Blogging IP and employment issues

/. occasionally clues me in to an interesting article, like The Weblog Question. There are questions about appropriateness of employee weblogs and ownership of content on employer-sponsored or requires weblogs, as well as personal sites.

I have a hard time seeing how this issue could be very complicated to understand. Companies do or should have policies on the intellectual property rights of works created by their employees. If I write a blog about my work and publish it on my companies servers, that work is CLEARLY the intellectual property of my company. It is no different than writing a paper; it is part of my job, and clearly owned by the company. Mark Potts, CTO of HP’s management software business, thought he owned the content to his blog that was hosted on company servers. I’m surprised, even shocked, that an employee at the officer level doesn’t know something so basic about intellectual property rights.

The issue does get more complicated if an employee chooses to keep a blog on their own time and using their own resources. However, this issue is conceptually no different from an employee working on personal projects outside of work. It is up to each company to have clear policies governing what is owned by the company, and what is owned by the employee. As with any other company policy, it is up to each employee to decide whether they are willing to follow those policies.

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Tour of Georgia update

The route for this year’s race will be very similar to last year, except this time the first stage starts in Augusta! I know what I’ll be doing on the morning of 19 April.

Last year, Andrea and I caught the finish of the stage from Dalton to Dahlonega, and then the next day drove up to Brasstown Bald to watch the elite pros race up the tallest mountain in Georgia. I took a lot of pictures and even some video, which I STILL haven’t had time to edit down. Perhaps the excitement of the upcoming TdG will motivate me to take another look at that footage!

We had an excellent time on both mountain stages we saw last year, and will have to look in to seeing them again.

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Elections in Iraq

Electoral officials estimated that up to eight million Iraqis voted – more than 60% of those registered.

60% bests the turnout for the USA 2004 Presidential election of 59.6% of eligible voters.

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Where do I live?

The Augusta Chronicle has two interesting articles in the Sunday edition. The purchase of the Fat Man’s novelty store location by Michael Schepis, owner of the downtown restaurant Pizza Joint, is important business news for the area. Perhaps Mr. Schepis is tired of waiting for the promised revitalization of Augusta, and is ready to throw in with Columbia County, which has grown much larger even since we moved here in early 2001. I actually think that story is bigger news than this one. Augusta is the past; Columbia County is now. The future, of course, remains to be seen.

When we moved here from London, we saw downtown Augusta as a future promise. There were several fun places to eat and get a beer, and signs on many of the buildings proclaimed mixed-use urban developments were in progress and in fact were right around the corner. Columbia County lacked many of the urban amenities we had in London. The ones we particularly missed were so-called “third spaces:” places you go in your leisure time that are neither home nor work, but provide a setting for social exchanges. Parks, coffee houses, and pubs are what we wanted, and it looked like our best chances for getting them were in Augusta.

It’s been four years now, and there are a few more places to eat and drink downtown, the city council gives occasional lip service to revitalization, for example the demolition of a decrepit eye-sore of a building to make a town square, and a weekly farmer’s market during the spring and summer, but a revitalization effort needs sustained residential and retail development. Otherwise, it will never draw new residents and shoppers in from booming Columbia County.

The question for Columbia County is whether the growth we’re experiencing will be limited to the drive-everywhere big box retail type associated with suburban sprawl, or whether it will be better managed, providing welcoming spaces where families can gather, walk from store to coffee shop to park, leaving the cars where they belong: in the driveway and parking lot.

The Augusta Exchange is an example of the type of growth I would like to avoid. It’s a few acres of medium sized retail stores, along with several restaurants and some big-box retail. Think of several strip malls getting married and having a clan and you’ve got the Augusta Exchange. The place is so unfriendly to pedestrians that people will actually get in their cars and drive from one end of the same side of the street to the other! I can be stubborn about these things, so I try to walk, but crossing the street in this place feels like you’re putting your life in the hands of that SUV driver over there, and he is talking on the cell phone and entertaining his three kids in the back seat when he should be driving. Or rather, when they all could be out walking.

I do have some hope that Columbia County will get it right. There are plans for a mixed-use development near the Evans town center called Marshall Square that could turn in to the center of something nice. Our new library is looking good, and has a performing arts center and a cafe attached.

I think Augusta had a chance to jump on to the growth of Columbia County, but that was a few years ago, and now they’ve missed this chance and will have to wait for the next one.

Where do I live? I used to tell people from out of the area that I lived in Augusta, but now I say I live in Columbia County.

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Convergence, meet Ease of Use

Not too long ago I mentioned the type of ease of use I want out of my appliances, whether it’s a dishwasher, a wireless LAN, or a gizmo that lets me play my music over the stereo without having to swap CDs. I really do want to set it up, then never worry about it again. I can handle a clothes dryer level of periodic upkeep in an appliance — just clean the lint screen and go for it. I don’t want some mythical convergence box in my living room that acts like a computer when I use it, I want a hand-held device barely bigger than my TiVo remote control that lets me effortlessly play anything I want from my music collection, without swapping CDs. The best solution I’ve found so far is just to hook an iPod up to the stereo, but even with third party remote controls, that isn’t an ideal solution. What if I want to browse? What I need is a hand held platform that can browse the music library and control playback. It has to be almost as fast at browsing as iTunes; no one wants to scroll through an HTML table or list with five thousand items.

I think the Mac Media Center can give us that if the project team keeps things nice and modular. Sure, their default interface may not be exactly what I want, but if they keep their view abstracted from their model, I or somebody with similarly simple motivation will be able to add it on later.

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