continuations

Resource Discussion

May 23, 2006 8:28:40.020

Ian tried commenting here, but it apparently didn't work - that Javascript form may be more trouble than it's worth. Anyway, to the meat of his new post: he says that I missed his point, by assuming that by "resources" all he meant was memory. Based on his original post, that is how I took it. However, he explains further, and lists resources that GC doesn't typically handle: database connections, sockets, (etc, etc).

Here's why I didn't consider that - because all of that is at issue in any web app that maintains some kind of session state on the server. Whether you use continuations or cached data in some other form, you end up dealing with all of that (unless you re-open everything on each submit - which tends to get expensive). Typically, you use the finalization mechanisms of your language/library of choice to deal with that: the session times out, finalization kicks in, and you clean up. I fail to see how continuations make this more (or less) complex.

As to this on the back button amd continuations:

I'm not claiming that it's impossible to handle the back button this way. I'm just saying it's a bad idea, because you need to be able to write code that can tolerate being wound back and forth at the user's whim.

That's precisely the complexity that continuation based servers remove from your purview. In a "standard" we app, you tend to toss some kind of page key around, so that you can tell where you are (as opposed to where your app thinks it is on the server). How that's simpler, I have no idea. Having written a number of web apps in the standard way, I'm not prepared to call it simple.

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DRM

DRM doesn't pay

May 23, 2006 9:08:08.417

Sony settled the class action lawsuit that came out of their rootkit fiasco - they still have a Texas suit to deal with though:

The agreement ends one chapter in a public relations disaster for the entertainment company, which must still contend with a lawsuit brought against it by the state of Texas for violation of state antispyware laws.

DRM software is bad PR, and - if done stupidly enough - might even be illegal. meanwhile, proving that they've learned nothing from this, Microsoft continues to plow forward with PVP-OPM. Here's a tip: the "Aero" interface is not cool enough to cover up that stench.

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blog

Updated the comment editor

May 23, 2006 11:31:36.300

Troy mentioned that I should grab the latest version of the Javascript HTML editor we use here - it turns out that I was on a very old rev. I've updated to the latest, which just came out in May. They seem to be making progress on Safari support - not enough for me to make that the default for Safari though. I know some people have had trouble commenting with the editor - hopefully, this will be an improvement.

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web

Not a Conspiracy, but...

May 23, 2006 15:42:58.413

Dare Obasanjo points out that it's not a sign of the apocalypse when an MS site doesn't support Firefox (or Safari, etc):

Unlike Devanshu and Todd, I don't think there are sinister conspiracy theories for why two Microsoft products were released and ignored features of interest to the geek demographic. In every product release, you have a limited amount of resources and time in which to apply those resources to your next version. This means that you tend to focus on features that will provide the most bang for the buck and may ignore features that have limited appeal such as supporting a browser which is used by 8% of the market or a media subscription model is only used by 1% of internet users. I don't always agree with the practice of deciding on features based on market penetration statistics but I can understand when product teams make such decisions. I suspect that is more likely the cause of these omissions than some nefarious collusion between MTV and the Windows Media team or some plot to ensure IE's market dominance by having Windows Live services require only that browser.

Of course, it depends on who your market is. For some products, ignoring that 8% might be mostly irrelevant, while for others, it's going to be a killer. On the other hand, not supporting them will be an ongoing irritant. I was trying to use some award miles on USAirways. I normally use Firefox, so I logged in and went to the award pages. I got all the way to the end, credit card entered, seats selected, the whole thing. Submitted, and bam - tossed to the reservation page with no confirmation and no warning.

Hmm. I verified that no miles had been taken out, and tried again. Same result. Spent some time on the phone with an agent who couldn't figure out how to make the reservation for me (this has to go into the annals of bad service. She was apologetic, but could do nothing for me). Finally, I tried IE. At the point of submission, it slaps up some "please wait" page that must be IE specific.

Now, for the guy trying to cash in award miles, that's irritating, but it's no lost revenue for the airline. Had I been trying to buy tickets though? I would have been far more worried about the "did that go through" thing had each one involved a potential charge of a few hundred bucks.

So I agree with Dare - resources and inertia explain these things far better than some silly conspiracy theory. Having said that, the one taking the damage from this sort of thing is the vendor with the badly implemented site.

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cincom

Cincom's Tom Nies to speak at the UN InfoSec Conference

May 23, 2006 17:00:21.174

Cincom's President, Tom Nies, will be speaking at the AIT InfoSec conference at the UN:

18th Annual InfoSec and IT Infrastructure Conference & Exhibit

Theme: Moving Forward at Light Speed, the Latest InfoSec Threats, IT Alternatives and Solutions

Venue: The International Conference Center in United Nations Headquarters, New York City

Dates: June 27-28, 2006

Event Partners: IDG Pubs (InfoWorld, CSO), UN Global Alliance for ICT and Development

This Week’s Featured Presenter:

Thomas M. Nies, Founder, President, and Chief Executive Officer, Cincom Systems, Inc., is the longest-serving CEO in the Computer Industry. Tom will discuss, “I came. I saw. I simplified,” and explain how huge amounts of money are invested in InfoSec technology today. Tom will put into plain words the details needed to simplify information systems implementations, and will clarify how to maximize the impact of those investments.

Contact Steve Kayser for further details.

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news

Pixels Imitating Life

May 23, 2006 18:14:42.122

Wired:

An online real estate developer sues gamemaker Linden Lab for allegedly repossessing his cyberproperty.

If you're going to have a virtual world, maybe you need a virtual court system?

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blog

Trackbacks are back

May 23, 2006 19:19:20.648

I added the same spam block system I'm using on the Wiki here, and turned trackbacks back on for some of the blogs as a test. Thus far, it seems to be working fairly well. If it gets overwhelming, I'll just turn them off again. If it stays sane, I'll enable them for all the blogs.

Fingers crossed...

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marketing

About that first 25,000 users...

May 23, 2006 21:26:22.672

Well. This story about how many of the early adopters actually "count" could have a twist - have a look at fakezilla:

FakeZilla.com traffic simulators are designed to send as many unique hits to your server as it can handle. Web page requests are routed through a massive list of anonymous proxy servers which can be defined by you. Counters and banners "see" these fake hits just as if a real user was browsing your site. When used with the Web Server Log extractor the fake hits and traffic appear 100% realistic- you can't tell the difference between FakeZilla traffic and real traffic!

Your venture capitalists can't tell, either - at least not until it's too late. It's simply amazing how many tools exist to create spam or fake traffic now.

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law

Lawyers gone wild

May 24, 2006 8:36:51.923

There's an odd twist in the "iPod Nano Scratch" lawsuit - it looks like the lead plaintiff, one Jason Tomczak, never actually agreed to be a lead plaintiff. Via Digg, I ran across this open letter from him, where he says (in part - go read the whole thing):

The truth is that I never sought out nor did I ever hire David P. Meyer & Associates or Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro to represent me in any case, much less the iPod Nano Class Action suit.

Later in the post he mentions that he sued the law firm in question, in order to try and clear his name. The results of that demonstrate that even well intentioned laws can backfire. The law firm filed an Anti-SLAPP motion against him, using California's protections against SLAPP suits. Seems completely ridiculous to me, but dealing with that will chew up time and money - both of which are in greater supply for the law firm.

I googled Jason's name, and ran across something very curious - on the leading pages that turn up, he's not quoted. The lawfirm is, and his name comes up, but there are no direct quotes. That seemed fishy to me, and also seemed fishy to Couthouse News. It looks a lot like the lawyers who filed the suit against Apple went for an easy payday against a large firm (on the old "cheaper to settle than fight" theory of operations) - and they didn't even take the time to find a real plaintiff.

In the meantime, I'm going to try and contact Tomczak and get his side of this directly. There doesn't seem to be a working email address, but the open letter does have a snail mail address. I'll try that, and I'll post on this again when I know more.

Update: Slashdot picks up the story.

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general

Back in the PM

May 24, 2006 12:23:13.732

I had a checkup this morning, and after seeing the cholesterol numbers, I'm motivated to go out for a jog now. I'll be back online this afternoon

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news

Hacky Sack Pro

May 24, 2006 14:06:42.918

Who knew that Hacky Sack was a professional sport with a world championship? RocketBoom has the video.

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stupidity

It's still all about Dave

May 24, 2006 14:09:44.443

Spotted in Scripting News

I love and admire Mike and Richard, and I'm glad they're welcomed by the owners of Web 2.0, but until they put out a welcome mat for everyone else, I'm going to keep looking to the future, because I think that kind of exclusivity belongs in the past.
And Mike, if you wanted to get rid of the problem, one call to O'Reilly or Battelle right now would probably take care of it. And mention it to Kevin Werbach as well. That you and so many others quietly acquiesce allows the exclusivity to continue. Until then, I'm going to keep looking for a route-around, and some day, hopefully soon, we'll find it.

Here, let me translate: "Wahhhhh - they won't invite me to their conferences. Wahhhhhhhh"

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spam

Email: No longer reliable

May 24, 2006 14:15:47.655

Spam has made email an unreliable mechanism. Witness this case of a lost bid:

There it was in the e-mail spam filter, along with offers to invigorate both your bank account and your sex life: an offer to save the Cobb County schools $250,000. But this message was for real.
School officials are blaming an overeager junk-mail filter for capturing and killing a Kennesaw businessman's bid to provide telephone services to the system. It seems the part of the filter that watches for pornographic material was offended by the use of terms such as "long distance."

I have to check my junk folder (both the corporate server-side one, and the local client-side one) regularly - otherwise, I end up missing quite a bit. This has tragedy of the commons written all over it.

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itNews

Shocker: Vista could be delayed more

May 24, 2006 14:34:11.739

In News that should shock no one, Microsoft's Steve Ballmer is dampening expectations about the release date for Vista:

The operating system was due to be launched this year but in March the company said it wouldn't get broad release until January 2007. Ballmer said Wednesday that the planned January launch may slip further based on feedback from a beta release program and the product road-maps of hardware vendors.

That's actually a smart move, getting out in front of a potential delay like that. With feature driven releases, timing is always hard. We do timeboxed releases of Cincom Smalltalk, but the consequence for that is that the delivery of any given feature is always up in the air. You get predictable features, or a predictable date - you don't get both. All too often in this business, you get neither :/

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media

Media to the Edge

May 24, 2006 14:41:04.423

Terry Heaton, via Doc Searls:

Because here's the deal. The tools available to everyday people that are turning the media world on its head are also available to professional organizations. You don't have to approach everything with a $100,000 solution when $10,000 will do just fine. If aggregation is where its at (and I believe that it is), then build aggregators. Let other people be the content creators and move yourself to the edge. Not only is it fun there, but that's where the profitability is going to be downstream.

Isn't that pretty much what Amanda Congdon and RocketBoom are doing right now? Over time, I expect that most news operations will look a lot more like movie productions - you'll have a small number of permanent employees who manage a wide range of stringers, whose expertise varies and is available as needed.

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media

Transparency Required

May 24, 2006 15:24:07.372

Whether Google like it or not, being in the media business (and Google News is a media outlet) requires some transparency on their part. Steve Rubel points to the problem:

Google is getting smacked for removing conservative e-zines and blogs from Google News. To date, Google has done a poor job of explaining why certain blogs are enshrined and others aren't. They need to publish some standards around who they are willing to include and why.

What content they are pulling isn't nearly so relevant as why it's being pulled. Like a newspaper, they have no requirement to publish anything they don't want to publish; it's their site, and they can do what they want. If, on the other hand, they want to retain actual credibility, they need to explain what standards they use for including (and not including) content.

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development

Compounding the Error

May 24, 2006 16:35:52.909

As if "final" isn't bad enough, some people would like to make it the default:

I’ll say it one more time: final should be the default. Java’s mistake was not that it allowed classes to be final. It was making final a keyword you had to explicitly request rather than making finality the default and adding a subclassable keyword to change the default for those few classes that genuinely need to be nonfinal. The lack of finality has created a huge, brittle, dangerously breakable infrastructure in the world of Java class libraries.

Umm, sure. Because every library I've ever used was designed specifically with my needs in mind, and I've never, ever had to extend anything.

*Cough*

That must have been something coming up there. I guess the BS meter just went to infinity, and I couldn't take it anymore. He goes on:

One final point: final is the safe, conservative choice. Should you mark a class or method final, and later discover a need to subclass/override it, you can remove the finality without breaking anyone’s code. You cannot go the other way. Once you’ve published a class that’s non-final you have to consider the possibility that someone, somewhere is subclassing it. Marking it final now risks breaking people’s running code and working systems.

It's safe, just like a straitjacket. With all possible movement impossible, how much can you do? It's not about breaking someone else's code anyway. When I get a library from a vendor, I don't expect perfection - I expect a best effort, given the knowledge the engineers had at the time. I fully expect to have to subclass in some places, to delegate in others, and to override methods in subclasses in some cases. Heck, I'm using smalltalk, so my amp goes to 11 over here - I may even change code in existing classes in the library. I'm sure that concept will make his head explode, but my goal is to empower the developer - not to break his wrists because he folded the napkins wrong.

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media

Attention Deficit Disorder

May 24, 2006 22:17:40.919

I guess it's been awhile since Nick Carr got some blogosphere love - today, he's calling Wikipedia "dead":

Wikipedia, the encyclopedia that "anyone can edit," was a nice experiment in the "democratization" of publishing, but it didn't quite work out. Wikipedia is dead. It died the way the pure products of idealism always do, slowly and quietly and largely in secret, through the corrosive process of compromise.

Right. Apparently, restricted editing rights on some of the more controversial pages signals the end times. Here's his point, such as it is:

The end came last Friday. That's when Wikipedia's founder, Jimmy Wales, proposed "that we eliminate the requirement that semi-protected articles have to announce themselves as such to the general public." The "general public," you see, is now an entity separate and distinct from those who actually control the creation of Wikipedia. As Vaughan-Nichols says, "And the difference between Wikipedia and a conventionally edited publication is what exactly?"

Sure Nick, sure. And blogs that moderate comments are dishonest, too. Maybe I should set up a chart, so I could plot Carr's needs for attention and see if there's a pattern.

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itNews

Grid Computing

May 25, 2006 7:37:30.565

If you are looking for an overview of the state of grid computing, then head on over to Tim Bray's place.

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cst

Generating a Runtime in Cincom Smalltalk

May 25, 2006 8:30:14.936

Fnordistan explains how to package up a Cincom Smalltalk application into a runtime - including the creation of a Windows executable. It's easy to follow, and has all the steps you'll need to follow. Highly recommended.

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smalltalk

Cross Dialect Monticello

May 25, 2006 8:32:14.050

Colin Putney is working to make Monticello a cross dialect version control system for Smalltalk:

However, there is a real need for tools to make cross-dialect development easier, and versioning is an important component of that. After doing a few demos, I had volunteers to maintain VisualAge and Dolphin ports. The VisualWorks folks all seem pretty busy, but I'm sure somebody will step up when MC2 gets to production quality.
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sports

If the Pitcher is my age...

May 25, 2006 9:08:24.339

I'm not surprised that Randy Johnson is having a tough spring - he's an old power pitcher, and - other than Nolan Ryan and Roger Clemens, power pitchers tend to fall fast as they age. I thought it was a mistake to get Johnson when they got him, and last night's performance is just giving me more evidence:

But on Wednesday, he allowed at least five runs for the sixth time in eight starts before improving after Jason Varitek's single put Boston ahead 5-4 with no outs in the third. Johnson struck out the next three batters and retired nine of the last 10 he faced before leaving after five innings.

"I hit my spot better later in the game,'' Johnson said. "It's funny to say this, but what I'm going through, you take anything as a positive. The last three innings were a positive. How much worse can it get?"

Despite his solid finish, his ERA rose from 5.62 to 5.89 while he allowed nine hits and two walks with eight strikeouts.

Here's a tip for Steinbrenner: If the pitcher is pushing 40, then don't hire him. Develop the talent out of the farm system, for gosh sakes.

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tv

Lost cliffhanger

May 25, 2006 9:40:32.038

The way they ended "Lost" last night wasn't as mind boggling as the ending to Battlestar Galactica's season was, but it does make for an interesting beginning to the upcoming third season. As SciFi Wire said:

Producers of ABC's hit series Lost, which aired its surprising second-season finale on May 24, told SCI FI Wire that it sets up the upcoming third season, which will focus more on romance -- and on the mysterious Others. "The Others are an important part of season three, and there's a lot of mysteries and a lot of questions about the Others that the audience is going to be curious about going into season three," said executive producer Carlton Cuse in an interview. "And those are the things we're going to explore."

Follow that link only if you don't care about spoilers, or have seen the last episode. With the wrap on the regular season at hand, I'm waiting for July, when SG-1, SG-A, and BSG start up again.

Update: As James points out in the comments, BSG isn't back until the fall.

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marketing

Rules Based Support

May 25, 2006 10:14:21.817

SharkTank relates a humorous support incident, where a caller has to lie in order to get support. It's posted as a funny anecdote, but it's actually an illustration of what happens when you ship support to a third party - to manage it, you apply a script and rules. That keeps costs low, but it torques off customers.

The amazing thing is this: everyone mouths the idea that it's easier to sell an existing customer than a new prospect, but then thye go out and act as if the goal is to treat the existing customer like a musroom - in the dark, and covered with manure. As word of mouth PR spreads, leaving existing customers with a bad taste in their mouth is just going to get stupider and stupider.

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gadgets

Wii Pricing comes out

May 25, 2006 10:19:18.489

Nintendo has announced that the Wii will not cost more than 25,000 yen (about $225 USD). Here's the quote:

The player won't cost more than 25,000 yen, said Yoshihiro Mori, Nintendo's senior managing director, at a news conference in Osaka. The company expects to ship 6 million Wii consoles this fiscal year, and about 17 million software games for the device.

Given that, I'm going to make a prediction: The US price will start at $199. That puts it down into the psychological "impulse buy" space for an awful lot of people in the US. I guess we'll have to wait to see if I'm right.

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management

The Army of Davids Expands

May 25, 2006 10:43:00.406

What Wired is calling Crowdsourcing is an example of what Glenn Reynolds wrote about in "An Army of Davids" - for any given field, there are underused experts out there. This is going to be a far bigger driver for business change than offshoring is - why go through the hassle of dealing with people half a world away when you can grab the spare cycles of people who are no more than 3 timezones away? The example here has to do with photo licensing, but it applies to things far beyond that:

iStockphoto, which grew out of a free image-sharing exchange used by a group of graphic designers, had undercut Harmel by more than 99 percent. How? By creating a marketplace for the work of amateur photographers – homemakers, students, engineers, dancers. There are now about 22,000 contributors to the site, which charges between $1 and $5 per basic image. (Very large, high-resolution pictures can cost up to $40.) Unlike professionals, iStockers don’t need to clear $130,000 a year from their photos just to break even; an extra $130 does just fine. “I negotiate my rate all the time,” Harmel says. “But how can I compete with a dollar?”

He can’t, of course. For Harmel, the harsh economics lesson was clear: The product Harmel offers is no longer scarce. Professional-grade cameras now cost less than $1,000. With a computer and a copy of Photoshop, even entry-level enthusiasts can create photographs rivaling those by professionals like Harmel. Add the Internet and powerful search technology, and sharing these images with the world becomes simple.

This is going to hit business in any task that isn't completely core, and can be shopped out. Over the next few years, the shops that thought they were cutting edge by moving operations abroad are going to learn that they are already behind the curve.

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general

Live from Barnes and Noble

May 25, 2006 16:25:40.388

Well, this is nice. I had to take my daughter to an activity, and there's a Barnes & Noble nearby. The WiFi isn't free, but it's not expensive either. It's pretty nice to be online, with a Mocha, with the history books right down the steps...

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PR

Web 2.0, except where prohibited

May 25, 2006 16:32:32.526

Here's a Negative PR Event bearing down on O'Reilly - they think they own the term "Web 2.0":

One of these events - the upcoming Web 2.0 half-day conference is the target of a cease and desist letter (below) from the legal team of O’Reilly publishers. Basically O’Reilly are claiming to have applied for a trademark for the term “Web 2.0″ and therefore IT@Cork can’t use the term for its conference. Apparently use of the term “Web 2.0″ is a “flagrant violation” of their trademark rights!

So how long do you think it will be before Tim O'Reilly notices the "boy, what tools those clowns at O'Reilly are" flareup over this? Will he call off the dogs quickly, or will the negativity have to rise to Warner Kremer Paino levels first?

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humor

Mildly disturbing

May 25, 2006 20:20:54.109

Who knew that Spock could get down?

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cst

New Cincom Smalltalk White Papers

May 25, 2006 20:31:42.640

If you're looking for high level information on our Web Services implementation(PDF), check out the new whitepaper we've put out. Those of you looking for information on ObjectStudio 8(PDF) should look at the new whitepaper for that.

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DRM

Ok with extortion and all that

May 26, 2006 0:55:28.881

The RIAA is just amazing. First, they say that suing 12 year olds and grandmothers is just peachy:

When asked if they regret suing people like 12-year-old girls and grandmothers, Sherman says no, and that they're "feeling pretty good", then goes on with some lines that pay lip service to the idea that they're interested in coming up with new business models, rather than just using litigation as the cornerstone of their strategy.

That's bad enough, but then they whipped out what techdirt refers to as an attempted jedi mind trick:

The most egregious comment, though, comes from Bainwol, who says "nobody" has any problem with DRM and copy protection. While consumers might not know what DRM is, they know when they songs they've purchased won't play on their new MP3 player, because it's not compatible, or when they can't burn a CD to their computer because a record label thinks they're a criminal, or when the copy protection on a CD opens their computer up to hackers.

Sheesh. I think Tony Soprano would be ashamed to be in the same room with these clowns.

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management

Greater values of suckage

May 26, 2006 8:09:21.911

Looks like Chris Pirillo has found more things to dislike in the new Outlook than things to like.

I think the problem is simple - developers don't know when to stop, and management doesn't want them to stop. Office is a huge chunk of MS' revenues, and there's a corporate need to drive upgrades. That's why management wants churn. However, take a look at what is, for the most part, a mail client. Is there really that much more it needs to do? Is the complexity inherent in making it a combined PIM, email client, and RSS reader worth it?

Based on what most users of Outlook seem to say, I don't think so. It's too big, too bloated, and too unfocused on any of the things it does. What I think MS really needs is 3 smaller, lighter tools here that can communicate in some fashion. That's not going to happen though - instead, the suckage will just increase.

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analysts

Wasted Oxygen

May 26, 2006 8:18:54.100

The pixels on my monitor nearly revolted after I browsed this page:

Operate All Revenue Generating Channels in a Web 2.0 Architecture by 2008. Enterprise architects must act as catalysts that speed the formation of unified business technology strategies and their execution. The enterprise architecture process must shift gears from limiting complexity by limiting choices to accelerating innovation and execution by coordinating complexity through unified business and IT strategy, decentralized execution and loose coupling among all related stakeholder disciplines.

That's, umm, something from a Gartner analyst at the recent ITxpo in San Francisco. I wonder if the participants were aware of just how much oxygen was being wasted. With luck, the room had some plants so that something benefited.

Hat tip Stefan Tilkov.

Update: Heh. In the IRC channel, one of the regulars had this comment: "It says that the enterprise architect shouldn't just limit choices, but decide for others too. Lend your business to the architect, so he can ruin it more quickly."

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PR

Owning Web 2.0

May 26, 2006 8:45:23.062

Looks like O'Reilly and CMP recognize a PR problem when they see one coming down the pike - they've called the dogs off of the IT@Cork conference. They still insist that they own the "Web 2.0" moniker though, and state that it's like the term "LinuxWorld" - a stock use of a trademark:

O'Reilly and CMP co-produce the Web 2.0 conference. "Web 2.0" was coined when we were brainstorming the concept for the first conference in 2003. As noted in the letter to IT@Cork (sent from CMP's attorney, but with our knowledge and agreement), "CMP has a pending application for registration of Web 2.0 as a service mark, for arranging and conducting live events, namely trade shows, expositions, business conferences and educational conferences in various fields of computers and information technology." To protect the brand we've established with our two Web 2.0 Conferences, we're taking steps to register "Web 2.0" as our service mark, for conferences. It's a pretty standard business practice. Just as O'Reilly couldn't decide to launch a LinuxWorld conference, other event producers can't use "Web 2.0 Conference," the name of our event. In this case, the problem is that it@cork's conference title includes our service mark "Web 2.0," which the law says we must take "reasonable steps" to protect. We've also contacted another group that has announced a "Web 2.0 Conference" in Washington, DC this September.

Here's the problem - the term "Web 2.0" is way, way too widespread for them to claim ownership. Here's a Google search on it - see what I mean? The law may well be on their side, but common sense very much isn't. If they think they're being harmed when others use that term, then they need an appointment with a cluestick.

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smalltalk

Seaside with the Dolphins

May 26, 2006 9:57:46.111

Seaside is making its way to Dolphin - there's an early port available here. Seaside now works on VW, Squeak, and Dolphin - if the Instantiations folks step up like the Object-Arts folks did, it could work on VA too.

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cst

Security Libraries in Cincom Smalltalk

May 26, 2006 10:41:41.554

We've posted another white paper - this one is on the Security Libraries that ship with Cincom Smalltalk. Download the PDF here.

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analysts

Because we needed another acronym

May 26, 2006 11:12:12.361

Thank goodness we have smart folks like Nick Gall over at Gartner - otherwise, a term many of us have become familiar with - REST - wouldn't be pushed aside for an enterprisey acronym like WOA. Without the extra buzzwords, how would enterprisey architects, and the analysts who support them, ever manage to validate their existence?

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syndicateNY

Video from Syndicate NY

May 26, 2006 15:32:50.817

There's video of some of the sessions online here. The keynotes from Doc Searls and Dan Gillmor are there, as well as the session with Dave Weinberger. I haven't sat through them (I was there when they happened), but the quality from the bits I sampled looked pretty good.

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development

Just Stuff about Development

May 26, 2006 15:48:03.469

Here's an interesting paper that comes from No Fluff, Just Stuff (PDF) - I particularly agree with this summation towards the end:

I predict that we’ll see the increasingly wide adoption of dynamic languages, metaprogramming, and agile design and development practices over the next few years. In spite of many naysayers, momentum seems to be building in this direction.

I don’t think it will stop with Ruby, Python, or any of the other new old languages that are gaining popularity. Although those languages borrow extensively from their progenitors, they stop short in some other ways. I love programming in Ruby, but occasionally I find myself needing some of the features of Smalltalk or Lisp that Ruby doesn’t have -- true macros, for instance, or the ability to easily pass multiple blocks to a single method (with appropriate cues as to their distinct roles). And don’t get the idea that I’m an old Smalltalk or Lisp programmer! I come from a C, C++, and Java background. But I’ve recently begun to understand some of the subtle strengths of languages that I used to think were weird.

You have nothing to lose but your lower levels of productivity :)

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Macintosh

Dead Mini

May 26, 2006 17:17:16.169

The mini seems to have died. I turned to put some music on, and it was locked up. Couldn't get in via ssh, so I turned it off. Now, it won't boot. Won't boot from CD, even. Guess it's off to CompUSA. Sigh.

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movies

XMen: Last Stand

May 26, 2006 23:38:51.091

"XMen: Last Stand" was ok, but nothing special. It took an awfully long time to get going. By 30 minutes in, I was waiting for the ending which - while it was entertaining - went down pretty much the way I expected it to. It also felt choppy at times, as if large pieces of characterization had been left on the cutting room floor. It's a decent enough "popcorn" movie, but don't go expecting to be awed.

One thing I will say - stay in the theater all the way to the end of the credits. There's a scene that's shown then, and if you get up as the credits roll - no final tidbit for you :)

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logs

Weekly Log Analysis: 5/27/06

May 27, 2006 8:03:39.931

It's that time again - Saturday morning. I'm off to Annapolis with my daughter's girl scout troop today, but I've got the weekly numbers first. BottomFeeder downloads proceeded at a rate of 144 per day - down from last week, but in the normal range. I think the bump from the slashdot effect has disappeared:

PlatformBottomFeeder Downloads
Windows487
Linux x86115
Mac X87
CE ARM80
Mac 8/957
Windows98/ME48
Update42
HPUX26
Linux Sparc22
Solaris18
AIX17
Sources11

On to the HTML page accesses - towards the end of the week, the total pageviews tailed off, while the number of unique pageviews (by IP address stayed about the same. More RSS? Fewer scripts trying to leave spam? The tools:

ToolPercentage of Accesses
Mozilla66.7%
Internet Explorer24.1%
Other3.2%
MSN Bot2.6%
Megite1.3%
Everest/Vulcan1.1%
Opera1%

Interesting that Safari doesn't show up at all in the HTML accesses, but in the RSS accesses, Mac tools figure so prominently. Speaking of which, those numbers:

ToolPercentage of Accesses
Mozilla26.5%
BottomFeeder17.8%
BlogLines8.7%
Net News Wire8.2%
Internet Explorer7.6%
Other8.9%
Safari RSS4.1%
Google Feed Fetcher3.5%
BlogSearch2.2%
NewsGator2.1%
SharpReader1.8%
Planet Smalltalk1.4%
Java1.1%
JetBrains1.1%
RSS Bandit1%
Liferea1%
Everest/Vulcan1%
News Fire1%
Jakarta1%

And I'll be back later, after the day trip

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media

Bloggers win a round

May 27, 2006 8:19:32.121

Bloggers won a round against Apple - Wired reports that Apple could not compel PowerPage to reveal their sources for a story they posted on (then upcoming) Apple plans. To boil it down, the court said that it was journalism in action, and that Apple couldn't stop bloggers any more than they could stop mainstream publications:

A California appeals court has smacked down Apple's legal assault on bloggers and their sources, finding that the company's efforts to subpoena e-mail received by the publishers of Apple Insider and PowerPage.org runs contrary to federal law, California's reporter's shield law, and the state Constitution.

This is good, but it's not the full extent of rights that we ought to expect, at least here in the US. Right now, if you post on politics, and you use AdSense (or accept any other type of ads), you could conceivably run afoul of various campaign finance laws - which have the effect of muzzling what you might want to say. The big media needn't worry about that; they have their press exception. The thing I've always wondered about that is simply this: why does a big outfit like GE (owners of NBC) get more rights than I do?

Anyway, this Apple decision is a good thing - but it's cause for a satisfaction, not joy. At least IMHO.

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weather

Another Hurricane Season Approaches

May 27, 2006 8:48:17.509

It's nearly June, and the 2006 hurricane season (for those of of us in the eastern US) is upon us. I thought I'd take a look at the historical trends for hurricanes, and there's a lot of data out there. This site has a nifty table of frequencies (up to and including 2004) - and it illustrates something interestesting: notice how frequency had a local peak in the 1941-1950 interval, and then started to drop? That coincides with the end of WWII, and the rise in prosperity in the US. It also coincides with the spread of inexpensive air conditioning.

What does that mean? It means that people started to move south in large numbers. In particular, coastal development ramped up - along both the US east coast and along the gulf coast. It almost certainly seemed safer - the table tells the story. According to that data, the annual hurricane frequency has been below average since about 1950.

Mind you, the data only goes back to 1851, and that's a very short time in climate terms - the "average" for such a short time span could well be meaningless. In behavioral terms though, it's not. The building boom along the coasts coincided with a period of lower activity, and people didn't remember that really bad storms (1935, for instance) were not just possible, but highly probable. We tend to completely ignore things that we don't have personal experience with.

So, have a look here; while there were two absolutely awful hurricanes last year, the raw numbers were 15 storms of category 1 or higher (storms get names if they hit tropical level - category one is much stringer). In 2005, 15 storms hit category 1 or higher. And out of that 15, you have to drop the ones that never got to the US mainland in order to fithem into that table. That data is further down in the second tabll, and it was 5 storms. So from 2001-2005, that gives us 14 storms that got to level one or above, and also hit the US mainland.

Which means that we are back into the kind of active period that we last saw (again, here in the US) back in the 1940s - before the current buildup on the coasts happened. What does all that mean? Darned if I know - in looking at the data since 1851, it looks like we've been in a relatively quiet period since 1950. As I said above though, this is such a short interval in climate terms that it may be meaningless. The only real conclusion I can come to is this: it was probably a mistake to build as much as we have near the coasts. I'm guessing that insurance rates will reflect that pretty quick.

If you want to track these storms yourself (I do, since my parents live on the east coast of Florida), then you should subscribe to the NOAA tropical storm feed.

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travel

A Day in Annapolis

May 27, 2006 17:35:27.948

We headed down to Annapolis for a girl scout outing today - it was beautiful weather, so being a chaperone was a pleasure. We started the day with a walking tour of the downtown area. My wife had set up a guided tour, which was very nice. We went by the harbor, the state capital, and into the kitchen of one of the historic buildings - set up as it would have been back then. The capitol is quite nice - it's the oldest, in continuous use capitol in the US. Here's a picture I took, looking up the street towards the capitol dome:

Annapolis Capitol View

The harbor is quite nice too - you can't see it in the low res camaera phone shot I took, but the Bay Bridge is off in the distance here:

Harbor View

It was cloudy for a bit while we were there, but it cleared off and got quite warm. We headed up the street from here to the Paca house. William Paca was one of four Marylanders who signed the Declaration of Independence; he had a house with a view of the Severn River built in the 1760s. It's no longer got that view; the Naval Academy is in the way (along with a bunch of filled land). Here's a view of the Paca house from the garden:

Paca House from Garden

And a a view from the house, looking down at the "summer house" on the far end of the garden:

Paca Summer House

The house has an interesting history. It was privately owned until the turn of the 20th century, when a hotel company took it over. They left the house mostly alone (although they modified the bedrooms to add bathrooms, so they could be sold as suites). The garden was paved over and the bulk of the hotel was built there. It stayed that way until the early 60's - at which point the entire structure was nearly levelled for a parking garage. Fortunately, a foundation managed to raise money and buy the house and land, and then spent a number of years in restoration. It's a beautiful spot now - well worth visiting if you happen to be in Annapolis.

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gadgets

Convergence or Specialization?

May 28, 2006 11:03:06.604

The biggest supposed trend in electronics over the last few years has been convergence - we would be seeing the phone, the PC, the TV, the music player (etc., etc.) converge into a smaller set of gadgets that do multiple tasks. "everyone" has been talking about this, from Bill Gates to the telcos - try this Google search for an idea of the buzz.

Now along comes this story in Wired, which seeks to throw some cold water on the idea:

Nathan Bales represents a troubling trend for cellular phone carriers. The Kansas City-area countertop installer recently traded in a number of feature-laden phones for a stripped-down model. He said he didn't like using them to surf the internet, rarely took pictures with them and couldn't stand scrolling through seemingly endless menus to get the functions to work.
"I want a phone that is tough and easy to use," said Bales, 30. "I don't want to listen to music with it. I'm not a cyber-savvy guy."

I think the problem extends beyond the non-savvy. I have a camera phone, and I generally like it - it's nice to have a small camera that I can take anywhere. On the other hand, getting the pictures off of it is insane - I have to type in the email address to send to for each pic (there seems to be a way to save and retrieve that, but believe me, it's not obvious). The method I'm presented with for inputting the address is nuts - the default is numeric, as they assumed I'd want to beam my photo to another phone number (never mind that I've never seen that actually work). The second choice isn't alpha-numeric - it's "t9-word". WTF is up with that?

So this weekend, we bought an inexpensive 5 megapixel digital camera. It can store hundreds of pictures (and video), and download via USB. It's smaller than my phone, and takes much better pictures. It's not trying to be two things at once, so it's far easier to use. Hmm. Guess which one I'll be using more of to take pics with? It sounds like I'm not the only one with these issues:

Consumers last year paid $8.6 billion for so-called data applications on their phones, up 86 percent from the year before, according to wireless trade group CTIA.
But they've also shown a growing frustration with how confusing those added features can be. A J.D. Power & Associates survey last year found consumer satisfaction with their mobile devices has declined since 2003, with some of the largest drops linked to user interface for Internet and e-mail services.

Well duhh. Anyone who's tried to type on a phone keypad knows that it's a really horrible way to enter text. Anyone who's thought about the problem knows that making the keypad bigger, in order to fit in a keyboard, is asking for trouble. The keys are still too small to type properly, and the phone gets to be too big to carry comfortably. There's actually a lesson in this quote, for anyone paying attention:

Coffey said the testing is worth it because ease-of-use can be a competitive edge.
"IPod was not the first MP3 player on the market, but once they figured it out (the user interface), they became the predominant one overnight," he said. "Whether you make it a marketing message or not, the public will discover that usability and choose your product over a competitor's."

How many things did the iPod do? Is it trying to be a phone, email device, and media player, or just one of those? Sure, there's the iPod phone - anyone notice just how successful that was? I don't think most people want a brain dead, converged device. Sure, they'll tell market researchers that they do, because ideally, we would all like to carry fewer things in our pockets. Our actual behavior says something different though.

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spam

Theft Oriented Splogging

May 28, 2006 13:35:49.458

Yet another theft oriented solution has appeared on the market - BlogSolution, the easy way to scam your way to page rank without working. It's not as if the people behind this are trying to hide what they do, either. Here's how they describe what the rest of us do:

But normally, it takes months of work, time, exasperation, irritation, probably even a little heartache to get a site to PR6 and ranking well for good keywords. And for good reason there's a lot of money in it.

Yeah, that's just teh suX0r, having to create content for a period of time, before someone notices. That work thing, day in, day out - it bites the big one. Instead, just steal it:

BlogSolution creates 100 blogs per second. It doesn't use Blogger. It doesn't use Wordpress. BlogSolution creates blogs with it's own CUSTOM blogging platform. And it's the fastest on the planet.
...
BlogSolution handles the WHOLE enchilada for you. It creates. It updates. It pings. It posts one way links to your sites. It cloaks. It interlinks your sites. Using "Smartjobs" it creates blogs when you're not around. It puts every job on autopilot. It dominates your competition.

This is the digital equivalent of copying content from books, pasting the pages together, and calling it your own work. The people behind this are content thieves - pure and simple. They and their users are making the internet a little bit worse, every day.

Here's the link to their site - go ahead and send them a note to let them know what kind of tools they are.

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smalltalk

Smalltalk IRC Channel

May 28, 2006 14:17:17.885

One of the servers that hosts the Smalltalk IRC channel went offline, but there are other access points. If you got tossed off, see the IRC page on the VW Wiki - I'm using the second one in the table.

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web

Online services and Auditability

May 28, 2006 15:13:55.267

Sam Ruby on "Share your OPML", after some subscribe/unsubscribe changes:

While the intentions behind this particular change are innocent, the fact remains that SYO in its current state is essentially un-auditable.

Dare Obasanjo objects the objection:

Doesn’t this apply to pretty much every online service? Or do you have the audit records for the Technorati Top 100, Feedster 500 or TechMeme’s current hot stories of the day?
Your comment seems pretty inflammatory given that this is the status quo in the online world today.

I think the difference is this: Technorati, Feedster (et. al.) are not playing at being our pal - they are businesses, and quite obviously so. Dave Winer likes to play at being "above the fray", which invites comments like Sam's.

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stupidity

Quick, Panic! But Buy from me first

May 28, 2006 15:27:03.933

Oracle's chief security officer farted in public the other day:

Things are so bad in the software business that it has become "a national security issue," with regulation of the industry currently on the agenda, she said. "I did an informal poll recently of chief security officers on the CSO Council, and a lot of them said they really thought the industry should be regulated," she said, referring to the security think tank.

Oooh, regulation of the industry. There's a thought. Pray tell, what "best practices" are you planning to recommend? The ones espoused by the CMM advocates? Or perhaps the Agilists? Maybe something else entirely? There's nothing even vaguely resembling consensus on this stuff. We can't agree on what kind of development tools or methodologies to use, and this clown wants to warn us about regulation? Here she is again:

Davidson also hit out at the "hacking mentality," and the incidence of exploits that could cause "a million dollars worth of damage...passed around freely at conferences." She said there was a major difference between people working in the software business and engineers who "are trained to think in terms of safety, security and reliability first."

Those engineers have recognized standards to follow, you bloviating moron. Software developers simply don't. Not even close. Of course, if you want to realize just how big of a jerk this woman is, you need only read the last quote:

She claimed that the British are particularly good at hacking as they have "the perfect temperament to be hackers--technically skilled, slightly disrespectful of authority, and just a touch of criminal behavior."

There's a way to improve sales and motivate people - be condescending and oafish all at once. I think Davidson needs a vacation - a very long vacation.

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DRM

One player per service

May 28, 2006 22:59:45.313

Chris Pirillo explains how and why DRM sucks eggs:

Now, I’ve already downloaded Pearl Jam’s new album through Napster. I can’t listen to it in either Rhapsody or URGE. I’ve paid for it already! So, let’s say I turn off Napster and switch to URGE. I’d have to download the album again. What’s more, Windows Media Player / Windows Explorer doesn’t tell me where the album came from - I have to guess. I have to play (by trial and error) to see which albums are supported by which service. THIS IS MADNESS! Why can’t the individual file detect which service I’m paying for and then adjust itself accordingly? Why must I maintain three DRM’ed versions of the same song?

It's as if you needed a different CD player for each label you bought a CD from. That's probably something the labels would have liked, but it simply wouldn't have washed with the public.

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holiday

Memorial Day

May 29, 2006 11:43:55.280

My grandfather fought in WWI - he was one of the lucky ones, who only came away with nightmares. My father in law fought in the Pacific campaign in WWII, and was on Iwo Jima when they raised the flag on Mount Suribachi - he doesn't recall seeing it tough - I expect he was too busy trying to stay alive. In honor of their service, and that of every other American who has served - and who is serving now - I offer up this:

In Flanders Fields
By: Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, MD (1872-1918)
Canadian Army

IN FLANDERS FIELDS the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

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games

Mucking up Caylus

May 29, 2006 12:30:33.712

I've mentioned the game "Caylus", which is our current favorite. We had somehow messed up one of the rules - at the start of each turn, we were distributing 3 coins o each player, but the actual rule is 2. It seems like a small change, but it really affected play on Friday night. Suddenly, a bunch of buildings that hadn't seemed relevant to us (ones that deal with money rather than goods) got played - and consequently, there were far fewer resources available. I don't know if that style of play will stick with our group, but it certainly shook things up.

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books

Book Recommendations Wanted

May 29, 2006 12:36:24.400

I've gotten some very nice recommendations on books via this blog, so I'll make a request - I'm looking for some good books on the 17th century in England - specifically, the English Civil War and the periods immediately before and after. Either leave a comment, or drop me a line. Thanks!

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events

ESUG Calls for Student Volunteers

May 30, 2006 7:45:21.085

The 14th ESUG Conference is taking place in Prague in September (4-8) - and they want student volunteers:

Are you a student, and do you want to attend ESUG (the premier European Conference on Smalltalk)? This year, ESUG again has a student volunteer program you can apply for. Your duties will be few, and you will have to help the local organizers.
ESUG does not pay travel costs, but the conference will be free. Depending on the number of students the hosting will possibly also be free. To volunteer, follow this link.
The program is now available here

I'll be coming to the conference, so I hope to see you there

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web

Storage Space: Free

May 30, 2006 8:27:48.411

Mike Arrington writes about the disruptive nature of CNet's AllYouCanUpload photo site, and how it's going to impact other offerings of this nature:

AllYouCanUpload is a site that makes uploading photos as easy as it can possibly get. They’ve removed all of the friction. You do not need to register for an account. You just use the uploading tool and you are shown the image along with codes to post the photo on sites like Myspace, ebay and others (I’d also like an option to have the image links emailed to me). Unlike Photobucket and Imageshack, AllYouCanUpload is completely free, and no advertisements appear on the uploading areas of the site (there are ads on the hosted part of the site, which you see if you click on a hosted image). There is no limit to the number of photos that can be uploaded or the total amount of storage that may be consumed. There is no limit on the size of an image, and images are not resized unless you request it. And possibly most importantly, there are absolutely no bandwidth restraints.

What struck me is something else, and it's a trend that started with gmail - storage space is now so cheap that companies aren't even bothering to charge for it. How cheap? Well, I was at CompUSA two days ago, and ran across this drive: a one terabyte Maxtor drive. It's being marketed as a one touch backup solution, and it's being sold for $899.

I still recall buying my second 40 MB hard drive back in the 80's, and thinking to myself that I was set - no way I'd need more space than that :) Now I have a 256 MB USB keychain lying around, and there are things like the Maxtor drive for sale. With storage effectively unlimited, all we need now is reasonably fast (and bi-directional) network access. At that point, "the network is the computer" may actually be true.

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blog

Lots of Posts

May 30, 2006 12:11:55.287

I've been doing this blog since June of 2002 - if you go back to that first post, it's clear that I had no idea where I was going with the blog - I started it up as a multi-author blog (yes, the Silt server has support for that). Since then, I've been posting regularly - it's been 1459 days, with 8254 posts - that's between 5 and 6 posts a day over that time period.

The interesting thing (to me, at least) is that I'm not tired of it, and I don't see it as a chore. It's still fun, and I'll keep posting as long as it's fun. Besides, there's always something new showing up in my aggregator that makes me want to go off on a rant...

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blog

Outsourced Blogging

May 30, 2006 12:23:21.117

Rogers tries an experiment - outsourcing his blog to India for a week. It sgould be interesting to hear the perspective of someone in India for a change.

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web

Failed Analogy

May 30, 2006 12:43:11.447

David Weinberger points to this amusing imagination of a town that ran sidewalks like ISP's want to run internet access. There's a simple problem with the whole scenario though: Sidewalks are generally city (or county) property, which means that they are a "public utility". As such, the city can regulate usage, and not allow any specific private interest to do so.

The internet though? Some parts are owned, other parts are public, still others live in some quasi-public status. It's really not the same thing at all. Not to mention that various municipalties do, in fact, regulate usage of the sidewalks. You can't set up a business on one, and in many places, you can't (legally) ride a bicycle on one either.

My problem with the net neutrality debate is the apocalyptic tones being used by everyone involved. The telcos and cable providers would like me to think that video is going to overwhelm limited bandwidth - yeah, right. I've seen various doomsday predictions of a bandwidth crisis for years, and it never seems to materialize. On the other hand, we have other people telling us that the ISP's are entities of raw evil, ready to slice up bandwidth into tiny little chunks and screw us all over.

Neither of these dark visions represents reality. We've had a mostly unfettered net for a long while now, and I seriously doubt that consumers will be willngly led to gated communities of crappy service - with or without regulation. Likewise, I seriously doubt that video is about to kill the internet star. In general, I trust the market to deliver reality far, far better than I trust government. When we invite government in to "give" us net neutrality, there's going to be a price. That price would probably involve content restrictions "for the children", along with a raft of other "good stuff" that would end up limiting my freedom of expression. To the people calling for net neutrality laws, I say this: be very, very careful what you ask for. You might not like the form in which it's delivered to you.

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law

Lawyers Gone Wild: Confirmation

May 30, 2006 14:00:32.647

I received confirmation from the law firm representing Jason Tomczak in the Nano scratch case - they are representing him, and he does say that the lawfirm that brought the case never had him down as a formal plaintiff. I'll post the email they sent me if I get their permission to do so. In the meantime, maybe it's time to contact the firm that claims to represent him, and get their side of the story.

Update: I called the law firm that claims to represent Tomczak, and left a voicemail. We'll see if they have anything to say.

Update 2: Here's the note that Cameron Totten, of Sherman & Nathanson, sent me:

The facts as stated in the open letter are correct and alleged in the lawsuit we filed on behalf of Mr. Tomczak against the Hagens firm and the Meyer firm. I am interested in learning more about the blogger in Maine. Can you provide me more information or direct me to some links on the topic? If you need any more information from me, please feel free to contact me.

He's referring to the infamous Warner Kremer Paino thing, which I mentioned in my mail to him.

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Macintosh

Dead Mac Drive

May 30, 2006 17:52:00.093

I've had an "I'm not impressed" incident with the Mac - the HD just went and died. It's unclear whether the filesystem went bats, or whether the drive is bad - it's under warranty, so the Apple tech at CompUSA is dealing with. The data on the drive is a total loss though. So now comes the fun part - getting back the stuff I bought off iTunes. Ideally, I could just copy it off the iPod. But noo.... the ugliness of Apple's DRM concessions to the RIAA kills that.

Bah.

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PR

O'Reilly's response on the Web 2.0 thing

May 30, 2006 21:21:36.961

Tim O'Reilly responded to the Web 2.0 trademark kerfuffle today, and it's a good response. I'll highlight one piece to make a point:

CMP let us know recently that they were worried about potential dilution of the conference brand by other companies putting on Web 2.0 related conferences using the same name, and I agreed with them that it was an issue that we needed to deal with. I was not aware, however, that CMP intended to send out cease and desist letters to anyone in the short term, let alone to a non-profit organization with whom I'd previously corresponded about the event they were putting on. (Gina Blaber, the head of our conference team, was aware of the letter, however, and approved it, and that's why Sara Winge, in her postings, did not disclaim O'Reilly's responsibility.)

At this point, lawyers are in the PR business as well as the legal business. I'm sure they don't like that - it's not something they aimed for, any more than PR people aimed for law. Be that as it may, that's the way it is. The mistake here was in PR terms - CMP's lawyers did exactly what Warner Kremer Paino did when they sued Lance Dutson - they created a negative PR event. Sure, there are difference. CMP has a valid trademark, and they sent a letter rather than a lawsuit.

In PR terms, none of that matters. The end result is, they made O'Reilly look bad, and did potential harm to the business. Tim states that people piled on prematurely, and that may well be the case. I'd argue that CMP's lawyers prematurely sent their letter as well. Not on legal grounds, but on PR grounds. It used to be that PR and marketing had to run things by legal first, to check for potential trouble. Now it runs the other way as well. I'm not sure that Tim fully gets that, because he states:

Just to be clear, neither CMP or O'Reilly is claiming the right to all use of the term Web 2.0, as some of the posters assert. We just want to keep other conference companies from putting on on events that trade on the name and concept that we created. And don't tell me it's not possible to have a Web 2.0-related conference without using Web 2.0 in the name! Microsoft's Mix 06, Google's Zeitgeist, the Ajax Experience -- these are all web 2.0-related conferences that don't use the name.

The question he's got to ask himself is, was the standard legal treatment of a cease and desist letter worth the PR nightmare it caused? I think a phone call to IT@Cork first, followed by a letter if that had been unsatisfactory, would have worked a whole lot better. It's a new ballgame out there for PR - and if O'Reilly wants to surf the Web 2.0 wave, he's got to deal with that reality.

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gadgets

Wii Pricing announced

May 30, 2006 21:56:53.231

Looks like my guess about Wii pricing was wrong. I figured on $199 (I thought about saying "or $249, but didn't). I should have gone with the bigger number:

Gamers still mulling their options following the unveiling of cool new consoles from Nintendo and Sony at the recent E3 2006 conference might want to take a closer look at the Wii, given that Nintendo has formally priced the machine well below the competing boxes.
The price, $250, is half the cost of Sony's $499 PlayStation 3 console and considerably less than Microsoft's top-end Xbox 360 that sells for about $400.

It's now a matter of which games they have ready at the point of release.

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humor

Piracy is killing the RIAA!

May 30, 2006 22:08:05.484

Head on over to Donny's blog and find out how the piracy from one torrent site is of more value than the GDP of France. Oh, the humanity...

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PR

Channeling Bill Lyons

May 30, 2006 22:14:31.867

Instantiations is channeling the marketing team from DarkPlace-DodgeyTalk - I just saw this in comp.lang.smalltalk:

I'm trying to figure how Instantiations did subscribe me (and some fellows smalltalkers) to a Java newsletter, when the only thing I did is register to download some goodies and documentation of *Smalltalk* more than a year ago.

I received the following mail (snipped):


 -- BEGIN OF MAIL
Subject:        Last Chance to Register: Bring Java Back to the Desktop
From:   Instantiations Inc. <newslet...@instantiations.com>
To:     <me>

*Eclipse RCP Webcast
**LIVE From Times Square

Wednesday May 31, 2006
2:00 - 3:00 PM EDT
Registration Closes Tuesday
 -- END OF MAIL

How to believe them when they say they will improve VAST? :-(

Heh. Know your audience, and all that :)

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