linkdump for 2006-04-16

linkdump for 2006-04-15

linkdump for 2006-04-14

official arbiters of quality

According to a study from the University of London, men and women have different tastes in literature. This shouldn’t be too surprising, except that most men apparently have no taste in literature at all. A Sydney Morning Herald story (via Tim O’Reilly) says most men have little interest in reading fiction between the ages of 20 and 50, and the books they cite as influences tend to be brooding stories of alienation associated with the teenage years. At first, this struck me as a little wacky, since I’m a man and I was an English major, but I realized I more or less quite reading fiction when I finished college. My tastes quickly turned to computer magazines (of course, I had a job at a computer magazine) and later blogs. I do try to read fiction during school breaks, but I wonder if the Don DeLillo books I enjoy still fall into the category of adolescent lit.

ton of garbage software

Street Tech points to a blog post that relates a story about purchasing a Dell from a retail outlet. When the customer finalized the sale, the salesman asked him if he wanted to spend $20 to have the store techs remove all of the trialware from the machine. I imagine the folks at Dell can’t be too happy about this since I’m sure they have contracts with AOL, Real, and a variety of other ISVs to put trialware on their machines. Potential DMCA violations aside, this proves how little interest Dell shows in caring for their customers is vendors are offering to fix the computers out of the box. I had a lame sales job at Dell one summer, and customers would often ask to have their machine shipped without Real, AOL, or other trialware. Although there were multitudes of customization options available, these trial packages were non-negotiable, often raising the ire of customers. Fortunately, there’s a script called Dell Decrapifier that removes these packages for customers able to find it online.

linkdump for 2006-04-13

linkdump for 2006-04-12

jealously guard the real

Josh Marshall notes that anti-tax samurai Grover Norquist has applied to trademark the phrase “K Street Project.” The K Street Project began in the mid-nineties by Tom DeLay and Norquist as an effort to ensure that the major lobbying firms hired only Republican insiders and channel corporate money into Republican campaign coffers. The project was successful, considering the Republican control of the house and the corporate-friendly agenda pushed through government.

With the emerging publicity around Jack Abramoff and Tom DeLay’s misdeeds, the K Street Project is bound to gain media attention. Norquist’s attempt to trademark the phrase is a way to lock down the way it is used and close down the discourse surrounding right-wing lobbying. Clearly this is an abuse of the current intellectual property regime and a startling example of why we need to reform intellectual property laws in order to maintain free discourse about politics, society, and culture.

Update: Josh Marshall now says Norquist was just trademarking the K Street Project logo. In retrospect, it seems unlikely that Norquist could use the trademark as much of cudgel in media discourse, but now it’s clear that he isn’t trying to shut down coverage of his work.

linkdump for 2006-04-11

bunch of peeps in this joint

Noticing the burst in Peeps-licensed product this Lent, a bOINGbOING reader asks, “How interesting a story can you get about Marshmallow chicks and bunnies?” I doubt the official Peeps canon includes “Peep Research: a study of small fluffy creatures and library usage” by Susan Avery and Jennifer Masciadrelli, but it’s certainly my favorite peep-related text.

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