Harry Potter and the Unkeepable Secret

This from Good Morning Silicon Valley:

If you really, really can’t wait a few more days for the new Harry Potter book to hit the shelves, and you don’t mind squinting at page scans so poor that they need to be touched up in Photoshop to be readable, you can now download a version that has been loosed on Bit Torrent sites. Then visit an ophthalmologist. And if you really, really want to wait and savor all the revelations in hard cover, be very careful about where you tread on the Net — the spoilers should be in bloom soon. Wonder how Bloomsbury Publishing is feeling about the $20 million it reportedly spent to keep the book under wraps until Saturday…

Skin deep

If, like me, you’re slightly irritated by the smugness of the “I’m a Mac, I’m a PC” ads, then you’ll enjoy this.

Thanks to Tom for pointing me to it.

Citizen Media: A Progress Report

Dan Gillmor, reflecting on the first year of his project…

We’ve come a long way. There’s a growing recognition and appreciation of why citizen journalism matters. Investments, from media organizations and others, are fueling experiments of various kinds. Revenue models are taking early shape. And, most important, there’s a flood of great ideas.

But we have a long, long way to go. We nee much more experimentation in journalism and community information projects. The business models are, at best, uncertain — and some notable failures are discouraging. Dealing with the issues of trust, credibility and ethics is essential; as are more tools and training, including a dramatically updated notion of media literacy.

I offered 10 major points in my talk, as follows…

Thoughtful. Worth reading.

Boris the Tosser

“Jester, toff, self-absorbed sociopath and serial liar”. Polly Toynbee describing Boris Johnson, the ole Etonian joker who has announced that he’s running for Mayor of London.

That just about sums him up! It was interesting that David Cameron made a point of saying that Johnson wasn’t his candidate for mayor. He was, said the boy Dave, “Boris Johnson’s candidate”. Polly thinks this will backfire onto the Cameroonians. She’s right. Remember the famous Bullingdon picture which shows Cameron and Johnson as young toffs.

Actually, I’ve never thought Boris was a harmless joker: I used to know people like him in the Pitt Club at Cambridge (I was an occasional visitor, not a member) and beneath their amiable Woosterish exteriors many of them were as reactionary as they come. Toynbee has spotted this in Johnson. For example:

What about Boris the sociopath? Apart from being caught often lying to all and sundry – he was fired from the Times for making up a quote – how has he survived the Darius Guppy scandal when he was recorded agreeing to find a journalist’s contact details so old Etonian friend Guppy could have the man beaten up? How badly? Guppy suggested just a few cracked ribs. Later when Guppy was jailed for a £1.8m insurance fraud, Boris explained his role with: “Oh poor old Darry was in a bit of a hole. He was being hounded.” Can Cameron really get through nearly a year’s mayoral campaign by just laughing and saying, as he does, “Boris is Boris”? If he were to win, Cameron would be in a worse hole still.

Freecycle

I’ve been clearing a lot of stuff in the house — to the point where I can now actually see some of the floors again. I’ve also donated boxes of old electronics stuff to the folks at the local municipal waste dump. But wouldn’t it be nice, I thought, if something like Freecycle existed in the UK?

Oh — hang on — it does. In fact there are 438 groups spread across the country, with 784,362 members!

Hmmm…. I wonder if anyone has a use for a nice pair of speaker stands?

Thanks to Brian for the link.

Ndiyo! – Hubster

Hooray! The new Samsung monitors with the DisplayLink chip in the back have arrived! Quentin and Michael have already been doing interesting things with them. And Chris Nuttall wrote a nice piece in the Financial Times about DisplayLink.

(Footnote: DisplayLink is the company spun out by Ndiyo to develop the thin-client technology we deem necessary to change the world — or at any rate the way we do networking.)