Reason Magazine customizes new cover with each subscriber's name and satellite photo
— this sort of thing is considerably easier for online mags (via) #
Sean Palmer's Gmail preview with new screenshots
— user-defined labels, "starred" messages, and filters #
Amazon generated 6% of their 2002 revenue from web services
— if so, why don't more retailers offer them? (via) #
Lessig responds to a Forbes columnist's attacks
— the columnist calls Larry a "moron" and "idiot" (via) #
Live Music Archive hits 10,000 free shows
— highlights: Cowboy Junkies, Doughty, Soul Coughing, Tenacious D, Ben Lee, Ben Kweller (via) #
Webjay, listener-created playlists of web music
— great idea, but hotlinking MP3s is usually frowned upon (via) #
Man proposes to wife with Atari 2600 game
— geekiest marriage proposal ever, download the ROM (via) #
Mogi, location-based multiplayer gaming in Tokyo
— sounds like this is the first fun example of the genre (via) #
Xanga is more popular and viral than Friendster
— it's about to break Alexa's top 100 most trafficked websites #
Sound of Magic, tribute to Disney theme park music
— amazing site with tons of interesting MP3 downloads #
Ashcroft creates task force for copyright violations
— I'm hoping this is an early April Fool's joke #
Toronto court rules music sharing legal under Canadian copyright law
— plus, the Canadian RIAA can't subpoena ISPs for names #
Historical relationship of height to success
— a society's height is a biological shorthand for well-being (via) #
Shirky on micro-social software tailored to small groups
— not all software should be built to scale (via) #
Technorati hits 2 million blogs
— I noticed it this morning, but was waiting from comments by Dave #