bLOGical
Carpe Diem "Weblog reporting on Advanced Technologies, Grid-Computing, XML WebServices, Semantic Web and Java / Python development"
 
                                                                                                         
   Updated: 10/28/2003; 8:05:07 AM.            

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Thursday, July 17, 2003
> 1.4 Billion Cell Phones Waiting to Be Entertained.
Intel and Microsoft's 802.11 investment shows their interest in riding interactive bandwagon that cell phones are leading: An interesting piece of analysis from the always thought provoking Bill Gurley, a venture capitalist of long standing, who has seen Wi-Fi's potential much earlier than most. Gurley argues that cell phones' lack of luster was due to their lag in supplying services people didn't know they wanted, but which the uptake and revenue rate on shows there's a market for. Mostly interactive media is at stake, and new phones will offer even more of this. Meanwhile, he points out that the global market for computers has slowed, and there are more cell phone owners and a faster phone sales market than that for computers. Intel (as I wrote in the Seattle Times a couple of months ago) and Microsoft both need to keep up on Wi-Fi as part of the edge they can wield while Wi-Fi's advantage is strong -- but Gurley misses the fact that Intel and Microsoft will slide their way right into the cell data world and cell telephone world by continually updating their wireless offerings. What Centrino is today -- plain jane 802.11b -- doesn't reflect tomorrow. Intel could easily plop in 802.11a/g, Bluetooth/802.15.1, and one or more 2.5G/3G standards in the same card slot in the next-generation, and turn their laptops into hubs for cell data, for cell-computer interaction, and for wireless high-speed networking without skipping a beat.... [Wi-Fi Networking News]
> Sony's new Clie.
The official announcement wasn’t supposed to be until tomorrow, but Sony Japan is showing off its latest Clie handheld a day early. With its mini-keyboard and a landscape-style 480x320 pixel display that can rotate and twist around, the PEG-UX50's clamshell design is reminiscent more of Sharp's Zaurus line of handhelds than anything Sony has done. The UX50, which runs on Palm OS 5.2, also has both WiFi and Bluetooth (making it the first Palm-powered PDA to have both), 32MB of RAM, 22MB of flash ROM, a 0.3 megapixel digital camera, a slot for Memory Stick Pro cards. Comes out in Japan on August 9th, with release dates in the US and Europe expected soon after. Read [Thanks, Gotecki and Omar]... [Gizmodo]
> Sony Japan Unveils the Clie UX-50
Sony Japan Unveils the Clie UX-50
Posted by: Ryan on Thursday, July 17, 2003 10:04:30 AM
Sony Clie PEG UX-50Sony Japan has taken the wraps of the new Clie, expected to be officially announced in San Francisco tomorrow. The Clie PEG-UX50 has a mini laptop like design with a swivel screen and built in keyboard. The device has a integrated in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless as well as a
> Congress mulls prison terms for KaZaA users.
Trade one lousy file, go to jail [The Register]
> Bob Doyle's Portable Web Studio for Blogradio Productions. 
ng.com/images/2001/09/20/sharpPermaLink3.gif" width=6 border=0> [Scripting News]
> Web Services--A Manager's Guide..
Last month I suggested that someone do a comparative review of this new book by Anne Thomas Manes and my latest book. Last week, I had the opportunity to meet Anne and get a copy of her book. Rather than wait, here are my own--admittedly biased--comparisons.

"A Manager's Guide," as the title suggests, is the perfect pragmatic guide for managing a current web-services project. If you want to know what works today, right down to the specific products from individual vendors, Anne's book is the one to buy. .NET versus Java? Which J2EE platform or UDDI registry server? The current state of the basic protocols: SOAP, WSDL, UDDI? You'll find the answers in one place. As with my book, there are no code fragments or XML listings. It's for managers, not programmers. But this book is the one to buy for your tactical requirements.

"Loosely Coupled," on the other hand, takes a more strategic view, and in a sense picks up where Anne's book leaves off. I don't explain any of the protocols. In fact I rarely mention them by name. I assume (a) you'll learn about them somewhere else (such as from Anne's book), and (b) they'll change quickly anyway. Anne has a 30-page chapter on "Advanced Web-Services Standards," which is where my book kicks in. As the subtitle suggests, I look more deeply at the missing pieces of web services: transactions, security, reliable asynchronous messaging, orchestration and choreography, QoS, contracts and other business issues, infrastructure, and the big one: industry-specific semantics.

Both books cover the fundamental concepts of web services such as service-oriented architectures. Anne, however, sees web services as being fundamentally about application integration, which clearly is the sweet spot today. I look at the issues surrounding inter-organizational loosely coupled web services, taking a longer-term and more strategic view. If you're thrust into managing a web-services project, need to ramp-up quickly, select vendors and products, and be able to communicate with your developers, buy Anne's book. If you need to develop a long-term web-services strategy for your organization, buy mine. In other words: buy them both. I think you'll like the combination. [Doug Kaye: Web Services Strategies]

>
  • Slashdot | Your Rights Online -
    /16/1931225.shtml?tid=126&tid=158&tid=172&tid=93&tid=99">Freenet 0.5.2 Released.

    FurbyXL writes "With the RIAA roaring to grab peer-to-peer users by their IP addresses, Freenet - fully anonymized production and consumption of content - is gaining renewed attention. Articles in New Scientist, ZDNet UK, Wired and CNET (and here) set a somewhat typical context for Freenets major release 0.52. Significant performance improvements through NIO-based messaging, probabilistic caching etc. should provide increased rest to Chinese dissidents, but may finally wake-up the RIAA's Matt Oppenheim..." --- The announcement on the Freenet home page lists several improvements found in the new version: "a new NIO technology that brings improved performance using less CPU and system resources," "Individual nodes are now more efficient," "the speed and routing of the entire network have significantly improved," probabilistic caching, user interface improvements, and more.

    [Privacy Digest]
    >
  • Slashdot | Intrusion Tolerance - Security's Next Big Thing?

    An anonymous reader

  • writes "DARPA's OASIS program consists of more than 20 research projects in intrusion-tolerant systems. The basic idea is to concede that systems will be penetrated by malware and hackers, but to keep operating anyway. Other projects take a wide variety of technical approaches to providing intrusion tolerance. MIT's Automatic Trust Management uses models of trust to choose from a variety of ways to achieve system goals; Duke/MCNC's SITAR (Scalable Intrusion Tolerant Architecture) adapts tricks from fault-tolerant systems and distributes decision-making; BBN-Illinois-Maryland-Boeing's ITUA employs unpredictable adaptation. Shutting down the military while waging war is not an option, but the idea of continuing to operating critical defense systems even after known penetration by hostile hackers or damaging worms will take some getting used to."

    [Privacy Digest]
    > Congress threatens two hi-tech Gestapo programs.
    TIA, CAPPS II in crosshairs [The Register]
    > Content management for the people.

    Matt Haughey has published a much needed article (Beyond the Weblog) explaining how to power an entire site with Movable Type.

    Now if I could just get off my ass and interview the Morning News guys about their fiendishly clever MT template implementation like I've been meaning to for nearly a year now I'd be much happier.

    [Radio Free Blogistan]

    © Copyright 2003 Ed Pimentel.
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