23 Dec 2003 How to Save the World is one of those blogs with just too much content. Lots of good stuff here. Thanks for the pointer, Accordian Guy. [from: JB Ecademy]
[ 23-Dec-03 8:40pm ] On die puny humans:, my current favourite SF author Cory Doctorow nails it in an end of year commentary. He say it better than I can so I've quoted his post in full.
The last twenty years were about technology. The next twenty years are about policy. It's about realizing that all the really hard problems -- free expression, copyright, due process, social networking -- may have technical dimensions, but they aren't technical problems. The next twenty years are about using our technology to affirm, deny and rewrite our social contracts: all the grandiose visions of e-democracy, universal access to human knowledge and (God help us all) the Semantic Web, are dependent on changes in the law, in the policy, in the sticky, non-quantifiable elements of the world. We can't solve them with technology: the best we can hope for is to use technology to enable the human interaction that will solve them. ps. If you've never seen it check out Cory's (and Mark's) main blog, bOING-bOING. Die Puny Humans also had this post from Mark Eris from Wasp Factory Records (one of the more interesting independents), The year (2004) in which all intellectual property (All? No. One small village in Gaul still.....) goes digital, and thus becomes thievable within 5 seconds of being available. Download the record of the book of the film of the comic and the delete it after one view, because it`s a crock of shit and you`re glad you didn`t pay any money for it anyway. The robber baron cartels find themselves having to run fast enough to keep up with people, as sitting on the sidelines calling the consumer a thief won`t cut it any more, no matter how many 5 year olds they take to court. And they can`t take it. It`s been too many decades since they had to go outside the house, and all that rich food, slave girls from the ghetto and colombian health products have taken their toll. Come off the accelerated culture curve for a second and listen. Really strain your ears. And you can hear them wheezing, coughing up blood, collapsed to the floor shouting abuse at the customer who is always right from somewhere back in the last decade. Quite! [from: JB Ecademy] 20 Dec 2003 This is so cool!
Molecular Expressions: Science, Optics and You - Powers Of 10: Interactive Java Tutorial : View the Milky Way at 10 million light years from the Earth. Then move through space towards the Earth in successive orders of magnitude until you reach a tall oak tree just outside the buildings of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, Florida. After that, begin to move from the actual size of a leaf into a microscopic world that reveals leaf cell walls, the cell nucleus, chromatin, DNA and finally, into the subatomic universe of electrons and protons. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 20-Dec-03 9:40am ] 19 Dec 2003 Auto-aggregating RSS from Blogrolls
A request to anyone who runs a Blogroll management system or code. eg Blogrolling.com, bloglines.com, Typepad. When a new site is added to the blogroll, use RSS Auto-discovery to capture the corresponding RSS feed. From this, generate three things. 1. An aggregated html view of the feeds 2. An OPML list of the feeds 3. A single composite RSS feed of all the items. A lazyweb request [ 19-Dec-03 9:33am ] 15 Dec 2003 The real cost of offshore outsourcing : THERE APPEARS to be a general assumption that dramatic savings can be made by sending software development to countries where IT salaries are 10% or 20% of similar IT professionals in the USA or Europe. That assumption is quite invalid according to those who have tried it, in fact they claim that savings rarely reach 30% and it can take years before even that level of savings materialise. According to them, a multitude of other costs, beyond the obvious cost of salaries, are often forgotten when considering sending work offshore.
So remember Stubbs, keep it local. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 15-Dec-03 6:10pm ] Slashdot | Spain, Morocco To Build Undersea Rail Tunnels
The immediate question this brings to mind is when Morocco will join the EU. I happen to think this would be a *good* thing. I'm all for extending the EU to N Africa round both ends of the Med. [from: JB Ecademy] David Weinberger: The Dean Campaign and the Internet (IT Conversation)
I can highly recommend these interviews. Doug has got a whole range of experts talking for 20 minutes or so and is then streaming the interviews over the web. It's like having a radio program specialising in Net Gurus. That makes it a great example of the democratising nature of the web. [from: JB Ecademy] 13 Dec 2003 Mobitopia reports on GNER on train Wifi All Change to WiFi, Please, All Change... Looks like it almost works.
There's some good stuff on Mobitopia so I've added it to Dailenews. [from: JB Wifi] iStumbler is a netstumbler clone for Macintosh. They've got one good suggestion which is that if you deliberately open your access point to the public add ".public" on the end of the SSID. This seems like a good plan to me. Please note though that their recommendations include:- get a good dsl provider which permits bandwidth sharing I'd hate for anyone to get into trouble with BT or NTL because they shared their bandwidth outside the ISP's T&Cs. [from: JB Wifi]
10 Dec 2003 Spam to email ratio soars in 2003 : MessageLabs expects that by next April about 70% of email traffic will be spam.
Email is terminally broken. So what next? [from: JB Ecademy] [ 10-Dec-03 8:10pm ] 09 Dec 2003 Wifi Planet has got a tutorial on implementing the NoCatAuth Gateway Server (via dailywireless)
Now aybe we can get all this packaged as a consumer friendly add on to a commercial AP. Like the Linksys WRT54G. I'm convinced that this is the way to go to do deliberate and controlled broadband sharing. Shame it's so hard. [from: JB Wifi] [ 09-Dec-03 9:10am ] Daily Wireless - Barbie's Wireless VideoCam The mind boggles! Now that Jennicam is going, has anyone got barbiecam.com? [from: JB Wifi]
[ 09-Dec-03 9:10am ] 08 Dec 2003 Business week - U.S. Programmers at Overseas Salaries. I'm not sure I should even be pronmoting this idea as it feels like cutting off my nose to spite my face. Whatever, the story is about a startup who could potentially halve their programming costs by using offshore (India) programers. Instead he offered the work at the same rate to US programmers and was flooded with quality applications from out of work programmers. Two of the contractors have now become full time employees at normal US rates so the story does have a happy ending.
There's some serious implications here. First is that the lack of hassle of using onsite or at least onshore contractors is worth a signififcant amount. So the savings from going offshore need to be large for it to be justifiable. And second is that we're rapidly heading into a global employment market if we haven't already. Which means Western salaries dropping to match offshore salaries without the same drop in cost of living. That has serious consequences for global economics. And a lot of personal pain. This is one of the drivers behind the current US (and UK) decline of the middle class. [from: JB Ecademy] The focus so far on public hotspot access has been all about a client (laptop) getting access outwards to the internet. Indeed some hotspot vendors have gone to lengths to restrict the laptop's vision of other clients connected to the same AP. Is anyone doing any work on software and facilities that are deliberately aimed at getting hotspot connected machines to talk to each other? Since they're all on the same local WLAN, it should be possible to share disks, printers, run multi-user games, remote control presentations, check presence and so on.
As I typed "Printers", I wondered why there's never a printer a public hotspots. I've already had a time when it would have been handy to be able to print a paper downstairs at Cafe Grandprix. [from: JB Wifi] [ 08-Dec-03 8:40am ] 07 Dec 2003 Mozilla Thunderbird V 0.4 has been released. This email an news client is looking better and better. Even tough it's only 0.4, it's impressively stable.
If you absolutely must have a calendar as well before you can switch from Outlook, try the Mozilla Calendar project. And of course there's Firebird as well for browsing. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 07-Dec-03 3:10pm ] 10 hottest wireless applications for 2004
1. Multimedia messaging 2. Voice over WLAN 3. Localized content 4. Multicasting 5. Group press-to-talk 6. Remote networking 7. Wireless printing 8. Mobile blogging 9. Mobile community services 10. Industrial productivity IMHO they missed one. P2P comms. That's Phone 2 Phone comms. We're seeing the first inkling of this in Bluejacking. Now if my phone has Bluetooth, and maybe Wifi, why shouldn't it connect direct to phones that are physically close to share music, ringtones, games and act as a walkie-talkie? Conceivably some of these functions could also work via GSM/GPRS/CDMA/3G. There's a prize here to the first phone manufacturer that starts building this stuff in even if it does impact the carrier's revenues. [from: JB Ecademy] Slyck News - Sharman Exterminating Kazaa Lite K
Ah, the horror, the horror... I can't even begin to express the irony of this. Sharman Networks, which is the commercial arm of the Kazaa file sharing network, has used the DMCA to force the Kazaa Lite program off the web. Using a ridiculously powerful Copyright protection law (for the protection of dinosaurs from small mammals) to protect a program who's sole purpose is the circumvention of copyright. For those who don't know KazaaLite was a hacked copy that eliminated all the spyware. It looks as though KazaaLite is now dead. While it still works for the moment we can expect Sharman to increasingly isolate it via upgrades to the main program and network protocols. Personally, Kazaa is so laden with Spyware that I won't use it on it's own so I've just downloaded DietK that appears to do a least some of what KazaaLite used to do. We'll see. I think the net effect of this will be to increasingly fragment the music sharing networks. It won't go away but each one will be smaller and less effective. Looked at like that this action looks counter productive. But then Sharman has shareholders and investors just like the music companies. [from: JB Ecademy] 05 Dec 2003 mbites - The Big Bluejack Heist at Waterloo This is a fairly balanced story about the practice of bluejacking or using bluetooth to send messages between phones. What interests me about this is the possibilities for phone to phone communications. It wouldn't be hard for phone manufacturers to start building in features for P2P Phone to Phone communication. Everything from swapping ring tones, MP3s, multi-user gaming to walkie talkie direct voice comms. Bluetooth is one way of doing this but at least some of it could use the normal GSM and GPRS channels or even WiFi for Wifi/GSM/Bluetooth enabled PDAs. The downside is obviously that it would affect revenue for the carriers and some of those swaps are dubious from a copyright point of view. But technologically this shouldn't be hard. [from: JB Wifi]
02 Dec 2003 Esther Dyson on Social Networks Worth reading. [from: JB Ecademy]
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