Nice article about teleconferencing (including Qwaq, which is based on Croquet) versus travel.
I wonder if there's real data on the relative merits of the energy used in office buildings vs. telecommuting. Office buildings are potentially more efficient through scaling, although the economic incentives are so lacking that there's usually a lot of waste. While homes are energy hogs, we do already have and heat them for our non-work time.
eShrek – n. software that is big-business in and of itself. For entertainment purposes only, not business or personal enrichment. (From Old Internet eMail and New Hollywood Shrek, after Yiddish “shrek” (monster), sometimes with connotations of shlock, shmaltz, shmata, or other short throw-away Yiddish words denoting things not highly regarded.) Compare “crapware.”
Damn, I thought I had found a Christmas gift for my wife that was not a gadget. You may love a gadget. You may tell your friends. You may keep using it for a year. Or not. But to me, a gadget is defined as something you don't immediately replace when it's lost. Gadgets aren't game-changers that permanently alter how you live.
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Last Monday I called to complain that despite the premium I was paying for 3Mb/s service, I was getting 300 Kb/s downloads and worse. They responded by cutting me off completely. I'll spare you the dialog, but you can just substitute any page from Franz Kafka or Lewis Carroll. A guy came on Wednesday to replace my cable modem and splitter, and it appeared in his immediate testing to yield close to the expected 3000 Kb/s.
Over the next few days I found that I only got that speed immediately after rebooting the cable-modem. After a few minutes, it would drop to 1500, 600, 300, 150, and finally 30 Kb/s. Slower than an acoustic modem from before my children were born. All through the rest of the week, I would reboot, and watch as the speed fell off.
Charter stopped taking my calls altogether. They just hung up on me over and over again.
After one of these calls we ordered DSL from our local phone company. The modem arrived Friday. I plugged it in and it worked! 3.5 to 4 Mb/s. And it has stayed that way ever since. I've been trying to get my mail and Webpages copied off from Charter, but they won't let me log in.
Since then, I've discovered two things I didn't know or pay any attention to when things just worked:
Despite increasing their revenue from saps like me by more than 10% over this quarter last year, they announced this week that they're losing even more money than ever, and their stock lost nearly 20% of it's value. Couldn't happen to a more deserving group.
This morning my Internet service was out. Usually, I call and get either a recorded message saying that there's an outage in my area and that technicians have been dispatched, or a I get a voice menu that talks me through resetting my modem. They don't let you talk to an actual person until you do this.
But today, I got right through to a person. He asked for my social security number, my wife's social security number, and what I used the Internet for. I was specifically asked what I downloaded. After several more minutes of monkeying around, the putative technician (who must have recieved his degree from a Blackwater USA training camp), told me that “it was broken” and they'd send someone out next Tuesday. After several minutes of screaming at him, and then my wife screaming at him (the big guns), the service was back on.
Could this possibly be anything other than Homeland Security outsourcing the RIAA's bidding to the telecom operators? It sounds absurd, but the weird thing is — we already they know that this has happened. There's no question of “can this happen”, only a question of what happened here in this case.
World-Wide Web technology is primarily static. The technology is designed around slow repeated cycles of request-a-page/get-a-page. Technologies like Flash, Curl, and Laszlo are aimed at improving this interaction while staying within the WWW framework. But the Web isn't about interaction, it's about information and, to a certain extent, transactions. While these drivers remain unchanged, two stories in my local paper this week have shown me that the expectations of pace have changed.
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Getting virtual worlds away from a computer screen and into a physical classroom space doesn't have to be hard. These Greenbush Labs guys are using a commercial computer/whiteboard link to run open source software based on the KAT. How cool is that?
I figure there is no technology on earth to which the Chief Technical Officer of Intel Corp doesn't have access. Today he chose to talk about Qwaq and Croquet during his closing keynote address to the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco's huge Moscone Center.