It’s been a long day, so I’ll simply relish that OpenDNS is now live to the world. More to do, but at least some sleep is in order. Wired covered the release with “Site-Lookup Service Foils Fraud,” and there were more than 1500 diggs today. If you want to learn more, visit the website.
Entries from July 2006
OpenDNS is live
July 10th, 2006 · 5 Comments
Tags: Everything · OpenDNS
The web, a decade ago, when it was still measurable
July 6th, 2006 · No Comments
Tim Bray resurrects a presentation he gave in May, 1996 entitled “Measuring the Web.” A worthy part of history, and now it will be preserved in various caches for… well, a long time. Some of the sites named are long gone, and no longer well known. Infoseek, for example, where I interviewed in December, 1996, [...]
Tags: Data · Tech · Time · Visualization
Movie: Superman Returns
July 6th, 2006 · 1 Comment
With a bunch from the office, I saw Superman Returns the night after it opened last week. Normally, I wouldn’t brave the crowds to see an anticipated film this early in its cycle, but always more fun with a group. The movie worked, but certainly didn’t feel new in any ways. Brandon Routh, playing Superman, [...]
Tags: Movies
Book: Sprawl
July 6th, 2006 · 1 Comment
Robert Bruegmann gives book Sprawl a dry subtitle, “A compact history.” To his credit, it’s appropriate. In 225 pages or so, not counting the extensive endnotes and bibliography (which I skipped), the professor (for that’s what he is) does a thorough job of trying to define sprawl and then politely demolish the demonization and negative [...]
Tags: Books · Everything · Non-fiction
Book: The Paperboy
July 6th, 2006 · Comments Off
Pete Dexter’s The Paperboy was a step in a different direction from my recent reading. A novel about investigative reporting and family dynamics in Florida, The Paperboy mostly smolders, and almost catches fire. You feel the humidity of Florida in Dexter’s writing. The characters feel complete, with the deliberate exception of the narrator, the younger [...]
Tags: Books