Author: Kent
Father's Day
For many reasons, this seems like an appropriate Father’s Day video.
It also demonstrates why YouTube is such a fantastic resource.
Link for feed readers that don’t embed the video.
Calling Lou Diamond Phillips
I was about to turn on tonight’s Sci-Fi Channel offering of Lou Diamond Phillips dealing with genetically altered bats (which sounds like a movie designed specifically to my tastes), when I came across something better. Engadget either getting owned or owning others (I’m not really sure which) over a dog brain in a dish.
According to this Engadget story, some cat (the human kind, but keep reading and you may begin to wonder) has grown a dog brain in a dish. Now we could make a Sci-Fi Channel offering out of that alone- but there’s more.
What, you might ask, is the highest and best use of a dog brain in a dish?
To play video games, of course. It sort of takes “man’s best friend” to a whole new level.
Now all we need is for the Sci-Fi Channel and Lou Diamond to team up and bring us a movie about the dog brain’s entry into and domination of the pro video game circuit. After the dog brains start winning all of the teens of dollars of prize money, Lou Diamond could play a human gamer who unseats them and returns mankind to its rightful place at the top of the couch potato chain.
Possible sequels could involve squirrel brains that needlepoint, whale brains that rap and turtle brains that play fart football.
Who Decides Who Decides: The Wikipedia Problem Explored
I have been reading with interest the recent discussion about Wikipedia, that great collaborative, free, online and hopefully accurate, encyclopedia. Let me begin by saying that I use Wikipedia all the time and that I think the idea of a collaborative encyclopedia is a great idea- in theory and, perhaps, in practice.

The recent discussion revolves around the issue of editorial checks and balances.
I am convinced the issues arise out of differing views of the meaning of collaboration. You see, when you agree to collaborate, you must collaborate. Which means that, in theory, everyone is free to add to and edit entries on topics that, presumably, they know something about. Some people, however, seem to be taking the term collaborate a bit too literally, thinking that any restriction on a user’s desire to have his or her way with an entry taints the process and constitutes some sort of undesired censorship. This is wrong, and here’s why.
In any online collaborative venture, be it an encyclopedia, a message board or blog comments, there are several kinds of potential content providers:
First and best, there are the knowledgeable and helpful people who try to play by the rules and make an effort to be objective. Objective matters not on a message board which, by design, is to be filled with opinions. It matters greatly when the goal is a shared resource. Even subconsciously, opinion and emotion often creep into writing disguised as facts. There must be some checks and balances, other than the emotional reactions of those who emotionally disagree, to preserve the required amount of objectivity.
So even with people who are trying to play fair, there is a need for oversight.
Then there are the people who don’t know what they don’t know. On a blog, I can talk about politics, curling, why I like David Gilmour better that Steve Gillmor, and anything else I want ramble on about- and if it turns out that I am foolish, wrong or mistaken, my readers will simply vote with their subscription buttons. But if I decide all of the sudden that I am an expert on curling, am I really the right guy to rewrite the Wikipedia page on curling? Of course not.
So again, there must be checks and balances in case people start believing they know more than they do.
Then there are the people who have genuine but differing opinions of how a site should be run. The best example of this at Wikipedia are the people who either enter or edit entries about themselves. If unchecked, everybody and their dog would have an entry. On the other hand if you see something about yourself that is factually incorrect, why shouldn’t you be able to correct it. Again, checks and balances are needed. (As an aside, while I read and like Fred’s blog, Wikipedia is not limited to online or VC matters, so if Fred is suitable for an entry, so are a ton of other educators, business persons, doctors, lawyers, firemen, soldiers etc. who do a lot of good here in the real world).
Finally, there are the troublemakers. I remember the night Mike Arrington posted about a test chat room that had been set up by 3Bubbles to show their new chat application. I wondered over to check it out, and the signal to noise ration was beyond horrible thanks to quite a few chatters who were there purely to disrupt things and create chaos. I can tell you from vast experience developing and operating interactive web sites that disrupters and troublemakers are a constant problem that require constant diligence. Left unchecked, the vandalism that Jimmy Wales calls “a minimal problem, a dull roar in the background,” would eventually overwhelm the legitimate content the way unpulled weeds will overwhelm a yard.
The New York Times article sums up the Wikipedia problem nicely:
“At its core, Wikipedia is not just a reference work but also an online community that has built itself a bureaucracy of sorts- one that, in response to well-publicized problems with some entries, has recently grown more elaborate. It has a clear power structure that gives volunteer administrators the authority to exercise editorial control, delete unsuitable articles and protect those that are vulnerable to vandalism.”
and
“While these measures may appear to undermine the site’s democratic principles, Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia’s founder, notes that protection is usually temporary and affects a tiny fraction of the 1.2 million entries on the English-language site.”
All of which leads me to my conclusion.
We shouldn’t be worried about the fact that someone gets to decide what is acceptable at Wikipedia. Instead, we should focus on who decides who decides what is acceptable at Wikipedia.
As long as there is built-in fairness to the answer to that question, the other problems, both from an inclusive and an exclusive perspective, will take care of themselves.
In fact, when people argue about limitations of any kind, they are often not arguing about the limitation so much as they are about who controls the limitation. If we focus narrowly on the real problem at hand, it is easier to understand the problem and to craft a solution that work for everyone.
It’s all about the correct checks and balances.
Hill Country Day Three

Cassidy and Evie and Delaney and Aidan on a roller coaster
We spent all day today at Sea World.
We saw Shamu, a dolphin show and the shark exhibit. We rode the big waterslide and played in the wave pool.
The kids got to pet and feed dolphins.
More photos here.
Elvis, Gates and Kinky Friedman
Perhaps unable to go on after Elvis left the building, Bill Gates is stepping down at Microsoft, to devote more time to his charitable foundation. The foundation has donated $10.5 billion in 12 years of operation.
Meanwhile, Kinky Friedman continues to slap around the other candidates, proving that if he were to somehow get elected Governor of Texas, we’d be in for an interesting time. His camp had this to say recently about candidate Carole Keeton Strayhorn asking to be listed on the November ballot as Carole Keeton “Grandma” Strayhorn:
“Strayhorn’s demand that her political slogan be put on the ballot is completely absurd and reveals a politician fast becoming irrelevant,” said spokesman Robert Black. “Kinky Friedman may tell jokes, but the Strayhorn campaign is teetering on the edge of becoming one.”
Maybe Bill should fund Kinky who should hire Scoble as the official Texas evangelist and podcaster. We already have a state bird and a state flower.
This would keep the band together and be good for Texas at the same time.
Technorati Tags:
scoble, gates, kinky friedman
Hill Country Day Two
We did a whole lot of tubing today. Later we hung out by the pool and swam.
At night they have a campfire where the kids can make smores. Last night there was a huge game of flashlight tag, where one kid has a flashlight and the last kid to get tagged by the flashlight wins. Cassidy won one of the games and Delaney did great too.
Tomorrow we’re off to Seaworld to see Shamu.
Humor and Sense from Henry Blodget
Henry says that maybe eBay will buy Fed Ex and Verizon, so it can add a “Mail Me” and a “Call Me” (perhaps Al Green could be their marketing spokesman) to the “Skype Me” buttons on its auctions.
Henry likes Skype fine, but says correctly that a Yahoo purchase would have created greater synergy. Amen. I love eBay, but I haven’t the foggiest idea why it bought Skype- other than the old bubble inflating standby. Because it could.
I actually installed Skype for the first time ever last week. And I have to admit it’s pretty cool. But I can’t conceive a situation in which I would want to “Skype” a buyer or seller of an auction. In fact, I would probably consider it an intrusion if I got “Skyped” by someone based on an eBay auction.
Sometimes the strategic plans of internet companies are a lot like the movie Momento. They start at what should be the end and then make things needlessly complicated after that.
More Foolishness from the RIAA
The priority challenged RIAA has now decided that those bad YouTube videos of teenagers lip synching their favorite songs is somehow a business plan for record labels.
Project Opus reports that some YouTube users have reportedly received cease and desist letters from the RIAA, demanding that their amateur videos be taken down.
Here’s a news flash RIAA. These kids are not ever going to get a freaking synch license so they can lip synch and make funny videos, some of which are the best possible viral marketing for a song. All you are accomplishing by harassing these kids is to once again look greedy and clueless. That and nipping some good marketing in the bud.
It would be so nice if the record label cartel would stop trying to turn back the clock and embrace the technology that is going to thrive with or without them.
Blogging the Alamo

Cassidy and Delaney in the Alamo
We are on the first day of a vacation in the Texas hill country. We spent part of the day in San Antonio. We took the kids to the Alamo and had lunch on the San Antonio Riverwalk.
Afterwards, we came to the Hill Country Hyatt, where we checked in and then went tubing on its man made “lazy river.” We’re going to do some more tubing tomorrow. We’re going to Seaworld on Friday.
Big fun so far.

