Sunday, July 23, 2006

Hummer Winblad Search Dabble Turns Up...Web Widget; What's Vister?

I'm still trying to get to the bottom of the interest in searching for Hummer Winblad on Technorati. In my search, I learned that Hummer Winblad gave money to "DabbleDB" of Canada -- like $2 million. I also discovered that Hummer Winblad sent $1.5 million to Startup PostApp for an "online widget."

Ok, gimme an f-ing break. An online widget. You know "widget" is an economics term for just some kind of device -- nothing specific -- that's used to show the sale of something as related to matters in microeconomics.

Next.

Well, next I learned that Hummer Winblad really did give money to Post App, and they've got an application I'm going to put to great use at SBS.

What's a Web Widget?

Well according to PostApp, it's "A web widget is a piece of web service-based interactive content that can be dynamically embedded into a web page. For example, a web widget can be a game, a score box displaying a set of statistics, a weather box, an advertising box or any other functionality to be embedded on a web page such as a blog, personal homepage, social networking profile, or auction page. Web widgets, sometimes called gadgets or modules, are increasingly used by web publishers to enhance their web pages, and web service developers are now frequently making their technologies available as web widgets. Many different technologies can be used to develop widgets: HTML, JavaScript, AJAX, Flash, Java Applets, and any web application platform: J2EE, LAMP, Perl, Ruby, etc.

PostApp is creating a marketplace that connects web widget developers with bloggers and other personal publishers. Widget developers include online services seeking widespread widget distribution such as Yahoo! and eBay, as well as small independent widget developers."


Nice.

It fits in with what we're doing with our main products here. Real cool.

Now about that Dabble thing.

It turns out there are two Dabbles -- the one in Canada, and this one.

I like Mary Hodder's better!



But regarding this whole social networking craze, you're probably wondering what's next on the horizon that Hummer Winblad should be investing in. Well, here's "Vister."

..and that's Danah Boyd who's 1/2 of the team who conceived Vister. She's an interesting speaker. How do I know? Because I happened to catch her talk about social networks one day at Cal a few years ago. Her talk was theoretical and a bit racy -- I think deliberately so -- but none the less informative.

I tried to contact her with the idea of exploring how what she was doing could fit with SBS, but she didn't see how and at the time I was dealing with too much with business and family battling cancer to try and take time to show her how. So I set the idea on the shelf.

Jeffrey Heer seems to have more of his teeth sunk into Vister's development. This is he:



And this is a video about Vister. Check it out!

More On Michael Strahan’s Divorce



Regardless of how this ugly matter turns out, I do hope Michael Strahan’s not one of those "Down Low" brothas. Yikees!

NEWARK NJ (UPI) — The nasty divorce between New York Giants Pro Bowl defensive end Michael Strahan and his soon-to-be ex-wife is stunning even seasoned divorce lawyers.

The case features sordid details like adultery, beatings and rampant overspending of money, the Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger reported. The highly public case, taking place in Superior Court in Newark, is a culmination of 17 months of a very bitter battle between a couple, who once projected a clean, wholesome image.

Accusations include Michael Strahan’s alleged “alternative” affair with television doctor Ian Smith, an accusation that Michael Strahan secretly videotaped his sister-in-law getting undressed and Michael Strahan’s allegation that Jean Strahan cheated on him with other women, the newspaper said.

The case, far from settled, has turned into a spectacle that most celebrities try to avoid. Michael Strahan, who once appeared in television commercials for Campbell’s Chunky Soup, is trying to refurbish his image with the help of Sports Media Challenge, a firm that helps athletes deal with the press.

NY Giants Michael Strahan Explains His Side Of Sad Divorce



It reads like his wife's trying to dig up every bad black male stereotype she can think of. Well, something triggered the whole deal.


By MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
DAILY NEWS SPORTS WRITER


Giants football star Michael Strahan calmly tells Daily News he wants divorce to be dignified, especially for the sake of his 5-month-old twin girls.


Two years ago, Michael and Jean Strahan were lovingly restoring Montclair mansion




No, Michael Strahan says, there was no mistress in Toronto, no hanky-panky in Jacksonville. No road rage on the Garden State Parkway. No psych test mandated by the New York Giants.
He loves his twin baby girls and plays a big role in their lives.

He didn't dump his wife because she doesn't like rap.

And no, Michael Strahan, says, he is not interested in getting into a bloody public brawl with his estranged wife, Jean.

"Despite all this, I still like her," he says. "I still respect her. I love her."

In an exclusive interview with the Daily News, the football star says the marriage is over but he wants to end the relationship with dignity for the sake of his family - and especially for his 5-month-old daughters.

"You realize that everything really boils down to them," he says. "If I were a man without kids, without family, then this would be, 'Hey, you want to duke it out, let's duke it out.'

"But I got kids. I got nephews. I got nieces. I got a mother and father and brothers and sisters. And Jean has the same. And I think just for our families' sake, I don't want to slug it out.

"I'm not looking to fight, because I think our families are going to be the biggest losers in this. And to me, it's not worth it."

The 13-year National Football League veteran says he feels compelled to set the record straight because he feels his wife has taken some dishonest, painful shots since their marriage - which looked like a fairy-tale relationship to his friends and fans - collapsed in the 10 days since Jean Strahan called police to their Montclair, N.J., mansion.

She claimed he threatened to beat her.

Michael Strahan quickly filed for divorce, claiming his wife withdrew $3.3 million from their bank accounts. Jean Strahan slugged back, claiming in court documents that he had affairs with two women, rammed a slow-moving driver with his Cadillac Escalade on a Jersey highway, spends no time with his girls and was forced by the Giants to undergo psychological tests.

Last week an Essex County, N.J., judge dismissed Jean Strahan's abuse claims but admitted into evidence photos she says were taken after he abused her years ago.

Michael Strahan, dressed casually in a dark shirt and slacks as he sat in the Chelsea offices of a media consultant, calmly rejected her other claims during the interview with The News.

There wasn't a girlfriend in Toronto, as his estranged wife claims, and no affair in Florida during Super Bowl week, he says.

"I don't know why she would say that," Strahan says. "I never gave her any reason to say that.

"I don't have anybody in Florida. I don't have a girlfriend in Toronto."

Strahan says his wife's claim that he rammed another car with his sport-utility vehicle isn't true, either.

"We were on our way to dinner, and we got into a car accident," he says. "But it was just that - a car accident. I can't imagine being mad enough to wreck my own car. ...

"The police were called, a report was filed, officers came. My demeanor was calm, as it always is."

The Giants, he adds, didn't make him undergo psychological testing after the incident. "I've never had a psychological evaluation by anybody," he says.

Strahan also denies his wife's allegation that he spurned his family after she gave birth to their babies last fall. Jean Strahan says he ignores their kids and turns his back to her in bed.

In court papers, she claims he "looks for excuses to absent himself from our house, playing in every imaginable golf tournament, participating in every boondoggle to Las Vegas, shooting the pilot for a television show in Los Angeles."

But Strahan says he's been part of his girls' lives since the day they were conceived. He was injured in the middle of the last NFL season, which gave him a lot of time to spend with his daughters.

"I've been strapped with a Baby Bjorn for more hours than I can remember," the 275-pound football star says, referring to an infant carrier.

"It was a totally great experience," Strahan says of the birth of his girls. "They're fun. They're two totally different personalities. One sleeps quite a bit, and the other stays awake all the time.

"They like to hold hands. It's the most amazing thing to have twins."

Strahan laughs when asked about his wife's allegation that he left her because she didn't share his taste in hip hop.

"If you're in love with somebody, it doesn't matter what kind of music they listen to," he says. "Actually, I'm grateful for Jean teaching me to like Waylon Jennings, the Bellamy Brothers, James Taylor, all those good people I wouldn't have listened to without knowing her."

The grid star looks remarkably at peace for a man whose image was eviscerated for days last week.

He credits his cool to the support he's received from his teammates and other NFL pals, and from family and friends. Strahan says the rips he's gotten have been fortunate in one sense: He's heard kind words from friends he hasn't spoken to in years.

"I feel compelled to say something publicly because it involved my family in a very private matter that is now very public. Hopefully, this will end it, and everybody will respect that it is a private family matter," Strahan says.

Anger and frustration flare, however, when he talks about what he calls unfair treatment in the New York Post, which his camp says is serving as a mouthpiece for Jean Strahan and her attorney.

"If you're going to write a story, I'd prefer that it at least be true. If it's not true, you shouldn't write it," he says.

Strahan is a lock for Canton - the football hall of fame. The defensive end set a league record for sacks in a season in 2001. But like Joe Namath, Walt Frazier and Derek Jeter, he's more than an athlete - he's one of those rare New York stars who seems to transcend his sport.

He's a regular on the TV sports talk shows, a Chunky Soup pitchman and a tireless worker for good causes.

In an era when many people assume athletes are self-absorbed jerks, Strahan has always been known as one of the good guys. And he says nothing has changed.

"I think it's pretty hard to fool people for 12 or 13 years," Strahan says. "I'm the guy who everybody knows - the guy who's been in New York for 13 seasons."

The couple married in 1999 and became one of New York's hottest sports couples, a fixture at charity events and on the gossip pages. Michael called Jean his rock and admits he still has warm feelings for her.

But the marriage, he adds, is definitely over. It wasn't the pressures of an NFL career - the public spotlight. There isn't any one thing he can pinpoint as the fatal wound.

"I can't particularly look back at any event and say, 'Okay, this was the moment that things weren't working out.' I don't think it was like that," he says.

"It was just, over the course of time, things deteriorated.

"It's a marriage that in the long run didn't turn out with the fairy-tale ending."

Although the judge threw out a restraining order that barred him from his home, Strahan says he won't return because he doesn't want to disrupt his little girls' lives.

Strahan, on the advice of his lawyer, won't talk about what happened at his Montclair home on March 10. He won't talk about the $3.3 million he says in his divorce papers Jean Strahan swiped. He just hopes the split can be handled with maturity and grace.

"We owe it to each other to respect our kids and their future and their privacy - to end this in the right way," he says.

"If you end it the right way, it still allows you to both be a great influence in your kids' lives, and I think that is very important."

Saturday, July 22, 2006

SF PD and FBI Pick On Josh Wolf For Video Of Cops




Josh Wolf is a vlogger who took a video of a demonstration where allegedly an SF PD offficer used his car to run over protestors and their materials. The FBI and the SF PD in the form of an agent and a cop tracked down and then visted Mr. Wolf at his home. For more information, see joshwolf.net . This SF Chronicle article explains the rest of the story:

SAN FRANCISCO
Judge gives protest videographer reprieve
Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, July 21, 2006

Printable Version
Email This Article
A freelance journalist who has refused to hand over videos he shot at a San Francisco protest to a federal grand jury stayed out of jail Thursday, at least temporarily.

U.S. District Judge William Alsup asked a government lawyer whether prosecutors would consider granting immunity to the journalist as a way of inducing him to give the tapes to the grand jury, which is looking into whether demonstrators at the protest broke federal laws.

Alsup's decision to ask for further arguments and resume the hearing Aug. 1 gave a reprieve to Josh Wolf, who could be jailed until next July, when the grand jury's term expires, if he does not turn over the videos.

The grand jury is looking into a July 2005 demonstration in the Mission District organized by anarchists against the Group of Eight international economic conference in Scotland. A police car was set on fire during a clash between officers and demonstrators. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Finigan said the vandalism could be a federal crime because the Police Department receives federal funds.

Wolf, 24, a freelancer who focuses on political dissidents, shot videos of the demonstration. Portions were shown on television stations, including footage of the police car.

The grand jury has demanded the rest of the videos, and Wolf has refused, claiming a journalist's right to withhold unpublished material from the government. That right is recognized by California law but not by federal law, which prevails in federal court.

Alsup ordered Wolf last month to turn over the videos or face jail for contempt of court. Wolf was in the grand jury room later that day, insisting on his right to remain silent, when a prosecutor abruptly withdrew his subpoena.

Prosecutors renewed the request for the film last week, but Alsup was more receptive to defense arguments at Thursday's hearing in San Francisco.

The judge said he had tentatively concluded that Wolf had the right to remain silent and withhold evidence to avoid selfincrimination. Finigan said he saw no danger that Wolf could incriminate himself, but the judge said Wolf might fear that authorities would accuse him of aiding lawbreakers at the protest by encouraging them. "I don't think that's fanciful,'' Alsup told the prosecutor.

He suggested that Finigan ask his superiors to authorize an offer of immunity to Wolf, which would protect the journalist from being prosecuted for any information he provided to the grand jury but would eliminate one of his defenses to contempt of court. Wolf declined to say what he would do if granted immunity.

Alsup denied a request by Wolf's lawyer, Jose Luis Fuentes, to transfer the case to the judge who is considering the government's attempt to require two Chronicle reporters to identify their sources of closed-door grand jury testimony about steroids in sports.

The judge was also skeptical of Fuentes' argument that Wolf should be let off the hook because the government had failed to show compliance with Justice Department guidelines, which require prosecutors to pursue every alternative and secure authorization from the attorney general before obtaining a subpoena against a journalist.

Alsup said the guidelines were not legally binding and asked why they should be allowed to "interfere with the wheels of justice, the grand jury getting the information they need.'' But he asked Finigan to report back on whether the government had followed the guidelines in this case.

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This video was originally shared on blip.tv by jaydedman with a Public Domain license.

Lebanese Mood Turning Against The USA - CNN

This CNN report is chilling in that it shows a reporter explaining that he was in a village outside of Beirut, where there are about 50,000 people. His group of American journalist was confronted by an angry group. The reporter says "The mood is turning against the United States," because some Lebanese believe the USA gave the green light for Israel to attack them.

Here's the video:

Apple's Black MacBook - The Black MacBook Commercial You Didn't See

True Nuff TV made this totally funny take on the new Mac Commericials, this one featuring an African American man playing what else, a black MacBook. He stands next to the white MacBook and informs him that he's got several performance upgrades...

It's a commericial Apple should rush to cop because there's a kind of gay subtext in Apple's Mac commercial where the "Mac Guy" and the "PC Guy" are holding hands, but when a hottie Japanese woman comes in to show the digital photo she made with the Mac -- and starts holding hands with Mac Guy, PC Guy gets jealous.

Well, here's the Black MacBook Commercial:

Hummer Winblad Dumps Napster Emails, Proves Value Of Silicon Valley In The Process



(See the latest Hummer Winblad news here>)

If you're wondering why Hummer Winblad's the most search term on Technorati today, the whole matter seems to stem from this story that they've dumped emails related to the Napster case. For those of you who don't know this, Hummer Winblad is the VC firm (venture capital) that was started in part by Ann Winblad, the former girlfriend of Microsort founder Bill Gates.

In this act, and in the flood of searches on Technorati -- itself based in San Francisco and part of the Silicon Valley culture -- Hummer Winblad has demonstrated that Silicon Valley still has some impact on American Culture. I personally think it's Technorati CEO David Sifry's way of showing Ann that Technorati's got juice.

Here's a video about Silicon Valley culture..