Posts Tagged ‘Politics


J’ai repris le code de mon Book ReadR

Je m’en suis servi pour remettre en page un texte (.PDF) écrit par Etienne Chouard en 2011 (trouvé via le-message.org sur FB…)

 

C’est à lire en ligne ici http://www.b2bweb.fr/etienne-chouard/ :)

 

Traduction, repères visuels de navigation, “responsive design” HTML5, etc… je suis ouvert à toutes vos remarques et j’attends des retours :)

J’ai amélioré le concept de “viewport slider” (Cf. scrollbar)

 

tirage-au-sort-democratie

 

C’est pas mal quand même pour lire un long texte… non ?

 

Anciens et autres travaux :

 

 

Une sélection de vidéos sur de nombreux sujets liés à la politique : Monde, Guerre, Economie, Société, … Plus de 30h de reportages pour vos longues soirées d’automne ;)

 

 

Je recommande :

 

Ma playlist complète sur Youtube : http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLB5A7F97C5C70FFD6

Go ! :)

 

 

-EDIT- Des ressources et playsists par ici aussi… !

 

Et des pages Facebook sur lesquels circulent quelques liens…, même si il arrive que certains articles soient à prendre avec des pincettes…

Shared by molokoloco

[Philo : Le monde à l'envers]

 

“Either we all live in a decent world, or nobody does.”

A single page with his most famous quotes. Check it here : http://www.b2bweb.fr/orwell/

The page have be done in a couple of hours with “My book readR” project :) More infos

 

 

Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed :
everything else is public relations.
“ George Orwell

Durant ces quatre dernières années, La Quadrature du Net a alerté et fait campagne contre ACTA.

Ils ont besoin de notre soutient pour vaincre ACTA et défendre nos libertés…

ACTA / Dernières étapes cruciales avant le vote final / Soutenez la Quadrature

 

 

Shared by molokoloco

Qui sait ce qu’il faut attendre au second tour 2012 ?

 

Les 9 et 16 Octobre, qui peut voter ?

 

Tous les citoyens français inscrits sur les listes électorales avant le 31 décembre 2010. Et lors des primaires, il suffit de s’acquitter d’une participation au frais d’organisation de 1 € minimum et de signer l’engagement de reconnaissance dans les valeurs de la Gauche. C’est vous qui choisirez le candidat du changement en 2012 ! http://www.lesprimairescitoyennes.fr/comment-ca-marche

 

Astuces HTML5 :

 

Facebook :

 

Google :

  • @Fredzone AlloStreaming et AlloShowTV supprimés de Googlet.co/fEPdSlKi #fredzone
  • @mattcutts Stats from today’s YouTube live stream: 500+ simultaneous viewers, >1200+ people total. Thanks for all your great questions!
  • @googlewmc Today’s webmaster video : We did a live streamt.co/uPtdFMIx
  • @bdescary Google+ : assistez à une Vidéo-bulle depuis votre iPhone :http://dsy.me/1ts #fb
  • @sc72__ w3sh magazine – [Infographie] En 13 ans, Google a remplacé votre cerveau! t.co/Ma3halIM
  • @sh1mmer Omg. Chrome is awesome. “Other users are also experiencing difficulties connecting to this site, so you may have to wait a few minutes.”
  • @GoogleCode Google Apps Script gets bigger and stronger with three new APIs. t.co/8fIgPfa6
  • @clochix Dash est une déclaration de guerre de Google contre l’Open Web “We will (…) encourage Google developers start off targeting Chrome-only”
  • @levanhen Up to date Google Goggles brings Automated scanning carry out, makes your digital camera smarter: Android Mobile… t.co/x4eyz2Aq

 

Politique :

  • @edwyplenel De Karachi à Takieddine, toute l’histoire était sur Mediapart. Elle est maintenant devant le juge Van Ruymbeke. Et c’est une affaire d’Etat
  • @PetulaMoore Qui a financé le RPR/UMP/Magouille&Cie ? / Liliane Bettencourt ☑ / Les dirigeants africains ☑ / Les rétrocommissions de l’affaire Karachi ☑
  • @virginie06 La CNIL adresse un carton rouge au pompage des réseaux sociaux – Numerama t.co/MVidjq62
  • @PartiPirate RT @UnGarage: Important : faites-vous entendre sur la concertation Télé connectée pour défendre la neutralité du Net ! t.co/tUECFe5
  • @mikiane Vous voulez agir pour la net neutralité ? t.co/XZrW1UlF
  • @PetulaMoore Si mes calculs sont exacts, 58,000 postes ont été supprimés dans l’éducation nationale depuis 2007. Ça va les jeunes ? Pas trop entassés ?
  • @JuBox Orelsan “Suicide social” http://t.co/7aZ7how6 > titre dévastateur blindés de punchlines et clip de furieux #ClapClap

 

En vrac :


Shared by molokoloco

This come from an email send by the Diaspora* Crew

 

Dear Friend of Diaspora*

 

Thanks again for your interest in joining the Diaspora* community, and for your patience. We’re working on getting your invite out to you as quickly as possible, and we’re still committed to getting it to you by the end of October. We’re pushing out hundreds of thousands of invitations as quickly as we can — thanks for bearing with us.

As promised in our previous message, we want to tell you a little more about why we believe so strongly in Diaspora*’s mission: to build a new and better social web, one that’s 100% owned and controlled by you and other Diasporans.

Diaspora*’s distributed design is a huge part of it. Like the Internet itself, Diaspora* isn’t housed in any one place, and it’s not controlled by any one entity (including us). We’ve created software that lets you set up and run your own social network on your own “pod” (or server) and connect your network to the larger Diaspora* ecosystem. You can have a pod all to yourself, or one for just you and your friends, or your family, giving you complete ownership and control over your personal social information (including your identity, your posts, and your photos) and how it’s all stored and shared. Or you can simply join one of more than 20 open pods.[1]

 

This means you can do what you want. You can express yourself candidly, and be your authentic self. You can go by whatever name you like on Diaspora*. Pseudonyms are fine, and this both protects you (if you want to say something your boss or your parents disagree with) and opens the door to real connection. Here’s how one blogger and Diasporan put it:

Maybe his kind words mean so much to me because T is someone I’ve met through a [pseudo]nym — he got to know the real me’s ideals and beliefs, and liked that person… A compliment from [him] is based on my own sincerity, and thus, has a certain purity. It is untainted by perceptions of how I look, what I’m wearing, and so on. Given that, I value it especially highly.[2]

This kind of authentic connection brings back the social freedom that made the Internet awesome in the first place. And this is just the beginning.

You can make great connections with anyone in the Diaspora* ecosystem, not just the people on your own pod, because the pods are linked together.

You can also use Diaspora* as a home base for your outbound posts on Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr, writing to them all from Diaspora*. In the future, you’ll be able to monitor your inbound streams from Diaspora* as well.

Yet our distributed design means no big corporation will ever control Diaspora*. Diaspora* will never sell your social life to advertisers, and you won’t have to conform to someone’s arbitrary rules or look over your shoulder before you speak.

And because your information is yours, not ours, you’ll have the ultimate power – the ability to move your profile and all your social data from one pod to another, without sacrificing your connection to the social web. Over time, this will bring an end to the indifferent, self-serving behavior that people can’t stand[3] from the walled gardens that dominate social networking today. When you can vote with your feet for the environment where you feel safest, the big guys will have to shape up, or risk losing you.

We’re still building this move-your-profile capability, as well as other key features. It’s hard work, but we’re building the future we want to see, with incredible community support.

Diaspora* is a genuine community effort. More than 160 people have contributed to our code, putting us in the top 2% of all open source projects tracked by Ohloh.[4] Hundreds more volunteers have translated Diaspora* into 13 of the world’s spoken languages so far, with another 32 translations in progress. Thousands of Diasporans have given us more than 3,000 points of feedback. (We’re listening closely, and building the features you’re asking for as fast as we can.) And of course, thousands of donors have helped pay for our development, and hundreds of thousands of people — including you — are patiently waiting for access to try it out.

Thanks again for your patience. We can’t wait to see you here, and to build a brighter future together.

Sincerely,

- Dan, Max, Ilya, Sarah, Yosem, and Peter
Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

 

[1]: JoinDiaspora.com is just one of the pods within the Diaspora* ecosystem. Here’s a directory of some of the others that are open to new users (there are even more out there too, including many that are private, not open).
[2]: Excerpts from this blog post by Garidin Winslow.
[3]: “Report: Facebook Is Most Hated Social Media Company”, Courtney Rubin, Inc. Magazine, July 20, 2011.
[4]: http://www.ohloh.net/p/diaspora/factoids/10029264

 

Thomas Monopoly a vu son compte Google, et ceux qu’il avait associés, désactivés du jour au lendemain, sans qu’il ne soit averti. Fâcheuse aventure qu’il raconte ici. Son compte, fermé pour des raisons de violation des conditions d’utilisation, a été réactivé depuis. Artiste, l’auteur a monté une exposition – numérique – il y a trois ans intitulée “L’évolution du sexe” et dans laquelle il avait inséré  une photo “à la limité de la légalité“. Qui ne lui appartenait pas. Cette exposition avait pour but de souligner la violence et [...]

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