Archives payantes? [en]

Par curiosité, et parce que je ne me souvenais plus exactement de ce que j’avais écrit, je suis allée me promener sur les forums de Transfert. J’y avais réagi à  l’époque de l’affaire Kaycee Nicole Swenson.

Quelle ne fut pas ma surprise de découvrir que pour accéder à  l’article original, il faut être abonné au journal! Heureusement, j’ai pu retrouver la copie de cet article dans l’archive Internet. Merci la Wayback Machine!

Si ça continue comme ça, je vais faire systématiquement des liens vers ces archives… ou bien faire des copies locales *grrr*. Les URIs sympas ne changent pas – rendre payant ce qui était gratuit, n’est-ce pas un changement?

Update de dernière minute: Libération, même combat.

Indian Police [en]

Seems Anita’s husband got whacked on the head and taken to the police station for… doing nothing.

The conversation she cites remindes me of this one.

Best of Swiss Web? [en]

Je viens de découvrir Best of Swiss Web. Le gagnant est… je vous le donne en mille: un site flash sans alternative html!

India, Pakistan, and History [en]

A few months back I read this post of Anil’s, in which he suggests reunification as a solution to the India-Pakistan situation. I must say I personally quite like this solution, although I’m not sure it’s really viable (see my ideas on critical mass and big communities). I won’t comment further on the problem and its possible solutions, though, as I totally lack the political and economical insight to do so.

One argument in Anil’s post shocked me, however, and this is what I want to talk about today:

I also feel like the division of 50 years, or one hundred years, or however long it lasts, pales in comparison to the thousands of years of shared history.

[…]

It should only take a strong leader to remind Indians, Pakistanis, and Kashmiris of their thousands of years of shared history.

Anil Dash, Jan. 2002

The thousands of years of shared history is unfortunately a reinterpretation of history. The indian subcontinent was more or less unified under the Raj, and also at some point under the Moghul domination, but apart from that its history is definitely not one of unification.

I’m currently in the process of digging out enough indian history to demonstrate this (as I like giving evidence for what I state – sometimes). The “united subcontinent” is another of these “myths” whose origin can certainly be traced to relatively recent times (19th or 20th century, probaly). If anybody is interested, I’ll do a bit of research about it.

Now, let it be clear that I don’t blame Anil a bit for making that statement. We all—me included—repeat things that are “common knowledge” every day, and (unfortunately?) a fair amount of such things “heard and repeated” are false (heard about urban legends?)

The reason I’m telling you about this is because when I read the post, I thought “OK, that’s definitely not correct… but where on earth do I start to explain that it’s wrong? Do I have to go through the entire history of the indian subcontinent?” Actually, it’s possible to give a concise explanation—which I will try to do in a future post. The problem, I have now realized, is that my knowledge of indian history isn’t thorough enough that I am able to do so off the top of my head, even though I remember having seen evidence proving the point. So I’ll sweat a bit for the education of my readers and hunt it down 😉

I run in to this “where do I start?” problem pretty often, especially when the subject matter happens to be in my field of expertise. For example, I have joined buddha-l for my dissertation research. One of the reasons I haven’t participated to discussions there is that a lot of what is said is so far “off the mark” that I just can’t answer to it with my (limited, albeit specialized) student’s knowledge. If I’m pointing at Anil’s post today, it’s simply this afternoon’s indian culture lecture happened to mention Independence and Partition…

Scientologie [en]

A suivre: suite à  la censure par google d’une partie des pages de xenu.net, le célèbre site voué à  la lutte contre l’Eglise de Scientologie, une discussion sur la Scientologie, à  laquelle je participe activement (la discussion, pas la Scientologie!)

Scientology [en]

The CoS (Church of Scientology) is obviously pretty fearful of the work done by Operation Clambake, as it has seemingly asked Google to stop indexing this site.

See the article on Wired, and the email that xenu.org received from Google.

The latest news at Operation Clambake and a quick bout of googling tells us that Google is indexing most of the site again. If you think the work Operation Clambake is doing is useful, don’t hesitate to:

This piece of news gave me the motivation necessary to put online the reviews I had written for Fathom5 and AstoundingWeb (when they were alive), and in particular the review of Operation Clambake.

[from c-est-tout.com]

Heat [en]

I left my Easter Bunny on my desk today. Actually, it’s been there these last days and I’ve been steadily nibbling at it.

As the weather was nice and grey this morning, and the building in front of my balcony is getting taller (thus stealing a fair amount of my light), I pulled up the blinds before I left.

When I got back home this evening, the bunny was gone.

Well, there was a pool of warm melted chocolate inside the plastic wrapping.

Sound and Sonnets [en]

Thanks to Romain who brought a sound card with him when he came over this week-end, I am now enjoying the auditory dimension of the web. I’ve also managed to get Flash to work with my browser, so you can expect multimedia linkage in the future.

Drop in at When Love Speaks and enjoy the promotional video (under “Downloads”). I’m really tempted, I have to say. And it’s not just for Alan Rickman’s track.

Romain also brought with him a digital camera — but I’ll tell you about that later.

Cats and Blogs [en]

I’ve been wanting to mention this project for some time, but never got around to doing it. If you have a cat and a blog, open wide your ears:

The Cat Bloggers Project presents photographs of cats and their blogging humans. You’ll find Bagha’s page out there, of course.