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Living out on the left coast

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 Sunday, August 17, 2003
Ohio Lines Failed Before Blackout. When high-voltage transmission lines near Cleveland failed, an alarm that should have alerted controllers to the shutdowns did not work, investigators said. By Richard P...rez-pe--a. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]
comments < 3:13:20 PM        >

Unbelievable, school districts are now importing teachers to teach in U.S. schools, using the H-1B visa. Incredibly, school people are "predicting" that the U.S. will be short by 700,000 teachers - exactly the same kind of bogus claims made about tech jobs in 1998 and again in 2000, when Congress decided the U.S. should decimate its technical workforce. [Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
comments < 3:08:35 PM        >

Celphone service collapsed during blackout. Most cellular and PCS providers experienced significant network outages. They are designed to withstand outages lasting as little as 3 hours. That is not very encouraging.

Amateur Radio Communications stepped in to provide working communications during the power and communications blackout. [Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]


comments < 3:06:16 PM        >

Cringely Explains it all. Why IT departments are inefficient and possibly getting worse by rushing into Linux. Why they ignore Mac OS X products (they are too efficient). And why the offshoring trend is misguided. Single best article I have ever read on these important subjects in the tech sector. [Edward Mitchell: Common Sense Technology]
comments < 3:05:06 PM        >

NVPhon2Has any used one of these new WiFi phones?  VoIP Internet appliances that use 801.11b.  With a P2P/VPN connection to a corporate gateway, this would be a nice system to use in a home office enabled with WiFi/DSL.  You could basically take your company phone system home with you or tote it around the office park. [John Robb's Weblog]
comments < 3:02:41 PM        >

WEB 2.0 (Personal Broadcast Networks) is starting to get some traction.  Adam Bosworth (the CTO of BEA) is writing extensively about the Web Services Browser and Kevin Lynch (Sr. VP at Macromedia) has written a white paper on rich Flash applications that utilize Web Services (he calls them Rich Internet Applications).  Each takes a different approach to solving the same thing:  how to build new client (desktop PC) software that realizes the vision of Web 2.0?

What is Web 2.0?  It is a system that breaks with the old model of centralized Web sites and moves the power of the Web/Internet to the desktop.  It includes three structural elements:  1) a source of content, data, or functionality (a website, a Web service, a desktop PC peer), 2) an open system of transport (RSS, XML-RPC, SOAP, P2P, and too an extent IM), and 3) a rich client (desktop software).  Basically, a PBN puts the power of the Internet in the hands of the desktop PC user where it belongs. 

So far, we have made excellent progress on the first two elements necessary for Web 2.0, yet the remaining element has undergone an abortive development path.  The primary reason for this is due to Microsoft's dominance of the browser market which has resulted in stasis.  Additionally, both VCs and developers have been frozen in fear of fighting Microsoft on the desktop.  Regardless, the Web 2.0 desktop applications I had hoped for years ago haven't arrived in sufficient numbers.  Fortunately, the tide is about to shift.

Three development paths are now in contention.  The first is a desktop Web site approach (Radio).  A second is an enhanced browser method (Flash, see picture).  A third is a custom desktop application (.Net and nifty custom apps like Brent's NetNewsWire).  I suspect that all three approaches will gain traction over the next couple of years, but my personal preference (for a myriad of reasons) is to put a CMS (Web site content management system) on the desktop and leverage the limitations of the browser to provide an enhanced experience.  This makes it possible for a seamless transition for users from the Web 1.0 to Web 2.0.  Regardless, it is extremely nice to see motion. [John Robb's Weblog]


comments < 3:00:27 PM        >

EPRIPower outages and other power quality disturbances are costing the U.S. economy more than $119 billion annually, according to a recently released study sponsored by EPRIís Consortium for Electric Infrastructure to Support a Digital Society (CEIDS).

Current estimates to fix the system are between $50 and $100 b, in addition to the $3 b a year that is currently spent on grid infrastructure (this is half the annual investment made 30 years ago even as demand spiked).  The benefits include fewer outages (a huge percentage of that $119 b loss cited above), lower prices (estimates of $500m a year in savings for the NE corridor and CA alone) as power is more evenly distributed, and a wave of technology-based jobs (which pay a great wage and confer excellent skills).    

However, amid new calls for legislation to "fix" the US power grid, an important element is missing from the argument:  quality digital power.  What is needed is a smart power system that not only can prevent outages, but can improve the quality of power delivered.  Fortunately new systems of quality measurement are in the works. 

For example, a current-model, unprotected microprocessor may malfunction if power is interrupted for even one-quarter of a single AC cycleóin other words, for one 240th of a second.

In prior years, a sub second power malfunction wouldn't have been considered a problem.  Most people would only notice a flickering of their lights.  Given today's intelligent infrastructure, it could cause major disruptions -- as most of us have seen when our computers and high end devices fry.
[John Robb's Weblog]


comments < 2:59:52 PM        >

Rajesh is right on when he points to the Rocky Mountain Institute's approach to power security.  Decentralization is right. [John Robb's Weblog]
comments < 2:57:00 PM        >


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Last Update: 8/7/04; 1:59:56 PM Copyright 2004 Steve Brune, All Rights Reserved.
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