March 28, 2006

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Living books are the wave of the future:

Flat-Footed: Friedman Shows FSG How to Think Fast - 3/28/2006 - Publishers Weekly

Thomas L. Friedman, author of the bestselling The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century (FSG), practices what he preaches. Just one year after the initial publication of his book, which examines the rapid technological innovation and constant change that contribute to the “flattening” of the world, the text is getting an update and expansion, to the tune of 100 new pages and a new introduction. “We have version 2.0 now,” said FSG publisher Jonathan Galassi. “In a way, the revision of the book is in keeping with the spirit of the book.”

The new edition features new reporting, insights and commentary, drawn both from Friedman’s 2005 travels (to India, China and the Middle East) and from his encounters with readers around the country who have shared their accounts of the flattening of the world as they have felt it. FSG senior editor Paul Elie, who worked closely with Friedman on both editions of the book, said, “Because of Tom’s work at the Times, his understanding of how stories change is acute. He publishes 100 columns a year. He has to call it as he sees it at the time, and then refine it as he goes. That’s his temperament, and why shouldn’t we make it happen with the book, if we can?”

Friedman’s new introduction boasts that “it is now possible to revamp a whole book relatively easily.” Elie puts that statement into perspective: “Relatively easily compared to the past, yes. But it’s not easy, it doesn’t do itself.”

How true.

The World Is Flat was first published in April 2005, and the new edition of the book, which will have a 330,000-copy first printing, will go on sale April 18.

So let’s do a little back-of-the-envelope math. Assume for convenience sake that Friedman gets 8% of 24.95, or roughly $2.00 per book. That’s $660,000 for 100 pages, or $6600/page. I can see Friedman at his desk now:

Damn! that was a good page!

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Early Warning by William M. Arkin - washingtonpost.com

Do we really believe that the U.S. military thinks that Russia had a spy in the middle of American war planning for Iraq or that Russia broke some American code and listened in on U.S. war preparations in 2003?

And do we really think that Secretary of State and former national security advisor Condoleezza Rice first heard of this on Friday, as she made believe she did yesterday in television interviews?

The answer to both questions is no.

Welcome to the self-perpetuating world of spy vs. spy.

The nutshell summary of William H. Arkin’s article about the Russia spying disclosures is that Arkin’s mental filters are so finely tuned that they screen out all new information.

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Official Google Blog: And we’re back

The Google Blog was unavailable for a short time tonight. We quickly learned from our initial investigation that there was no systemwide vulnerability for Blogger. We’ll let you know more about what did happen once we finish looking into it.

Update: We’ve determined the cause of tonight’s outage. The blog was mistakenly deleted by us (d’oh!) which allowed the blog address to be temporarily claimed by another user. This was not a hack, and nobody guessed our password. Our bad.

This is inspiring.

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