...more recent posts
Had a drink and then a nice dinner last night with Chris from house8.net. Really nice guy as I suspected. This is the first time I've hung out with someone I met on line (I mean someone who wasn't already a friend of a friend or something.) So far so good.
If anyone knows any prayers or incantations promoting the efficacy of crazyglue computer repairs feel free to say them now.
Last night I overheard a man at a nearby table talking, not too favorably, about the food he ate growing up. He said that years later his Mom confessed that although she liked vegetables, she was always unsure how to kill them, so she would just use canned vegetables, which were obviously already dead!
Okay, yes, sure, last night was "Night of the Panther" at all Apple Stores, and you would have expected me to be there waiting in line for my copy of the latest Mac OS, but it didn't work out that way. So I'm going over now, head in hand, a full 16 hours late. I'm hoping they don't take away my secret Apple decoder ring. I promise to be on the ball for the next release.
Details of the new release to follow...
In the late 1980s, Dartmouth College was the most wired campus on the planet, running 10Mb Ethernet into every dorm room. Today, Dartmouth is the most unwired campus on the planet, with 560 access points covering 200 acres. At a recent conference here, Larry Levine, the head of computing services, challenged attendees to find a single spot on campus and surrounding areas that did not have 802.11 coverage. Even the boathouse, adjacent sections of the Connecticut river, the ski lodge, and sections of the ski slope are covered!Read on for more...
If you wanted to know where wired communications were headed in the late 1980s, all you had to do was go to the Dartmouth campus and look at their homegrown email application, Blitzmail. As any regular user of Blitzmail will tell you, it included a server-side address book and remote private and public folders before almost any other email application. Watching a regular user of Blitzmail, you could have predicted the rise of LDAP, IMAP, and most importantly Instant Messenger - Blitzmail was so fast and so ubiquitous, that people used it for IM-style back-and-forth conversations long before IM became popular in the larger environment.
At the conference, I looked for similar insights regarding wireless networks on the Dartmouth Campus. A few observations:
Apparently at least some camera phones can tag jpeg pictures with GPS coordinates.
Web search powerhouse Google has contacted investment banks about an initial public offering (IPO) that could value the company in the range of $15 billion and $25 billion, according to separate reports in the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal.
Many observers believe a Google IPO, which has been the subject of rampant speculation in recent months, would be the most valuable public offering since the heady days of the dot-com era.
One report said the company was considering an open online auction to "acknowledge the millions of users who have turned the closely held concern into a cultural icon." However, final decisions on a number of matters have not yet been made.
The network in the office is down. Seems like the router went south, although it's hard to be 100% sure of this without a known working router to swap in. So off to the store I go. If the prices are close I'll pick up a wireless model and start my grand building unwiring plan. I'm sure this will all go without a hitch... <cue menacing music>
The NY Times has a nice preview review of Mac OS X 10.3 (a.k.a. Panther) which is due out tomorrow night.
New mobile phone from LG Electronics. On sale in Korea by the end of the year. No word on a U.S. release, but the specs are interesting enough to note. 1.1 megapixel camera, 192MB memory, 2.8 inch 262,000 color TFT LCD, USB, IrDA, and a nice looking design to boot. Runs Microsoft's Pocket PC OS.
Two issues: where's the bluetooth? And when is someone going to put jpeg compression software into these camera phones? To belabor this point yet again: I want to take high res pictures with my camera phone, but I want to download them over USB to my computer at my leisure. When I'm in the field I want the phone to make a second, reduced size image, suitable for sending over slow cellular data connections. Come on! That should be easy. One click produces a full size 1 meg image, and a user defined scaled down image (say 100k.)