Is it table-top nuclear fusion? "The dramatic flashing implosion of tiny bubbles--in acetone containing deuterium atoms--produces tritium and nuclear emissions similar to emissions characteristic of nuclear fusion involving deuterium-deuterium reactions." [From the Desktop of Dane Carlson] 7:22:22 PM ![]() |
Salon: Waiting for Wi-Fi. With tens of millions of customers ready to be wireless by next year, and the price of a Wi-Fi laptop dropping below $1,000, why isn't AT&T setting up antennae for us, instead of shutting down its Digital Broadband service? The answer is less about technology than the shifting flows of capital in the 21st century. [Tomalak's Realm] 7:16:31 PM ![]() |
Uselessfacts.net: "Your Portal For Useless Facts, Strange Facts, Weird Facts, Bizarre Facts, Brain Teasers, Stupid People Stories, Greeting Cards, Interesting Facts!" [From the Desktop of Dane Carlson] 7:15:54 PM ![]() |
"If we lay the information revolution alongside the railway revolution, year for year, we'd now be somewhere around 1850 - just after the railway investment mania of 1845 and its crash in 1847," says US economist W Brian Arthur. Within 65 years of that particular market bubble bursting, Britain was to see its railway network expand from 2,148 miles to 21,000 miles - and some serious money made. [From the Desktop of Dane Carlson] 7:15:03 PM ![]() |
WriteTheWeb interviews J-Robb on K-Logs. ![]() 7:14:40 PM ![]() |
Burger King's fast Internet diet. The fast food chain hopes connecting with distributors and suppliers online will improve planning and help cut down on errors. [CNET News.com] 7:13:03 PM ![]() |
Nokia, Symbian score blockbuster Samsung phone win [The Register] 7:11:11 PM ![]() |
Boston Globe. MIT team develops mini-copter. Great controls engineering. The UAV space is about to explode. An effective control system has been the major impediment to broad use of UAVs. The controls solutions afforded in this area will also apply to personal aircraft. With simplified navigation and flight management, there is absolutely no reason you couldn't build a personal aircraft, that virtually flies itself, for less than the cost of a mid-range BMW. All the other impediments have been solved. BTW: current FAA rules make it possible for anybody with a drivers license to fly an aircraft that travels at less than ~55 knots. ''You can push a button, and it does a roll and keeps on flying,'' said team member Vladislav Gavrilets, a 27-year-old aero-astro doctoral candidate from Moscow. ''That has never been done before.'' [John Robb's Radio Weblog] |
BBC. Desktop fusion. This is turning into an interesting story. It's also amazing given the bashing the team that claimed cold fusion got. These scientists must have guts of stone to put their reputations on the line like this. [John Robb's Radio Weblog] 6:31:35 PM ![]() |
Paul Boutin. WiFi's future. It seems that a combination of inexpensive GPS equipment, a mapping program like Microsoft's Streets and Trips, and a directory of WiFi nodes would help a lot to get this grassroots network going. I am not holding my breath for this, but it would be cool. Once GPS and a mapping program is installed on laptops a whole new world opens up. Sharing real-time location data with others is also cool. [John Robb's Radio Weblog] 6:28:37 PM ![]() |
Paul Boutin files an exhaustively researched story on the state of commercial Wi-Fi, with observations on related realms: as is typical with a Boutin story, he talked to many, many people and puts together a picture on the current sporadic usage and patchiness of commercial Wi-Fi that's more complete than anything else seen to date. He's not cynical about it, obviously, but it's clear from the quotes he was able to gather that the current providers have some very hot spots in captive venues, and a lot of fairly cold spots which generate zilch. The article points towards the potential of the big boys (probably cell companies) entering the market in a big way, if only they can make up their minds to do it given their huge investment in currently incompatible, slow data rate technology. [80211b News]6:22:48 PM ![]() |
Are we ready to take the next step?
From the story itself, an email interview with John Robb:
I know. I've been there, done that. When I turned in the first draft of my book, my editor -- Tim O'Reilly -- said, "This is great, but I worry that you expect too much from people." It was true. We technologists like to think that if we can just come up with the right tool, all those wonderful k-logging benefits -- which are quite real, I can say from my own experiences -- will simply flow. But even then, I knew it wasn't just about the tools:
So why am I suddenly deep into blogspace, hoping once again to achieve what Notes never could, and what my own brand of Internet groupware never could? Because culture evolves. What's more, as Richard Dawkins and Susan Blackmore argue, culture is evolution. Fifteen years ago, most people weren't ready for the kind of collective mind-meld that makes k-logging work. Five years ago, most people still weren't. Today...well, the jury's still out, but the mainstream interest in blogging tells me that maybe, just maybe, we're close to having a critical mass of people who are ready to live transparently, to narrate their experiences in order to better understand them, and to be informed by the narrations of others. I hope it's going to happen this time around. But whether it does or not, let's be clear about one thing. Although the software needs to have a certain set of properties, software's not the gating factor. People are. There's really no mystery as to why the Web didn't go two-way from the start. If most people wanted it to, it would have. Maybe now they do. I hope so. [Jon's Radio]6:08:01 PM ![]() |
Aether Cuts 25% of Workforce. Cuts initiatives, to focus on core products [allNetDevices Wireless News] 6:06:30 PM ![]() |
Intel Moves Processors to Cars. Using same chipsets as used in handhelds [allNetDevices Wireless News] 4:48:59 PM ![]() |
Coming: Live Traffic Info via Phone. App supports Java, BREW platforms [allNetDevices Wireless News] 4:21:00 PM ![]() |
Report: Business Wireless Usage to Grow. Slowly overcoming barriers to usage [allNetDevices Wireless News] 4:14:06 PM ![]() |
Microsoft adds Windows Media Control to Pocket IE [IDG InfoWorld] 4:11:42 PM ![]() |
InternetWeek: Mission Interoperable. ![]() 4:02:00 PM ![]() |
Boo! And the 100 Other Dumbest Moments in e-Business History: "E-business consultancy MarchFirst launches a national branding campaign in June 2000. The campaign's main goal, executives say, is not to bring in new business, but to enable them to recruit employees. Price tag: $50 million. The company has since laid off 2,100 employees." [From the Desktop of Dane Carlson] 3:49:56 PM ![]() |
Safeway fattens its Web service. The land grab continues in the online supermarket sector as the grocery giant announces plans to launch Internet operations in San Francisco. [CNET News.com] 3:48:59 PM ![]() |
The Real Reason 3G is Vaporware. Even without the FCC's battle against NextWave, U.S consumers probably wouldn't have superfast wireless services by now. By Elisa Batista. [Wired News] 2:30:45 PM ![]() |
Oracle, DoCoMo Team on Enterprise. To use Oracle products over 3G net [allNetDevices Wireless News] 1:18:58 PM ![]() |
Sony Ericsson Unveils Phone Portfolio. Includes Symbian, Java smartphone, MMS support [allNetDevices Wireless News]
Looks like I'm wrong about Symbian. The beauty of capitalism... |