# Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Think you know copyright?

Although U.S. copyright law generally makes it illegal to copy a work without permission, the "fair use" doctrine permits some copying. But, what constitutes "fair use" is often misunderstood, and the rules are not always easy to apply. This article explains the fair use doctrine and how it works.

[ GigaLaw.com: What is "Fair Use" in Copyright Law? ]

After reading this, it's clear that no one does, at least no one who doesn't make $400 a hour to tell you how it works, and they may still be wrong.

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Too many places, too little time

My short list of places I want to visit has never included Italy, until now:

The Italian passion for espresso could soon be celebrated in the country's first-ever coffee museum, which a die-hard caffeine fan hopes to open here shortly .

[ ANSA.it - News in English - Italy's first coffee museum planned ]

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Reason #432 to keep paying the Internet's electric bill

Coverville is a podcast, produced three times a week, that focuses on cover songs - a new rendition of a previously recorded song. The show is produced and hosted by Brian Ibbott, in his home in Arvada, Colorado - about 10 miles West of Denver.

[ Coverville ]

For some reason I wasn't really getting into pod-catching on my Axim, but the shiny new PSP has me checking out a few again. For the most part it still seems like pod casts are just a bunch of lonely people broadcasting to dozens from their basements; Coverville, however, is quite entertaining so far. And who doesn't like a good cover?

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# Monday, February 06, 2006

The first IE 7 "cool" function

Most users just want to quickly put the content of the screen on paper for bookkeeping or use away from the computer. The key here is that all content on the screen is available to the user and that annoying extra white-space is avoided. No one likes to get extra pages with just one or two lines of content on an otherwise completely blank page of paper. IE 7 solves these problems by introducing: Shrink to fit and Orphan Control to minimize white-space.

[ IEBlog : IE7 Printing: An Experience You Won’t Want To Miss ]

Do yourself a favor and check out the whole article. This is seriously well though out, and looks as if printing is no longer just an afterthought. So far with IE7 it's been nice to have better standards compliance, fancier interface, RSS understood, search providers, etc. But this is really an unexpected delight.

Good job IE Team!

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How unique are your initials?

Can you google just your initials, in photos, and come up with mostly pictures of yourself?

If you are one of these fine people you can:

I wonder who else?

Oddly OJ Simpson doesn't make the list. Sure the google for OJ pulls him up, but his initials are OJS, right?

Update: A word of caution, google has indexed many nudie bits, and some of these may (depending on your google settings) involve some. Plus others you may try may involve some too. Apparently sometimes google can't determine if something is of the unclothed variety.

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The Confusing Japanese

Kangaroo highlights a "Japanese" thing that confuses me, the personification of inanimate objects as young women:

Shuffle Girl

But the accompanying Nihongo doesn't seem to be suggestive in nature, just a discussion of the technical merits of the iPod Shuffle.

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# Sunday, February 05, 2006

Cheese Boutique

Yesterday morning when I finally woke up I had a craving for something out of the ordinary. I dialed up restaurants on the VW GPS Navi computer to look for something new and exciting. I didn't find that, so much as a place I'd been before, but hadn't been to in quite a while: Taqueria Poblano in Del Ray. Yaty and I were both enjoying the Chicken Tacos al Carbon when we spied a shop across the street named Cheesetique.

I have long admired the plethora of cheese shops in Philadelphia's Main Line neighborhoods and West Chester. Why could I never find such lovely shops in DC? Perhaps I just lived in the wrong suburb, or my habits kept me from the good cheese shops. Sure, I could find good cheeses at Whole Foods or Wegmans, but there is something about a shop that is dedicated to cheese , like a bakery is to bread, or a cafe to coffee.

Envious I need no longer be, Cheesetique is simply lovely. Their selection may not be as broad as the super-trendy-super-markets, but they certainly know their cheese well at Cheesetique. They carry some meats too, and I picked up some prosciutto for the first time in forever, duck prosciutto that is. I had heard that some places were trying Italian preservation methods on non-pig critters and now I will get to sample one.

Del Ray has moved upscale, and seems to continue along that trend. Perhaps sad for the residents who can no longer afford to live in a town preserved by a degree of negligence, but it appears that the new inhabitants are quite happy to preserve what makes Del Ray such a lovely place to live or visit.

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# Thursday, February 02, 2006

I second that emotion

A number of videogames attempt to converge Hollywood style filmmaking within a videogame framework, Hideo Kojima's Metal Gear Solid series being a prime example of a game successfully applying impressive cinematography techniques within its storyline.

To God of War creator David Jaffe, though, that style of storytelling takes players out of the game too much, and he's approaching plot reveals in a different manner with the PSP game he's working on: there won't be a single cut scene in the entire game.

[ David Jaffe Hates Cut Scenes News Story From 1UP.com ]

I've always disliked the jarring cinematic sequence. From Final Fantasy VII with it's 3 styles that don't look at all alike, to Prince of Persia: Warrior Within and Two Thrones where the game can handle wide-screen but the cinematics are just stretched, to any game that has that awkward pause while loading from disc. I just don't understand. So many Nintendo games (especially ones from Rare) do a great job seamlessly moving in and out of in-engine cut scenes.

I hope more developers take notice and follow in Mr. Jaffe's footsteps.

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Improvements?

Internet Explorer 7 contains a number of improvements to cascading style sheet (CSS) parsing and rendering over IE6. These improvements are aimed at improving the consistency of how Internet Explorer interprets cascading style sheets as recommended by the W3C in order that developers have a reliable set of functionality on which to rely.

[ Cascading Style Sheet Compatibility in Internet Explorer 7 (Windows IETechCol) ]

I'm not sure how an attempt to finally support CSS the way it was explained is an "improvement" or building an engine that breaks older sites coded against the previous incorrect model is an "improvement".

That being said, I guess it's good to bite the bullet and do it up right, if in fact that is what IE 7 is doing now. I've already run into some oddities, but at least I have a swell MSDN article to help me pinpoint what they've changed in the engine before it gets popular.

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Color me corrected

Apparently I didn't fully understand the licensing of MSDE, since Microsoft advises us on how to...

Build dynamic, data-driven Web applications with Microsoft ASP.NET and MSDE 2000 using the Workload Governor to limit the number of concurrent operations that the database engine can perform.

[ Using MSDE 2000 in a Web Application (MSDE 2000 Web Resource Kit) ]

This continues with SQL Server 2005 Express, but the connection pool limit seems to have been increased to 25 simultaneous connections.

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# Saturday, January 28, 2006

Sony wants all of my money too

Getting ready for a trip usually requires a trip to EB Games for a new GameBoy or DS game. Today it ended up being a new PSP.

I have to say that so far I'm impressed. Setting up the WiFi was painless, and then upgrading to the newest OS (2.6) over that connection was a breeze as well. I picked up a few games and some anime thing ('cause it was just $10) and I should have a pleasant enough journey.

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# Thursday, January 26, 2006

Nintendo wants all of my money

And at the rate they are going, they just might get some more.

The rumored DS redesign is a reality, and will launch in Japan in about 6 weeks. No word yet on the US launch date, but Lik-sang is already taking pre-orders for the Japanese version.

I was about to buy a second DS, since there always appears to be a line to use the current DS, but waiting for this should be well worth it. The current DS has always seemed just a little bit too big to me.

The first questions I have are, is the stylus pictured the actual size of the DS lite stylus? It seems a bit big, which I hope is true. Second, does shrinking the size remove any functionality? Perhaps no GBA play?

Any which way I like it, and will most likely be setting aside a portion of my tax rebate, in a super-special-secret-box to ensure I get one of these on its US launch date.

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# Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Raku touch pen DS

Am I living in the wrong country? Sure I don't speak Japanese, but it couldn't be that difficult, right?

・最適な長さ・太さ・握り心地を追求した、ニンテンドーDS専用のタッチペンです。
・快適な操作感でゲームをプレイする事が可能です。
・付属のキャップで、本体底面に装着が可能です。
・持ち運びも”ラク”なタッチペンです。
・ペン先は任天堂純正品と同材質を使用しています。

[ ラクなタッチペンDS ]

OK, that looks tough, but Google says that the above means:

  • Optimum length · thickness · grip feeling was pursued, it is the ニンテンドー DS private touch pen.
  • Comfortable operation to play the game it is possible in the impression.
  • With the cap of attachment, installing is possible in the substance base.
  • Also conveyance " the ラク " is the touch pen.
  • The nib has used the same material as the Nintendo Co. genuine products.

To get an idea of what " With the cap of attachment, installing is possible in the substance base" means, check out the pic:

Not only do I need one of these styli, but check out the other goods available to the Japanese public direct from Nintendo that I don't think I could ever find in the US.

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