cs 1.6: hands-on. cs-nation updates [CS-Nation]
Doc: Cutting Off the Head
Cut off the head and the body dies.
Nobody seems to be missing Steve Case.
Consider this possibility: As much as he may have fucked up the merger with Time Warner, and mismanaged everything since, Steve Case was the only guy who could have saved AOL.
That’s what I thought last Summer, when Steve still had his job. Now he’s gone, and AOL is toast.
Time Warner was, and will remain, a media company. With few exceptions (hell, I can’t think of any, except maybe (and very partially ÷ see half the items below) the New York Times ÷ maybe ya’ll can help me here) media companies don’t get the Net.
[Later…] Lance Knobel names two, both in the UK.
How can you tell if they do?
[The Doc Searls Weblog]
- They expose their archives, so search engines can crawl them
- They don’t move around (and 404) their archives
- They don’t refer to their customers as “consumers”
- They do everything they can to make it easy for people to find and use their goods
- They know, instinctively, that doing all the above yields greater value in authority than whatever value in dollars they obtain by selling yesterday’s or last week’s bird-cage liner
- They don’t labor to dumb down technologies, so readers, viewers or listeners are forced to endure unwanted advertising
- They value and work to improve interoperability
- They don’t try to improve on the vacuum-filled end-to-end stupidity of the Net itself
- They embrace and extend the Net’s own infrastructure (which provides that end-to-end stupidity)
- They don’t sit quietly with their thumbs up their asses when powerful entertainment lobbies railroad laws and regulations that limit or eliminate the ability of innovative media enterprises (including themselves) to do business
Sleep Well Tonight
I was a resident of Illinois for two years (birth to a bit after age two, before we moved back to Indiana). More than four generations of my mother’s family lived and died – and are buried in Illinois – my parents will lie to rest there, as well.
While scandal tainted his office from the start, Governor Ryan showed a particular amount of character and political courage this week when he pardoned and issued clemency to all members of Death Row.
Granted that this was a bit extreme – the citizens of Illinois did elect him – and this was well within his power to grant. Given the circumstances and information than has been learned about the death sentence in Illinois – he made the right decision – and I shall always admire him for it.
“I’m going to sleep well tonight…”. Even if the exercise of my power becomes my burden, I will bear it. … I sought this office, and even in my final days of holding it, I can’t shrink from the obligations to justice and fairness that it demands. … I’m going to sleep well tonight knowing I made the right decision. -Illinois Governor George Ryan announcing blanket commutation for all Illinois Death Row inmates. For the first time in a very long time, I’m proud of the state (Illinois) I live in. I’m proud, not because of some fleeting sports championship, or some other silly thing, but because of the moral courage of its elected leader, Gov. George Ryan. In the last forty-eight hours, Ryan (R-Kankakee) took the unprecedented steps of pardoning four death row inmates, and granting a blanket clemency to the remaining 164 inmates sentenced to death. [kuro5hin.org]
The Education of Governor Ryan
The Education of Governor Ryan. Governor Ryan’s dramatic announcements that emptied his state’s death row were not the product of sudden desperation, but a gradual and painful re-education. [New York Times: Opinion]
RKO Baby…
Hearst Ranch deal. Hearst Ranch plan closer to approval.
This deal has the state paying between $100M & $150M for 82,000 acres (with 18 miles of coastline) with the Hearst Corp reserving rights to build 27 homes and an Inn.
Not bad IMHO.
This is the land that surrounds the Hearst Castle.
The spirit of Orson Welles and Wm. Randolph Hearst haunt these lands.
[Google U.S. News] [Marc’s Voice]
Steve Case is gone…..
Case resigns as AOL chairman. Steve Case will step down as chairman of AOL Time Warner in May, saying he wanted to avoid “distractions” at a critical time for the company. [CNET News.com]
Oh well, I guess it had to happen. I wonder how long Miles will last?
There was a time when Steve Case was as famous as Bill Gates. Then it all came crashing down. He really pulled off a miracle and should go down as one of the most important people of the 1990’s.
I wonder who will take over as Chairman?
[Marc’s Voice]
Name Matchers…
Wanted: What’s His Name Again?. For U.S. intelligence agencies, the varied spellings of foreign names that sound similar make it difficult to maintain accurate terrorist watch lists. Name-matching technology is helping make sense of the alphabet soup. By Steve Mollman. [Wired News]

