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| Sunday, March 31, 2002 |
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Dept. of Overstate
| | They're both terrific writers. |
Blogerrata
| | A number of folks have pointed out that one sponsor of the Anti-Mammal Dinosaur Protection Act, Ted Stevens of Alaska, isn't a Democrat. I sit corrected. |
| | One of those, Patrick Nielsen Hayden of Electrolite, also notes that my email address isn't posted on the blog. In fact it has long been sitting under the link from my name at the bottom of the About Doc page (which needs some serious updating). To make things easier, I just added the address in the text. At the same time I switched it from doc-at-searls.com to doc@ssc.com, because the latter is my work email address, which has far better spam filtration than my home address, which gets many dozens every day. |
Imagine auctioning the musical note b-flat
| | ...how do we get emerging national economies to scuttle the top down, centrally-controlled management of spectrum as a scarce resource model that is owned and help them adopt the more powerful ocean metaphor. Is spectrum not actually more like the ocean than a railroad in that it can be used by anyone, in any amount, is owned by no one, and should have the smallest set of operational rules? Why should we impose our archaic telecoms regulatory approaches on emerging nations when our current methods are simply the extension into the 21st century of models that were created to manage primitive early 20th century technologies? |
| | Thanks to Cam for pointing to Jock's piece. |
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