Monthly Archives: July 2007

Internet User Counter

AMD has a cute page at its 50×15 project, which has counters with estimated counts of the world population and the estimated number of Internet users. The user number grows a lot faster than the population number.

50×15's purpose is to draw attention to the hope that half the planet will be connected by 2015 — a status that AMD says on current trends won't happen until 2030 unless someone ramps things up.

As of this posting, world population is about 6,607,372,000; internet usage about 1,140,247,000; and penetration at 17.25%. [corrected]

Posted in Internet | 2 Comments

Wonderful Question

Bret Fausett has a great question at Lextext.com,

Someone came up with a new list of the seven man-made wonders of the world. Now, really, what's more wondrous? Some old buildings and statutes...or the Internet? The Internet wasn't even a finalist.

Posted in Internet | 6 Comments

Media Notices McCain Won’t Be President

stick a fork in hmThe one thing that Howard Kurtz is good for is memorializing the conventional wisdom. Today he administers last rites to the McCain campaign in light of his cash crisis followed by the defections of several senior figures from the campaign.

You heard it here back in March. (See also McCain's madness.)

Posted in Politics: US: 2008 Elections | 1 Comment

More Dirt on Gonzales

Gonzales Knew About Violations, Officials Say

Two senior Justice Department officials said yesterday that they kept Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales apprised of FBI violations of civil liberties and privacy safeguards in recent years.

The two officials spoke in a telephone call arranged by press officials at the Justice Department after The Washington Post disclosed yesterday that the FBI sent reports to Gonzales of legal and procedural violations shortly before he told senators in April 2005: “There has not been one verified case of civil liberties abuse” after 2001.

It is a sign of how dysfunctional our government is that this man is still in office. ( Not to mention that the same questions must be asked about Gonzales's boss.) The question presented is whether these are truly exceptional times, or whether the current crisis — the public's complete loss of trust in the government, the government's complete lack of interest in whether the public trusts it — is a sign of some deeper structural failing in our form of government.

Posted in Politics: US: GW Bush Scandals | 1 Comment

David Howarth, Shadow Solicitor General

New role for Howarth: My friend David Howarth has been promoted to the Liberal Democrat's front bench, and will be serving as shadow Solicitor General.

“I will use the role to demand answers from the Government on their role on the BAE Systems scandal and will fight for electoral reform as well as taking part in debates on criminal justice and the reform of the legal system.”

Another smart move by the LDs.

Posted in UK | 1 Comment

Blog Gets Eight Innings of Results

This is a cool example of a blog getting results. Follow the link if your care about either blogs or baseball.

(spotted via rc3.org)

Posted in Blogs | 1 Comment