Thursday, January 22, 2004

Monetizing Graphical Search: "Vivisimo, a software company based in Pittsburgh, Pa., offers technology that clusters search results on the fly into folders labeled by category. While the typical list of search results appears on the right, the clickable folders on the left, helping the searcher make sense of the various links and drill down into more relevant results. People who love lists and are used to organizing information hierarchically may appreciate the way Vivisimo displays the folder contents as you click on the folders. "
Monetizing Graphical Search: "You could think of Vivisimo as graphical search for the left brain, and Grokker as the right brain version."
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "Bush did mention the report by CIA weapons inspector David Kay, claiming Kay 'identified dozens of weapons of mass destruction-related program activities.' The 'WMD-related program activities' description was a stark contrast to his previous definitive declarations that Iraq possessed fully-developed WMD, ready to be deployed at any moment "
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "Bush also said, 'Under the law you passed, seniors can choose to receive a drug discount card, saving them 10 to 25% off the retail price of most prescription drugs.' But these discount cards do not guarantee seniors a price discount. Specifically, 'sponsors of drug discount cards will be allowed to change their prices � and the list of covered drugs � on a weekly basis.' "
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "Bush said, 'We can cut the deficit in half over the next five years.' But the plan he was referring to 'omits a number of likely costs' such as the continued cost of Iraq and its own defense spending plans. All told, he is proposing roughly $3 trillion in new tax cuts and spending, including $1 trillion to make his tax cuts permanent, $1 trillion to privatize Social Security, $50 billion more for war in Iraq, $1.5 billion to promote marriage, and a Mars proposal that could cost $500 billion. The result is that the deficit is predicted to be 'in the range of $500 billion in 2009' � not even near half of what it currently is. "
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "Bush said, 'Jobs are on the rise,' referring to the recent drop in the unemployment rate. But he didn't mention that the unemployment drop was due to the fact that the economy was so bleak that 255,000 of the jobless simply stopped looking for work. Additionally, the jobs that are being created are lower-paying. "
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "'With lines like 'America will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our people,' Bush was clearly sounding a campaign theme.' "
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "only 76% of Americans watching the speech had a favorable impression, down from 84% last year and 94% the year before. At the same time, the percentage of Americans who felt negatively jumped up to nearly a quarter of those watching."
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "The numbers are in, and they show President Bush's speech didn't go over as well with the public as previous State of the Union addresses. According to a new WP/ABC News poll, President Bush 'deliver[ed] his State of the Union address...to an American public that has become broadly dissatisfied with his domestic agenda.' "
Center for American Progress - Progress Report - Page: "This year's 'pre-speech spinners told us that the address had two basic goals, to remind voters that Bush is a busy, serious commander-in-chief making the world safe from evil-doers and to show empathy on the domestic issues that polls show he needs help on.' "

Monday, January 19, 2004

Microsoft Palladium: "Known Elements of the Palladium System
The system purports to stop viruses by preventing the running of malicious programs.
The system will store personal data within an encrypted folder.
The system will depend on hardware that has either a digital signature or a tracking number.
The system will filter spam.
The system has a personal information sharing agent called 'My Man.'
The system will incorporate Digital Rights Management technologies for media files of all types (music, documents, e-mail communications). Additionally, the system purports to transmit data within the computer via encrypted paths. "
Microsoft Palladium: "Palladium is a system that combines software and hardware controls to create a 'trusted' computing platform. In doing so, it would establish an unprecedented level of control over users and their computers."

Thursday, January 15, 2004

Dr. King Timeline: "1968
February 12: Sanitation workers strike in Memphis, Tennessee.
March 28: Dr. King leads six thousand protestors on a march through downtown Memphis in support of striking sanitation workers. Disorders break out during which black youths loot stores. One person is killed, fifty people are injured.
April 3: Dr. King delivers 'I've Been to the Mountaintop' at the Memphis Masonic Temple.
April 4:Dr. King is shot at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis. He dies in St. Joseph's Hospital.
April 4-11: Riots erupt in 125 cities around the country, including the nation's capital.
April 7-9: Dr. King lies in state at Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia. Mourners file by at the rate of twelve hundred per hour.
April 8: Coretta King, Yolanda King, Martin Luther King III, Dexter King, and Ralph Abernathy lead a memorial march for Dr. King in Memphis.
April 9: The funeral of Dr. King is held at the Ebenezer Baptist Church. He is laid to rest at the South View Cemetery. "
Dr. King Timeline: "1967
January: Dr. King writes his book Where Do We Go From Here? while in Jamaica, West Indies.
March 12: Alabama is ordered to desegregate all public schools.
March 25: Dr. King attacks the government's Vietnam policy in a speech at the Chicago Coliseum.
April 4: Dr. King makes a statement about the war in Vietnam at the Riverside Church in New York City.
July 12-17: Twenty-three people die and 725 are injured in the riots in Newark, New Jersey.
July 23-30: Forty-three die and 324 are injured in the Detroit riots.
July 26: Dr. King, A. Philip Randolph, and Whitney Young, Jr., appeal for an end to the riots.
November 27: Dr. King announces the formation by SCLC of a Poor People's Campaign, with the aim of representing the problems of poor blacks and whites. "
Dr. King Timeline: "1966
Dr. King rents an apartment in a Chicago ghetto.
February 23: In Chicago, Dr. King meets with Elijah Muhammad, leader of the Nation of Islam.
March: Dr. King takes over a Chicago slum building and is sued by its owner.
March 25: The Supreme Court of the United States rules that any poll tax is unconstitutional.
May 16: Dr. King agrees to serve as co-chairman of Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam. An antiwar statement by Dr. King is read at a large Washington, D.C. rally to protest the war in Vietnam.
June 6: James Meredith is shot soon after beginning his 220-mile 'March Against Fear' from Memphis, Tennessee, to Jackson, Mississippi.
July 10: Dr. King launches a drive to make Chicago an 'open city' in regard to housing. "
The day when Viola Liuzzo died: "The town was Selma and one of those heroes and martyrs was a Detroit housewife named Viola Liuzzo."
Dr. King Timeline: "1965
February 21: Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City.
March 9: Unitarian minister James Reeb is beaten by four white segregationists in Selma and dies two days later.
March 15: President Johnson addresses the nation and Congress, describing the voting rights bill he will submit, and uses the slogan of the civil rights movement, 'We Shall Overcome.'
March 21-25: Over three thousand protest marchers leave Selma for a march to Montgomery, protected by federall troops. They are joined along the way by a total of twenty-five thousand marchers. Upon reaching the capitol, they hear an address by Dr. King.
March 25: Viola Liuzzo is shot and killed while driving a marcher from Montgomery to Selma.
August 6: The 1965 Voting Rights Act is signed by President Johnson.
August 11-16: Thirty-five people die in riots in the Watts area of Los Angeles, CA. "
Dr. King Timeline: "1965
February 21: Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City.
March 9: Unitarian minister James Reeb is beaten by four white segregationists in Selma and dies two days later.
March 15: President Johnson addresses the nation and Congress, describing the voting rights bill he will submit, and uses the slogan of the civil rights movement, 'We Shall Overcome.'
March 21-25: Over three thousand protest marchers leave Selma for a march to Montgomery, protected by federall troops. They are joined along the way by a total of twenty-five thousand marchers. Upon reaching the capitol, they hear an address by Dr. King.
March 25: Viola Liuzzo is shot and killed while driving a marcher from Montgomery to Selma.
August 6: The 1965 Voting Rights Act is signed by President Johnson.
August 11-16: Thirty-five people die in riots in the Wattquiv="Content-Type" content="tex
Dr. King Timeline: "1965
February 21: Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City.
March 9: Unitarian minister James Reeb is beaten by four white segregationists in Selma and dies two days later.
March 15: President Johnson addresses the nation and Congress, describing the voting rights bill he will submit, and uses the slogan of the civil rights movement, 'We Shall Overcome.'
March 21-25: Over three thousand protest marchers leave Selma for a march to Montgomery, protected by federall troops. They are joined along the way by a total of twenty-five thousand marchers. Upon reaching the capitol, they hear an address by Dr. King.
March 25: Viola Liuzzo is shot and killed while driving a marcher from Montgomery to Selma.
August 6: The 1965 Voting Rights Act is signed by President Johnson.
August 11-16: Thirty-five people die in riots in the Watts area of quiv="Content-Type" co
Dr. King Timeline: "1965
February 21: Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City.
March 9: Unitarian minister James Reeb is beaten by four white segregationists in Selma and dies two days later.
March 15: President Johnson addresses the nation and Congress, describing the voting rights bill he will submit, and uses the slogan of the civil rights movement, 'We Shall Overcome.'
March 21-25: Over three thousand protest marchers leave Selma for a march to Montgomery, protected by federall troops. They are joined along the way by a total of twenty-five thousand marchers. Upon reaching the capitol, they hear an address by Dr. King.
March 25: Viola Liuzzo is shot and killed while driving a marcher from Montgomery to Selma.
August 6: The 1965 Voting Rights Act is signed by President Johnson.
August 11-16: Thirty-five people die in riots in the Watts area of Los Angeles, CA. "