RedPost’s SignBeta

I really want a RedPost SignBeta,

That’s a 19″ LCD screen in a frame powered by an integrated PC running a customized version of Ubuntu. Its basically a puny digital photo frame on steroids. All for just $599, which isn’t cheap but is cheap for that size of a digital photo frame.

RedPost sees itself as in the digital signage business, but I just want one to cycle through porn digitized comic book covers in my basement office.

Later this year they’re coming out with a new version at the same price point with a better warranty, etc., so maybe I’m buying one of these for myself for Christmas.

Why Close Comments?

I have never understood why some blogs and web sites turn off comments to items, sometimes just a few weeks after they post an item. I’ve always thought this was a bad idea.

The other day, for example, I was researching a new urban legend (well, at least it was new to me). In the course of my websurfing I came across a brief item on a very popular blog that is run by a few academics. The blog entry repeated the urban legend and then linked to a study that supposedly supported this particular myth. There were a number of comments, all speculating on why the urban legend was true.

But, it turns out, the urban legend really is just an urban legend. The study cited was several years old and there were serious shortcomings to it that emerged after it had been published. I thought I’d set the record straight and post a link to a point-by-point critique of the study’s methodology that appeared in a peer reviewed journal.

Except I couldn’t. Even though the item was posted in February 2008, comments had already been turned off. Anyone researching this urban legend who happens upon this particular blog post will assume that the question has been authoritatively resolved in the affirmative when that simply isn’t the case.

Which is why I never close commenting. If someone comes a long a month or year or decade later to somethng I’ve written and can offer insight into the issue, more power to them. The web is not a synchronous media so I’m not sure why commenting should expire after some arbitrary length of time.