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Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: CBS & NBC Out Conservative Fox

Posted By: Harold

Viacom, the network that has vowed to fight the FCC's indecency fine for the Jackson/Timberlake “Wardrobe Malfunction” all the way to the Supreme Court in the name of free speech, has rejected this advertisement by the United Church of Christ as “too controversial,” as has NBC. Fox, the “conservative network,” had no problems, nor did the ABC Family Channel. What gives? Disturbing implications discussed below. [Read More!]
Posted: 12/02/04 17:58:12 - No comments

Inventing the Future: Inventing the Future: digital convergence happens

Posted By: Stearns

Croquet is “about” real-time collaboration. A bunch of people can be in the same virtual environment and see the live effects of each other moving around and manipulating things. It seems natural to add audio chat using existing Voice Over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology. So now you can talk to folks in the same space while you work together. We're working on Webcam video, too, so that it's generally suitable for holding distance meetings in a Croquet place. I didn't think much about displacing land-line telephones. Who cares.

We thought a bit about how you could connect the telephone system so that you could call in to a Croquet place and join a meeting (audio only?) from a cell phone.

But then I read this quote from Patrick Scaglia, Vice-President and Director of the Internet and Computing Platforms Research Center at HP Lab:

“Croquet is a first in many ways. It represents a major step in our vision of computation as a communications platform and service, available anytime, anywhere, from any device. Soon, Croquet will run on everything, from a PDA through a set-top box; persistent Croquet worlds will be ubiquitous on the Internet, routed intelligently to each user through computational services overlays like PlanetLab. This will change the way people think about software and computation, from today’s device-oriented perspective to a perspective of computation as a persistent, pervasive, service”.

It took a day to sink in.

Eventually, people will want and get always-on connectivity for mobile devices, just as over half of American Internet users now get for fixed-position access. After demand evens out, I think device costs are first-order proportional to the number of chips, with the complexity of chips being a second-order effect. So the cost of a PDA capable of running Croquet will someday not be inherently much more expensive then a cell phone such as is now being given away by providers.

So, will we have telephones? Of any kind?

As far as I know, the Croquet developers didn't set out to replace the telephone. If I had, my wife would have threatened divorce for such a hair-brained idea. And I'm not predicting that Croquet will displace the telephone. But it is interesting that progress in solving an abstract and general problem
mightlead to the merging of computers and telephones.
Posted: 12/02/04 09:51:48 - 1 comment

Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of The Sausage Factory: PA HB 30 Now Law *sigh*

Posted By: Harold

Gov. Rendell signed HB 30 into law an hour before the deadline last night (11/30). In a last minute deal, VRZN agreed to waive its right of first refusal against the proposed Philly municpal wifi system. Rendell promises to work with other municipalities to the extent their systems are “viable” to “ensure that they succeed.”

I'll have more analysis later, including what I think is the likely aftermath in both PA and for other states. Short version: we did surprisingly well for organizing from ground zero the week before Thanksgiving. We have also put a spotlight on the issue of municpal broadband systems (and wireless in particular) that will take this out of the back rooms and turn it into a real issue for public debate.

A copy of Rendell's statement on the ban and a link to the full text of the statement below.

Stay tuned . . [Read More!]
Posted: 12/01/04 10:32:37 - 1 comment

Inventing the Future: Inventing the Future: shared persistence

Posted By: Stearns

The real-time collaboration in Croquet is cool. It provides a very different way of structuring applications that will allow things that nothing else can. The croquet team is working hard on this aspect. But we're just begining to consider the implications of shared persistence. I think this is just as radical in itself, and will inspire truly extroadinary software when combined with Croquet's other aspects. [Read More!]
Posted: 11/26/04 23:13:44 - 2 comments

Tales of the Sausage Factory: TotSF: Industry Mobilizes to Stop Philly WiFi

Posted By: Harold

Surprise! Surprise! Surprise! As recorded in this article about last night's community meeting in Philly, Verizon has mobilized to squash municipal wifi in Pennsylvania. This little gem, called House Bill 30, is a classic: it provides huge new public subsidies for Verizon while squeezing out competitors. My analysis below. [Read More!]
Posted: 11/18/04 20:48:41 - 6 comments

Eclipse Laszlo plug-in from IBM

Posted By: John

Last October, Laszlo Systems announced that they were opening up their rich client technology and making it available for free download from Open Laszlo .org.

Today, IBM's Emerging Technology group released an Eclipse plug-in for Laszlo. You can grab it from their alphaWorks
site.
Posted: 11/18/04 19:44:39 - No comments

Tales of the Sausage Factory: TotSF: Public Knowledge Action Alert on IP bills

Posted By: Harold

I'm republishing below the action alert from Public Knowledge on the latest intellectual property hijinks in Congress.

Stay tuned . . . . [Read More!]
Posted: 11/17/04 14:05:13 - No comments

Total Government Awareness going the way of John Ashcroft?

Posted By: Stearns

A long time ago, I think I mentioned in a comment to something that there was a project at the MIT Media Lab to keep a database of uncorroborated information about government officials, analogous to Ashcroft and Poindexter's “Total Information Awareness” monstrosity.

The project had been written up in several places, including Wired and slashdot, but now it seems to have shut down.

Why? Lack of interest (we get the government we deserve), or were they shut down? I have no idea.

The TIA project (ephemistically renamed “Terorist Information Awareness”) seems to have disappeared from the DARPA site, too. Does that mean it has been abandoned, or just gone silent.
Posted: 11/17/04 09:52:25 - 1 comment

Tales of the Sausage Factory: TotSF: The Wireless Circle Jerk

Posted By: Harold

Sascha Meinrath has this blog posting on how Motorola's acquisition of MeshNetworks is a prime example of corporate welfare gone wild. Of course, in D.C., we call this “the circle of life”. Taxpayers, however, may see it as the Circle of Jerk.

It is unclear to me if Motorola, one of the fiercest foes of expanding unlicensed access, is simply trying to take out a competitor or hedge a bet. I do not expect their filings to change — in fact,I expect them to leverage MeshNetworks as a means of undermining manufacturing comments from folks like Tropos. OTOH, FCC staff are not stupid, and understand how industry filings work.

Stay tuned . . .
Posted: 11/17/04 09:47:03 - No comments

Tales of the Sausage Factory: TotSF: I agree with the American Conservative Union

Posted By: Harold

Well, on one thing anyway. ACU — one of the backbones of the conservative movement, is opposing attempts by Congress to pass yet another stupid bill on copyright enforcement. Details in this Wired article. The quote that caught my eye was:

“'It's just plain wrong to make the Department of Justice Hollywood's law firm,' said Stacie Rumenap, ACU's deputy director.”

Couldn't agree with them more.

Stay tuned . . .
Posted: 11/16/04 15:14:56 - No comments
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