Posted January 30, 2012
Don't you just hate it when you click a link while you're on YouTube watching a
video. Before you realize what happened you click the back button. Normally
this will reload the page and start the video from the beginning.
But not today. It continued at the same point where I left. That's how it
should be.
Posted January 20, 2012
This is my first post with rssCloud enabled. It's not that hard, if you've have
created the infrastructure already. The infrastructure can be found on github:
github/pompiedom-rsscloud and github/pompiedom-ping.
Posted January 13, 2012
I really love the thoughtful blog posts and videos from people who are in the
middle of the thing they're talking about. Those people know what they are
talking about and also have a way to make a change for the better.
Christopher Hitchens was a
author and journalist and fighter against religion and absolute morality.
His articles in Vanity Fair
are both eloquent and interesting. Also see him speaking
against dictatorships and totalitarian regimes of all kinds.
Eben Moglen is a law professor,
who started the Freedom Box Foundation and talks about privacy, free software
and how Facebook is a great way to collect information and help people spy on
other people. He gives amazing talks about these subjects, which you should see
if you think this is just a bit interesting.
Neil DeGrasse Tyson and
Lawrence Krauss, astrophysicist
and theoretical physicist, both talking about the wonders of the universe, the
things we know and don't know.
These are mostly very long videos, but if you're only a little bit interesed
you should give this some of your attention.
In How to change the world
professor Moglen talks about how you can change the world if you know exactly
what you want and exactly how to do it. And if you take a look at his fight
against software patents and "spying for free" you will get an idea about how
to understand what he means by changing the world.
Still, if I see these people talk and read what they write, I don't think I
have a chance to make the same impact they had on peoples lives. You could ask,
is that necessary? And I would answer, I'm not sure. But I would hate to lose
the freedoms we have (or had).
But to get back to the title of this post, I sometimes feel like I'm yelling
from the sidelines and poking here and there, but don't have any impact, at
all.
So for me there is this way to get around this: I want to increase freedom for
people and myself. Increasing freedom is a good thing. I don't have to impose
rules on other people, I don't want to say: you have to this or that. I
wouldn't like other people telling me to do this or that.