to let things stand (stet) and treat message boards like novels, preserving idiosyncrasies of language as far as possible and taking them as intentional — a 'wuz' on the Internet remains 'wuz' in the paper."
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 6:07 20th Jul
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MyLongNickName writes "Less than a month ago I took a position at a smaller firm (around 50 employees) as an IT Manager. As you might expect from the size of the company, I oversee quite a variety of tasks. I come from a background of computer programming, and am definitely not a master of every function. We rely on third-party solutions providers for areas like our networking, web hosting, phone systems, etc. I am used to working in a larger environment with a large IT staff (and not just because of super sizing at McDonald's). Just the daily rubbing elbows allowed me to stay current in areas that I did not directly touch. And when I had a question, I personally knew someone who could answer my question. I am not in that environment now. How do I stay current? I don't want to be a master of every technology, but I want to be aware of tre
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 8:19 20th Jun
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I just want to ask you one quick question. Are your blogs profitable? I told you it would be quick. It's real simple to answer. Either your blogs are earning for you, or their not. I will tell you something here and I will be blunt. If your blogs are earning you some type of income then you need to listen up. If your blogs are not earning you some sort of income then you DEFINETLY need to listen up. Pay attention close to what I say and maybe the next time someone asks you that question instead of saying yes or no you can say "HECK YES THEY ARE"! Now I again will be blunt. Some people consider this totally unethical and blackhat. I leave that for you to decide. A vast majority of the people that will tell you this is "blackhat", are not earning "peanuts" from their blogging efforts.
in Blog Watch
via Articles Bridge @ 9:15 9th Jul
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I feel exploited when a customer takes to much time to send me all the images, texts, videos, ideas etc that I need to complete the project. In the meantime, severals changes are asked from the client. A web site project could take 3 months! Eating peanut butter 3 months in a row is not very interesting (its juste an exemple of how poor I can be cause I wait for my money). A project could be finished in 2 short weeks (that never happened to me) Even if I charge 40% of the total price at the beginning, I always feel that Im more interested in finishing the project that the customer is. Sometimes I wonder if Im in the good job in my life, but I prefer to be poor sometimes than having a boss. Im open to any ideas to not feel exploited, and sorry if Im definatly not in the topic, thats what I understood from the article, feeling exploi
in Webmaster Tips
via About @ 22:29 27th Jun
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JULY 30--Arguing that technology has ensured that "complete privacy does not exist," Google contends that a Pennsylvania family has no legal grounds to sue the search giant for publishing photos of their home on its popular "Street View" mapping feature. Responding to an invasion of privacy lawsuit filed by Aaron and Christine Boring, Google has countered that the couple "live in a residential community in the twenty-first-century United States, where every step upon private property is not deemed by law to be an actionable trespass." In a motion to dismiss the Borings's federal complaint, Google's six-lawyer team asserts that, "Today's satellite-image technology means that even in today's desert, complete privacy does not exist. In any event, Plaintiffs live far from the desert and are far from hermits.
in Search Engines
via The Smoking Gun @ 14:07 30th Jul
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Trevor Paglen is an astrophotographer with a difference… he takes photos of satellites that are not there. Officially "not there", anyway. He spends many nights surveying the skies, waiting for classified spy satellites to pass overhead. When one appears, after researching what is actually out there (which is a hard task, these things are not meant to be discovered!) he captures it with his hi-tech astronomical spy satellite-catching equipment. His work makes for captivating (if unnerving) reading. Apart from capturing 189 "ghost" satellites in orbit, he's turned his stargazing lenses to Earth and taken a peek into the top secret world of "black ops"…
in Space Science
via Universe Today @ 14:12 22nd Jun
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"Reason #14 - "Do Something for the Environment" - I agree with most of the arguments made here. Yes, with Linux you don't have the boxes and the CDs that traditional software has. My only problem here is: Would this convince one of my non-technical acquaintances to switch? Not really. If they can help the environment, they do, but they are not going to go out of the way to switch to a whole new operating system because it's good for the planet. In other words, they are not hippies."
in Linux
via Linux Today @ 9:08 23rd Jul
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Well, this shouldn't surprise very many people, but following on plenty of earlier studies that have made it clear that most people don't do much to protect their privacy, a new study out of the UK pretty much states the obvious: people say they're concerned about privacy, but they sure don't act that way. The study found 84% of users say they carefully guard their info online -- but when tested, 89% of people actually did give away info in the same exact survey. To be fair, the specific set of questions was first asking people if they carefully guard their income info, followed later by a question asking them what income bracket they fell into. It's reasonable to think that some folks believe that the bracket is not the same as giving away their actual income -- which is what the first question implied.
in Data Privacy
via Techdirt @ 13:51 15th Aug
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The plans are not "hideous" as a lot of people are trumpeting, ok they are not "amazing value" to kill every plan out there wonderful but are not as gouging as some (most if not all) people would make it seem.
in Handhelds
via GeekZone @ 18:10 8th Jul
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On Wednesday I received 72 e-mails, not counting junk, and only two text messages. It was a quiet day but, then again, I’m not including the telephone calls. I’m also not including the deafening and pointless announcements on a train journey to Wakefield – use a screen, jerks – the piercingly loud telephone conversations of unsocialised adults and the screaming of untamed brats. And, come to think of it, why not include the junk e-mails? They also interrupt. There were 38. Oh and I’d better throw in the 400-odd news alerts that I receive from all the websites I monitor via my iPhone.
in Search Engines
via The Times @ 7:38 20th Jul
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How dare you to say it was funny. WaiWai article was NOT funny considering the damage it has done. The articles were untrue and NOT credible, and it was disgrace to Japan and Japanese culture. Some foreigners writing "female in your country is prostitute" is absolutely not funny, especially when it is not true. Every single article I have read were simply horrible.
in Blog Watch
via Japan Inc @ 10:35 30th Jun
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Tibor the Hun writes "According to Gartner and IDC, Apple now has between 7.8 and 8.5% of market share. While those numbers are not astonishing, they are not insignificant, and their growth does not seem to be slowing down. Will the pearly gates of acceptance open up for them once they reach the magic 10%, and will that have a positive effect on desktop Linux adoption? Hard to tell, but it's good to see that normal people (not just us geeks) are choosing to go with a different OS, rather than staying with the headache-inducing Windows."
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 21:28 17th Jul
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That Quake game for the iPhone we wrote about a few months back has made it onto Cydia, the jailbreak application repository. Just Another iPhone Blog says it's not too slow and it doesn't make use of the accelerometer (so it's probably not the version we wrote about before), but it does play fairly well. Seeing as it's not the one we wrote about before, we're not sure if it's even networked, but c'mon, Quake on iPhone! [Just Another iPhone Blog]
in Handhelds
via Gizmodo @ 20:21 5th Aug
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Hugh Pickens writes "Bill Gates, in a interview with the BBC, revealed the secret of Microsoft's success: 'Most of our competitors were very poorly run. They did not understand how to bring in people with business experience and people with engineering experience and put them together,' said Gates. 'They did not think about software in this broad way. They did not think about tools or efficiency. They would therefore do one product, but would not renew it to get it to the next generation.' Mitch Kapor, founder of the Lotus Corporation, has a different view: 'Claims by Microsoft that people were buying the software because it was good are pretty self-serving. I'd like to smoke what he's smoking.' Gates also said that he took a 'conservative balance sheet approach' to running Microsoft explaining that he wanted 'great financial strength so
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 10:50 21st Jun
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The summer is almost over but some of you are still in vacation and besides your normal activities, some of you play mmorpg games. While there are many out here, not all people like the subscription models, so they play free mmorpg games. They are not exactly free because they all have shops that can offer you an advantage if you buy special items from there, but it’s not mandatory and in some, it’s not necessary at all if you know what you’re doing. Developers must get money someway in order to maintain the servers and the game, so that’s why we have the shops.
in Video Games
via Gamers.com @ 20:04 24th Aug
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walshy007 writes "In a recent thread it was asked what it would take for an 'unstable' 2.7 development tree to be created, to which Linus replied: 'Nothing. I'm not going back to the old model. The new model is so much better that it's not even worth entertaining as a theory to go back. That said, I _am_ considering changing just the numbering. Not to go back to the old model, but because a constantly increasing minor number leads to big numbers. I'm not all that thrilled with "26" as a number: it's hard to remember. I think the time-based releases (ie the "2 weeks of merge window until -rc1, followed by roughly two months of stabilization") has been so successful that I'd prefer to skip the version numbering model too. We don't do releases based on "features" any more, so why should we do version _numbering_ based on "features"?'"
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 12:04 16th Jul
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An anonymous reader writes "Now that the Swedish government (in its infinite wisdom) has passed a law allowing them to monitor email traffic, a question that I think a lot of people are asking (or at least should be asking) is: 'What can I do to improve my privacy?' The answer is not obvious. So, what are the best solutions for seamless email encryption, search privacy, etc? What are your experiences with PGP vs GPG vs ...? In this day and age, why is the use of this type of privacy technologies still so limited? Why isn't there a larger movement promoting the use of privacy tools? Also, what is in your opinion the largest privacy concern? Search tracking? Email transfer? I believe this is an interesting question not only for Swedes, but for everyone.
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 8:19 20th Jun
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Dallas-based Blockbuster Inc. announced Tuesday the withdrawal of its proposal to acquire Richmond, Va.-based Circuit City Stores Inc. Jim Keyes, Bockbuster chairman and CEO, said the company decided not to proceed with the acquisition "based on market conditions and the completion of our initial due process." He also said the proposition was not in the best interest of Blockbuster's shareholders. In response to the withdrawal, Philip Schnoonover, chairman, president and CEO of Circuit City, has said that "The board's review was not dependent on Blockbuster's participation." Circuit City is still exploring strategic alternatives, but will not disclose more information until the board approves a course of action.
in Gadgets
via Display & Design Ideas @ 19:49 2nd Jul
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Hyperic, known for its tools that let users monitor and manage their applications running on the Web, has launched a new hosted service for users of Amazon Web Services. In this case, however, it might be a good idea to first say what the free service does not do. It does not provide users with specific information on how their particular application is doing. It does not tell them what’s going on in their pieces of the cloud. It does not dulcetly intone, “Excuse me, Dave, but I have detected a throughput problem in storage sector 6.”
in E-commerce
via Grid Today @ 8:19 30th Jun
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Dave writes in with an interesting story suggesting that Major League Soccer is potentially violating the DMCA by issuing a takedown of footage for which it does not own the copyright. The details are a little confusing, and some parts aren't entirely clear -- but from the account at the link, two Major League Soccer teams participated in a separate tournament, called the U.S. Open Cup. The event was not televised at all, despite efforts among fans to provide a streaming webcast. Apparently, at the soccer match, a fight broke out, and the local news covered it, using footage from the game. Following this, some bloggers posted the news stations' story about the fight on YouTube -- at which point MLS sent a DMCA takedown notice. The question is whether or not MLS has copyright over the footage (MLS's trademarks are meaningless here, as the
in IP & Patents
via Techdirt @ 9:29 17th Jul
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New Delhi, Aug 09: YouTube in not a profitable venture, Google said in a recent disclosure. Ad sales revenue from the popular video sharing site has not had any material effect on the revenue of the company, it said in its 10-Q SEC filing.
in Search Engines
via ZeeNews.com @ 8:43 10th Aug
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SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- HOT or NOT, Inc., a leading social entertainment site today launched HOT or NOT GOSSIP
in Blog Watch
via Social Media Portal @ 20:07 5th Aug
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SAN FRANCISCO - (Business Wire) HOT or NOT, Inc., a leading social entertainment site (www.hotornot.com) today launched HOT or NOT GOSSIP
in Blog Watch
via Earthtimes.org @ 10:40 5th Aug
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Earlier this week, we covered a report from the Georgian Foreign Ministry, claiming that the Russian Business Network (RBN) was actively engaged in cyberwarfare against Georgia—with the blessing and backing of the Russian government. There have been no new reports from that source, but several security experts have spoken up, and raised the question of whether or not the Russian government is actually involved.
in Computer Security
via ArsTechnica @ 19:47 13th Aug
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