for sushi the other night to celebrate my friend Suki’s birthday. I have known her a little bit for a long time, and last time we’d seen one another we talked for a while about her first novel, which she’d completed and was shopping around. Anyhow – the other night I asked and it seems things are going well, which is really cool news. At the previous dinner, Suki had given me her card, which of course I promptly lost. But I found it again last night, and through it I also found this, a little website for Go Through the Waves the first novel by Suki Lee.
Here’s the image
from the Axis webcam at work. Yes, the clock is wrong.
In Evhead today
, Evan Williams mentions a webcam with a server built in. Well, it is cool. We have one at the office, though I believe it’s stuck behind our firewall at the moment (why that would be I don’t know). I’ll try to get to the bottom of it, actually, now that I remember that it’s there, and presumably chugging away.
The use of freelancers’
material on the web (and in other electronic media) without additional payment has been a huge issue in Montreal for some time, but hasn’t received a whole lot of coverage. Editor and Publisher Online reports today that Freelancers are picketing the Boston Globe, and I’m sure similar things have happened throughout North America. The newspaper business, in my experience, is playing hardball on this one – at least that was the case here. It’s interesting in the context of the Napster debate, because it shows the differences between how copyrights are handled. Freelance journalists generally only sell a license for first publication, but newspapers want to extend that (thus cutting into potential sales to other papers) without additional payment. In the music biz, the record company buys the copyright itself, so presumably any additional revenue stream won’t make a difference in the amount they pay the artists. That should be an issue but it isn’t.
Michael Sippey wrote
a rebuttal to Nielsen’s article entitled “The Beginning of Web Design” in stating the obvious. I think it’s a much more balanced approach to things. [link via heather]
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