Nike LeBron 9 – Christmas | Preview

kylegriffin1979 Friday, November 4, 2011 1
Nike LeBron 9 – Christmas | Preview

Maybe its a consolation prize to the canceled NBA games… Unlike the trifecta launch seen last holiday season, LeBron James might be going it alone this year in the release of his new NikeLeBron 9 – Christmas Edition. Decked in the same holiday colorway of bright red, hinted with an assortment of green laces and heel tab as accents, white Swoosh and LeBron’s own signature completed the design nicely.  Though the  players and team owner still can’t agree on a contract just yet. Let’s hope we will see these on LeBron during playtime once Christmas rolls around. And if you just can’t wait that long, check out MarqueeSole for some early arrivals.

 

One Comment »

  1. Erica Wednesday, February 8, 2012 at 9:12 am -

    The issue menitoned with executing content remotely when it was sourced from another application is not a difficult problem to fix. I’ve seen this a number of times when rendering CDATA content with XSL; no matter how the content is enclosed/sanitized, CDATA and notably disable-output-escaping needs output sanitizing as well.I’d be interested in your brewing article, “In Defense of Walled-Gardens.” I am not for these large centralized services with user lock-in, and federation is an appealing concept, be it an old concept when we look at email. The benefit is openness and detachedness.I can’t say how many times I’ve wanted to post a reply to a number forums topics, but am unable without registering and logging in. The issue is, I don’t want multiple accounts on services with redundant functionality. Social networks are a great example because they generally all provide the same features, but each requires usership to interact, they are all closed communities.If you do write the article, I hope to see some analysis of the OpenMicroblogging specification, which imo is a decent open solution, and I think it keys on the main factor federated social system must rely on for “security” and that is the social relation opt-in. A user subscribing to another [possibly federated] user’s content is making that decision, essentially yielding authorization for a publisher to post to the subscriber’s inbox. If the publisher decides to exploit this fact, or is compromised, what is the exact security threat? I believe it varies between systems, especially when comparing OMB and Wave.OMB is generally rendered in one specific way, while Wave will allow self-defined rendering with widgets/html/js/css. In that light, I don’t necessarily feel the architecture is a threat, but I do think the content possibilities need a sanitizing method at a more fundamental level in the overall system.Federation is a long-standing, open solution, email proves that. When the concept of “walled gardens” expires and the focus shifts to federated solutions, I think we will have the right answers.This is why I enjoy the best open+social community, the blogosphere.

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