Archive for September, 2007

Scripting News for 9/18/07

September 18, 2007

A killer app? 

Mint sounds like something I’ve been waiting for.

Like something everyone will want.

Now, should I trust them with my data??

BTW, it’s refreshing that someone, whoever they are, saw their way through the maze of BS products that Silicon Valley keeps coming up with and made something obvious and widely useful. That’s the kind of stuff I like to see. :-)

PS: I did a search and found out that Mint is one of the 40 products announced at TC40. It should win the $50K award, if the execution is anything more than passing. Best idea at the show, by far.

PPS: Fred Wilson writes to say Mint is not a new idea, that Wesabe, a company he has invested in, has been offering a similar product for over a year. He also sent a pointer to their Security and Privacy FAQ, a very inspiring document.

Is a tech bust coming soon? 

Fred Wilson thinks so.

And I agree.

The reason the tech sector runs in cycles of euphoric booms and deep busts is that there is little support for long-term investment in tech. The new concepts that will fuel the next boom cycle are already here, but there isn’t enough money flowing into developing them. The ideas that are getting investment are more and more derivative of the original idea that fueled the boom cycle that is now (likely) coming to an end.

If you look back at the last two busts, there was one in the early 90s when the software boom had run out of juice, and then in the early 00s when the web boom had run its course. In both cases, the seeds of the next boom were already planted, but the investors weren’t pushing money in their direction. The savior after the early 90s bust was the web, and the second was what they call Web 2.0, which is a really lame way to describe the networked creative environment, what I called the Two-Way Web.

I’m going to be in NY in October, and I hope to meet with Fred and other investors to talk about how we can soften the busts and enhance the booms.

Networking in SF hotels? 

Here’s a problem that some investment dollars help solve.

Apparently, the TechCrunch 40 conference isn’t streaming to the outside world because the Palace Hotel has incredibly lame networking, and they won’t allow conference promoters to bring in more wires? This is what I hear, although it’s not confirmed. Emails to the conference promoters yesterday were not responded to.

I’ve also received emails from a number of companies announcing products at the show who want coverage on Scripting News, so my interest is not entirely idle. :-)

So what does it take to establish one hotel in SF as the default tech conference hotel? Networking! Geez, you’d think it’s obvious by now. We do things that require networks. Look in any conference room around the world for a clue. And supposedly San Francisco is the central node in the network of technology bringing all this great stuff to the rest of the world.

So where is the hotel that gives us the very most basic technology to wire up conferences so that the whole world can participate?

Do we need to move the tech industry to another city?

Someone please ask the Mayor or Google or someone in charge when they’re going to fix this problem. It should have been solved in 1997, and it’s already 2007.

BTW, here’s a clue: there are some great business opportunities, beyond conferences, for the first physical location in downtown SF to solve this problem. Just ask Loic. :-)

Scripting News for 9/17/07

September 17, 2007

Alan Greenspan, Dale Bumpers & H.L. Menken 

Yesterday, former top US central banker Alan Greenspan, a very respected public official, said: “I’m saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows — the Iraq war is largely about oil.”

Dale Bumpers, former US Senator from Arkansas, defended President Bill Clinton when he was on trial. He said, memorably: “H.L. Mencken said one time, ‘When you hear somebody say, This is not about money, it’s about money.’ And when you hear somebody say, ‘This is not about sex,’ it’s about sex.”

Bumpers might say today: When you hear somebody say the war in Iraq is not about oil, it’s about oil.

And Greenspan was absolutely right. Everyone knows that so many US trops and so much US money would not be deployed in Iraq if it weren’t in the middle of the oil reserves of the world and if Iraq itself didn’t have so much oil. It’s ridiculous to argue otherwise. Yet, this admission is causing a major recalc in US political discourse. Had Greenspan said something so obviously true in 2003 or 2004, we might have avoided this national catastrophe. And I think this says more about us, and our desire to be misled, to have our lives simplified, to delegate our intellectual existence.

Yes, our troops are there because of the oil. Don’t doubt it.

Postscript: The Bumpers speech is worth watching again, for its eloquence and simplicity. It wasn’t so long ago that we rose to this level of discourse.

Seth of the Obstructionist: “There’s still some people in this country who, alas, still believe in it’s values.”

Today’s links 

TimesSelect goes onto the scrap heap tomorrow night. Now I’ll be able to read Frank Rich and Paul Krugman once again. :-)

I have a new Jotit site. Simple but well thought-out.

I didn’t know there is a bill before Congress to impeach VP Cheney.

Okay I didn’t like the ending, but I’m glad the Sopranos won the Emmy in its final season.

TechCrunch 40, day 2 

Following up on yesterday’s piece about Demo-like conferences.

Eric Norlin proposes that the economics are still out of whack. The people providing the value, the people attending the show, should get in for free. The demoers should pay. He has a point. In my HyperCamp proposal, that is how it works. The premise is that in 2007 everyone who attends is as much press as anyone else (everyone’s a blogger) so what’s the justification for some people getting in as press (i.e. free of charge) and others paying $2500.

Richard Wolpert: Crunch Crunch.

Valleywag says JC is really Willy Wonka. :-)

Paul Boutin has a list of the companies demoing at TC40.

The unofficial back-channel for the TC40 conference.

JS Pepper’s photos from TechCrunch 40.

Frank Gruber’s photos from TC40.

Too bad they don’t have a live video stream from the conf.

Wait a minute — justin.tv has a stream:

Watch techtalk live video and chat on Justin.tv

Bad news, they turned off the video and audio in the afternoon, so we can’t catch the demos from remote. We had an interesting discussion going on the IRC about the stuff going on in the morning, but it’s not happening in the afternoon. Sorry, we did the best we could.

Currency accounts, day 2 

Yesterday, I asked how an ordinary American investor could hedge against weakness in the dollar. To clarify, I wasn’t thinking of converting stocks or bonds, it’s just a question of what currency I keep my cash in.

Anyway, this is something that a fair number of Scripting News readers know something about, and lots of great advice came back in short order. A summary follows.

1. ETFs are stocks traded on the NYSE that track various currencies.

2. HSBC and Everbank have multiple-currency accounts. But watch out for commissions every time you convert from one currency to another. They could wipe out all the gains you may have from holding assets in one currency vs another.

3. Becoming a currency trader may not actually be so hard, and you get the best rates on currency exchange.

4. Paypal lets you store value in a variety of currencies.

Thanks everyone for the excellent info! :-)

Scripting News for 9/16/07

September 16, 2007

Today’s links 

Congrats to Hugh MacLeod on his new deal. :-)

Mark Cuban: “I love me some MacBook.” He says Macs don’t have two-button mice, this is a common misperception. I use two-button mice for all my Macs. They “just work.” Honestly, I think Apple ought to give up the fight on this issue, two buttons are no big deal to master, esp compared to other much more complicated concepts you have to master to use a Mac.

Wait a minute. The Apple Mighty Mouse has four buttons, apparently, even though they appear to only have one.

I just ordered a new Logitech keyboard. Impulse purchase.

Yesterday I took a twitpic with my iPhone in the Apple store. This guy was following, at a cafe across the street. Of course he came over, and we had a nice schmooze.

Currency accounts for US citizens 

Did you see Alan Greenspan on 60 Minutes tonight? What a revelation, one of the most powerful political and economic forces, but until now, basically silent. There were so many interesting things in the interview, but one of them left me with an urgent action item. Lesley Stahl, the interviewer, asked what currency he got the advance on his book in? He said it didn’t matter, because he could convert to whatever currency he wanted, begging the question. She pressed, and he volunteered that the best choice is to be diversified. Which of course is a conclusion every money manager would reach on their own, it’s just like stocks and bonds, you never want to have all your eggs in one basket, the best strategy is to be diversified.

I’ve wanted to be diversified in currency for quite some time, but have found it’s not so easy. I have an investment account and a checking account, both are in US dollars, and neither offers the option of anything other than that. I just spent a couple of hours with Google trying to figure out where I could open an account that would allow me to keep cash in euros, yen, yuan, dollars (Canadian, US, Australian or New Zealand), pounds, or… ? I found that I could become a currency trader, which is absolutely not what I want. What I’d like is something like a mutual fund for currency. Or failing that, a certificate of deposit that allowed me to specify what currency it would be in.

So I thought I’d ask the smartest people I know, the readers of this blog. Do you keep your savings in more than one currency? Is there an online bank that does this well, one that a US citizen can use (that is, it sends 1099’s to the IRS). Any ideas would be much appreciated.

TechCrunch 40 

Conferences are in the air, it’s that time of year again.

Sorry to be missing the TechCrunch 40 conference which starts tomorrow. I love demo-type conferences, I was one of the originators of the Demo conference, started by Stewart Alsop in the early 90s. The idea then was to take the drudgery out of going to huge shows like Comdex, where you’d have to walk past miles of meaningless booths to find the really interesting products, which often weren’t even on the show floor.

And even when you found the gems, the demos usually weren’t very good. So Iobbied Stewart to do a conference that would flip the equation around. Do a conference where there were no booths. The demos would be done on computers at a desk, and the demoer was seated, as were the people receiving the demo, usually two or three at a time. Ideally, the demo would be done by the person who developed the product, or the CEO of the company, so that when you asked a question, you might actually get an intelligent answer. And limit the number of people showing to 30 or 40, people chosen by Stewart, who really has a love for intelligent and interesting products. The mind of Stewart of course was key to the process. I wrote the guide to demoing software for the first Demo, which was given to all the demoers and presented at dinner the night before, by yours truly.

When Stewart left, a succession of people ran Demo. At one point, I was offered the job, but I turned it down because I was running a company. I don’t think I would have been good at it anyway, because I’m more of a product developer than a connoiseur. Better to have someone like Stewart or Mike Arrington, who live to receive demos, do the choosing. In some sense I have been trying to create the perfect demo, to be a Demo God (a term I coined btw). I’ve not been to a Chris Shipley Demo, but I hear they’re good. I’d like to go someday. I know Mike and Jason are trying to change things in this area, and change is good, and I don’t doubt that Demo will adapt.

It is a shame to be missing the TechCrunch conference, but I guess there’s a good reason for it, although I sure don’t know what it is. Jason got very very mad at me for interrupting his speech at Gnomedex, and scorched my earth in every way he could think to. I think a mensch would regret doing that, and would say so publicly. I would like to get that out of the way so I could have fun at the conference like everyone else. But since he made me his bitch, it just wouldn’t be fun being there listening to him present the demoers, thinking how mean he had been to me, in such a public and humiliating way.

Anyway, be glad when people respect you, and try to shrug it off when they don’t. That’s the best advice I can give. And bless the demoers, people who have the guts to put their ideas to the test.

5/21/99: Never demo on a development server.

Jeff Jarvis’s conference 

Jeff Jarvis, whose mind occupies the intersection of mainstream media and the blogging world, perhaps more than any other person, is having a conference in mid-October in NYC to bring together people from both worlds to present constructive ideas for working with each other.

Me, my feet are firmly planted in the blogging world, but I’ve spent a lifetime reading and watching MSM, starting with the NY Times at the kitchen table with my parents and brother, when growing up. Some of my fondest memories as a child were our discussions of the days events, and the Times was our common structure. Everyone in our family read the newspaper, often from cover to cover.

As Jarvis councils us, never mind the mistakes, what can we do to make things work better? And I have a couple of proposals in that direction that I will try to present at the October 11 conference. In all cases, they involve the MSM opening up more to include not only the ideas of blogging, but also the bodies of the bloggers.

1. I’ve said it many times before, it’s worth raising again. Any newspaper or radio or TV station with a good reputation in its community could embrace the fresh ideas of the bloggers in their community by offering free blogs to members of the community, who may be new to blogging. I suggested this to the Times in 2001 — when a person is quoted in a Times article, a few days after the piece runs, contact them, and ask if they’d like to have a NY Times hosted blog. There would be no control over what appeared on the blog. It would have a nytimes.com domain (something like bullmancuso.nytimes.com). Build an aggregator, something very much like Twitter (which is after all, a river of news, not exactly a new idea, heh) that shows all the new posts from members of the community. Encourage (but don’t require) your editorial people to read the blog posts. Let whatever happens happen.

2. Here’s a new idea that I haven’t proposed before. Open your newsroom to bloggers. Set aside a half-dozen desks for people who blog in your community, people you’ve gotten to know, and provide them with wifi, a water cooler, your coffee (no matter how bad it is) and chance to work alongside your editorial people and (very important) with each other. It’s an incredible thing when bloggers get together in a physical space, the sparks can really fly. Now imagine what could happen if those sparks got flying between the remaining editorial people in a professional news organization and the bloggers. I believe the secret of scaling the news is right there, you just have to open the door and see what comes in.

A Boston Tea Party for the 21st Century 

Watching This Week on ABC this morning. First they interviewed Secretary of Defense Gates. He’s repping the Bush plan in Iraq, basically no change. Never once did the interviewer ask the Secretary if the voters and taxpayers have any say in what happens. He did ask about the Democratic plan, which is very different from what we the people want.

Then he interviews Sen Jack Reed, a Democrat, who wants change now, but still would only withdraw a small percentage of the troops.

We’ve had so much time to think about this. So much intimidation from the President, first if we didn’t like the war we were cowards, that was the point behind his Cut and Run campaign. We’ve come a long way, but he’s still negotiating through dishonesty. The President says he favors cuts, but he’s lying, his cuts in troops are insignificant, and were mandated by the deal he made with us, that his “surge” was just that. Never mind that we don’t want to pay for this war with more money, lives and attention. It seems we don’t talk about anything but Iraq. There have to be other things falling apart while all our attention is there.

So I have a proposal.

1. Whereas it’s obvious that Bush plans to run out the clock on his presidency re Iraq. There will be no change until he leaves office.

2. He’s trying to set it up so that when the next President takes office, if he or she withdraws from Iraq, this will set the stage for his supporters to call that person a coward and a loser.

3. It seems very likely that the next President will not make any major changes to US policy in Iraq.

Therefore, why should we wait until Bush leaves office? Why shouldn’t we the people, throw out our President-King, using the political tools our founders left us. Let’s remove both Bush and Cheney, and then turn to the Democrat leader, Nancy Pelosi. If they she doesn’t promptly remove our troops from Iraq, impeach her, and keep going until someone in the order of succession gets the message that our government is of the people, by the people and for the people. And we don’t go for taxation without representation.

We see clearly how we’re being manipulated. Most of us are neither Democrats or Republics, we don’t have their interests at heart, and clearly, they don’t have our interests at heart.

Scripting News for 9/15/07

September 15, 2007

Today’s links 

Scoble’s story of today’s adventures. Blogging at its best, imho. It was a really great day. Hey I met someone who’s likely to be a friend for a long time. He was less than two days old. As I was dropping Robert and Patrick off I thought this kid is going to have a lot of role models. :-)

Al Jazeera: “Nearly 200 protesters have been arrested during a march in Washington DC held to demand the return of troops from Iraq and the impeachment of George Bush, the US president.”

Miguel de Icaza on new firmware for iPods that make it impossible to use one with any OS other than Windows or Macintosh. Maybe it’s time for us all to get together and build an open source and completely open MP3 player, without any of the taxes Apple imposes. It’s too important a product to leave to one company.

New Mac Mini notes 

I bought a new Mac Mini today, it’s my second, the old one is way slow and old and doesn’t do the latest 802.11n tricks, and the disk is small. The new Mini is for the TV room and the old one will become a server. So now it’s time to master VNC and Chicken of the VNC. This was a topic of discussion here on 11/20/06.

Ooops, it turns out the new Mac Mini does not support 802.11n. Oy.

Milan Scoble on day 2 of his young life 

Patrick Scoble at hospital, with new brother, coping 

After hospital, a visit to Apple store, to spend money 

Scripting News for 9/14/07

September 14, 2007

Scoble and Maryam sittin in a tree 

Last night at 2AM, Maryam Scoble gave birth to a healthy 9 pound boy named Milan.

Scoble being Scoble, of course there’s a Twittergram marking the moment, and some Flickr pics. And Maryam’s seemingly endless labor was lovingly chronicled on Twitter itself.

Oh happy day!

Much love and a hearty mazel tov to the proud parents, his big bro Patrick and the newborn baby boy.

Mash Me Baby 

I’d love to get an invite for http://mash.yahoo.com/ — thanks in advance! :-)

PS: I got one. Thanks!!

The newsroom for the blogging generation 

Click on the pic for more info.

On the calendar 

Networked Journalism Summit, Oct 10, in NYC.

Jeff Jarvis: “The premise of all this is that even as journalistic organizations may shrink, along with their revenue bases, journalism itself can and must expand and it will do that through collaborative work. The internet makes that collaboration possible and we’ve barely begun to explore the opportunities it affords. A year or two ago, the point of such a meeting might have been evangelizing this idea. But in that time, a number of great projects in collaborative, networked journalism have taken off. So now is the time to share the lessons — success and failures — from these efforts and to determine what’s needed to move on to the next goals. By bringing together about 150 practitioners from all sides, we hope that the meeting itself can spark new partnerships and projects.”

Lunch with Loic Le Meur at T-Rex in Berkeley 

http://loiclemeur.com/

More news in Scripting News 

The RSS feed for Scripting News now has the last 20 items posted to the blog instead of just the posts for the most recent day. This means that if you read the feed in an app that more or less displays the contents of the feed (as opposed to the new stuff) you’ll see more.

Scripting News for 9/13/07

September 13, 2007

The new environment 

I had a number of interesting conversations today, first at our weekly blogger’s breakfast in Berkeley, then with Rex Hammock at T-Rex, and then with Nick Denton at Barney’s in Berkeley. I watched the President’s speech and the followup with Republicans and Democrats. Then I got a direct message from Fred Wilson saying he was going to write about Iraq, to which I responded, glad to hear it!

Through all my discussions today I’ve been telling a story about Fred Wilson.

I’ve only met Fred once, we had a dim sum lunch in July in San Francisco. We’ve also had several back-channel discussions, some pretty intense. And of course I’ve been reading his weblog for a couple of years. How well do I know Fred? Not that well, but then consider the possibility that Fred is one of the leaders of his generation of tech investors. Compare how well I am getting to know Fred as compared to say John Doerr, the VC of the previous generation who I knew best.

In the past, the most I would have heard was a quote or two in a business publication maybe three or four times a year. The quotes would pass through N levels of filters, reporters, editors, copy editors, etc. How different that is from the way things work today, when I not only hear from Fred on a daily basis, but I also see pictures of people he meets through Twitter and Flickr, bits of music he likes, and random thoughts on the non-tech issues of our day, such as the war in Iraq.

In talking with Denton, who runs Valleywag, which gets a lot of flow, but doesn’t run ads (something I had never noticed before), we agreed that some things don’t change. There are still hierarchies of people, stars and gossip about stars, but something important has changed. Now we have the means to go direct, and that truly is an important difference.

And more and more I believe that the plan I outlined in 2000 and 2001 for making money on the Internet is the way it will shake out. It will be important to feel our way through it, and realize that the power we have to learn about each others’ lives and minds and feelings and foibles, is just the beginning of the changes the new environment is bringing about.

Postscript: Fred Wilson’s post about Iraq.

Lunch today with Rex Hammock at T-Rex 

http://www.rexblog.com/

Christine was our waitress 

Iced tea and salad with Nick Denton at Barney’s 

http://www.nickdenton.org/

Scripting News for 9/12/07

September 12, 2007

Bravo to MoveOn 

I got to watch much of the testimony of General Petraueus in Congress early this week.

The Republicans kept showing off a MoveOn.org ad in the NY Times that asked if General Petraeus was really General Betray Us. It worked. Now every time I hear his name I hear the MoveOn slogan.

Betray Us Betray Us Betray Us.

Goodbye Bush.

I think the next MoveOn ad should be a straight FAQ on Iraq.

Q: Is it making American safer?

A: No.

Q: Could the money we’re spending in Iraq be put to better use?

A. Yes, of course. To say nothing of the American and Iraqi lives that are being wasted.

Q: Did the President commit impeachable offenses in selling the war in Iraq?

A: Yes, of course.

Q: Will we win or lose in Iraq?

A: No. We are occupying Iraq. There’s no enemy that we’re trying to depose. There’s no victory possible, as there is no losing possible.

Key point: Nothing any of us could say would get Bush to say “Oh geez, you’re right, we really fucked up. Let’s fix this as soon as possible.” So stop arguing with him as if this could possibly happen.

Just focus on what we believe.

Scripting News for 9/11/07

September 11, 2007

Does Iraq make America safer? 

Slate: “Republican Senator John Warner asked General David Petraeus whether the current strategy in Iraq ‘will make America safer.’”

Petraeus: “I believe that this is indeed the best course of action to achieve our objectives in Iraq.”

Warner repeated: “Does that make America safer?”

Petraeus: “I don’t know, actually.”

Health report, General Petraeus 

Feeling much better today.

Health is beginning to return. I owe it all to patience, lots of sleeping, drinking fluids, and not trying to be healthy before I actually am. Today I’m going to take a 20 minute easy walk in the sun.

Watching General Petreus testify today. The Dems are very polite. Sorry I still think we should get the hell out of Iraq. I don’t think any more Americans should die there.

Elizabeth Dole is speaking now.

Help Mozilla with localization? 

When I visited Mozilla in August, I met Michal Berman, who works in Toronto on localization of the browser. She asked if I had any insight into localization issues for RSS, and I offered that my readers probably know a billion times more about this than I do.

http://tinyurl.com/285se5

So I asked her to put up a blog post outlining her questions, and offered to link to it prominently from Scripting News. If you can help Mozilla, it’s definitely for a good cause. :-)

Scripting News for 9/10/07

September 10, 2007

Today’s links 

Allen Stern looks at various scams Mahalo uses to make it look like people are using their site.

Kevin Marks: Journalists Slumming Online.

Uncov didn’t raise enough to send a delegate to the TechCrunch conference later this month. They can keep my $100, I hope they do something interesting with it.

Should every app be a platform? 

I’ve been pushing the idea that every app should be a platform for a long time, that in addition to a user interface, every app should have a programmatic interface. For me the idea came from growing up using Unix in the 70s, where every app is a toolkit and the operating system is a scripting language. Wiring things together is an integral part of being a Unix user. It’s why programmers like Unix so much.

The idea then came up again with the push to integrated software in the early 80s. Mitch Kapor and Lotus were selling the idea of an all-in-one package, Symphony, which was a word processor, database, spreadsheet, graphics and communication program, with a macro language tying it all together. Bill Gates proposed a different approach, let each app stand alone and share its data with other apps through a common scripting language. This idea was so good that I started a company in 1988, UserLand Software, to create such a scripting language for the Mac, which then had a rich user interface and a totally underdeveloped scripting interface. Today, the Macintosh has a rich tradition of interapplication communication, made possible by this simple idea that every app should have an API.

This led to XML-RPC, the Internet version of apps with APIs, which led to SOAP, and then REST, which imho, will eventually lead back to XML-RPC (as people realize that standardized marshalling formats have value). However you express the API, today you can write scripts that combine the features of scriptable Internet apps such as Twitter, Flickr and various blogging platforms.

And at least one VC, Fred Wilson, has caught the bug, and is investing in companies that build net-scale technology with APIs. His companies will have the kind of lock-in that will be the envy of the VC world, because when other developers build on your platform, it’s mighty hard to replace what’s underneath. Imagine moving a coral reef from one ocean to another and you get an idea of how strong a lock platforms have.

Scripting News for 9/9/07

September 9, 2007

China’s effect on the Internet 

Andrew Baron likes to keep checking to see who’s writing about China’s effect on the Internet.

So far, he says, it’s only been David Weinberger and himself. Now I will be part of the club. :-)

Like Andrew, I read with some curiosity that China has developed a way to disable the US military entirely through the Internet. It’s like a science fiction movie. Now we have to develop a similar capability to disable their military, and voila, there’s one war that can’t happen! Excellent.

Apply that technique to all existing armies and you’ve solved a major problem for mankind. Okay this may be a little naive, not sure, but it’s worth discussing, don’t you think??

Morning green tea notes 

It’s been a really interesting morning, in a sick kind of way (that is, I’m still really sick, coughing and wheezing, rasping and sneezing).

First, I got a really excellent How To Be A Sick Dude from Naked Jen, my very good friend from Santa Cruz, who specializes in wellness through herbs and good vibes. She’s been sending well-intentioned “mom energy” my way, advising me to do certain things, and against others. The most serious thing she warned me about was doing too much too soon. That’s a good way to be sick for a month, she warned. So I asked for her prescription. When can I go for a walk, and how long should it be? I really want to get out and I think pulling oxygen in and out of my lungs would be good for them. But when I exert myself, even a little, I start coughing madly. So she wrote me a How To, and I’m going to encourage her to post it on her blog because a lot of other people could benefit from this common sense advice on what to do and what to avoid.

Marc Canter wrote a fantastic blog post this morning that explains in a nutshell all that’s wrong with the tech press. It’s a well-written piece, you get the sense that he’s spent a lot of time thinking about it. The problem is that when the press don’t do their job, and those of us who care about getting the real story do their job for them, it’s very easy to get rid of the problem, just make fun of the people who care enough to ask. That’s what happened at Gnomedex, I asked questions of someone in power that he didn’t want to answer.

The sad thing is that this doesn’t just happen in the tech press, it happens in all media. They feel it’s their responsibility to carry the story the way those in power want it carried, so they ask questions about “the surge” that Bush wants asked and only when he wants them asked. We’re seeing this play out in excruciatingly agonizing detail with tomorrow’s appearance in Congress of General Petraeus. He will come to explain the decision that’s already been made, he’ll say we can discuss it when it’s been given a chance to work or not. How about next June or July?

I’ve been playing around with a new expandable display for the Scripting News home page, using the mktools package from Matt Kruse. Let me know if you like it, or don’t.