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	<title>Comments on: Ubiquitous Place(s)</title>
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	<description>I am a mongrel - O ma! A gremlin...</description>
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		<title>By: small dog, big byte &#171; small change</title>
		<link>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/yulelog/2007/06/21/ubiquitous-places/comment-page-1/#comment-6759</link>
		<dc:creator>small dog, big byte &#171; small change</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Jun 2007 17:18:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] small dog, big&#160;byte   Published June 21st, 2007   tech tango      Yule Heibel has a great post on what it means to be &#8220;authentic&#8221; and &#8220;local&#8221; on the one hand and also global in the full sense of that term on the other. I was thinking along the same lines (though with less Frankfurt-school flavorings then Yule&#8217;s well-reasoned and seasoned piece) as I was contemplating a small paragraph in a story in our local paper about feuding neighbors. As feuds between neighbors go, this went as local as it gets. With a spitting distance between fences, one would assume that the focus of the fight and resolution would be of the same short focal length&#8230;. And yet, when one neighbor slashed the throat of the other neighbor&#8217;s little dog, the blood spilled in a widening arc, defying the laws of physics. That&#8217;s because the bereaved neighbor turned to the Internet with cunning to meet the brute force and so bring about local change: Bricknell advertised a petition on the Internet site Craigslit, urging the court to give Guarduno the maximum sentence. More than 4,000 animal lovers throughout the nation have signed it. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] small dog, big&nbsp;byte   Published June 21st, 2007   tech tango      Yule Heibel has a great post on what it means to be &#8220;authentic&#8221; and &#8220;local&#8221; on the one hand and also global in the full sense of that term on the other. I was thinking along the same lines (though with less Frankfurt-school flavorings then Yule&#8217;s well-reasoned and seasoned piece) as I was contemplating a small paragraph in a story in our local paper about feuding neighbors. As feuds between neighbors go, this went as local as it gets. With a spitting distance between fences, one would assume that the focus of the fight and resolution would be of the same short focal length&#8230;. And yet, when one neighbor slashed the throat of the other neighbor&#8217;s little dog, the blood spilled in a widening arc, defying the laws of physics. That&#8217;s because the bereaved neighbor turned to the Internet with cunning to meet the brute force and so bring about local change: Bricknell advertised a petition on the Internet site Craigslit, urging the court to give Guarduno the maximum sentence. More than 4,000 animal lovers throughout the nation have signed it. [...]</p>
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