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Check out Alexandre’s great article follow-up to LGM2007! Cheers to him and all participants!
Archive for August, 2007
Totally bummed to hear that super cool hacker buddy Greg Stein got jacked last Friday. While we were at Wikimania he was on crutches the whole time, and some fools jacked him hard. So, be a buddy and donate some money to Greg so he can recover and relax for a bit.
Heya all, I’m attempting to take a vacation this week from Creative Commons and am heading to Mexico City for a few days to chill out. What this means is that I will work more on all the other projects and get caught up
Cheers to you all!
I’m reposting this (mainly so it gets picked up on planet openmoko and so that others get to see what I posted on the main CC blog:
OpenMoko, the world’s first integrated open source mobile platform, released the artwork for their phone interface under a CC BY-SA 3.0. It is important to note that the software stack on the OpenMoko tries to completely run on Free Software, so that an owner has the freedom to do what they like with their OpenMoko hardware. Sean Moss-Pultz, project lead states this about the OpenMoko mobile interface:
Personally, I feel that one of the most important areas for this project
is the development and exploration of the mobile user interface. The
human-machine interface is the intersection of art and technology. Great
interfaces blend the visual with the technical. They balance simplicity
with complexity. Often times, I feel, really great new interfaces are
not immediately intuitive. They are not instantly natural. In fact, I
would even argue this can be detrimental to improving interface design.
If an interface is to be superior it must be different. Therefore it
can’t be intuitive, that is, familiar. A better metric, perhaps, is the
learning time it takes until the interface feel’s natural and intuitive.Now that we have freed phones, everyone can contribute to an improved
baseline interface. This is our collective challenge. Can we create
something truly different? Can we lead this incredibly important field?
This is super cool and underlines some other projects Creative Commons has been working on this summer, such as liblicense, a software library for handling content licensing on various desktops (gnome, kde, olpc’s sugar, etc). One of the considerations for liblicense, in addition to adding licensing to the OLPC, is for the OpenMoko.
While Creative Commons is focused on providing the world with free content licenses, we also spend a good deal of time developing tools to support this endeavour. Stop for a minute and consider what a device like OpenMoko or OLPC would be if you can’t get access to great content, the archives of human knowledge, free and open content? Also, what about how these devices are also content recorders now? One should also be able to put this content up on a site like flickr or blip.tv simply and easily. LibLicense helps with this goal. It is a great project that you will hear more about in the ongoing days.
Come to overlap this SATURDAY in San Francisco! Its only $5!:
Mark Templeton (Anticipate Recordings / Canada)
Roddy Schrock (SF) + Video by Jano Cortjio
Ruoho Ruotsi (Defchild Productions/Skor Records)
Pand0ra DJSaturday, August 25
Rx Gallery
132 Eddy Street
San Francisco, CA
$5
10 pm
The show is only $5! Its a great place to connect up with others in the bay in and around electronic music and the whole bay cool tech seen. Look for me and Lu at the bar…
That’s right! Its time!
Get started watching the best saga in years and also one of CC’s biggest and most well known license adopters…R-Kelly!
Yes, this is true…let the floodgates open! Andy had some nice screengrabs of the future
This new functionality, developed by Google Summer of Code student, Bruno Dilly, will be in the upcoming Inkscape 0.46 release…bring it on sooner rather than later! Let your favorite Inkscape developers know you want 0.46 out sooner rather than later
Let the flood of remixing begin!
Now, I start to question why even store anything on your hard drive?
Hopefully though, this will bring on many new levels of users and developers to Open Clip Art Library. We need many developers to help with the system, which is now running on the rock-solid OSUOSL.org infrastructure. Bring on the content!









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