...more recent posts
First full report on the SonyEricsson P800 super 1337 uber cellphone. Sounds like the long wait has been worth it.
Having bought the danger hiptop I can't possibly contemplate getting a new phone for quite a few more months. But I cannot wait to see what will be around when I'm finally ready. Cellphones are the one consumer electronics niche that is still holding my interest. I'm very optimistic about what the next 12 months will bring.
New from daypop: word bursts.
For background, check out the work of Jon Kleinberg, a professor of computer science at Cornell University.
Got lucky with an invite to dinner last Sunday at the latest Jean-George venue, 66. Wow. They're open for lunch too (I wonder if it's easier to get in then?) Best meal since Austria.
The sesame noodles and the tuna tartar are absolute must have orders.
The technology behind the next generation of file sharing legal battles was unveiled at CodeCon today. Brandon Wiley describes Alluvium as "Peer to Peer radio" - which it is, but it also blurs the distinction between streaming and downloading once and forever.
I was raised in the Catholic church (meaning I grudgingly went to church every Sunday.) And perhaps I'd still be somewhere on the outskirts of the Chrisitian fold if I had run into any clergy members with the depth of thought I find in AKMA's writings. He's my second favorite religious blogger (Mr. Wilson gets the alpha position, of course.)
Read AKMA's take on the upcoming war with Iraq.
There may be no room for pride in war, only penitence; there may be no room for pre-emption in war, only response. (A righteous combatant will not strike a first blow, because she or he doesn’t know that the adversary actually is a combatant until the adversary starts the fight.) The Bush administration’s actions in North Korea illustrate that there are indeed other ways of addressing unstable tyrants who possess weapons of mass destruction. When Bush singles out Hussein and Iraq as “deserving” a pre-emptive war that will surely affect non-combatants disproportionately (perhaps even deliberately so), his selectivity falsifies any claim that this could be a “just” war.Amen.
CNET interview with Dave Winer who has been tapped to bring blogs to Harvard University.
(via JOHO)
From Risk Digest, via a mailing list:
ATM vulnerabilities and citibank's gag attempt
Ross Anderson
Thu, 20 Feb 2003 09:58:47 +0000
Citibank is trying to get an order in the High Court today gagging public disclosure of crypto vulnerabilities:
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/ftp/users/rja14/citibank_gag.pdf
I have written to the judge opposing the order:
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/ftp/users/rja14/citibank_response.pdf
The background is that my student Mike Bond has discovered some really horrendous vulnerabilities in the cryptographic equipment commonly used to protect the PINs used to identify customers to cash machines:
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/TechReports/UCAM-CL-TR-560.pdf
These vulnerabilities mean that bank insiders can almost trivially find out the PINs of any or all customers. The discoveries happened while Mike and I were working as expert witnesses on a `phantom withdrawal' case.
The vulnerabilities are also scientifically interesting: http://cryptome.org/pacc.htm
Source URL: http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/go/risks/22/58/6
Clicker, a shareware app for OS X that lets you have some control over iTunes, DVD player, Keynote, and Powerpoint by using a Sony Ericsson bluetooth phone (like the t68i) as a remote control. Wow.
"Further, Sony Ericsson Clicker has a built in 'proximity sensor', allowing you to trigger actions when you leave or come back to your Mac." Double wow. This is the first cool use of bluetooth I've heard.
Excellent. Apple's new Safari browser is getting tabs. As soon as they post it for download I'll switch to that as my main browser. This is a small thing that makes me strangely happy.
If someone decides to teach a class on weblog theory they now have the perfect introductory text. Nothing new here if you've been following along, but it's great to have it all layed out in one place. Excellent collection of links. Very nice job.
These tools are being developed and we are on the verge of an awakening of the Internet. This awakening will facilitate the anticipated political model enabled by technology to support some of the basic attributes of democracy, which have eroded as power has become concentrated within corporations and governments. It is possible that new technologies may enable a higher-level order through emergent properties, which will enable a form of emergent direct democracy capable of managing complex issues more effectively than the current form of representative democracy.We can hope, right?