This weekend was nice. I have a new year’s tradition of re-reading my StungEye post from the previous year. I also re-read and update my resolutions. Here’s a recap of my 2010.
Doing Is Real; Being Is A Social Fiction*
Most of my 2010 resolutions were about doing stuff, rather than thinking about doing stuff. ; )
As such, I:
- Presented a talk on Internet start-ups at the RRC Directions conference.
- Participated in the Google AI Tron Challenge.
- Completed three courses for my Certificate in Adult Education.
- Spent the summer working on various home renos.
- Helped create WinnipegElection.ca.
- Applied and was accepted to attend TEDx Manitoba.
- Started a new programming blog, CodeGlutton.
To increase my productivity (or better said, to decrease my procrastination) I’ve been experimenting with a simple To-Do system based on video game “achievement theory”. Some inspirations:
WinnipegElection.ca
Our goal with WinnipegElection.ca was to increase citizen engagement in Winnipeg civic politics by creating an online information hub for voters, candidates and journalists. This past October we helped over 35 thousand Winnipeggers research their mayoral, council and school trustee candidates.
The site was inspired by openParliament.ca, which was inspired by howdTheyVote.ca and theyWorkForYou.com.
We will be announcing a new project later this month, built in collaboration with RRC Journalism students. We will continue to focus on organizing and sharing publicly available political data.
Intellectual Property and the Public Domain
Twenty-ten was the year I finally overcame my fear of the public domain.
“He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me. That ideas should freely spread from one to another over the globe, for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density in any point, and like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive appropriation. Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property.” — Thomas Jefferson
Prior to this year I had been using a (fairly permissive) Creative Commons license for all my publicly available source-code, blog content and Flickr photos. After pondering the above-linked essay I no longer wished to force attribution or to place non-commercial-use restrictions on my works. I claim no ownership over the ideas I choose to share with others.
This year I released the following soure-code as public domain using the Unlicense:
- Three Processing Sketches
- glutton_lastfm
- glutton_ratelimit
- WinnipegElection.ca + 2010 Open Data
- Marvel Social Network
Also:
- Yesterday was Public Domain Day.
- The Unlicense: The First Year in Review
- Bill C32, the Canadian Copyright Moderization act is working it’s way through the House of Commons.
- My thoughts on Bill C32.