秋日流水帐

September 18, 2006

谁此时没有房子,就不必建造,
谁此时孤独,就永远孤独,
就醒来,读书,写长长的信,
在林荫路上不停地
徘徊,落叶纷飞。
——摘自北岛译里尔克《秋日》

星 期六参加了在职法律研究生课程班的开学典礼,回到这个生活了四年的校园,一切那么熟悉,又如此陌生。达明一派有《那个下午我在旧居烧信》,其实“下午”、 “故居”、“烧信”我们常常可以换成另外的时间、地点和事件,那些致命的触动心灵的回忆!在学而优顺便买了连岳的《伸了》以及《万象》2006年8月号。
晚 上和一班同学在学而优书店旁边的yes-no咖啡厅聚会,老魏在百忙中(^_^)出席大会。大家各自叙述一年来的情况和今后的打算。PK在厕所向老魏感叹 大家的变化很大。其实我倒觉得没什么变化,如果一定要说有那也是顺着个人本来固有的性格自然而然的演化。出乎意料的是huige拍脱并且入党了,对于后者 他说他很后悔,不知关于拍脱他的感觉怎样呢?
星期天参加了人力资源助理管理师的培训,无聊,要不是看在免费的份上,我打死也不会去的。中途huige打来电话,询问我和狗熊昨晚说了什么。原来他也不能免俗,我以为只有我才这么八卦。同去的领导说没什么好听的,于是中途早退回来。
以后或者要开始一种没有周末的生活了!

让人爽歪歪的罗马

罗马又赢球,在国米打平之后,目前以净胜球优势名列榜首。
志之以为祝贺!

北京人爱百度 上海人爱Google

谷歌(Google)在高端用户群中绝对领先。CNNIC调查报告把高端用户定义为年龄在25岁及以上,学历在大学本科及以上,收入在3000元以上的非学生用户。

一不小心,混迹于高端用户,哈哈

金 陵晚报记者袁涛报道 中国互联网络信息中心(CNNIC)昨日发布了最新的2006年中国搜索引擎市场调查报告。2006年的中国搜索引擎市场在经历了跨越式发展后,依然呈现 出持续升温的局面。除了百度、谷歌(Google)、雅虎在市场上三足鼎立外,在功能和搜索内容上则显示出互补的态势。
百度霸占首选市场
CNNIC 调查结果显示,在用户首选的搜索引擎中,百度首选市场份额继续攀升,达到了62.1%。谷歌(Google)的市场份额为25.3%,同去年同期相比,下 滑了8个百分点。谷歌(Google)虽在首选市场的竞争中失利,但我国同时使用两个及以上搜索引擎用户占总用户数的76.3%,在二选市场上谷歌 (Google)以37.8%的市场份额拔得头筹。这表明大部分用户在使用搜索引擎时,单个搜索引擎无法满足其全部需要,谷歌(Google)是补充搜索 时的第一选择。
雅虎用户忠诚度上升快
用户忠诚度是指半年前首选使用某搜索引擎的用户中,现在仍选择首选使用某搜索引擎的比率。CNNIC调查显示,雅虎成为用户忠诚度上升速度最快的搜索引擎,同去年同期相比,其忠诚度上升了15.6个百分点。
搜狐搜狗最“成熟”
此 次CNNIC调查报告中一个比较有趣的结论是不同的人群钟情不同的搜索引擎。百度是最“年轻”的搜索引擎,其23岁以下的用户比例最大,占到了52. 7%。相比之下,搜狐搜狗中23岁以下用户为19.7%,因而成为最“成熟”的搜索引擎。谷歌(Google)在高端用户群中绝对领先。CNNIC调查报 告把高端用户定义为年龄在25岁及以上,学历在大学本科及以上,收入在3000元以上的非学生用户。数据显示,企业用户占谷歌(Google)总用户的 48.5%,学生用户群所占比例几乎接近百度用户总数量的一半。此外,调查结果还显示出北京人更爱百度,上海人更爱谷歌(Google)。
百度品牌知名度最高
品 牌知名度是指用户对搜索引擎名称的知晓程度。在搜索引擎各品牌知名度中,百度以86.5%的优势名列第一,谷歌(Google)和雅虎分别以64%和 38.5%位居第二、三,搜狐搜狗和新浪爱问则排名第四和第五。另外,Google的中文名字“谷歌”知名度为16.3%,当然这可能与“谷歌”这个中文 名字推出的较晚有关。

Google加入禁书周

September 14, 2006

9月12日,美国图书馆协会(American Library Association)主席Leslie Burgergoogleblog上说,google已经加入了25前由美国图书馆协会等机构发起的禁书周Banned Books Week
禁书周旨在张扬阅读自由的理念,时间定在每年9月份的最后一个星期,今年的禁书周从9月23日到30日。读者可以在 google.com/bannedbooksGoogle Book Search 查找20世纪那些曾经被禁的伟大小说。
在ALA的网站上列出了20世纪最伟大的100部小说,其中有42部(黑体表示)是曾经被禁或者引起争论的,包括有《了不起的盖茨·比》、《麦田里的守望者》、《尤利西斯》、《1984》、《勇敢新世界》等等。

  1. The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald
  2. Catcher in the Rye, JD Salinger
  3. The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck
  4. To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee
  5. The Color Purple, Alice Walker
  6. Ulysses, James Joyce
  7. Beloved, Toni Morrison
  8. The Lord of the Flies, William Golding
  9. 1984, George Orwell
  10. The Sound and the Fury, William Faulkner
  11. Lolita, Vladmir Nabokov
  12. Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck
  13. Charlotte’s Web, EB White
  14. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, James Joyce
  15. Catch-22, Joseph Heller
  16. Brave New World, Aldous Huxley
  17. Animal Farm, George Orwell
  18. The Sun Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway
  19. As I Lay Dying, William Faulkner
  20. A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway
  21. Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad
  22. Winnie-the-Pooh, AA Milne
  23. Their Eyes were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston
  24. Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison
  25. Song of Solomon, Toni Morrison
  26. Gone with the Wind, Margaret Mitchell
  27. Native Son, Richard Wright
  28. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey
  29. Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut
  30. For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway
  31. On the Road, Jack Kerouac
  32. The Old Man and the Sea, Ernest Hemingway
  33. The Call of the Wild, Jack London
  34. To the Lighthouse, Virginia Woolf
  35. Portrait of a Lady, Henry James
  36. Go Tell it on the Mountain, James Baldwin
  37. The World According to Garp, John Irving
  38. All the King’s Men, Robert Penn Warren
  39. A Room with a View , EM Forster
  40. The Lord of the Rings, JRR Tolkien
  41. Schindler’s List, Thomas Keneally
  42. The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton
  43. The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand
  44. Finnegans Wake, James Joyce
  45. The Jungle, Upton Sinclair
  46. Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf
  47. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Frank L. Baum
  48. Lady Chatterley’s Lover, DH Lawrence
  49. A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
  50. The Awakening, Kate Chopin
  51. My Antonia, Willa Cather
  52. Howard’s End, EM Forster
  53. In Cold Blood, Truman Capote
  54. Franny and Zooey, JD Salinger
  55. Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie
  56. Jazz, Toni Morrison
  57. Sophie’s Choice, William Styron
  58. Absalom, Absalom!, William Faulkner
  59. Passage to India, EM Forster
  60. Ethan Frome, Edith Wharton
  61. A Good Man is Hard to Find, Flannery O’Connor
  62. Tender is the Night, F. Scott Fitzgerald
  63. Orlando, Virginia Woolf
  64. Sons and Lovers, DH Lawrence
  65. Bonfire of the Vanities, Thomas Wolfe
  66. Cat’s Cradle, Kurt Vonnegut
  67. A Separate Peace, John Knowles
  68. Light in August, William Faulkner
  69. The Wings of the Dove, Henry James
  70. Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe
  71. Rebecca, Daphne du Maurier
  72. A Hithchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams
  73. Naked Lunch, William S. Burroughs
  74. Brideshead Revisited, Evelyn Waugh
  75. Women in Love, DH Lawrence
  76. Look Homeward, Angel, Thomas Wolfe
  77. In Our Time, Ernest Hemingway
  78. The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Gertrude Stein
  79. The Maltese Falcon, Dashiell Hammett
  80. The Naked and the Dead, Norman Mailer
  81. The Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys
  82. White Noise, Don DeLillo
  83. O Pioneers!, Willa Cather
  84. Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller
  85. The War of the Worlds, HG Wells
  86. Lord Jim, Joseph Conrad
  87. The Bostonians, Henry James
  88. An American Tragedy, Theodore Dreiser
  89. Death Comes for the Archbishop, Willa Cather
  90. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame
  91. This Side of Paradise, F. Scott Fitzgerald
  92. Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand
  93. The French Lieutenant’s Woman, John Fowles
  94. Babbitt, Sinclair Lewis
  95. Kim, Rudyard Kipling
  96. The Beautiful and the Damned, F. Scott Fitzgerald
  97. Rabbit, Run, John Updike
  98. Where Angels Fear to Tread, EM Forster
  99. Main Street, Sinclair Lewis
  100. Midnight’s Children , Salman Rushdie
另外ALA网站上面“美国图书馆协会道德法则"(Code of Ethics of the American Library Association)和“图书馆权利法案”(Library Bill of Rights)也是值得一看。

Google’s China Problem (and China’s Google Problem)

这是 Clive Thompson于今年4月23日发表于纽约时报的旧文,记得当时国内博客有人转载过,似乎还有人翻译成中文,我也复制了英文原文贴在自己的天涯博客上,当时自己也没有细看。今天突然心血来潮,花了一个下午的时间借助金山词霸把这篇长文看完了,的确获得很多以前不了解的信息。
强烈推荐!
原文在此:Google’s China Problem

Veni, Vidi, Wiki:一个关于维基的可以维基的地方

September 13, 2006

著名的科技网站wired new的记者ryan singel上个月写了一篇关于wiwi的文章,讨论如何使wiki这种模式更具用户友好性,以及wiki这种公开协作的模式是如何在其他软件和现实世界里生根立足的。文章写好之后编辑决定将其放到网上,让读者加入进来,用wiki的模式一起完成这篇关于wiki的文章。 现在这个叫作veni.vidi.wiki的地方已经蔚为大观,有讨论wiki模式会不会失败的,有认为wiki不仅仅只是wikipedia这种模式的,有说wiki并不孤单(比如还有wikitravelwikihow之类的东西在),等等。可惜我英文太蹩脚了,很多东西都还看不懂。 不过这个地方的确值得推荐:veni.vidi.wiki

民主党派认真学习《江泽民文选》

转台的时候,一不小心看到一群老人在开会。停下来看了一下,原来是民主党派人士在认真学习《江泽民文选》 。
罗永浩说我国的民主党派存在的目的是支持中国共产党的领导,他说他很奇怪既然这么支持我党的领导为什么不直接加入呢。
罗永浩举例说一个人具有独立思考能力的标志之一就是,能够感觉到《人民日报》和《新闻联播》说的基本不是人话。

冠军联赛开锣,罗马大胜对手

新赛季欧洲冠军联赛昨晚开锣, 作为罗马球迷,看到罗马4:0大胜顿涅茨克矿工,塔代伊、托蒂、德罗西、皮萨罗先后开斋,这是这几天为数不多的开心事之一。

可笑的是,国米居然0:1输给了里斯本竞技,看看他们那套阵容,那是之前玩CM的时候才敢想象的。作为罗马的主要竞争对手,我乐得在一旁幸灾乐祸。

唯一担心的是以罗马的球队厚度能否应付欧洲和国内联赛的双线作战。或者他们应该把主要精力放在意甲联赛,欧联能赢多少算多少。

另:博客乱码问题似乎通过手工逐一修改可以复原,但愿只是这次这是偶然。

为什么我这里会乱码

这是为什么呢?

英国卫报(Guardian):维基(wikipedia)不向中国网络检查制度屈服

September 12, 2006

原文出处:Guardian Unlimited

9 月10日英国《卫报》报道:维基不向中国的网络检查制度屈服。维基从去年10月开始就被中国政府封锁了。包括Google、Microsoft和 Yahoo在内的世界其他重要网络公司为了争取中国市场(?)先后屈服于中国政府,如大家所知道的Google在中国大陆变成了谷歌。

当然,维基坚持己见实际上对中国大陆的网民是一种遗憾和损失,毕竟如果不通过代理或者其他手段,他们是看不到上面本来可以看到的东西的。

就目前的情况来说,互相妥协一点是不是对大家都有好处呢?或者维基不屑于我们中国人引以为荣的中庸之道。

The founder of Wikipedia, the online encyclopaedia written by its users, has defied the Chinese government by refusing to bow to censorship of politically sensitive entries.

Jimmy Wales, one of the 100 most influential people in the world according to Time magazine, challenged other internet companies, including Google, to justify their claim that they could do more good than harm by co-operating with Beijing.

Wikipedia, a hugely popular reference tool in the West, has been banned from China since last October. Whereas Google, Microsoft and Yahoo went into the country accepting some restrictions on their online content, Wales believes it must be all or nothing for Wikipedia.

His stand comes as Irrepressible.info, a joint campaign by The Observer and Amnesty International for free speech on the web, continues with the support of more than 37,000 people around the world. The campaign calls on governments to stop persecuting political bloggers and on IT companies to stop complying with these repressive regimes.

‘We’re really unclear why we would be [banned],’ Wales told The Observer. ‘We have internal rules about neutrality and deleting personal attacks and things like this. We’re far from being a haven for dissidents or a protest site. So our view is that the block is in error and should be removed, but we shall see.’

Wales said censorship was ‘ antithetical to the philosophy of Wikipedia. We occupy a position in the culture that I wish Google would take up, which is that we stand for the freedom for information, and for us to compromise I think would send very much the wrong signal: that there’s no one left on the planet who’s willing to say "You know what? We’re not going to give up."’

Wikipedia’s entry on the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 includes the government’s official claim that 200-300 died and the Chinese student associations and Chinese Red Cross’s estimate of 2,000-3,000 deaths.

Wales said: ‘I think it’s an interesting question whether they’re prepared to understand the difference between advocating one set of figures or another versus simply reporting on what the controversy is. I can understand that they would be upset - although of course I still don’t think they have any moral right to ban anything - if we were pushing one set of figures in contrast to their objections, but if we are reporting both, to me that’s exactly what an encyclopaedia should do and they should be comfortable with that.’

Wales will meet senior Chinese officials in an attempt to persuade them to allow the website’s 1.3 million articles to appear there uncensored.

‘One of the points that I’m trying to push is that if there’s a small town in China that has a wonderful local tradition, that won’t make its way into Wikipedia because the people of China are not allowed to share their knowledge with the world. I think that’s an ironic side-effect and something the people in the censorship department need to have a much bigger awareness of: you’re not just preventing information about Falun Gong or whatever you’re upset about getting into China, you’re preventing the Chinese people speaking to the world.’

The Irrepressible.info website will allow visitors next week to access and distribute censored content.

The campaign

Since Amnesty International launched Irrepressible.info with The Observer on 28 May 2006:

· More than 37,000 people around the world have signed the pledge calling on all governments and companies to ensure the internet is a force for political freedom, not repression. They include Coldplay’s Chris Martin, dotcom entrepreneur Martha Lane Fox, Bob Geldof and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

· The House of Commons foreign affairs select committee has condemned Google, Microsoft and Yahoo’s co-operation with the Chinese government as ‘morally unacceptable’.

· Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, has said that the company compromised its principles by accepting Chinese censorship. He said it was ‘a set of rules that we weren’t comfortable with.’

· Members of the US Congress have championed the Global Online Freedom Act in a bid to stop major internet companies co-operating with regimes that restrict free expression, including Belarus, China, Cuba, Ethiopia, Iran, Laos, North Korea, Tunisia and Vietnam.