The Blog




Magnatune: try before you buy MP3 music.. infoAnarchy says it better than I can.

They call it "try before you buy." It's the shareware model applied to music. Listen to hundreds of MP3'd albums from their artists. Or try their genre-based radio stations. If you like what you hear, you can buy their music online for as little as $5 an album or license their music for commercial use. Artists get a full 50% of the purchase price. And unlike most record labels, their artists keep the rights to their music.

This has been tried a couple of times before but never quite like this. I happen to think this and not iTunes is the future of record companies. But what do I know? I'm not looking for the next S Club 23 to pay for my posh habit. [from: JB Ecademy]




I've just uploaded a foaf export module for Drupal V4. You can find it in the contribs CVS. It works stand alone but it depends on the buddylist and profile modules to work at it's best.




Techdirt:Free Hotspots Have A Better Return Than Paid is a report that quantifies the ROI for a venue offering free WFi internet access. The example is the Schlotzsky's Delis chain in the USA. What's interesting here is that the cost of installing a free WiFi hotspot is much, much less than a paid one, because there's a whole load of baggage you don't need. As a venue you can then concentrate on selling your primary business line to the extra customers that the WiFi brought in.

On a much smaller scale, it would be interesting to know how many Ecademists are spending money in cafe Grand Prix because there's WiFI available. I certainly know I've spent money in the Media Centre because I could get bandwidth there. [from: JB Wifi]

Silicon Valley - Dan Gillmor's eJournal - London Bloggers' Gathering Friday Evening

Meet the London Blogerati and a Superstar Journalist.

When: Friday at 18:30.
Where: Red Lion, Westminster, 48 Parliament St.
Who: Whoever wants to show up.
Why: You have to ask? [from: JB Ecademy]

BBC - iCan seems to be a group community news site. Keep an eye on this one. It appears that Matt Jones had a big hand in it. [from: JB Ecademy]





Marc points at this, Federated identity, PingID and standards cartels - TechUpdate - ZDNet : Speaking at Digital ID World General Motors chief technology officer Tony Scott detailed the difficult path to delivering a federated identity solution. Federated identity management, which supports multiple entities connected within a circle of trust, is one of the major initiatives growing out of Web services that will provide substantial benefits to corporations and consumers.

Bing! I just realized why I have a problem with this. I want to do the same thing but without the "circle of trust" bit. Or at least build the circle of trust on the fly or have it appear as emergent behaviour. As long as the circle of trust is a pre-existing requirement before we can share and move Digital Identity, we'll have big gorillas controlling who is in the circle and who isn't. And you can be sure that you and me won't be allowed in.

Just as right now you can't really use SSL unless you're CA is one of a handful of commercial entities. In that case it's because the circle of trust is effectively hard coded in the browser.

Even if it's not as good or bad as that, we'll still have to build the circle before we can use it. So how long will it take for new website Foo.com to get included in the circle managed by bar.com?




Guy Kewney of Newswirelessnet reports in The Register about Comtralis building a mesh network to distribute broadband in Newmarket.

Steve Richardson, founder of the networking specialist company, said that using the LocustWorld Meshboxes meant that he'd been able to install local broadband for a total upfront cost of £15,000, where the previous quote (from Invisible) had been for £50,000, or more.

What's interesting about this is that despite the wealth in Newmarket, only recently has it got a trigger level. Comtralis got fed up waiting and created a wireless mesh network serving 25 customers and fed by a 1Mb leaded line. Even when BT enable the exchange in 2004, it looks like Comtralis will still manage to be competitive. The second interest is of course, that it's a deployment of 20 Locustworld mesh boxes and in particular the latest dual radio meshbox.
[from: JB Wifi]

60 people now have their Skype ID on their Profile. Add yours here.

If you don't know what this is about, Skype is a telephone over the Internet system (also called VoIP) for WinTel PCs that "just works". It's currently free, once you've bought the PC and broadband connection. [from: JB Ecademy]




Marc Canter writes : Turns out Julian Bond (of Ecademy) has been working on his own extension/usage of Drupal for FOAF and single sign-on authentication. Though Drupal is a lot less "secure" than some other systems (like PingID's SourceID implementation of the Liberty Alliance) it's ALLOT easier to implement and support.

Every so often I chuck these things out. Sometimes they stick to the wall, sometimes they don't.

There are two approaches to this whole single sign on, digital ID problem. The BigCos (and including Liberty/PingId) keep trying to solve the problem completely with billing a key requirement (who are you going to sue?). This pretty much requires that trust relationships between websites are set up prior to the customer getting involved. It's getting a little less centralised and a little more federated than it used to be but you still need a consultant just to read the PDF specs let alone implement something. It feels like this is at least partly because they're trying to solve the problem completely. And there's a lot of vested interests here.

Drupal, SEA, http://php.weblogs.com/universal, FOAF and others are coming at this from the other end. They just want to let the customer login using a login that has been athenticated somewhere else. And they want to solve the age old problem of heterogeneous systems all wanting to own the customer data. It's just possible that we can bootstrap these trivial systems up to the level of industrial strength required for billing. But if we start with the idea that we can never have perfect trust setup prior to the customer we're inevitably led to the need for good audit trails in order to work out who to sue after the fact. It doesn't necessarily mean we can't find who to sue.

All I've done with SEA is to take Drupal and Universal and ask why a central website is needed at all. Hosting is cheap. Hundreds of thousands of people are now hosting their own weblog systems. Why shouldn't they host their own personal Digital ID/SSO/Profile system as well. It's not to say there won't be a need for centralised DigId systems, but they don't have to be the only game in town.

Bryan writes;
On principle, I'd be happy to see something come along which is simpler than the heavy - XML - and - PKI - and - SOAP - based SAML and it's derivitates (including Liberty).

But protocols and software implementations are different layers - so I take issue with your statement that SEA is easier to implement than SourceID. They're apples and oranges, it's like saying HTTP is easier to implement than Apache. Sure HTTP is a couple dozen pages of spec, while Apache is thousands of pages of C code, but it's not a fair comparison.

Get me?


Bryan, reference implementations of SourceId are only available now in Java and .Net(C#). Where's the Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Delphi, Lisp, Javascript, VB implementations? I thought seriously about starting a PHP project to implement Liberty until I looked at the specs and gave up in despair. As long as the solution is as complex as that, the implementations will remain under bigco control and we won't have enough choice of library.




Mozilla has released
- Firebird 0.7, A better browser
- Mozilla 1.5, A better browser suite
- Thunderbird 0.3, A better Email-News client.
So why not make this a Microsoft Free Friday and try these out. They're all small downloads, easy to install and just work (better).

Here's the full SP.

A couple of interesting releases by mozilla.org. First of all Mozilla 1.5 was released. This is supposed to be the last version of the old Mozilla suite. Mozilla Firebird 0.7, the stand-alone browser by mozilla.org was also released today. It includes many new features, e.g. Web Panels. For more information see the newly designed product page for Firebird. A third release is the stand-alone version of the Mozilla mail-program Thunderbird , which has now reached version 0.3.

The Mozilla Foundation also launched new end user services, like CD Sales and Telephone Support. As an effort to target more end-users, a redesigned website was also created.

As always MozillaZine has all of the stories, too. Give these new releases a try, but please use a mirror if possible. [from: JB Ecademy]




There's been two recent posts asking about home wifi installations connected to ADSL. I've also been asked offline what to recommend. Although there were several suggestions I still feel confused.

Most ADSL modems in the UK seem to have a USB connection rather than an ethernet connection. I've only been able to find a single router that uses USB on the internet side and that doesn't have WiFi. This is the Draytek 2200.

So now we have two options.

The first is to put in an ADSL modem with ethernet. The we can choose from a large number of virtually identical boxes from all the major manufacturers. Linksys, Dlink, Buffalo, Belkin, Netgear, etc, etc, all sell a 802.11g WiFi access point with 4 ethernet ports and a built in Router, Firewall, NAT. You can buy these in any PC World for around £125.00 I don't know how to choose between them and don't have the personal experience to make a recommendation so you can either go for a name brand, cheapest or read all the reviews and try and make your mind up.

The second is to buy a box that has a 802.11g WiFi access point with 4 ethernet ports and a built in Router, Firewall, NAT but also has an ADSL modem built in. You junk or return the USB modem. It looks like Draytek and possibly DLink make these. You may or may not then have problems with your ISP because you're using a modem they don't recognise or understand.

Next we come to Cable which basically means NTL. Originally NTL used to supply Motorola ethenet modems but now their supplying USB modems. We're in exactly the same situation except that I don't think anyone makes a combo box with a built in cable modem. Or at least not at an acceptable price.

So let's say we've now navigated successfully through the hardware minefield. The next problem is that one or more of these boxes now has to connect to the ISP. This is typically one of three options. PPPOA, PPPOE and DHCP+MAC. The first two are ID+Password systems and are common on ADSL. The catch is that not all of the hardware above supports both standards and both types are in use in the UK on ADSL. So can anyone fill in the blanks and say which ISPs use which system and which hardware boxes support it? The last DHCP+MAC is typically used by cable. It just means that the cable connection is tied to a MAC serial number in the modem and the first device after the modem is given a dynamic IP by DHCP. Given that we're going to have to use the cable modem and all the boxes support upstream DHCP this is not going to be a problem. Probably.

So now we've got an internet connection coming into the house and this is being shared by a wireless WIFI LAN and 4 wired ethernet ports. The next task is configuring this and connecting devices but I'll leave that for another day.

Clearly there's quite a lot of blanks in the description above. And I'm still not giving you complete answers and shopping lists. Can anyone help out here? And if you think you can, please provide some hard data with URLs, product numbers and shops. [from: JB Wifi]




So how does this work then? Boingo Wireless partners with The Cloud and so get 2,500 hotspots in the UK. Except that The Cloud has already partnered with BT Openzone. $21.95 per month for unlimited usage vs £85 per month unlimited over the same hotspot? [from: JB Wifi]




I've done some more work on the SeaWiki - Home Page. Hopefully this will make it clearer what I'm trying to do. There's also much updated sample code for the client.php and server.php. And a Drupal authentication module that implements the client side.

In the process, I discovered a schema for vCards in RDF. I'm wondering why there's so much overlap here with FOAF tags.

This has also raised some questions about how the remote auth works in Drupal when working with a remote Drupal site. I'll flesh these out later.

Then there's the discovery that Deanlink generates FOAF. Here's Zack's sample.




A standard way of serializing RDF in YAML would be an interesting exercise.

BTW. Any thoughts that ReST + YAML could be a replacement for XMLRPC or that RSS and Atom could be reworked via s/XML/YAML/ should be banished the moment they arise. They are much too disruptive and likely to cause a complete melt down of certain sections of the interweb during the ensuing flame war.

emotion : LOL

The Social Software Weblog is one of the first of Jason Calacanis' commercial weblogs from Weblogs Inc. Which is all well and good, but where's the RSS, Comments, Trackback, FOAF and all that other Movable Type goodness? Can anyone work out what platform they're using? And the posts are from someone hiding behind "Weblogs, Inc. Staff". Having said all that the content is quite good.

Incidentally, there's what looks suspiciously like a job advert for journalists who want to blog for money on the sites. [from: JB Ecademy]




Smart Mobs points at Jon Stahl pointing at a thread on Howard Dean's campaign blog where they're brainstorming tools for political activism (phew). Jon (or was it Howard) has summarised the 173 posts so far into at least 23 (fnord) key suggestions.

The one I really like is to run a copy of Bugzilla to track issues. This is something that should actually be done at every level of politics. Of course, we (the electorate) should be able to post bugs in the social fabric. Discuss them, categorise them, allocate responsibility and check them off when they are fixed and tested. It's the perfect geek solution to open government.

But also of course, it would never work.I mean "Society" is not an open source development project, now is it. You can't check the local school out of CVS, fix it and then check it back in. You can't run the benchmark test suite against version 1.02 of the Health system after the nightly build.

There's something happening here and what it is ain't exactly clear. And it may even herald a radical change in political process where we finally get some real participation. Or is it just the shift of power from the genuinely wealthy power class to the moderately wealthy middle class while still leaving two thirds of the population dis-enfranchised. And maybe it's still encouraging politicians to play their power games without actually changing anything. [from: JB Ecademy]

That asshole, Chris Locke never called me an asshole. And that asshole, Dave Winer has never called me an asshole in public. For that, that asshole, Julian Bond says he's truly thankful.




We may not do Burning Man in the UK, but we can do The Big Green Gathering. And one star attraction there this year was the iTrike: The World's First Solar-Powered Internet Rickshaw! which provided WiFi connected Internet access to a satellite base station, streaming video and music all while sitting in a sofa and being gently pedaled round the campsite. Yes. That is a giant pantomime Zebra next to the giant fluffy sheep. [from: JB Wifi]

OhMyGod! Like gag me wth a spoon! It's the official George Dubya Bush Campaign Blog!

You've got to admire a website that has menu options for both "Compassion" and "Homeland Security"

Come on Tony Blur. Get with the program. It's time you had one too. [from: JB Ecademy]

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