![]()
CONCEPTS
JOURNALS
EXPLORE
Academic Commons
Chronicle of Higher Education
SFC NYC 2011
Larry Lessig, Harvard Berkman Klein
Jonathon Richter, Immersive Learning Research Network
Doug Blandy, UO Folklore
Mark Johnson, UO Philosophy
Antonio Lopez, John Cabot Univ.
Victoria Vensa, UCLA Art|Sci
Berkeley DMAX/BAMPFA
Berkman Center, Dana Boyd
Berkman Center Harvard Law
MediaBerkman Harvard Law
Bioneers Collective Heritage Institute
Cardozo Law, Susan Crawford
Complexity Digest
Cooperation Commons *
Digital Humanities UCLA
• welcome
Harvard Free Culture Computer Society
Santa Fe Institute
Intl. Society for Systems Sciences
New England Complex Systems Institute
Institute for Ethics and Emerging Tech
Kairos: Rhetoric, Tech, Pedagogy
MediaTropes
MIT CMS New Media Literacies
• NML Blog
MIT Center for Civic Media
Music Cognition Matters
New Media Consortium
Pressthink, New York University
On The Commons
Open Source Lab, Oregon State Univ.
Our (and Your) RISD
Regenerative & Permaculture Institutes
Creative Commons
Stanford Archeolog
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Stanford Humanities Lab
Stanford Metamedia
Stanford MetaverseU *
Stanford Open Source Lab
Stanford Philosophy Talk
Uplift Academy, Tom Munnecke
Contribute
There are 3 unlogged users and 0 registered users online.
You can log-in or register for a user account here. |
Thursday, March 17, 2005 - 04:40 PM
![]() "Lawrence Lessig first published Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace in 1999. After five years in print and five years of changes in law, technology, and the context in which they reside, Code needs an update. But rather than do this alone, Professor Lessig is using this wiki to open the editing process to all, to draw upon the creativity and knowledge of the community. This is an online, collaborative book update; a first of its kind." - Code v.2 wiki.
Code v.1 What is code.google.com? Code.google.com is our site for external developers interested in Google-related development. It’s where we’ll publish free source code and lists of our API services. Who are the people behind code.google.com? A lot of people worked together to both prepare source code for release and prepare code.google.com for launch and ongoing maintenance. We really care about free and open source software (F/OSS) at Google, and this site is one aspect of that affection. AND What is Google Print? Google's mission is to organize the world's information, but much of that information isn't yet online. Google Print aims to get it there by putting book content where you can find it most easily – right in your Google search results. How does Google Print work? Just do an ordinary Google search. When we find a book whose content contains a match for your search terms, we'll link to it in your search results. Click a book title and you'll see the page of the book that has your search terms, along with other information about the book and "Buy this Book" links to online bookstores (you can view the entirety of public domain books or, for books under copyright, just a few pages or in some cases, only the title’s bibliographic data and brief snippets). You can also search for more information within that specific book and find nearby libraries that have it.
|
GETTING STARTED
INTERNET ARCHIVE
WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION
PUBLIC LEARNING
OPEN COURSEWARE
OPEN DL, ML, & RL
       • Deep Learning OPEN FORGES
OPEN METAVERSE
       • Blender [3D Suite]
OPEN ACCESS
OPEN WEBCASTS
OPEN MOVIES
FREE CULTURE +
OPEN ACCESS TEXTS
Blog. Cliff Gerrish - Echovar
Blog. Solving For Pattern
Blog. PaulBHartzog
Blog. Dave Pollard
Blog. George Por
Electronic Frontier Foundation [EFF]
Free Software Foundation News
Login
Future of the Book
Groklaw *
High Fidelity Dreams Scott Draves
H+ magazine
IFTF Future Now
Kolabora Collaboration
Make Magazine & Craft Zine
Nation of Makers
Neurotechnology Zack Lynch
NextNow Collaborative
Unconference.net
Valley Zen
Visual Complexity
Wikinews
WorldChanging
|