Saturday
Aug052006
Today's New Blawg
Saturday, August 5, 2006 at 1:49PM
Singularity, by Professor Michael Scott: "Attorney. Programmer. Scholar. Teacher. Human."
Friday
Aug042006
TWiL Be Too Cool
Friday, August 4, 2006 at 11:08PM
I love the idea of an online hub that would aggregate the current and ongoing work of the ZDTV/TechTV alumni —
and — of hosting this WEEK in LAW (TWiL). Stay tuned for more on that front. (Want to suggest discussion topics or guests? Tag 'em.)
Friday
Aug042006
The Linkfest Continues
Friday, August 4, 2006 at 2:08PM
I'm doing a lot of narrating my attention flow here this week, because what's catching my attention seems — understandably enough, to me — pretty compelling:
- YouTube continues to illuminate the legal profession
- Two big pieces of news from Beet.TV: CNETTV.com and AOL Video ("[I]f it's out there, well find it. This is a place where we are aggregating and indexing video from any source imaginable on the web, whether its YouYube or Google or CBS or NBC....")
- Ken Fisher at Ars Technica examines place-shifting: [C]hallenges present and future paint a rough picture for innovation
- Also from Ars: George Lucas: YouTube Star War parodies can stay
- C.E. Petit: "Just what we need: Hollywood against the gambling industry in a race to see who can get a stealth amendment in its favor tacked on to some otherwise-unrelated legislation."
- Rebecca Tushnet on on CollegeNET, Inc. v. XAP Corporation, 2006 WL 2037457 (D. Or.): "If I make money by delivering eyeballs to my clients, is there a Lanham Act violation when I lie to get those eyeballs? My intuition is yes, at least for defendants like Google and XAP – but I'd have to draw the line at communicative products, like a newspaper with articles by Jayson Blair."
- [Update]: Also, don't miss John Palfrey's coverage of Professor Lessig on interoperability at Wikimania.
Thursday
Aug032006
So Many Links, So Much Time
Thursday, August 3, 2006 at 4:28PM
- shades of Snow Crash: NewAssignment.net
- CrunchBoard is here (via)
- Media Life Magazine looks at IPTV
- Law and Letters takes a comprehensive look at law schools, WiFi, and laptops: "Law students are mature enough to know that whatever form the lecture/discussion takes (Powerpoint, classic lecture, or heavily Socratic/dialogic) there are also many ways to process the material (taking notes by hand, by laptop, or by making their own case briefs, or just listening) and that just as the professor has discretion in how s/he conveys the material, the student should have discretion in how s/he processes it."
- File sharing is not yet ready to join the online dinosaurs; you can say that again