Have we been thinking about the Dean Legacy incorrectly?

In my previous entry, I asked, “Will any of the campaigns in 2008 or 2012 show the sort of bold courageous leadership necessary to have a campaign that is of, by and for the people?” It reflects the way people seem to be thinking about the question, “what is Dean’s legacy on upcoming campaigns?” Maybe that isn’t the question we need to be asking at all.

Whenever I heard Gov. Dean tell people, “You have the power”, my mind always went to that scene in The Life of Brian, where Brian tells the crowd, “You are all individuals” and everyone responds as if by rote, “We are all individuals”. Too often, I attended Meetups where people talked excitedly about “having the power” and then asking the folks around them what they were supposed to do with that power.

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More About Spock

Since I wrote my last piece about Spock, I continue to get interesting emails, tweets, and so on about Spock. Three blog posts about Spock that are worth noting are Web 2.0 Experiments, snafus and stumbles, where the author is ‘hoping that Spock ends up in the dead pool’, Dislikeing Spock Even More, where the author compares Spock to Shelfari, and I am not Spock where the author wonders what Spock really has to do with any of the trusts that he has.

One person twitter, I'm surprised they aren't leaving us comments. Well, I sent an email to Maia Bittner a member of the Spock Team that had added a tag to my Spock profile. I pointed her to some of the blog posts and asked why there hadn’t been comments. She said,

We haven't commented (yet) for several reasons. One is that we want to be judged by our actions and not our words. Trust me, we've been paying very close attention to the parts of Spock that users take issue with, and we've been incorporating suggestions from blogs into our development plans.

I cannot emphasize enough to you how dynamic and (hopefully!) evolving Spock is. We try something out that we think is a good idea, and if people don't like it, we change it.

Another reason we haven't commented is that because of how often the structure of the site changes, we can't make any promises.

The Orkut Virus and Scripts

Last night, I received five scrapbook entries on Orkut saying, “2008 vem ai... que ele comece mto bem para vc”. I’m not sure what that means, if anything, and it surely isn’t something my five friends would have sent me, especially not all at the same time. So I did a little digging.

It appears as if a script hit Orkut last night. The details are a bit sketchy, but apparently if you bring up the scrapbook page with one of these viral scraps in it, it would send that message to all of your friends and join you to a group, ‘Infectados pelo Vírus do Orkut’. Last night, that had 396,849 members. This morning, it is at 690,513 members. The problem is that you cannot unjoin this group.

Google appears to be deleting these scraps as fast as they could and the five scraps were deleted from my scrapbook as well as the one that the virus sent to my wife.

A way to protect against this is to turn off Javascript in its entirety, or to add a tool that partially turn off scripts. I chose the later option, using a Firefox addon called NoScript. It allows you to chose which domains can run scripts and which ones can’t.

Wordless Wednesday



Alpacas, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Second Life Trading Technical Analysis

As we get further into the holiday season, trading in Second Life to continue to slow. Maelstrom Baphomet started off his most recent post noting that “There's not much to say about the market this part of the year as it tends to get slow and sluggish as not to many people bother with their investments or tracking the market around the holidays…”

A brief glance at the exchanges seems to bear this up, with the exception of Monkey Canning buying 100,000 shares of AVC yesterday. With less players in the market, there could be some good trading opportunities in the event that a stray seller comes by when there aren’t a lot of buyers. So, I thought it would be interesting to look at some of the technical data for various stocks.

BDVR, BNT, BMG, DFC, MED, QCL, and VHI all saw their support levels drop. WJUV, DCTY, LCA, SLCX, AVC, IBF, and SBP all saw widening as both their support levels dropped and their resistance levels increased. ESN, BHE and fifteen stocks on SlCapEx all saw their resistances levels climb.

While it is hard to tell how much of this is because of fundamental changes, and how much is because traders aren’t paying close attention right now, my guess is that a lot of the drop in the support level for several of the stocks, especially those that saw their resistance level increase at the same time, is because buyers and sellers are doing other things for the holiday season, and this may present some good trading opportunities.

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