<|BOS|> journalist/media type who seems to always be pushing the boundaries.
Arjun Basu: Writes the best fiction in 140 characters.
Watching Will Ferrell as a guest on Charlie Rose the other night. Will doesn’t have to say anything, but he always makes me laugh out loud.
The great and caring doctors and teachers in our society.<|EOS|>Diagnosis: Test round but elongated, brown, bilayered; inner hyaline sac invisible, outer layer consists of a thick compact layer of debris. Size usually 65 µm. Endoplasm granular, one vesicular nucleus, 13 µm.
Ecology: herbivorous, dry mosses on trees.<|EOS|>Awn hosts its code at git://github.com/p12tic/awn.git.
There are download files available for Awn.
Awn has 1 active review.
Awn has 18 active branches owned by 10 people and 2 teams. There were 0 commits in the last month.
We'll accept deprecated functions for a bit methinks.
1714. Launchpad automatic translations update.
Make Pango markup GNOME 2.22 (i.e., Pango 1.20) compatible.
Untested fix to remove the GTK+ 2.16 dependency for the detach code. Only tested if it built without errors.
Commiting WIP at the request of mhr3. More or less converted AwnBackground, AwnBackgroundFlat, AwnMonitor, and AwnPanel.
lp:~t-achim/awn/force-quit 0 Experimental 2008-06-24 18:05:27 UTC 2008-06-24 This branch has not been pushed to yet.
lp:~ruzzyca/awn/Ruzzy 1 Development 2008-04-30 10:44:05 UTC 2008-04-30 This branch has not been pushed to yet.
You can't create new branches for Awn.<|EOS|>Welcome to the New York City Internet Health Report, a Mozilla project made possible in collaboration with the NYC Mayor's Office of the Chief Technology Officer. To demonstrate what makes internet health meaningful for stakeholders and communities at the municipal level, this collection of case studies offers a portrait of a vibrant city working in different ways toward a common public good – an inclusive, safe, secure, open, and decentralized internet.
Digital inclusion: Beyond access, participation is safe and meaningful for all of us, including those who are traditionally marginalized or excluded from digital participation.
Decentralization: Instead of a few, the internet is controlled by many, for greater resilience, more diversity, and to prevent harmful concentrations of power.
Privacy and security: Everyone is able to assess and use digital and data systems safely.
Openness: Technologies and data that drive the Web are transparent and actionable.
Web literacy: Everyone can read, write, and participate in the digital era, as producers and consumers.
Piloting this project with New York City was intentional. After Mozilla launched the internet health framework in 2017, NYC saw its utility as a framework for action and planning, informed by a shared holistic approach to the internet and Mayor de Blasio’s commitment to values of justice driving the City’s historic tech and data focus. Now, there is evidence to report back on; we have a lot to learn from NYC's leaders about how to build healthy local digital ecosystems. By mapping these issues, and observing how they intersect with life in the city, this report illustrates the changing digital terrain in NYC and how intent, planning, and leadership -- in and out of government -- result in outcomes. Ideally, it helps stakeholders, decision makers, and advocates identify best practices that, with City investment, amplify initiatives and policies driven by civil society organizations towards continuous and positive impact — from technology initiatives in the public interest to equity-driven government investments serving all New Yorkers.
This pilot report comes as historic advances in technologies of connectivity change how we connect with the world and each other, making the internet more indispensable and complex than ever. Although shifts open up new opportunities for justice, economic empowerment, and even happiness, they also come with immense emerging risks. Every day, New Yorkers rely on the internet to communicate, learn, work, and play. They also increasingly contend with proprietary algorithms making high-stakes decisions about their lives and families; data being shared and sold without consent; as well as persistent online harassment and increasing disinformation cycles. As a result, we see the erosion of public trust in civic processes that are rapidly moving online: crucial things like voting, the delivery of public services, and the newly digital decennial census.
It’s the right time for NYC to re-imagine its relationship with the internet, to maximize its potential for being a fair and just city,