September 2, 2005
london wifi needed september 7th

The good news is, Ross Mayfield of Socialtext is throwing a party in London next Wednesday.
The bad news is, he needs to find a venue. One that has WiFi. I called the Texas Embassy (my usual geek dinner venue), but no dice.
Can anybody suggest somewhere? Please leave a comment either here or over on Ross’ wiki. Thanks.
Sarah, can you bring some girl geeks along?
[Evelyn’s post got me thinking:] Maybe Katrina is for wiki’s what 9/11 was for blogs.
"Hugh's Daily Cartoon" Newsletter.
A new cartoon sent out every weekday morning to your inbox [RSS version here.].
A wee chuckle to start your day off right etc.








Hugh: BTW, thanks for all your wiki efforts too. You may be right. I think that was evident after the tsunami too. The blog format wasn’t working for The South-East Asia Earthquake and Tsunami Blog immediately in the aftermath. And then Constantin (http://blog.basturea.com/) helped them set up a wiki asap.
Wikis are great for coordinated collabaorative efforts and projects. Whereas I like blogs for single thought-streams.
I think the simplicity of SMS and ubiquity of cellphones should also be tied into some kind of always available via Red Cross or someone “emergency wiki” mobile wiki system — with moblogging’s ease. Internet access and power wasn’t that ubiquitous (BEFORE and) after the tsunami, but cellphones were.
However, blogs are simpler than wikis thus far. The user interface is still a bit on the rough side (i.e. my mom would never figure out how to edit a wiki as they are today even if it was an emergency; she could post to a blog). Simple WYSIWIG wikis like SocialText’s new Wikiwyg are needed.
And even I’m too lame to figure out how to host a wiki (and I need one for the upcoming tsunami anniversary project).
Absolutely nothing to do with yr post.
But a response to the cartoon.
Reminds me of one of my all time favourite moments form literature.
The lead character in Camus’ ‘La Peste’ spends all book/plague/war long trying to write the first line of his great novel.
Endless permutations follow in a metaphorical struggle to achieve the perfect first line (a metaphor for a blameless existence).
His final comment at ‘the end’, is delivered with resigned triumph of having made progress: ‘J’ai supprime tous les adjectifs’.
(I’ve deleted all the adjectives).
I think your pictures are really great at removing the ‘clutter’ from communication.
It’s a talent I envy.
’The market for something to believe in is infinite.’ Love that.
Yr a funny fella.