...more recent posts
Clay Shirkey's The Possibility of Spectrum as a Public Good. Yet another recap of why radio interference is no longer a problem, and how this should change FCC regulation policy. Very short and to the point for such a complex issue. Best summary yet.
Blobjects to Spimes, Bruce Sterling's 2004 SIGGRAPH speach.
Back from vacation. Little Compton, Rhode Island was beautiful once again. This was my second year at the same location, although over the winter they knocked down the house and built a new one in its place.
I hurt my back and spent much of the week laying on the floor, but oddly this didn't upset me too much. I managed to sit up for the fabulous meals.
Also I left my cellphone on the windowsill one night where it got drenched with rain. When I turned it on I just got a sickly yellow blinking screen. I tried to reboot it a few times over the next couple of days, but never had any luck. Now this morning, after sitting for many days and completely draining the battery, I plugged it in and it appears to work. Occasionally the screen will get this jittery thing, but otherwise it appears okay. I am surprised because the thing got *wet*.
Anyway, it's very nice to be back in the center of the world.
Tor:
The system is based on a concept called onion routing. It works like this: Messages, or packets of information, are sent through a distributed network of randomly selected servers, or nodes, each of which knows only its predecessor and successor. Messages flowing through this network are unwrapped by a symmetric encryption key at each server that peels off one layer and reveals instructions for the next downstream node.
I've always had wildcarding turned on in the main mail account on this domain. This has meant that any mail sent to x at digitalmediatree.com, where x does not match a real mailbox, falls through into the main account where I receive it. This was handy because I would catch misspelled names and forward them to their intended recipients, and also because I could just make up crazy email addresses on the fly knowing that any address I wanted to use would be automatically valid.
But the spam is finally too much. Even with pretty good filters. It had been hovering at around 500 spams a day, but then in the past few days jumped to over 700, and now this morning there were over 2,000 spams waiting for me (that is since late yesterday afternoon!)
So I turned wildcarding off. Any email sent to a nonexistent mailbox at this domain will now bounce. No big deal really, but I thought I'd mention it. And maybe that makes you feel better about your spam problem.
Anniversaries can be tricky to calculate, but by some measures August 14th 1999 is date this site came into being. I'm reminded of this because I needed to renew the domain name before the 14th so as not to lose it. And since I am going to be away next week, I went ahead and did it a few days early. Imagine that. Anyway happy 5th birthday everyone. And thanks for all 15,454 posts and 22,292 comments.
It doesn't include a camera, but the new Siemans SK65 phone has a qwerty keyboard design that looks like it might be a winner.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs successfully underwent surgery for a "very rare" type of pancreatic cancer. The operation was successful and he is recovering and expected back on the job in September. Think Secret has the full text of his email to Apple employees.
Now, don't get carried away. It's not a big deal or anything. Small gifts and professions of undying gratitude should cover it.
Okay, I think the phone is working. Mobile email is not working yet, but I am getting anything sent to that address on my computer (so I still get them, but not as fast.)