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Inventing the Future: component programming

Posted By: Stearns

Marshall McLuhan said that the interesting thing about a medium is what it makes the user become in order to use it.

What does Croquet make people become? Rick McGear, a Croquet advocate at HP, says that using Croquet makes us become programmers.

What is programming? The classic definition is of computational processes, but object-oriented programming seems to take a different view. And Croquet's TeaTime architecture describes objects in terms of a mapping between message histories. I'm not finding process to be satisfying. [Read More!]
Posted: 04/10/05 12:01:06 - 2 comments

Inventing the Future: components: reified computing

Posted By: Stearns

The component model I'm working on tries to make everything you deal with visibly concrete so that it can be directly and uniformly manipulated — even behaviors. It was inspired by my wife's fascination with a game on her PDA. [Read More!]
Posted: 04/06/05 21:39:23 - 2 comments

where are they now?

Posted By: Stearns

Any conclusions from the following?

* Since 9/11, the portion of DARPA's computer science budget going to universities has dropped drastically from $214M to $123M. (Pretty paltry, in my biased opinion.)

* Universities (at least the one's I'm familiar with) are typically prohibited from doing classified research on campus.

* The total DARPA computer science budget over the same period has actually increased slightly, from $546M to $583M.

* DARPA's Total Information Awareness project, initially unclassified, has officially been ended by Congress.

* The last year in which Ashcroft had requested unclassified funding for TIA was 2004. He had asked for something north of $100M.

Say, what is Ashcroft doing since going back into "private" life? What is Poindexter up to?
Posted: 04/06/05 21:36:01 - 1 comment

Sony patents beaming sights and sounds into your brain

Posted By: Gary

Hastening the day that we all become batteries for powering our robotic overlords, Sony has patented beaming senses into the human brain, according to this story at Yahoo News. Now all the machines need to do is rise up, stick us in a pod, and beam images into our eyes onfa mundane reality while sapping our bodies of electricity. Yay Sony!

You know, sights from a game might be cool to have beamed into your brain. However, I've been addicted to... err... playing a lot of World of Warcraft recently. Visuals are one thing, but honestly, I really don't want to smell an orc or a troll, especially after I have bludgeoned the thing to death.



Posted: 04/06/05 17:04:14 - 3 comments

Tales of the Sausage Factory: Muni Momentum Swings Toward the Telcos, But The Game is Far From Over

Posted By: Harold

After a number of victories, the momentum has recently turned to the Telco side of the muni fight.
On the plus side, we have not yet lost anything definitively. There is still time for citizens in these states to make this an issue. But I'm having the feeling I usually reserve for the Boston Red Sox in August.

Well, let's see if we can't make this our 2004 World Series. Anybody in these states interested in trying to fight these bills, let me know and I will try to put you in touch with folks on the ground there. [Read More!]
Posted: 04/06/05 13:00:34 - 1 comment

Tales of the Sausage Factory: Bad News From Colorado

Posted By: Harold

I'm reprinting (with permission) a post from Dave Hughes about yesterday's (4/5) Colorado House Committee Hearing on their anti-muni bill. For those unfamiliar with Dave Hughes, he is one of the true pioneers of unlicensed spectrum as a way of bringing broadband cheaply and easily to the masses.

It's grim reading. But unlike Dave, I refuse to give up until a bill is passed and signed. There is still time for the people of Colorado to remind their elected officials that at the end of the day, they work for them, not Qwest or Comcast.

Stay tuned . . . [Read More!]
Posted: 04/06/05 12:39:35 - 2 comments

a rant on copy protection

Posted By: Stearns

<rant on>
I could just slap Steve Jobs. He really had a good thing going with me, until today.

All the people I hang out with are pretty avidly anti-Microsoft, on technical, business, and moral grounds. I work at a University where I and everyone else use Macs. My wife was a Mac pioneer from way back, has a business that may soon be buying educational computers by the truckload, and is a perfect candidate for the "Switch' ads. I like Pixar movies, and I'm tickled that ol' Steve's iTunes was able to show those RIAA guys what morons they've been.

Well, it that's all changed.
[Read More!]
Posted: 04/02/05 14:44:56 - 4 comments

Inventing the Future: I was just thinking of you...

Posted By: Stearns

I just had one of those damn computer things, where I send an email to someone who I couldn't reach by voice, but just after sending it, I get an email from that person that changes the conditions of what I was writing to the person about. Arghh.

I've written before about how Croquet fosters both synchronous and asynchronous communication, like combining chat and email. Here's how it plays out in this particular scenario. I go to the special space that Alice and I have created (with a few clicks or voice commands) for the stuff common to us. (Or maybe common to a group of three or more. It doesn't matter.) I create a message in that space – voice, text, or video. The idea is that Alice will see that message (and possibly be notified) and will review at her leisure. Alice starts to do the same thing, but since each of us has a presence (an avatar) visible to anyone else in the space, we see each other. Then we just start talking, directly. While we do so, I can even point at the paragraph that I was just composing. Alice can edit it, too, so that she or I can then bring over the collaboratively revised version to Bob. No mail client. No telephone. No chat client. No whiteboard. No filenames or email addresses. No server.

OK, this isn't that different in principle from the little colored balls in Macintosh Mail that tell you which addresses belong to people who are in your buddy list and available for iChat at this moment. But maybe it's enough different to actually be useable.
Posted: 03/31/05 16:54:10 - 4 comments

Tales of the Sausage Factory: Low Power Radio Order

Posted By: Harold

On the decidedly low-tech side, but still a very important part of my work, is helping the Low Power FM community (particularly the good folks at Prometheus Radio Project) deal with the FCC.

One of the things that has kept me busy this month has been a final push to get good stuff out before Powell left. It finally happened at 7:30 p.m. the night he left, with the release of this Order.

This is actually an interesting story that, among other things, pits local community radio organizers aganst some folks in Twin Falls, ID that are either exploiting loopholes in the rules or violating federal law to set up a nation-wide evangelical Christian radio network. [Read More!]
Posted: 03/31/05 12:00:21 - 3 comments

Tales of the Sausage Factory: My Day With the Supremes

Posted By: Harold

There are advantages to being a member of the Supreme Court Bar. One is, you get to go and hear the arguments from the Supreme Court Bar section. Guess what I did today! While you will get tons of info from other websites, this is probably the only place you will see someone say that Justice Rehnquist now sounds like a bad combination of Darth Vader and the Emperor from “Return of the Jedi”.... [Read More!]
Posted: 03/29/05 17:17:00 - 22 comments
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