Feb 24

In reading Bruce Schneier’s post When the Internet Is My Hard Drive, Should I Trust Third Parties? I was struck with the thought that things are necessarily as bad as he makes them out to be. Using sites like ma.gnolia, diigo and even Google Notebook it is possible to save not only a link but also the actual content of the link. So if the original source goes away, you still have the content.

Of course, you are putting your trust in the fact that ma.gnolia itself is not going to go away and take all of your archived content with it. But if you look beyond web-based tools to something like Soho Notes, you can clip and save (and backup) web content to your local drive all you want and reduce your chances of being a victim of link-rot. Having a synchronization mechanism between online and local (or mobile for that matter) data would improve the survivability of the data.

I would still like to see this problem ‘solved’ by implementing what I call Ubiquitous Data.

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Feb 24

Depending on how you do the math, either yesterday or March 31st is the 10th Anniversary of Mozilla. In a way, it doesn’t seem that long ago. And in thinking about it, it hasn’t been ten years, because the real game changer didn’t get started until six years later (in 2004) when the first release of Firefox arrived on the scene.

Since then, Firefox has delivered a little over three years of innovation and improvements. More than can be said for the stale, outdated default provided by a large, malicious corporation. It will be interesting to see what Firefox is delivering as it reaches it’s tenth. The inclusion in the next release of semantic web awareness is (to me anyway) a sign of good things to come.

Cheers, Mozilla.

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