Of Montreal
![]()
I found this band last night. Of Montreal.
Listen to the great bass on Wraith Pinned To The Mist (and other games). I’ll most likely listen to this across the Atlantic tonight.
![]()
I found this band last night. Of Montreal.
Listen to the great bass on Wraith Pinned To The Mist (and other games). I’ll most likely listen to this across the Atlantic tonight.
I travel a lot. I travel on United Airlines and the Star Alliance whenever possible. I think loyalty is mutual – both United Airlines and Star Alliance are Novell customers; they look after me well.
I’m currently stuck in Salt Lake City Airport – fog in San Francisco. I’ve missed my connecting flight to London. United has already transfered my itinery to the later flight; and I had a phone call from United Easy Update to let me know this.
I’ll be late arriving in Düsseldorf – but I should be there relaxed and in one piece.
No sooner had I written about the Novell blogging policy – when I got a comment from ‘SaladDodger’ asking about my use of Creative Commons and how that fitted with my restrictions on reuse.
Hands up. I was caught.
I was mid-site change and re-included the Creative Commons license without clarifying the commercial reuse of my blog posts.
I’ve redone some of the wording – it should be clearer.
In summary – please link to, trackback and quote my posts in your own blogs. If you’re a commercial entity please ping me and let me know you’re doing it. Give me some attribution.
–
![]()
Novell recently updated its internal policy governing how employees use the internet.
One notable change in the policy:
Personal websites, weblogs and other forms of online discussion are encouraged, and Novell respects employeesÂ’ use of them as a medium of selfexpression.
Obviously as a public company Novell requires that no confidential or proprietry information is posted. Novell has an ethics code that all employees are required to agree to (and electronically sign).
I think this is a good thing. Communication is becoming more open – Cool Blogs, Jeff Jaffe’s CTO Blog and Novell Open PR are all great examples.
Your feedback to date has been incredible and much valued. Keep it coming.
What else would you like to see here? Let me know. We do read and publish your comments.
Written at: Provo, UT

Novell today changed the inernal policy governing how employees use the internet.
One massive change for the good:
Personal websites, weblogs and other forms of online discussion are encouraged, and Novell respects employees’ use of them as a medium of selfexpression.
Obviously as a public company Novell requires that no confidential or proprietry information is posted. Novell has an ethics code that all employees are required to agree to (and electronically sign).
A good policy.
One interesting part it seems like my small print has been quoted directly in the policy 🙂
Recent Comments