The return of the 18th century coffee house. Startups don’t need offices

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Wired News: Monster Fueled by Caffeine on a startup that works out of a coffee shop. After a false start with ‘hot desking’ in the 90’s freely available wifi, laptops and cellphones really do mean that in some case you can work anywhere. In this case, history has come full circle with some of the biggest institutions in the world, such as Lloyd’s insurance, having been started in 18th century coffee houses. Increasingly I am meeting people, that like myself would rather work out of a coffee shop than some anonymous cube hell that is the staple of most US work environments. I have a friend who is looking to buy a coffee house in San Francisco as space for his startup, whilst keeping it selling coffee to the public. From an architectural standpoint I see this as the perfect rebellion. Unlike coffee houses, office space does not have to…

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Creationist stickers ruled unconstitutional

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Reuters: “A U.S. judge on Thursday ordered a Georgia school district to remove stickers challenging the theory of evolution from its textbooks on the grounds that they violated the U.S. Constitution.” The creationist/ID folks will be up in arms about this, however to defend their case they would have had to show that their agenda is not religious. How many non-religious creationists are there. None.

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Bookmarklet question

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One of the ways that you can overcome the 508 character limit for bookmarklets in IE 6 is to use a local bookmarklet stub that references a server side javascript file. See:Better Living Through Bookmarklets [JavaScript & DHTML Tutorials] The problem is that IE’s security model blocks document.write unless it writes into a new page, which is a problem if people have popup blockers. Does anyone know of a workaround? (Sorry, I have comments blocked cos of spam, so email is the only option to reply).

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The New York Times are a changin’

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Business Week on the New York Times: “A majority of the paper’s readership now views the paper online, but the company still derives 90% of its revenues from newspapering.” That’s a problem indeed, but nothing compared with local newspapers’ loss of classifieds to Craigslist and the like. I can’t help but feel that there may be an opportunity for newspapers in premium, Zagat-like online directory businesses. Joi Ito’s Web: The Future of the New York Times

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DRM and consumer rights

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Instead of meeting halfway with consumers, the music and movie industries seem to have shifted their attention to hardware and software media players in a war of attrition. As a result consumers are being ripped off. A Byzantine maze of restrictions, poorly thought out and being debugged on-the-fly by end user guinea pigs stops people from viewing or listening to things they have legitimately bought. (I can’t watch UK DVDs in the US for example which really pisses me off). This is clearly going to get worse. Is there already a specific consumer rights group to tackle this? If not, someone like Cory Doctorow would be great as a DRM Czar. Below, Jenny, AKA The Shifted Librarian, wrestles with a Kafkaesque DRM nightmare: “I spent about an hour trying to play back a disc I legitimately bought and went as far as installing and updating a 3rd party application to…

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Predictions for 2005

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Predictions for 2005: 1. Wikiyahoo – Tagging/Folksonomies become the tech talk of the town. Flickr gets acquired 2. Googlets – People cash out and leave Google, creating a startup frenzy in SF 3. An Englishman

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Fact Check Reality Check

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Ooh I like this, about time fact checking got a reality check. Jason Kottke satirizes anal retentive blogger fact checking of big media, pointing out that almost anything can be deconstructed to look misleading. 60 Minutes wrong again! (kottke.org)

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Adbombing – How to use Overture and Adsense to stop ads for things you don’t like

Posted by | half baked ideas | No Comments

The Internet allows you to protest directly against unethical advertisers by clicking on ads you don’t like. Traditionally people have protested against hate media such as Michael Savage’s radio show by encouraging people to boycott advertisers on the show. The problem is this is indirect. Without direct penalties, shows like Savage’s actually rely on the ‘all publicity is good publicity’ phenomenon of having large audiences of people who listen just to be outraged. Advertisers gravitate towards low end brands where negative feelings against them are outweighed by the fact that some percentage of overall listeners will convert to buyers. It occurred to me that the Internet allows you to do something much more direct, to penalize advertisers by clicking on text ads and not buying anything. This doesn’t just lower revenues it actually costs the advertiser directly. The ‘all publicity is good publicity’ goes away. One could go one step…

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The emergence of a fascist cult in the Ayn Rand Institute

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I am currently mulling over the sheer generosity and heartfelt sentiment from the goose-stepping Ayn Rand Institute: U.S. Should Not Help Tsunami Victims The argument being that all money should come from individual donations. Only there is no donation box for Tsunami victims on the Rand website. Tsunami victims are presumably from ‘primitive nations’ where ‘the mere fact that they needed help should not have created a claim ‘as simultaneously Isolationist and Jingoist Ed Locke says of Vietnam, in another classic muddle headed Rand Institute Op Ed. By extension, should all Iraq rebuilding money come from donations from those who were in favor of invasion? Should the invasion itself have been funded from donations? It’s a nice thought, perhaps the Iraq war would have never happened if people had to put their money where their mouth is. But democracy ain’t like that, you can’t hold a referendum for everything. Society…

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Realtor destroying wishlist.

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My recent experiences with realtors show me that: most of them don’t know very much about buildings; waste your time by lying in descriptions; seem to be the last people on earth to use email and digital cameras instead of time wasting phone calls and expensive on-site visits. Realtors charge up to a quarter of what architects do, without most of the skill, service or liability. The reason that this happens is that they own the customer. By extension, if their services don’t benefit customers then this will change. Why hasn’t the Internet destroyed the current hopeless realtor merry-go-round. Perhaps a listings service could be built where data can only be submitted if: 1. the realtor or seller lists a contact email(rather than them contact you, or by phone). 2. all listing have digital pictures of outside and all rooms. 3. all room sizes are listed in square foot. 4….

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