In yet another sign of growing support for common sense election reform, the office of Senator Joe Leibham (R-Sheboygan) today released a poll indicating 70% of Wisconsin municipal clerks surveyed support a photo ID requirement at the polls.
129 clerks responded to the survey, and 90 support photo ID at the polls. When coupled with a recent survey released in February by the Republican Party of Wisconsin (RPW) that shows 84.3% of likely voters support photo ID, the head of RPW said it is time for Governor James E. Doyle to stop ignoring the will of the people and take action in support of this common-sense election reform.
Wisconsin Badgers vs. N.C. State: NCAA Sweet Sixteen Basketball
Viral Marketing
Every company we’ve spoken to already has somebody working on this,” said Andy Sernovitz, CEO of the Word of Mouth Marketing Association, or WOMMA. “It’s called different things — viral, buzz, customer satisfaction. But in the four months since we started, we’ve got 60 corporate members, and 3,000 people on our mailing list.”
Call it what you like, marketers of all kinds have been increasingly looking for ways to take advantage of the speed at which information moves today and the power that can come from people passing on their impressions, recommendations or referrals of products or services.
This is not something that can be manufactured – though many will try. Rather, it’s only successful when spontaneous and genuine….
Diesel Hybrids on the way
Vehicles with diesel engines typically get 25 to 30 percent more miles to the gallon than their gasoline counterparts, according to Charlie Freese, executive engineering director at GM Powertrain. Freese said the many factors that make diesel engines more efficient include operating unthrottled and more efficient oxidizing of fuel. Diesel engines also have a higher compression ratio, and the heavier diesel fuel has a higher energy density, according to Freese
Calatrava’s Milwaukee Art Musuem: Nocturnal Illumination?
As Calatrava projects go, this one is unusually subdued at night. His buildings and bridges in Spain, many of which I saw on a Calatrava-related odyssey in 2001, are beautifully lighted, sometimes theatrically so. His City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia, for example, becomes a charismatic town square at night, with an eyeball-shaped planetarium that gives off a lantern-like glow and a museum whose white ribcage looks even more dramatic than in the daytime. Calatrava himself designed the dramatic lighting for his cabled Alamillo Bridge in Seville (1992), its leaning-harp profile a forerunner of our own (well-lighted) 6th St. Viaduct, designed by Kahler Slater Architects.
What Price Trusted PC Security?
Because the trusted computing base is also used to make digital rights management systems more secure, this will give content providers a lot more control over what we can do with music, movies and books that we have bought from them.
Literary Collaboration: The King James Bible
A Palm Sunday Link: Dan Gillmor notes that David Bollier draws a parallel between today’s internet collaboration & the King James Bible.
We high-tech moderns like to think we have little connection to the past, but as I pondered the new online collaborations, I couldn’t help thinking that we could benefit from considering one of the greatest literary collaborations in history, the King James Bible.
Organize your Brain
James Fallows discusses several software tools that help organize thoughts, ideas and projects. Well worth reading. I use a couple of these tools: Aquamind’s NoteTaker as well as Omni Group’s Graffle & Outliner. ConceptDraw’s Project is another similar product.
The Singles Scene at Home Depot
Scott Simon takes a fascinating look at the singles scene at Home Depot. Evidently, some of these stores have hosted weddings…
Government Video News Releases
I find the conversation about Government video news releases much ado about nothing. How is this different than a media organization reprinting a press release – which happens all the time? The problem is not completely with the government, rather, it’s publishers who don’t bother to look into these releases and determine if there is another angle, or even a story worth spending time on, rather than just hitting the “print” button, as it were.