02 Jul 2004 Why do people send "Out of office" replies on email? What am I supposed to do with them?
Just another of life's unanswered questions. Like why do Anti-Virus systems send warning messages back when 90% of current viruses spoof the from address? Please don't do either of these. And especially don't use them if the system can't tell that the target address is a mailing list or that it's sent one to that address already. [from: JB Ecademy] 01 Jul 2004 Skype is rapidly becoming my preferred IM client quite apart from it's voice capabilities. So what would you like to see in Skype?
- Send file during a session - Web display of presence information via an embedded URL or image in a web page - An API so people could write add ons - Store and forward so you could leave a message for a contact who wasn't currently online. The message would be delivered automatically when they came online. - Better management of the contact list. Import and export via vcards Now here's the contentious one. With the programmer's experience of Kazaa, it wouldn't be hard to build file sharing of a specific directory between you and the people in your contact list. With some search of the directories of all the people in your contact list then bolted on top. This would end up something like the closed groups in WASTE or Soulseek. It could use the privacy and encrption to hide what was going on. This is the online equivalent of burning a CD for close friends and handing it to them. I've had a quick play with Microsoft's 3 Degrees addon to MSN and with Skype's conference call capability this wouldn't be hard to build in to Skype as well. What's fascinating about this process is that Skype now have a business model that should bring in revenue. Which means there's no need for them to bundle dubious adware or to litter the user interface with advertising. Skype may be built on voice, but what they've got is actually a general purpose platform that lets them progressively build IM function on top. It's going to be very interesting to see what they do with it. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 01-Jul-04 8:40am ] 30 Jun 2004 consultationprocess have re-invented The ID Card Consultation document as a blog complete with comments, trackbacks and a permanent URL for each paragraph.
It may or may not make any difference, but feel free to criticise and analyse each individual word. [from: JB Ecademy] www.mnftiu.cc | get your war on | page thirty-seven
Does this mean we'll be bringing home the troops two days early? [ 30-Jun-04 1:30pm ] 29 Jun 2004 I've now added links to phone numbers in your profile so that when you click on them, it tries to use Skype-Out to make the call. Some hints.
1. In Ecademy format your telephone numbers as +country_code number_without_leading_zero eg +44 8701 161 161 If you don't people may have to edit the call number after clicking on the link. 2. Get the latest release of Skype 0.98.0.28 3. Pick the Dial tab, click on the link at the bottom and buy some credit 4. Click on Ecademy telephone numbers to connect at cheap rates. eg EU0.014 per minute UK->USA [from: JB Ecademy] [ 29-Jun-04 3:10pm ] First an unusual comment from me. "I really don't know what I'm talking about here"
What's the current state of Enterprise (and consumer) Instant Messaging? I don't have hard facts or links to back this up, but something's going on here. Whizzing around in the back of my head are the following non-facts which may or may not be true. - Yahoo and AOL pulling out of the enterprise market - Microsoft still haven't shipped their enterprise system (RTS?). The beta still has less function than MSN Messenger - Jabber is getting more and more traction. Often in specially customised versions. - So in the standards war, XMPP is winning out against SIMPLE - Meanwhile, corporate employees are using Skype and consumer level IM whether their IT department likes it or not. - More and more universal clients are appearing that side step the lack of interoperability standards by hacking into each system. The systems keep changing prototcol to keep them out but their losing the battle. - Skype has made Voice attached to IM, the next must have. And none of the other IM systems have a credible solution to this. - The best system is Apple Mac only. iChat is much better than any of them, but it's still Mac only. - One of these days, one or more of the Voice IM systems will hook up to the plain old telephone system in a way that challenges "real" VoIP. - Whatever happened to BT's VoIP project in partnership with Yahoo! It should be shipping now, shouldn't it? - Where's IM on mobile devices like cellphones and PDAs? Why isn't it seamless to move between a mobile device and PC? - Why is MSN Messenger essentially the same application we had 5 years ago? It's got a prettier front but it doesn't actually do any more. And when are they going to blow out the 150 person limit in the contacts list? - Why can't you send a message to someone who is offline in most IM systems? Doesn't anyone else see store and forward as an essential feature? You'd be annoyed by an SMS system that didn't have this. Why do we put up with it on IM? - Why is there still no common URL scheme so you can embed an IM link in a webpage. Or a way of embedding a presence indicator in a web page. And why does MS keep changing the ActiveX only interface for this so that web developers can't keep up and it's not cross platform. Really, the IM market is almost as irritating as the mobile cellphone application market. What a graphic example of the mess and chaos that happens when commercial interests get traction before the standards get agreed. Well there's a lot of unanswered questions. Anyone? [from: JB Ecademy] 28 Jun 2004 The v6.2 release of MSN Messenger has some new options on the Actions menu which link to the 3 degrees site. So 3 Degrees has effectively come out of beta.
So what's it all about then? [from: JB Ecademy] 27 Jun 2004 As the USA Presidential campaign reaches a new low (Come on people. Don't you know about Godwin's law?) I have to ask myself, what is it about Americans and cookies?
[ 27-Jun-04 7:16pm ] 25 Jun 2004 Watch out! Incoming mass hack attack
So here's what the internet has finally come to. An unpatched flaw in MS IIS has been used to attack some major websites. This turns them into infection points for Internet Explorer users via an unpatched flaw in IE6. Some of these sites are rumoured to be major banking, shopping and shopping comparison sites. The irony here is that even if you had been religiously patching web servers and IE6 installations you're still at risk because there's no patch available for either part. The virus has not yet made it into Anti-Virus packages. The only solution is to change browser. And you can bet that at least one of those sites is IE6 specific and doesn't work without IE6. Or maybe it's all just an urban myth. Move along. Nothing new to see here. Stop using IE6. Switch to Firefox/Opera/Mozilla. Or buy a Mac. Stop using IIS. Switch to Apache. Or buy a Mac. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 25-Jun-04 5:10pm ] [from: JB Ecademy][ 25-Jun-04 1:40pm ] 24 Jun 2004 There's a huge amount of information on the web that is deliberately closed to the search engines. This is either because it's in odd formats, or that the owners have excluded the database from search engines. Or sometimes that the database navigation means that Search engines ignore it. Or that these sites have nobody linking in to them and so are never found.
Invisible-web.net - Searchable databases and specialized search engines Is a site that attempts to build a directory to these resources. Most of the sites allow free access and a link is provided both to the site's home page and to the search page within the site. The Invisible Web resources we've selected range from a searchable bibliography about African Elephants to a road construction database for U.S. highways. From a database of Canadian statistics to an interactive calendar of events at the world's leading art museums. It's an eclectic collection, but we feel that every resource included represents one of the best sources of information available for its particular subject area.[from: JB Ecademy] 19 Jun 2004 I've just uploaded the first cut of a php FOAF parser for use in applications that need to read FOAF without needing to understand RDF. You can find it here.
Here's the readme. There's a test rig here.
[ 19-Jun-04 4:33pm ] Microsoft Research DRM talk Cory Doctorow
This is a beautiful piece of work. It's the transcript of a talk Cory Doctorow from the EFF gave to Microsoft Research about the perils of Digital Rights Management and why MS should keep DRM out of products like Media Player. The argument comes down to 5 points. 1. That DRM systems don't work 2. That DRM systems are bad for society 3. That DRM systems are bad for business 4. That DRM systems are bad for artists 5. That DRM is a bad business-move for MSFT Particularly interesting is that last one and uses the example of Sony. During the early days of video recorder's Sony fought back against the entertainment industry and won a judgement that recording programs and tapes was fair use and the manufacturer of the device could not be held responsible for that use. That judgement was instrumental in creating the huge video industry we know today. This time around Sony bought a major entertainment corporation and ever since has been wasting time with a succession of hardware devices that are crippled with DRM. The end result is that they have effectively lost a whole series of markets beginning with the personal music player. Microsoft is one of the few companies with a media player that is big enough, arrogant enough, independent enough and with enough spare cash to simply stand up to the entertainment industry and stick two fingers in the air. Unlike Apple or Sony, MS don't need an iPod or iTunes to survive. Anyway, Cory's piece is quite long and detailed but if you're remotely interested in the future of music, video, consumer rights and DRM, you must read it. [from: JB Ecademy] SWAD-Europe: FOAF Workshop @ DERI Galway (1-2 Sept 2004)
The first two suggestions # Social network metadata standards # Trust issues in social networks mean that this is an important workshop for us. [from: JB Ecademy] 16 Jun 2004 Why You Should Dump Internet Explorer - Lockergnome's Tech News Watch is a well written article by an MCSE.
Rather than accusing me of Microsoft bashing, why not read the article and make you're own mind up. BTW. Firefox V0.9 is now out. Next week, "Why you should dump Outlook". [from: JB Ecademy] 15 Jun 2004 New Preview Release of Firefox - Lockergnome's Tech News Watch
New releases this week of Firefox, Mozilla and Thunderbird. [from: JB Ecademy] 08 Jun 2004 Go ahead and vote here. How Many Social Networking Services Do You Actively Utilize? - The Social Software Weblog - socialsoftware.weblogsinc.com [from: JB Ecademy]
[ 08-Jun-04 8:40am ] 07 Jun 2004 TheyWorkForYou.com: Is your MP working for you in Parliament? Here's Cory Doctorow's words about it.
TheyWorkForYou.com -- a project from the FaxYourMP team -- has launched today. This is the most amazing, subversive piece of political webware I've ever seen. It scrapes the Parliamentary record and makes the entire thing commentable, searchable and permalinkable. It compiles stats of which MPs vote against their parties most often, which ones speak most often, which have made the most motions and so forth. I've been beta-testing it and the code and UI are brilliant. It's like they've poured Parliament into LiveJournal -- and in so doing, have cutg overnment down to a human-addressable scale. We need one of these in every country in the world.[from: JB Ecademy] 03 Jun 2004 NotCon: golden age of the geekesque
What: NotCon '04 - an informal, low-cost, one-day conference on things that technologies were perhaps not intended to do. When: 11am-7pm, Sunday June 6th, 2004. Where: Imperial College Union, Beit Quad, Prince Consort Road, South Kensington SW7 2BB (nearest tubes South Kensington and Gloucester Road). Cost: £4.00 on the door, £3.00 concessions (ie students, under 18s, journalists, OAPs, the unemployed, any webloggers not covered by one or more of the previous categories). Also at http://www.xcom2002.com/nc04/ Be there, or be a real person with a life. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 03-Jun-04 5:09pm ] Like OD2, iTunes, Sony, the new Napster or Allofmp3.com? What was your experience like?
I ask because the BPI has put out a press release that legal online downloading services are turning around the drop in industry revenues. It's the usual glossy half truths! What you actually get is expensive, DRM protected, low quality, tracks. iTunes makes you jump through hoops to move your music from one device to another. Sony is in their own proprietary ATRAC 3 format so you have to use their software. And as for Napster in the UK, £1.09 per track + £0.99 per burn of the same track. They're havin a larf! I haven't tried OD2 so can't really comment. Funny that nobody's mentioning allofmp3.com much since the initial burst of publicity. This is the real future of music distribution. $1 per CD, quality encoding (MP3 LAME -standard 192Kb vbr), accurate ID3 tags, no DRM. I've *bought* more music in the last 3 weeks from them than I have through normal channels in the last 3 months. I've spent more on downloads than I did on CDs. And I've stopped messing even with P2P programs like Soulseek as it's so much more convenient, fast and accurate. I really can't fault it. One of these days maybe the labels will realize that the real problem with their sales is the price. Or maybe not. [from: JB Ecademy] |
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