Tip of the Quill: A Journal

Category Archives: Technology

[C3] The Future of Entertainment is… Paper?

I have a new post up today over at the MIT Convergence Culture Consortium weblog, “The Future of Entertainment is… Paper?” In it, I basically stare agog at the awesomeness that is PaperCamp, a one-day event that went down on January 17th in London and that I’m kicking myself for having missed. At the end […]

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The Future of Entertainment is… Paper?

Man, I hate hearing about an awesome conference just after the thing’s wrapped up. So it is this week with PaperCamp, which went down in London on January 17th. Here’s the description of the event from its own webpage: What is PaperCamp? A get-together for a day to talk about, fiddle with, make and explore […]

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Upgrades, part 2.

Continuing in the same vein as before, I’ve now managed to the get Movable Type’s new Facebook Connect plugin up and running on this blog. If you’ve wanted to comment on something here but have been deterred in the past, give this a shot and see if it works for you! I’ve also installed Shaun […]

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Upgrades.

One of this site’s unspoken functions is to serve as a testing ground for new technologies that I intend to add to other sites for MIT and for my consulting clients. This morning is a great example of that: first I added a custom Google search to my site (now accessible at http://www.geoffreylong.com/search) and then, […]

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Would Baudelaire hate the Kindle?

I love this new post over at HarperCollins’ HarperStudio blog: Would Charles Baudelaire hate the Kindle? As they quote the man himself: “As the photographic industry was the refuge of every would-be painter, every painter too ill-endowed or too lazy to complete his studies, this universal infatuation bore not only the mark of a blindness, […]

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OLPC cutting way back to birth the XO2.

Courtesy of my friend and coworker Andrew comes the news that Nicholas Negroponte’s One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) group is laying off half its staff, slashing salaries and ceasing its support of Sugar, the XO’s open-source OS to focus on finishing development of its second-generation XO laptop, the (presumably-titled) XO2. While I’m definitely troubled to […]

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Moving Into the Cloud.

There has been much made lately of the tech sector’s newest favorite buzzword: cloud computing. Like many such newly-minted terms, there is some dispute about its actual definition; I wrote about one such permutation in a previous entry for the C3 Weekly Newsletter when the MacBook Air was about to be unveiled at the Macworld […]

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Moving into the Cloud.

(The following is a draft of an essay I’m kicking around and will probably post over at the C3 blog. I’d appreciate your thoughts and comments – it’s less of a blue-sky thinking piece and more of a clarification and “this is what I’m doing in this space” piece, so it’s a little different from […]

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Take good care of my baby…

For months – actually, since almost when I first got it – I’ve had issues with Remiel, my MacBook Pro. It’s emitted a high-pitched whine whenever the brightness has been turned up past the halfway point, but that I could at least deal with. Earlier this summer, though, its mouse key started to stick, which […]

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Possible business models for Twitter?

This afternoon a very cool thing happened – my Twitter account was friended by the Twitter account for the University of Minnesota Press. Now, to a forward-thinking academic like me, this is not only very cool, it’s incredibly cool – and for multiple reasons. First, the fact that they friended me leaves me with a […]

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