Friday, November 21, 2008

Report: Michael Jackson Converts to Islam, now Called "Mikaeel".....

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He can't do any worse than his failed conversion to a white woman....

MICHAEL Jackson has converted to Islam and changed his name to Mikaeel, according to reports.

The singer wore traditional Islamic dress as he pledged his allegiance to the Koran at a friend's home in Los Angeles, The Sun reports.

Jackson, who was raised a Jehovah's Witness, reportedly decided to convert after discussing religion with a music producer and songwriter on his new album - both of whom were converts to Islam.

The Sun reported singer Yousef Islam - formerly knowns as Stevens - turned up to help Jackson celebrate.

Jackson is due to give evidence in court next week after being sued by Sheikh Abdulla bin Hamad Al Khalifa, second son of the King of Bahrain.

Rest here>>>

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A Black Bond?


This past week or so has seen a few firsts, and first among these is the election of Barack Hussein Obama as the first black President of the United States of America. Obama showed the world what charisma, hope, and a disciplined message can achieve.

Just the weekend before the F1 world saw Lewis Hamilton become the first black F1 Champion of the World. In Hamilton's case it was all about someone giving him a shot, a shot that he had earned coming up through the ranks, and his driving skills took care of the rest.

This has led the current James Bond, Daniel Craig to suggest that it is about time there was a colored Bond.

Actually, what Craig said was, "After Barack Obama's victory I think we might have reached the moment for a coloured 007."

A black Bond would be not outside the realm of belief. I do not recall anyone saying that MI6 or whatever it is now being an exclusively Anglo or white employer.
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Poll / Survey Web Part Options for SharePoint

Clients ask me so frequently for a poll web part for their SharePoint intranets, I would be shocked if Microsoft did not include this in the next version. I have tested three third-party solutions, reviewed below. If anyone out there is aware of another option, please add a comment and let me know!

  1. Polling Web Part on CodePlex - http://www.codeplex.com/PollingWebPart

    Cost: free

    How it works: This web part doesn't connect to a SharePoint survey, but rather creates a list item in a simple list and displays that item in the survey. When you want to set up a new poll, you just add a new item to the list and that's the poll that is displayed.

     Pros: It's free, and simpler for the end-user than creating a new survey and connecting it to the web part each time they want to post a poll.

     Cons: There is no way to prevent users from voting multiple times, and survey results are not tracked by user. A maximum of five choices is allowed for any poll question. Graphical results are very simple – bar graphs are the only option. If you add the poll web part to the same page twice, it will display the same poll – you can't display two different polls on the same page at the same time. Data for all polls is stored in a single list, and is not optimized for export and analysis - as the developer states, this is not meant to be an analytic tool, but rather "for fun."

    To note: although there seem like a lot of cons for this web part, I have a client who uses it and is happy with it, as a no-cost way to bring a life to a team site home page.

  2. SharePoint Poll Web Part from Bamboo Solutions - http://store.bamboosolutions.com/ps-70-5-sharepoint-poll-web-part.aspx

    Cost: $400

    How it works: This web part doesn't connect to a SharePoint survey, but rather creates a list item in a list and displays that item in the survey. When you want to set up a new poll, you just add a new item to the list and that's the poll that is displayed.

     Pros: It's simpler for the end-user than creating a new survey and connecting it to the web part each time they want to post a poll. It displays results in color, in choice of bar graph or pie chart.

     Cons: There is an administrative web part which you need to set up each survey, and this is clunky to use – when you add it to a page it makes the page really wide so that navigation then involves a lot of scrolling.

  1. SharePoint Survey Web Part - Survey Plus from Kwizcom.com - http://www.kwizcom.com/ProductPage.asp?ProductID=333&ProductSubNodeID=353

    Cost: $399

    How it works: This web part connects to a SharePoint survey – you create the survey, then set the URL of the survey in the web part modification pane.

     Pros: I prefer the way this web part works to the two others, because it is most in keeping with how many other SharePoint web parts work – you add the web part to the page and then connect it to a list (the survey in this case). This is a little more overhead for the end-user, but I believe it's a more consistent and intuitive interface in the long run. The fact that you're creating a standard SharePoint survey means you can do more with the data once the poll has ended.

     Cons: The Pro above could be seen as a con if the end-users require the ability to create polls on-the-fly without having to create a survey first. Graphics are not quite a slick as Bamboo's.


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Written in stone: know thyself

While vacationing in Turkey last month, we visited Safranbolu, a town famous for its old houses. One large 19th century house, now a museum, is known as Kaymakamlar Evi, the Governors' House.

In the veranda, near the entrance, there was a small exhibit of various artifacts, old farming implements as well as several stone fragments. One of them was this piece inscribed with Greek letters. I photographed it hoping that it was an example of Karamanlica, Turkish written with Greek characters. (If you go to this page and click on the second image, in the enlarged version you can see the subject stone on the right towards the back.)

KnowYourself

Later, I transcribed the Greek letters into Turkish characters; but the words I got were meaningless. So, a couple of days ago, I e-mailed the picture to my friend Yorgi Sangiouloglou in Athens and asked for his help.

Yorgi informed me that it wasn't Karamanlica, but Greek and translated the phrase as the ancient dictum Gnothi eafton, "know yourself" (more info)

The date underneath is 1863 Septem[ber] 30.

Before the Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922), Safranbolu was home to many Greeks. Following the defeat of the Greek forces and the Treaty of Lausanne, the Anatolian Greeks were forced to migrate to Greece never to return. This stone is a fragment of the millennia old culture that disappeared with their departure.

Where did this inscription originally stand and what was the significance of the date on it? We will probably never know.


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Pakistan: Allah's Holy Warriors Bomb Girls' School.....

Nothing is more "un-Islamic" than a woman who can read and write.....

Mingora, 20 Nov. (AKI/DAWN) - Four militants and two women were killed and several others sustained injuries while a girls' school was destroyed in Pakistan.

The school was located in the area of Bar Bandai in the volatile Swat valley.

The government girls' primary school was destroyed by unknown miscreants by planting explosives in the night between Tuesday and Wednesday.

The four-room school building was completely destroyed and its furniture and records were damaged in the explosion.

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The Buddha Reincarnated?


This is a story I have been following for a while. I have not written about it in the past and there is not any reason as to why I have not. I studied a little bit about Buddhism when I was younger and first exploring the idea of my own personal spirituality and what I believe in. I have always believed in an idea that we as people can reach an enlightened state of being and that things become much clearer to us and for us.

For some this is a belief in God and for others this might just be a simple belief that there is something greater than ourselves out there. This post is not getting into a debate on the pros and cons of religion per se and arguments that if one does not accept a belief in God then they are a poster child for the devil.

This is a post about a kid who has meditated for months without food and water. There are some that even go so far as to say that this meditation and no (or reduced) food and water intake has been ongoing since 2005.

The kid, Ram Bahadur Bamjan, was first sighted in the jungles of Nepal. He was by all accounts easy enough to spot, as he was sitting cross-legged in deep meditation under a tree with his eyes closed and no movement.

This ability brought the masses out in order to witness this spectacle. The crowds became so large and so frequent that Ram did a runner. He disappeared deeper into the jungle and was not to be seen again. Well, not until he re-emerged this week at Ratanpur.

Ram looks pretty healthy for an 18-year-old that has been in deep meditation and without food and water for an extended period (photo courtesy of AP).

However, the kid is not without his detractors and skeptics. The skeptics cite the fact that the original Buddha is the enlightened one and that becoming enlightened is the end of the journey and not just another stage on the reincarnation trail.

Simply, the rationale is that being born a Buddha is the last birth, you have attained enlightenment. Now, the problem here is that Buddhists believe in reincarnation. However, I am accepting enough that I can accept that ultimately those few that do manage to reach enlightenment are rewarded with not having to go back to square one and start all over again.

Other scholars seem quick to point out that just being able to meditate and go without food is hardly proof positive of the boy being the reincarnation of Buddha.

Nevertheless, there are plenty of devotees who remain undeterred and unswayed by the skeptics. These devotees are convinced that Ram is the real deal and line up for hours to receive his blessing, which is a touch of one's head.
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Syekh Puji, Lutfiana Ulfa, and Pregnancy


It is being reported that Lutfiana Ulfa, the 12-year-old bride of Syekh Puji, is already pregnant. I have written about this case here.

In a legal sense this case is a simple one. There are clear violations of the law which are punishable and the Syekh must be investigated and then prosecuted according to those provisions. There can be no ifs, buts, or maybes here. The man by all definitions is a pedophile and a man with a plan to marry more children if and when he has the chance. This makes him a serial pedophile.

There has been a suggestion that the Syekh has handed Lutfiana back to her parents and feels that this returns things to their previous state and absolves him of any further legal troubles. The law has been broken and sending the girl home does not repair that damage.

The video link above (in Indonesian) seems to indi();} cate that there has been no divorce, although I am not sure how you dissolve a marriage that could never have taken place legally.

To the contrary, the lawyers for the Syekh and the Chair of the National Child Protection Commission indi();} cate that the Syekh needs to be patient and wait until Lutfiana is at least 16 years of age. Hence the reason for returning her to her family.

If it turns out that Lutfiana is really pregnant then this whole affair takes on a completely different dimension. Lutfiana continues to profess her love for the Syekh and if the Syekh is the father of her child, then I would not see this love diminishing in the short-term. I am not sure that a 12-year-old knows love outside of perhaps a love for a parent. However, I am not going to judge the girl or what she believes that she feels for this man.

The outcome of this case is still far from clear.
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Quote of The Day

"The most high-profile of those rulings, and the most high-profile ballot proposal, came in California. A state court gave its imprimatur to same-sex marriage in June; the electorate reversed that decision on Nov. 4 with the passage of Proposition 8, which defines marriage as only between a man and a woman. The opponents of gay marriage will tell you that the people have spoken. It's truer to say that money talks. The Mormons donated millions to the anti effort; the Knights of Columbus did, too. Like the judge who ruled in the Loving case, they said they were doing God's bidding. When I was a small child I always used to picture God on a cloud, with a beard. Now I picture God saying, "Why does all the worst stuff get done in my name?"

-- Anna Quindlen, in an essay that appears in Newsweek entitled "The Loving Decision" comparing the brouhaha over miscegenation in 1967 and the current struggle over same-sex marriage.

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Holy Land Trial: "I Suspect the Defendants Will be Viewed as Freedom Fighters Dedicated to Liberating Palestine, the Same way Mandela was Viewed by South Africans"......

Nevermind the fact that they support people who indiscriminately murder innocent Israeli civilians....who cares if a bunch of Jooooos are killed?......

As jurors continue to deliberate in the Holy Land Foundation terrorism financing retrial, supporters on both side of the aisle appear to be preparing to claim a moral victory – whatever the verdict is.

Today marks the jurors' seventh day of deliberations, which follow nearly two months of testimony. Last year's panel deliberated 19 days before a judge declared them deadlocked and called for a mistrial.

For the defense, the goal is acquittals for the five defendants charged with funneling more than $12 million to the Palestinian militant group Hamas after the U.S. declared it a terrorist organization 1995.

"I suspect that they will be viewed much the same way that Mandela was viewed by the black South African population – as freedom fighters who have dedicated their lives to the liberation of Palestine,"said William Moffitt, the Virginia defense attorney who represented two former university professors, Abdelhaleem Ashqar and Sami Al-Arian. They were acquitted in trials in Chicago and Florida on similar charges that they steered support to Palestinian terrorists.

Mr. Ashqar was sentenced to 11 years in prison last year for refusing to testify for a grand jury about his Hamas ties. Dr. Al-Arian pleaded guilty in 2006 to a charge of supporting Palestinian Islamic Jihad and is being held on contempt charges for refusing to co-operate in another terrorism support investigation. But both are viewed as folk heroes by some in the Muslim community.

Rest here>>>

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EHarmony Settles Anti-Discrimination Lawsuit

File this under the "What The Fuck?!" Department, but Eric McKinley, a 46-year-old New Jersey resident, has successfully reached a settlement with EHarmony.com, the heteros-only dating site started by psychologist Dr. Neil Clark Warren. In the lawsuit filed with the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, McKinley claims he went to the site and was - Gasp! - horrified to find that in the drop down box there was only 'man seeking woman' and 'woman seeking man.' He subsequently felt "the whole range of emotions...I felt like a second-class citizen." Well, guess what? You are. And not because you're gay. But because you're an idiot. Did it never occur to you that there are a squijillion other homo-friendly sites? (Uh, HELLO!) But more importantly, there are a lot of other sites that cater to specific group characteristics. Are Jews now going to have to accept Muslims? Are Muslims going to have to accept Alutians? The company reluctantly agreed to settle by creating a separate site - CompatiblePartners.net - as well as having to pay the state $50,000 for administrative costs, $5000 to McKinney and a free one-year membership which - now are you ready for this - he hasn't agreed to accept because he isn't sure he wants EHarmony monitoring his membership. No wonder McKinley's single. (Read the whole story here.)

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Be A Pornstar Or Just Drink Like One

Have you ever wondered what it's like to fuck-slash-be fucked by a porn star? Of course, you have! But since the odds of that happening are about as good as ever seeing Sarah Palin's medical records, there's always the next best thing. And, according to a report by J.C. Adams over at Xbix.com, that's now all possible thanks to the miracles of modern transportation. That's right, all you porn-loving fans, you can now be part and parcel of the eclectic "It" crowd every Wednesday night at Numbers Restaurant courtesy of Jason Seachrest who'll be sponsoring the Industry fete. And while learning about the anal predilections of America's top porn stars, you can enjoy some refreshing libations or graze on any number of interesting dishes including Lobster Ravioli, Tuna Tartar or Escargots. See ya' there!

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Iran: Presidents of 6 Leading U.S. Universities Expected to Meet With Ahmadinejad....

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Let the Joooo hating begin.....

The presidents of six leading U.S. universities are touring Iran, the latest in a series of exchange visits involving senior academics and scientists. The American academics include the presidents of Cornell, Carnegie Mellon and Rice Universities.

"I think Iranian universities are interested in increased cooperation with U.S. institutions," said David Lebron of Rice University. "Although we shouldn't underestimate the contact that already exists. Don't forget a lot of Iranian academics - especially senior ones - received some of their education in the U.S."

Officially, the academics are guests of Iran's most prestigious science and technology college, Sharif University, where they will take part in an open question and answer session with Iranian students.

....And now the American academics are expected to meet with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

But Dr. Saadeq Zibakalam, a political scientist from Tehran University, cautioned against reading too much into the American visit.

"If they were political scholars who might engage in discussions of policy, that could make this visit significant, and signal a thaw in diplomatic relations," Zibakalam said. "But they are largely scientists. That's more neutral ground."

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Nobel Peace Prize Winner: UN Should Revoke Israel's Membership....

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I'm convinced a full frontal lobotomy is a prerequisite for winning a Nobel Peace Prize.....

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Maguire says the United Nations should suspend or revoke Israel's membership.

Maguire says Israel should be punished for ignoring a series of United Nations resolutions over the years. Maguire won the 1976 peace prize for her work withholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland.

She is visiting the Palestinian territories to protest Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip. Israel virtually sealed off the territories after the Hamas took over there in 2007. The closure tightened two weeks ago in response to Hamas rocket fire on Israeli border communities.

Maguire told a news conference Thursday that it's time for the international community to take action against Israel.

Rest here>>>

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Pre-Stonewall Moments: Black Cat Bar

Contrary to popular myth, Judy Garland's death and subsequent revolt by the patrons of The Stonewall Inn has been mistakenly  attributed as the birthplace of the modern Gay Rights Movement. We learn, in Joanna Lin's historical piece in the L.A. Times, that there is a piece of our history buried in Silver Lake that pre-dates Stonewall and offers a rare glimpse into the genesis of a movement that would continue anew on November 4, 2008. (VH/TE)

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Jakarta Smokin' or Smokin' Jakarta?


Those of you that enjoy a nicotine fix need to be a little wary about where you are going to get that next fix during the period from 17 through 27 November 2008. The Government of Jakarta and several Anti-Smoking NGOs have decided that they are going to up the ante on smokers and conduct raids during this period (cartoon).


There is a Regulation, actually a couple of them (No. 2 of 2005 and No. 75 of 2005), that has been issued by the Government of Jakarta that prohibits smoking in certain places and requires businesses and others to provide special smoking rooms to cater for those who cannot go without a nicotine fix.


The places that are most likely to be targeted are office buildings, medical facilities, malls and shopping centers, places of worship, schools, and public transportation, among others. This seems to be an initiative that is being driven more by those concerned with the growing abuse of tobacco rather than any increased interest from the government in terms of implementing the 2005 Regulation.


The cold hard reality is that the government after the initial posting of signs declaring certain areas non-smoking, the government lost interest in enforcement. I remember when the Regulation first came into effect. I was taking a train from Gambir Station to Bandung. As I was waiting for the train to arrive, I remember having a good laugh to myself as I watched a young fella light up and puff away. Why the good laugh? He was standing under one of those no smoking signs, the red circle with a cigarette inside the circle and a red line through it. It was one of those moments, where you go, "nah, this is definitely not going to work."


Even now, each day in the building where I work I watch smokers line the corridors puffing away. There are no designated smoking areas, there are no non-smoking area signs or if there are they are routinely ignored. There is no enforcement from building management or the security personnel roaming the corridors. If I am not mistaken building management can be fined for any failure to enforce the provisions in their buildings.


Let the fun and games begin.

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Juvenile Northern Brown Snake

I came upon this tiny snake while looking for snails under a small log near College Park, Maryland last week. The Triodopsis shell next to it was probably about 12 mm in diameter. Using that as a scale, I have estimated the length of the snake as 13 cm.

JuvenileSnake

According to Butch Norden of the Maryland DNR, whom I always turn to whenever I photograph a reptile or amphibian I can't identify, this is an immature Northern Brown Snake (Storeria dekayi dekayi). He also noted that these snakes are known to feed on slugs and snails.

In Amphibians and Reptiles of Delmarva (by James F. White, Jr. & Amy Wendt White, 2002), the length range of adult Northern Brown Snakes is given as 23 to 33 cm. So this individual has some growing to do. They also indicate that these snakes feed on earthworms, slugs and snails among other invertebrates. Perhaps it was not a coincidence that I found it where I usually find snails.

Although I am not particularly interested in snakes, they have been featured on this blog several times. The previous one was a Black Rat Snake (Elaphe obsoleta.


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Slugs on the beech

The native philomycid slug Megapallifera mutabilis, abundant in the woods near my house, has a thing for beech trees. In this post I noted how one can tell that there are philomycid slugs at a location from the feeding tracks they leave on the algae-covered smooth trunks of beech trees (Fagus grandifolia).

This past weekend's weather, wet and unseasonably warm, was good for slugs. During a walk in the woods I came upon this beech, still wet from the earlier rain, with many shiny lines covering its trunk. Some of them may have been the trails left by streams of water running down to the ground, but at least those that were going sideways were definitely slug trails.

BeechWithSlugs

In fact, there were 2 slugs on it (arrows). The higher and the bigger one was about 4 m above the ground. To ascertain that it was what I thought it was, I brought it down with a long stick.

MegapalliferaMutabilis2

It was what indeed a Megapallifera mutabilis. The fall didn't harm it and after it untwisted itself, it went about its business.

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Own a gun? Then Don't Bother Applying for a job in Obama's Administration.....

Q: Have you ever owned a gun and if so, have you ever clung to it in a bitter fashion?......

President-elect Barack Obama's transition team is asking potential appointees detailed questions about gun ownership, and firearms advocates aren't happy about it.

The National Rifle Association has denounced the move, which has already led one Republican senator to consider legislation aimed at ensuring a president can't use an applicant's gun ownership status to deny employment.

It's just one question on a lengthy personnel form — No. 59 on a 63-question list — but the furor over the query is a vivid reminder of the intensity of support for Second Amendment rights and signals the scrutiny Obama is likely to receive from the ever-vigilant gun lobby.

Obama's transition team declined to go into detail on why they included the question, suggesting only that it was done to ensure potential appointees were in line with gun laws.

But even some Democrats and transition experts are baffled by the inclusion of the question.

Tucked in at the end of the questionnaire and listed under "Miscellaneous," it reads: "Do you or any members of your immediate family own a gun? If so, provide complete ownership and registration information. Has the registration ever lapsed? Please also describe how and by whom it is used and whether it has been the cause of any personal injuries or property damage."

Paul Light, professor of public service at New York University, said there was no such question for potential appointees when President George W. Bush took office in 2000.

"It kind of sticks out there like a sore thumb," Light said.

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California To Hear Lawsuits Challenging Prop. 8

As many of you already probably know, the California Supreme Court has decided to hear challenges to Proposition 8. The judges will order both sides to submit written arguments and will probably begin hearing oral arguments in March. State Attorney General Jerry Brown wisely implemented the proposition but has made no decision about the validity of the almost 18,000 marriages that have taken place between June 16 (when couples could legally marry) and November 4 (when they had that right rescinded.) Personally, I think the delay is a good thing. There are still a lot of raw emotions and this whole issue needs to drop a few degrees in the minds of voters. I am supremely confident this will be overturned by the courts and will eventually die down but we can expect a lot mischief from the usual suspects. In the meantime, stay cool. (You can read more here.)

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(My friend, Alex, took this picture at last Saturday's protest.)



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Internet Dickwad Theory


This has always been something that I have thought and said about anonymous blogging and the courage of one's convictions.

This is, people who think no-one knows who they are will say the most outrageous things that they would never say in a forum where people knew who they were.

I had never thought of calling this theory the "dickwad theory" but it seems to fit.

Thanks to Djoko for pointing this out to me. I cannot link to Djoko because he does not have anything to link to that I know of. The original of the above can be found here.
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Indonesia: Mohammed Cartoon Controversy Grows, Islamists Demand Government Execute Blogger who Posted Picture.....

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There ain't no rage like Muslim cartoon rage....

(Update to this post)

JAKARTA, Nov 20 (Bernama) --Indonesia was abuzz Thursday over cartoons depicting Prophet Muhammad which appeared on an Internet blog, and Islamic organisations protested vehemently against the belittling of the prophet and called for the blogger to be arrested and penalised.

Police have appealed for calm while they investigated the appearance of the cartoons on the blog in Batak, one of the local Indonesian languages.

A police spokesman said it had yet to be proven that the cartoons were the work of someone of another religion who wanted to belittle Islam and that the server and blog were not hosted in Indonesia.

Communication and Information Minister Muhammad Nuh said his ministry would track the blogger and impose appropriate action under the law.

Muhammad Ismail Yusanto, spokesman of the Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia Islamic organisation, said the cartoonist should be sentenced to death.

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Deer and gastropods revisited

ResearchBlogging.org
Katherine R. Greenwald, Lisa J. Petit, Thomas A. Waite (2008). Indirect Effects of a Keystone Herbivore Elevate Local Animal Diversity Journal of Wildlife Management, 72 (6):1318-1321.
DOI: 10.2193/2007-491


Whether or not increased deer populations negatively affect terrestrial gastropod abundances and diversities was the subject of this post back in December 2005 and a subsequent note I published in Tentacle, No. 14 (starting on p. 20). Two published studies had claimed to show that overabundance of deer was reducing the numbers of some species of terrestrial mollusks. My main criticisms of those studies were that they had methodological limitations and interpretational problems.

This recent study by Greenwald et al. provides some evidence that having lots of while-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in a park may not be a bad thing after all.

The authors counted salamanders, snakes and various invertebrate taxa in 12 10x10-m enclosures from which while-tailed deer were excluded and in 12 control plots that were freely accessible to deer. The study took place in Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Ohio in 2004 and 2005, approximately 5 years after the enclosures were established.

The results show that red-backed salamander (Plethodon cinereus), garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) and gastropod abundance as well as invertebrate richness (no. of species or higher level taxa) were higher in control than in exclosure plots.


Fig. 1 from Greenwald et al. The thick line across each box is the median of means for over the entire study period.

So far, so good. The increased abundances of gastropods in plots grazed by deer seem to support my contention that in North American forests where the white-tailed deer coevolved with the other native inhabitants, any impact the deer present at normal or near normal population densities might have on the other native inhabitants would be a natural process and not necessarily be detrimental to them. However, my initial excitement was short-lived.

As far as gastropods are concerned, this study had a serious flaw: the counted gastropods were listed only as "slugs" without further identifications. This is a shame, because slugs are rather easy to identify by experienced workers at least to genera from external characteristics. Such identifications can be done even from good photographs. Had the authors sent out identification requests to the land snail community, I am sure they would not have been turned down.

Without additional information on what those "slugs" were, the results of this study don't have much relevance for terrestrial gastropod research. Were those slugs introduced or native? That's a crucial distinction in terms of gastropod conservation and even the genus-level identifications of the slugs would have been of great value.

What really matters is to know if native terrestrial gastropod species benefit from deer grazing. I hope somebody will undertake a better study to look into that. We also need a mechanistic explanation of how deer abundance may affect the populations of coexisting animals.


Many thanks to Katy Greenwald for sending me a pdf copy of her paper and for providing clarifications about the study.


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When Good Porn Goes Bad

Ever wonder why so few American films successfully deal with the Adult Entertainment Industry? Kevin Smith, the director of "Zack and Miri Make a Porno" offers his take in a recent article in London's The Independent. Thing is, Kevin, you can make a movie about the Adult Entertainment and it can be successful - Can you say "Boogie Nights?" - but it has to be good. And according to him, him, him, her, her, him and, frankly, many others it just wasn't Smith's best work.

      



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Anti-War Groups Complain Obama "Hero Worship" Keeping Them From Openly Criticizing Cabinet Picks.....

Assploding irony.....

Antiwar groups and other liberal activists are increasingly concerned at signs that Barack Obama's national security team will be dominated by appointees who favored the Iraq invasion and hold hawkish views on other important foreign policy issues.

.....Martin said that his group was concerned about Gates and Clinton as well as Rahm Emanuel, Obama's choice for White House chief of staff. He also said his group was trying to mobilize its grass-roots supporters with e-mail alerts, but recognized that it must approach the subject delicately because of public euphoria over Obama's historic victory.

"There's so much Obama hero worship, we're having to walk this line where we can't directly criticize him," he said. "But we are expressing concern."

Peace Action urged in a letter for its members to speak up because "we can be sure that the Obama team is under pressure to dial back plans to withdraw from Iraq."

Despite concerns, some groups are trying to remain conciliatory.

Tom Andrews, national director of Win Without War, said that although he finds Sen. Clinton's views "very troubling," Obama should be given the benefit of the doubt.

"I take him at his word that he is committed to ending the occupation of Iraq in 16 months and that he's going to assemble a team that's committed to that goal," Andrews said.

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Zawahiri Issues One Threatening Message to Obama and CAIR Condemns it. Still Nothing on the Thousands of Threats Directed at Bush.....

Hands off our guy. Note: Notice how they agree with the "legitimate grievances of Muslims" Zawahiri mentions.....

WASHINGTON, Nov 19, 2008--A prominent national Islamic civil rights and advocacy group today condemned threatening rhetoric and racial slurs contained in a new video by Ayman al-Zawahri and said Al-Qaida's second-in-command does not speak for Muslims in this country or worldwide.

In a statement reacting to the new video, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) said:

"As Muslims and as Americans, we will never let terrorist groups or terror leaders falsely claim to represent us or our faith. The legitimate grievances of Muslims in many areas of the world can never serve as an excuse or a justification for attacks on civilian populations. We once again repudiate Al-Qaida's actions, rhetoric and worldview and re-state our condemnation of all forms of terrorism and religious extremism."

CAIR took particular offense to al-Zawahri's use of the offensive term "house Negro" in reference to President-elect Barack Obama. "Islam rejects racism and seeks universal peace and brotherhood. We repudiate any and all use of racial slurs or insults."

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Cats of Istanbul - Part 1

Istanbul<strong> cat</strong>1

It would be very unusual if you walked a short distance, say, about 50 m, in an ordinary neighborhood of Istanbul and didn't see any cats. The normal state of affairs in Istanbul, in fact, in any Turkish city, is frequent encounters with cats.
cats of all sorts.

Istanbul<strong> cat</strong>2

If you are a cat lover who also likes to photograph cats, a stroll thru a residential Istanbul neighborhood will provide countless opportunities to appreciate the beauty of felines and to practice your skills with the camera.

Istanbul<strong> cat</strong>3

Most Turkish "stray cats are actually, and surprisingly, well-fed. It seems that there are enough cat lovers looking after all the felines that are loosely attached to numerous households. Even the occasional tailless or blind-in-one-eye specimens otherwise appear to be in good condition.

Istanbul<strong> cat</strong>4
This survivor missing its tail and one eye was demanding attention from Deniz.

And here I am behind the camera (picture by Deniz).

Istanbul<strong> cat</strong>5

More to come.


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It’s dew, dude!

ZebrinaDetrita
Zebrina detrita crawling on dew covered grass. Photographed last October near Kastamonu, Turkey.

Ever since I witnessed some land snails crawling around on dew covered plants one early and cold morning last October while I was in Turkey, I have gotten interested in the activities of snails and slugs at low temperatures.

I have also been reading about the fundamentals of dew formation. Nothing profound though, only the very basic stuff.

Dew is liquid water that condenses out of the air, usually at night, as a result of a drop in temperature. How does dew form?

Let's see if I got it right.

It's all thermodynamics and the thermodynamicists usually work with sealed systems constant at some property or other. So, consider a sealed vessel containing some water at a constant temperature, T1. Some of the water molecules in the liquid phase will evaporate into the vapor phase, while some of those in the vapor phase will return to the liquid. After a while, an equilibrium will be attained and after that point, the amount of water in the vapor phase (and in the liquid phase) will remain constant. The vapor phase will be saturated with water vapor. If we increase the temperature to T2, however, additional water will evaporate and at the new equilibrium point, there will be more water in the vapor phase than there was at T1.

Now, what will happen if we reverse the process and lower the temperature back to T1? Some of the water in the vapor phase will have to condense back into the liquid phase until the amount of water in the vapor phase returns to its equilibrium value at T1. As we see in the next diagram, the saturation amount of water in the vapor phase changes continuously as a function of temperature. Therefore, if the temperature of a system saturated with water vapor is lowered even just a tiny bit, some water will condense out.


The red curve shows the variation with temperature of the saturation (equilibrium) vapor pressure of water. Ignore the blue curve. Fig. 3.9 from Atmospheric Science: An Introductory Survey by John Michael Wallace & Peter Victor Hobbs, Academic Press, 2006 (yellow and brown lines mine).

What if there isn't enough water in the vessel to saturate the vapor phase? In other words, if we put a very small amount of water into our vessel and the vapor phase is not saturated even after all of the water evaporates, will some of it still condense out when the temperature is lowered? Yes, it will if the temperature reaches a low enough value (less than T1) at which the vapor phase will be saturated with water.

This is basically how dew forms. If the air is saturated with water, in other words, when the relative humidity is 100%, the air is said to be at its dew point temperature (Td), because dew will be forming. If the air is not saturated, then the air temperature needs to fall down until the air becomes saturated with water vapor so that dew can start to form. That particular temperature will be the dew point temperature.

Let's look at the diagram again. Suppose the air temperature is 20 °C. The saturation pressure of water vapor at that temperature, marked by the yellow line, is ~20 hPa (hectopascals). But suppose that on a particular dry evening the vapor pressure happened to be ~10 hPa. That would make the relative humidity (10/20)x100=50%, which is the saturation vapor pressure at ~10 °C (brown line). Therefore, Td is 10 °C and dew will form if the air temperature drops down to 10 °C during the night.

So the dew point temperature is determined by 2 things: the temperature and the relative humidity.

There is a simple formula that gives the approximate Td if the relative humidity (RH) is >50%.

Td= T-((100-RH)/5)

In our example, Td= 20-((100-50)/5)=10. There are more exact dew point calculators here and here.

What does all of this have to do with snails?

In a nut snail shell:

1. Snails need water to be active.
2. If during certain times of the year rains are infrequent, dew formation may be the only source of water available to snails.
3. If the daytime temperatures are in the range 14 to 20 °C and the relative humidity is low (~50%), then dew point temperatures will be much lower (<10 °C; see Figs. 1 & 2 in Lawrence, 2005).
4. Under such conditions, snails will be forced to be active at low temperatures.

This is exactly what I witnessed on that cold October morning.


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OMG gossip: Lindsay and Sam use their fists

OMG Lindsay Lohan and Sam Ronson had a lesbian fistfight on the dancefloor [yeeeah]

Is Tricia Helfer a real, live Cylon? [popoholic]

Zac Efron will only wear pants or shorts that display his pubes, buttcrack, or underwear at all times [just jared]

Katie Price tries to sell her lingerie line with the most unappealing photos ever [hollywood rag]

Hugh Jackman still is not gay [celebitchy]

The buzz is that Anna Wintour might leave Vogue. Here are some replacement options [pipeline]

Is Tyra Banks a vampire? Has she been bitten by Robert Pattinson? The mystery unfolds [icydk]

Billy Ray Cyrus finally has some reservations about fifteen-year-old daughter Miley having sex with an underwear model [celebslam]

Every douchebag on MySpacealoged. [cityrag]


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So many Google Books so little time

I have an ever growing list of Google Books that I want to read. They are mostly from the 19th and the early 20th centuries. But if I attempted to read them all, I wouldn't be doing much of anything else.

I don't even bother to print most of the books anymore; I read them on my monitor. In fact, I often practice what is called skimming or skim reading.

Here are some of the Google Books I have recently read, am currently reading and planning to read in the near future. I am not putting up links to them. They all are available on Google Books. If you want them, just search for them.

Kew

The Dispersal of Shells by H. W. Kew, 1893. I have read most of this book. Despite its age, it was quite informative. What Kew meant by "shells" was, of course, live mollusks.

Müller

Letters from Constantinople by Georgina Max Müller, 1897. I have also read this one recently. Georgina Max Müller was the philologist Friedrich Max Müller's wife. In 1893, she and her husband spent some time in Istanbul visiting their son who was a diplomat at the British Embassy there. This book is a compilation of the letters they wrote back home. They had engaging accounts of their sightseeing trips, the formal friendship they had with the Ottoman Sultan Abdülhamit and the Turkish customs of that period.

Spratt&Forbes

Travels in Lycia, Milyas, and the Cibyratis by T. A. B. Spratt and E. Forbes, 2 volumes, 1847. Spratt was a lieutenant in the British Navy and Forbes was a naturalist associated with King's College in London. This is a detailed account of their travels in western and southwestern Anatolia in 1842. I am reading it currently and preparing an Excel file of all the place names they mention and the wildlife they encountered. It is an ideal book for skim reading.

Scharff

European Animals: Their Geological History and Geographical Distribution by R. F. Scharff, 1907. This one is next on the list. I don't think I will read the entire book, but only the parts that look interesting. There are several entries on terrestrial gastropods.

Baker

A Naturalist in Mexico: Being a Visit to Cuba, Northern Yucatan and Mexico by Frank Collins Baker, 1895. This too is on the list. Baker was a malacologist specializing in freshwater and terrestrial species. When I scrolled thru the pages, I did notice pictures of some snail shells. I may print this one out so that I can read it on the train.

I don't know if I'll ever have time tocatch up with the 20th century and then, the 21st century literature.


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Saudi Arabia: Emergence of "Weird" Fashions Makes it Hard to Distinguish Gays From Straight People.....

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Western liberal outrage in 1..2...3...98...125....9,826....ahh fuck it.....

The absence of accurate statistics showing the number of homosexuals in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; doesn't mean there are no homosexuals there. The drive for concealing this issue is the social stigma and the moral and religious stance.

Nevertheless, some indications prove that homosexuality has penetrated the conservative Saudi society. And now especially, after the ban on discussing the issue in the media has been lifted, homosexuality is now tackled in an unprecedented, open way in medical and social conferences.

Such openness revealed that homosexuality in KSA is not limited to gays and lesbians, but a third type has appeared between women, known as 'boyat' – plural for the English word 'boy' in Arabic form–, the fourth sex or transsexuals.

Thamer Al-Saykhan, a columnist for Al-Haya newspaper, warned about new ways of expressing homosexuality that are nowcategorized as 'fashion'.

In the past, he says, homosexuals wouldn't show their homosexuality for fear of the social grip, so their numbers and their groupings were much less. Now with the emergence of weird fads and patterns of dress that are viewed as 'fashion', it became hard to distinguish homosexuals from others.

The same weird fads may be worn by gays from the view that it suits them, and may be worn by other in the view that it is fashion. Wrapping up his talk he said that "thanks to fashion, we can no longer differentiate between a gay and an elegant person."

In contrast, Saleh Bin Rumaih, Professor of sociology at King Saud University, thinks that our Islamic society – thanks to God – rejects such phenomena and fights them. Speaking to IslamOnline.net, he said that "Islam – and society as well - is the impenetrable fence in countering such phenomena."

Rest here>>>

ZIP


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MOC Blog: A Users Manual

Many of you have expressed frustration at not being able to enjoy the videos I post because of the slow load times. And I hear you. Believe me, I want you to enjoy this as much as I do. But I'm caught in a conundrum. IE sucks. Period. And Firefox loads the video just fine but the majority of you use IE as your browser of choice. So I'm faced with a dilemna. I can ask you to start the video and then hit pause while the video loads or I can upgrade to a more stable server which is, frankly, an expensive proposition. And I'm not trying to become a free video-slash-tube site. So let me explore my options and see what I can do to strike a reasonable balance betwen what you enjoy and what I can afford. As the saying on the New Jersey Turnpike goes: The inconvenience is temporary. The improvement is permanent.

Njturnpike



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Get your opinion injections here

An exchange of e-mails with Deniz yesterday was concerning the relevancy of the classic The Elements of Style to our times. Strunk's 1918 original is available here; my paperback copy is a 1979 Strunk & White edition.

One advice that sounds quite irrelevant in this age of blogging is "Do not inject opinion" (No. 17 in Chapter V of the 1979 edition). But blogging is all about injecting opinions! If you don't like the opinions I inject into your mind, you may counter-inject your opinions by posting a comment (and if I don't like them, I'll delete them!).

Deniz wrote:
Imagine if they could see the blogosphere now!
Let me be fair, though, for the advice of Strunk & White wasn't totally pointless. They were mostly concerned with the kind of opinions "scattered indiscriminately", those presented where none is necessary. Their example makes perfect sense:
If you have received a letter inviting you to speak at the dedication of a newcat hospital, and you hatecats, your reply, declining the invitation, does not necessarily have to cover the full range of your emotions. You must make it clear that you will not attend, but you do not have to let fly atcats.
Of course, most of what's in Strunk & White is still good and useful. When I am trying to decide whether to use that or which, for example, I follow their advice in Chapter IV; when I am revising a manuscript, I try to omit as many needless words as possible as they recommend in section 17 of Chapter II.

Yet, I blog, therefore I inject opinions.


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Summary of Life

Something that came into the inbox that I thought was worth sharing!


GREAT TRUTHS THAT LITTLE CHILDREN HAVE LEARNED:
1) No matter how hard you try, you can't baptise cats.
2) When your Mum is mad at your Dad, don't let her brush your hair.
3) If your sister hits you, don't hit her back. They always catch the second person.
4) Never ask your 3-year old brother to hold a tomato.
5) You can't trust dogs to watch your food.
6) Don't sneeze when someone is cutting your hair.
7) Never hold a Dust-Buster and a cat at the same time.
8) You can't hide a piece of broccoli in a glass of milk.
9) Don't wear polka-dot underwear under white shorts.
10) The best place to be when you're sad is nana's lap.

GREAT TRUTHS THAT ADULTS HAVE LEARNED:
1) Raising teenagers is like nailing jelly to a tree.
2) Wrinkles don't hurt.
3) Families are like fudge...mostly sweet, with a few nuts.
4) Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
5) Laughing is good exercise. It's like jogging on the inside.
6) Middle age is when you choose your cereal for the fibre, not the toy.

GREAT TRUTHS ABOUT GROWING OLD:
1) Growing old is mandatory; growing up is optional.
2) Forget the health food. I need all the preservatives I can get.
3) When you fall down, you wonder what else you can do while you're down there.
4) You're getting old when you get the same sensation from a rocking chair that you once got from a roller coaster.
5) It's frustrating when you know all the answers but nobody bothers to ask you the questions.
6) Time may be a great healer, but it's a lousy beautician.
7) Wisdom comes with age, but sometimes age comes alone.

THE FOUR STAGES OF LIFE:
1) You believe in Santa Claus.
2) You don't believe in Santa Claus.
3) You are Santa Claus.
4) You look like Santa Claus.

SUCCESS:
At age 4 success is . . . not piddling in your pants.
At age 12 success is . . . having friends..
At age 17 success is . . . having a drivers licence.
At age 35 success is . . . having money.
At age 50 success is . . . having money.
At age 70 success is . . . having a drivers licence.
At age 75 success is . . . having friends.
At age 80 success is . . . not piddling in your pants.
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Rhianna in Jakarta -- Canceled?


Rhianna, or at least her management, have decided to cancel the concert scheduled for Friday night. The local promoter is suggesting that the concert is not canceled but rather postponed to sometime in January or February.

The reason is that Rhianna and her team allegedly have some security concerns. These concerns are supposedly heightened security alerts for the country. The speculation is undoubtedly going to be on the recent executions of the Bali Three (aka Amrozi, Mukhlas, and Samudra). However, my understanding is that this is mere speculation and the concern was security in general.

The promoter has allegedly sent representatives to Singapore to lobby Rhianna's management for a change of heart. However, with the concert to be held tomorrow a pretty quick change of heart is required in order to make the logistics work.

The promoter seems to be concerned with the billions of Rupiah in losses that will be sustained if the concert does not go ahead. Now, here's the thing. If you are a music promoter in Indonesia, I would have thought that it would have made good business sense to get insurance for this very thing. It is not like it is the first time a world class music act has pulled the plug because of security fears / concerns.

It seems ticket holders need not fear, as the promoter has guaranteed that all ticket holders are to be refunded. I am sure they would have preferred to see Rhianna in concert though. May be in January or February!
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From The Docu-Porn Dept.: Rio

Dennis Bell, the lucky son-of-a-Brazilian-gun, who heads up AthleticModelGuild.com has announced the premier of his latest entry in the über-salacious Brazilian manmeat niche: "Rio." The "docu-porn" is a "no bullshit" (Thank God!) investigation into the lives of some of the hottest slabs of earthly delight south of the equatorial line. In a series of candid interviews, we learn that Alex Frias had his first sexual encounter while working: "My first time was in a sauna. I was working, a customer showed up, so I went to the bedroom and I worked."(Now that's what I call customer service!), that Rick Garcia, despite being penetrated in his ass by a man's cock, is "completely straight" (Of course you are, dear.) and that Aleff Pavanello "always watch[es] porn movies." (No!) For a sneak preview you can click here or, if you happen to be in the Oakland, California area this Friday, you can go the "Rio" release party at the Bench at Bar.

Bzl016_rodolfo_guerra_066



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Quote of The Day II

"This is the fundamental point that the religious advocates of Proposition 8 fail to comprehend. Like other citizens, they are free in our society to support laws because they believe those laws serve legitimate ends, including such values as tradition, general conceptions of morality, and family stability. But they are not free - not if they are to act as faithful American citizens - to impose their religious views on others. That is, quite simply, un-American."

-- Geoffrey R. Stone, in an essay on The Huffington Post delineating the line between the role of the church and the state. Preaching to the choir, however, will not temper the The-People-Have-Spoken crowd.

053027010



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Social Media Presentations sponsored by the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council

This morning I attended a session entitled "Social Media: Intranets 2.0 - Internal Social Networkscatch Fire" sponsored by the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council. The speakers were Joan DiMicco, Research Scientist, Center for Social Software at IBM Research, and Donna Cuomo, PhD, Chief Information Architect at The MITRE Corporation. It was inspiring to see what these forward-thinking organizations are doing with social media in the enterprise, and some common themes emerged:

1. Social media activity is already happening within the enterprise.
2. There's mutual gain for the employee and the organization.
3. It's important to have policies around the content.
4. It's necesary to manage the lifecycle.
5. Get started.


1. It's already happening - people are sharing anyway (they're emailing links and files around, trying to find people / meet colleagues); and it's only going to increase. Joan DiMicco cited that 95% of college students use Facebook.com - we all know that the next generation of workers will not only be comfortable with web 2.0 technologies but will expect them in the enterprise. How can you enable them and leverage them to improve productivity and collaboration?

2. There's mutual gain - both the employee and the enterprise will benefit from the implementation of social networking tools. Joan DiMicco shared the value of social networking within IBM, as follows:

for employees:
- stronger bonds w/network
- form new relationships
- caring - a notion of humanizing the workplace
- climbing - a means to advance in career
- campagning - an ability to build build support for projects

for IBM:
- up-to-date, detailed employee profiles
- tacit knowledge & relationships made explicit
- intranet data repository vs. outside (kept even after employee leaves the company)
- increased social capital: loyalty, communication

3. Implement policies - employees want to share their knowledge and personal details, and they will do it responsibly if it is clear that they are accountable. At IBM, the governance around social networking includes a combination of policies/terms of use accepted by the end user, a form for users to report offensive content, and the fact that all activity is linked to a user, i.e. that there is no anonymous activity, which makes everyone accountable for their own posts.

4. Manage the lifecycle - have a plan for what happens to the information after a user leaves the company. At MITRE, when employee leaves, private bookmarks are deleted, and the public bookmarks go into an expiration account. The user's profile photos is replaced with a ticking clock icon. Bookmarks are available for 90 days so colleagues can go in and grab valuable information. For collaborative sites, there must be 2 owners for every site. When someone leaves they have to assign a new primary owner. When a site becomes less active it is moved to a different area, indexed less frequently, etc.
What about the ever-present issue of rapid and uncontrolled proliferation of content? As one audience member quipped, "First it's too soon to tell, then it's too late to stop." Both speakers acknowledged that content proliferates rapidly, but the implication was that the benefit outweighs this potential downside. MITRE's future development efforts will include a tool to aid navigation among their wiki pages to mitigate the proliferation issue.

5. Get started - find something that people already find useful - phone directory, organizational chart, listing of new project codes - and then start hanging additional functionality off it (like an availability indicator, profile information linked to the org chart, etc.). The greater amount of activity around the tool will lead to a greater amount of social capital within the organization.


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Transexual Reported Beaten, Found Dead

In June, I posted a video clip about Duanna Johnson's brutal beating at the hands of the Memphis Police. On Monday, the N.Y. Times reported that Ms. Johnson was shot in the head and killed. No motive has been determined. No suspects have been found. And no arrests have been made... (VH/TE)

18memphis190_ready




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AIIM Seminar on Document-Centric Processes (Boston)


Woohoooooo!, originally uploaded by Sjaek.

Last week, on 10/16/08, I attended a day-long seminar on "Automating Document-centric Processes - Is SharePoint Enough?" sponsored by AIIM.

Carl Frappaolo's keynote provided some statistics on why companies are using SharePoint as a business process management solution. The numbers aren't surprising - usability and functionality take second place to cost and the notion of plays-well-with-our-other-applications:

  • Integration with Microsoft products - 25.74%
  • (low) Cost of implementation - 20.79%
  • Usability for process participant (user) - 11.88%
  • Vendor preference (for Microsoft solutions) - 9.90%
  • Level of functionality - 6.93%
  • Reporting capabilities & dashboards - 6.93%


The main theme that emerged during the day is that SharePoint implementations can give rise to rapid proliferation of disorganized silos of information - what the ClearView vendor referred to as the "SharePoint Bunnies." Granted, this theme came from vendors who are focused on providing a solution to this "problem," but it's a point worth recognizing - the ease of site creation and the delegation of content management into the hands of the end users can lead to chaos if not governed. I've seen this at clients large and small - in an ideal world, you define requirements, policies, standards and structure before you start filling up the buckets, but human nature is to keep working now and put off the decisions until later. And if you're working, you need a place to put your work product, and if you're sharing it with others, why not create a team site for it? Another bunny is born.

[requisite extended metaphor about how undesirable bunny proliferation can be controlled and/or averted entirely if you plan and manage your farm carefully...]

--update 10/24/08 - see the article Avoiding "File Share 2.0" at EndUserSharePoint.com for some high-level tips on minimizing the bunnies. --

On a different note, my personal takeaway from this seminar, and one that I wanted to share with all the vendors who presented, is this: make sure your slides will be visible through all kinds of projectors. You can't know in advance the quality of the equipment you'll be using, but you can be fairly certain that white is not going to be white - it's going to be yellowish or purplish or dirty gray. Starkness and simplicity are your friends. PowerPoint Smart Art seems to be particularly problematic in terms of contrast and readability. I like presentations to look flashy and design-centric as much as anybody else, but we're just not there yet in terms of reliably state-of-the-art projection equipment.


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