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November 07, 2000


those people good to remember
Posted in :: Pondering ::

those people

good to remember those dang designers have a lot to teach us wacky IA's.
From the lost island of Vivid: My Thoughts
Posted at 11:40 AM, November 07, 2000
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From: Gleanings To: voters Subject:
Posted in ::

From: Gleanings
To: voters
Subject: Gleanings: election day

AMERICANS: DON'T FORGET TO VOTE


OPENING THANG

back from holland. ha. The pickled herring did not kill me. This one's short though, still playing catch-up.

Today's first gleaning was sent by Andi, and it's a hoot!

http://www.faxwerk.org/usabilitysucks/magritte.html

IA MATTERS

Great conference in La Jolla! Readup on the many presentations...
http://argus-acia.com/strange_connections/strange007.html

NEWS

Are we all thinking "acessibility"
Blind customers want to touch club lapdancers
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/etac=001851641145319&rtmo=lnk7bFlt&atmo=99999999&pg=/et/00/9/26/nlap26.html


SF Examiner: Quantifying the Internet.
If you ask Hal Varian of UC-Berkeley, he'll tell you the Net consists of 2.5
billion documents, growing at a healthy clip of 7.3 million pages a day.
Across the Bay, Net archivist Brewster Kahle simply points to the basement of
his Presidio office space. The whole Internet fits in there.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/examiner/archive/2000/11/05/BUSINESS8112.dtl

USA Today: Panel: Yahoo! can block access to Nazi items.
Yahoo! has the technical means to prevent French Internet users from accessing
its U.S. auction sites that trade Nazi-era items, a panel of experts including
Vinton Cerf, the man widely regarded as the ''father'' of the Internet, told a
Paris court.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/cti771.htm

Wired News: From May 22, 2000; France Gags Yahoo on Nazi Bids
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,36504,00.html

NY Times: V.C. Forsaking the Internet.
Indeed, for hundreds, maybe thousands of Internet companies founded with big
ambitions, it is becoming time to go home. The trickle of failures that has
steadily accompanied the growth of the Internet is now turning into a
flood.
http://www.nytimes.com/2000/11/06/technology/06DOT.html

Inside: Drudge Vows No Surrender on Posting Exit-Poll Results.
During primary season this past winter, three Web sites broke ranks with their
media peers by revealing exit-poll winners before the voting booths had
closed. But come next Tuesday, only Matt Drudge will risk the wrath of the
journalistic establishment and possibly of the courts...
http://www.inside.com/story/Story_Cached/0,2770,13878_13_1_1,00.html

Posted at 07:21 AM, November 07, 2000
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