The successes of Ron Paul include $20 million in funds raised last quarter solely from individual contributions by more than 100,000 people. Ron Paul is basically becoming successful for many of the same reasons that open source software and social software have become so effective and popular.

The campaign is truly driven my its active, rapidly growing, disenchanted community. The established candidates are to Microsoft as Ron Paul is to Linux. Ron Paul provides a consistent, open, inviting platform for followers to contribute.

Most of Ron Paul’s success in raising funds and getting the word out has been organized through social networking sites such as Digg, Meet Up, and Facebook. MySpace recently ran an online presidential primary, and Ron Paul was the runaway winner on the republican site. But the social software aspect is apparent in that he has by far the most active and energized offline communities supporting him as well.

Fox News recently tried to exclude Ron Paul from its debate in New Hampshire. Ron Paul funded an on-air town hall forum that was much higher in quality than the Fox debate, and then tonight, he appeared on the Tonight Show where Jay Leno basically told the world that Ron Paul was wronged.

For anyone that believes Ron Paul is unelectable, the same thing was said in 1980 about Ronald Reagan. I’ve never really cared much about politics prior to this election. As many others have said already, “Ron Paul has cured my apathy.”

first nfl game

I had the opportunity to attend my first NFL game ever on December 30th thanks to Torrey. We had amazing seats… first row, 45 yard line, and the Cardinals won easily against the Rams, with their highest scoring performance in 30 years.

Football Game View Torrey at the football game

The interesting thing about sitting this close to the players is that they felt more ordinary and approachable than I would have expected. I actually felt like I could go out there on the field and compete with these guys. Of course, the next day, I went out and played some football and realized that my mind thinks I’m a much better player than my body does.

Oddly enough, I also feel like the NFL does an amazing job packaging football for TV, as the pace and time between plays feels a lot slower when in person than while watching on TV. This is in contrast with baseball, where I feel the in-person experience runs at a faster pace than it does on TV. Overall, attending a game in person is a great experience, and sitting in the first row is that much better.

maxjet, we hardly knew ya

Lost in the Christmas rush was the announcement on Christmas Eve that MaxJet has shut down operations and declared bankruptcy. MaxJet was my new favorite airline, providing amazing all-business class service from Los Angeles, Las Vegas, or New York to London Stansted. On our trip to Italy in October, we had such a great time on MaxJet that we were a bit disappointed when the flight from Los Angeles was over after “only” 11 hours.

In the end, the straw that broke MaxJet’s back was competitive pressure from American Airlines, which entered their one currently successful market (New York to Stansted). An all-business class service was an amazingly refreshing way to travel for long distance flgihts, and I hope that a revived MaxJet, EOS, or Silverjet will find a way to fill the void of non-stop, all premium service from the US west coast to Europe.

what about the owners?

In the recent Mitchell report about baseball and steroids, there is a significant list of circumstantial evidence against many past and present baseball players.

I would still make the case that the ethical dilemma of what is enhancing at what is medicine is still blurred… for example, is a pitcher that receives Tommy John surgery that extends his career and improves the speed of his fastball any worse than taking HGH to stay healthy and extend a career? But I digress… believing the accuracy of the report or the right or wrong nature of performance-enhancements is not the only interesting issue.

The report is missing the list of owners, general managers, managers, agents, player’s union leaders, and MLB executives that were complicit, aware of, or encouraged the use of steroids. The players were not acting alone.

I think any of these non-players would have to be very naive to not have a clue about the situation taking place. And yet, in the public eye, everyone is blaming the players, but not the parties that were complicit in allowing this to happen.

lacking originality

Every few weeks, Google News shows me a new article about Renkoo that is related to wacky internet company names. The latest is one by the Washington Post. I’ve noticed at least 30 iterations of this concept since March of 2006, with the same examples, and each author sadly trying to come up with catch phrases like “how do you tell a company name from a typo.”

From what I recall, this lame series of articles started from the fairly funny Web 2.0 or Star Wars Character? quiz, though there is likely prior art. This story has been retold so many times, and rarely does the reporter give credit to the people that originally had some interesting insight on the topic.

If you’re a reporter thinking about writing a story about silly company names, here’s a crazy idea. Do the world a favor, stop writing useless drivel, and starting writing about something useful or interesting instead.

ajaxian survey

Ajaxian is running a new version of their Ajax survey for those that are interested in taking part in such things.

cross site scripting

Andrew Betts has delivered a phenomenal summary of cross site scripting (XSS) techniques and options in today’s browsers in his article Cross Site Scripting Joy.

datejs

When I was working on a project a couple of years ago, I had an idea for a great, alternative way to select a date. In the end, the better parts of my work made their way into Dojo, and the natural language feature was dropped as it was non-essential at the time.

Today, I saw the very nicely done DateJs library by the people at Coolite, and at a first glance, their work looks really impressive. Combining this with a nice Dojo Date TextBox would start to approach what I had wanted to build previously.

ecmascript cloud

John Resig’s EcmaScript Cloud reminds me of our earlier DHTML Universe, except this is from the perspective of browser vendors and language implementers rather than users and extenders. Very cool.

safari 3 updates

Apple has collated a list of supported CSS properties in Safari. Most notable are the list of webkit-* properties, which are implementations that are either attempts at implementing a CSS 3 draft concept, or experiments by Apple in making CSS better.

On Surfin’ Safari, there’s also a new article about 10 new things with WebKit 3. For those not in the know, Safari and many other browsers are based on WebKit. Safari 3 is based on version 3 of WebKit.

That said, you won’t find more experimental features such as CSS Transforms in Safari 3… those features are found in the current WebKit nightly builds only.

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