Sex, Drugs & Unix

Saturday, October 30th

the future of podcasting?


On the near horizon, cell phones will have enough processing power, programability and network connectivity to enable a syncronous podcast of images and sound from our daily lives. The simple fact is that there is no reason why you have to push the buttons on your phone to have it snap JPEGs, video or audio. These things can all be done via software control, potentially from a location 100s of miles away.

I hereby request a RSS feed coming straight from your new phone over some suitably exotic wireless connection, detailing current GPS, links to real-time images and/or video and/or audio and some nice text tag descriptions for Google's sake.

There is a place for businesses to provide a back-end here. The essential interface between the phone and the rest of the Internet.

Hopefully, this won't break Technorati.
Jim on 10.30.04 @ 04:39 AM PST [link]


Friday, October 22nd

Bush .v Kerry on unlicensed spectrum


I see nothing here about more unlicensed spectrum from Shrub. Bush will attempt to sell something he doesn't own.

What should the federal government do to encourage innovation and the broader use of wireless services that rely on unlicensed spectrum?

Bush response:
We need to open up more spectrum for public uses in order to make wireless broadband more accessible, reliable, and affordable. I have dramatically increased the amount of spectrum available for wireless service and identified 90 MHz of spectrum to be auctioned for advanced wireless services

My Administration has proposed several legislative changes and initiatives to improve the spectrum management process, including providing new authority to set user fees on unauctioned spectrum licenses. In addition, my Administration has pushed for legislation to create a Spectrum Relocation Fund to streamline the process for reimbursing government agencies that allocate from spectrum band with great commercial value. The legislation will not only give agencies a greater incentive to relocate but will also provide greater certainty to auction bidders.

I also established an aggressive Spectrum Policy Initiative to promote the development and implementation of a U.S. spectrum policy that will foster economic growth; ensure our national and homeland security; maintain U.S. global leadership in communications technology development and services; and satisfy other vital U.S. needs in areas such as public safety, scientific research, Federal transportation infrastructure, and law enforcement.

Kerry response:
The explosive growth of "WiFi" shows the benefits of making some spectrum available on an unlicensed basis. This could be particularly important for rural areas, since the cost of deploying these new services could be 3-4 times cheaper than existing wireless technologies - increasing competition with cable and telephone companies. In addition, I would make the regulatory changes that are needed to unleash new broadband networking technologies such as cognitive radio, mesh networks, ultra-wide band, and software-defined radio.

Jim on 10.22.04 @ 07:09 AM PST [link]


More on Nixon



There was a time when Democrats were the party that occasionally stole elections. Lyndon Johnson very likely stole his 1948 victory in the Texas Democratic primary, which launched his Senate career. President Kennedy actually joked about the notorious vote rigging in Chicago, which quite possibly tipped Illinois to him in 1960. (He would have won the Electoral College very narrowly without Illinois.)

It was Richard Nixon, that scoundrel's scoundrel, who resisted the temptation to mount a court challenge to the Illinois result because he felt the country couldn't take it. Imagine longing for the days when we had Republican leadership as principled as Nixon's.

But the days of urban Democratic machines that voted dead people are long gone. The press has reported isolated abuses, such as a few Florida snowbirds trying to register in more than one state. But any fair comparison of election abuses this year will reveal that one party is expending energy to register as many supporters as possible and assure that that their votes will be counted, while the other one is registering its supporters but also systematically trying to keep the opposition's votes from being cast. There is simply no comparable Democratic program of ballot suppression.

Maybe we should invite election observers from Afghanistan and Iraq.

We may not know the winner until the Electoral College meets in December, and perhaps not even then if contested elections are still tied up in court. It's not even clear whether the ultimate arbiter would be the Supreme Court or the House of Representatives.

If the courts took away the people's right to choose the president, and George Bush in effect stole two elections in a row, this would surely produce a constitutional crisis and a crisis of legitimacy.

But what if they gave a constitutional crisis and nobody came? The most ominous outcome of all would be public passivity, echoing 2000. That would confirm that the theft of our democracy was real.

Call me partisan, but the best insurance against this horrific outcome would be a Kerry win big enough so that even Karl Rove would not dare to mount this maneuver. A razor-thin race virtually invites it. And if Bush wins handily, our democracy will have other problems.

link

Jim on 10.22.04 @ 07:00 AM PST [link]


Hunter S. Thompson chimes in on the election



Presidential politics is a vicious business, even for rich white men, and anybody who gets into it should be prepared to grapple with the meanest of the mean. The White House has never been seized by timid warriors. There are no rules, and the roadside is littered with wreckage. That is why they call it the passing lane. Just ask any candidate who ever ran against George Bush -- Al Gore, Ann Richards, John McCain -- all of them ambushed and vanquished by lies and dirty tricks. And all of them still whining about it.

That is why George W. Bush is President of the United States, and Al Gore is not. Bush simply wanted it more, and he was willing to demolish anything that got in his way, including the U.S. Supreme Court. It is not by accident that the Bush White House (read: Dick Cheney & Halliburton Inc.) controls all three branches of our federal government today. They are powerful thugs who would far rather die than lose the election in November.

The Republican establishment is haunted by painful memories of what happened to Old Man Bush in 1992. He peaked too early, and he had no response to "It's the economy, stupid."

Which has always been the case. Every GOP administration since 1952 has let the Military-Industrial Complex loot the Treasury and plunge the nation into debt on the excuse of a wartime economic emergency. Richard Nixon comes quickly to mind, along with Ronald Reagan and his ridiculous "trickle-down" theory of U.S. economic policy. If the Rich get Richer, the theory goes, before long their pots will overflow and somehow "trickle down" to the poor, who would rather eat scraps off the Bush family plates than eat nothing at all. Republicans have never approved of democracy, and they never will. It goes back to preindustrial America, when only white male property owners could vote.

[...]

It was the most brutal seizure of power since Hitler burned the German Reichstag in 1933 and declared himself the new Boss of Germany. Karl Rove is no stranger to Nazi strategy, if only because it worked, for a while, and it was sure as hell fun for Hitler. But not for long. He ran out of oil, the whole world hated him, and he liked to gobble pure crystal biphetamine and stay awake for eight or nine days in a row with his maps & his bombers & his dope-addled general staff.

[...]

Your neighbor's grandchildren will be fighting this stupid, greed-crazed Bush-family "war" against the whole Islamic world for the rest of their lives, if John Kerry is not elected to be the new President of the United States in November.

link

Jim on 10.22.04 @ 06:46 AM PST [link]


Channeling Gaping Void


(Channeling Gaping Void)

DAY ONE:

VIVATO: Our Wi-Fi basestations are the best.
THE MARKET: Yes, your phased array technique is very strong.

DAY TWO:

VIVATO: Our Wi-Fi basestations are the best.
THE MARKET: Yes, your Wi-Fi basestations are still the best.

DAY THREE:

VIVATO: Changing the physics of W-Fi!
THE MARKET: Ummm... yeah I'm sure you are, but what's all this about interference levels, and I've heard that 802.11's CSMA/CA means that your Wi-Fi basestation has to "share the air" with every AP or client card in the field of view, reducing usable capacity to a small fraction of an ordinary AP.

DAY FOUR:

VIVATO: Largest Wi-Fi deployment in the world.
THE MARKET: For a bunch of FUCKING FARMERS, you lame-ass creeps. You promised metro scalability.

DAY FIVE:
VIVATO:


DAY SIX:

VIVATO: Our Wi-Fi basestations are the best.
THE MARKET: Hey, I just visited your website and saw no mention of how you counter interference. What the hell are you doing about it? You sold me 3 channel operation! Are you going to fix the multichannel issues? Are you going to give me a refund?

DAY SEVEN:

VIVATO: Our Wi-Fi basestations are the best.
THE MARKET: No, they're not. You guys are assholes.

Here's some free advice; Go read Locke. Get a clue.

Jim on 10.22.04 @ 04:35 AM PST [link]


Thursday, October 21st

Stopping Superman


If Vivato had any chance of stopping what I've done here, they would have employed the only known working tactic against a "disgrunted employee" who knows too much and isn't afraid to shout. They would have responded by getting personal, on-line. They would have their employees blog.

Want to motivate your boss to get blogs? Have him do some homework on the Kryptonite story and look at the brand equity that has gone away due to their response (or lack thereof).

Read the whole thing.

Of course, Vivato's management still believes that branding is king, and that a press release that implies that the Dave Matthews Band uses its famous (but barely functional) basestations at every concert venue, (the truth is that they use only the Bridge/Router (pollen8) platform), is the path to increasing market share.

Then again, having your brand equity shot to hell doesn't mean much when Branding is dead:


Blogging is all about ECO-logy. Branding is all about EGO-logy. The two are not compatible. Which is why brand-wimpy Microsoft has hundreds of bloggers [a well-known fact], and why you can get fired for blogging at uber-brand Apple [so I've been told].
Apple like the conversation they're currently having. They don't want it to change, internally or externally. They want to control the means of conversation.
I've seen branding work. I've seen blogging work. My conclusion?
Branding is dead.
Holy Shit.
Branding. Is. Dead.
We just thought just marketing and advertising were dead. Nope. Branding kicked the bucket, too.
Dead, dead, and dead.
Holy shit.


Vivato currently bans its employees from blogging. They modified the Employment Agreement to make it so. You can expect little else while the company remains managed by Neandertals.



Note to Chris DeM and crew: love the blurry people on the SH outdoor datasheet, but isn't the photo of the anorexic model on page 4 a bit too edgy?
Jim on 10.21.04 @ 03:33 AM PST [link]


Thursday, October 14th

Note to Conley


Your dark horse is dead. Damn fine thing the company didn't follow that path, huh?

Always remember, Bob; commodity products will always win in a commodity market, and that best is the enemy of good enough.

May those that love us love us;
and those that don't love us,
may God turn their hearts; if he
can't turn their hearts, may he
turn their ankles, so we'll know
them by their limping

Jim on 10.14.04 @ 06:12 AM PST [link]


Wednesday, October 13th

Zombie-movie eerie.


Vivato's CFO quit yesterday, Having a CFO depart in the middle of raising money is not the typical strategy for the startup-CEO. Typically the startup CEO seeks to inspire confidence in the mind of the institutional investor by presenting a picture of stability and solid foundations.

Raj only joined Vivato in early April. His departure six months later is a sign of deep decay at the heart of the organization. CFOs don't just quit. They're not granted that luxury. When a CEO and BoD hire a CFO, they want someone who will be there long-term. Its often monts or years before they find another position.

Not that the revolving door to the executive suite is anything new at Vivato.

In Feburary (2004!), Vivato announced three new executives. By August, none of the three was working at Vivato. Siavash Alamouti exited when he would not bow to Stalter's demands of how the product must work. (Frankly, what Stalter wants is impossible.) My understanding is that Siavash was treated in a very unprofessional manner during his exit. This is typical of Stalter's dealing with anyone around him. Intel picked Sivash up about as fast as possible. He is now CTO at their wireless broadband division. Roth was, quite frankly forced to resign. Placed in corporate Siberia and left to rot. Mark Tyre tired of the bullshit, and went back to Cisco. With Tyre's exit, I expect most of the sales team (the team that Mark built) to set sail for calmer waters. While these guys were all "part" of Vivato for a long time (Siavash joined before I did, while both Tyre and Roth joined about the same time as I), none of them lasted longer than 6-7 months reporting directly to "Killer Don".

And last March, Vivato announced Kevin Ryan has been appointed vice president of marketing and business development. Yet Kevin is nowhere to been seen on the management board, and on September 22, Stalter announced that Chris DeMarche now has the title of "senior vice president of marketing & business development", so its likely Kevinturn in the gualg. We know he's still there, because he's quoted in Time today (see below).

And now this mess. Time has written an alter to Stalter's Ego. It is such crappy journalism that Glenn Fleishman immediately labeled it "uninformed" and refused all further comment.

Here are a few fun facts.

1) Stalter is using my old TiBook. The Apple Powerbooks are legend for their poor 802.11 performance. It's a wonder he's getting any coverage at all.

2) The HoopFest referred to in the article predates Stalter by months. The man who did 99% of the legwork for that (Martin Brewer) is now at WaveLink.

3) Brian Town, pictured in one of the photos, got cut in the last round of layoffs. Maybe he can take comfort in getting to be in "Time".

4) The reporter didn't take a notebook to a story about a 100 block "HotZone". What kind of reporting is that? The kind you can buy. Nothing says "puff piece" like a reporter failing to test the very thing he was sent to report on.

But the part I loved best is when it call came back to parking.


Next come the parking meters. Soon, a parking attendant who writes you a ticket in Spokane will also be able to run your plates to see whether your car is hot. And when your time runs out, the fancy wi-fi-enabled parking meters will be smart enough to page a meter cop, so you will get all the parking tickets you deserve.

and later in the article:

Parking in my neighborhood in Brooklyn, N.Y., is so tight, it took 45 minutes of circling the block before I found a space. I spent that time doing a thought experiment: What if Vivato lit up my neighborhood with wi-fi? Then you could have curbside sensors that page your car the instant a spot opens up ... maybe a heads-up display on the windshield, showing a map of where the perfect spot is.

I ran this idea past the folks at Vivato. They love it. But won't everybody converge on the same prime spot as soon as it frees up? Not if you fork over extra to get notified, say, 30 seconds earlier. "You pay a premium for that!" says Kevin Ryan, Vivato's V.P. of marketing and business development, his eyes gleaming with invisible wi-fi light. "You're the platinum customer!" There you have it. The future of free urban wi-fi looks bright. It just might cost a little more than we thought.

I've written about the tie-in with Spokane's Nazi Parking Policy before.

By their own admission, Vivato have sold "a few hundred" units of the first gen product aka "Little Joe".
They sold a few hundred Little Joes, but not nearly as many as they needed to sell.

They've got $67M of VC funds sunk into the company. The last round was $45m. Do the math. How does a company that has:

1) replaced the CEO (with ZERO positive effect)
2) washed out the ENTIRE exec team. TWICE!
3) Failed to show appreciable customer demand for the technology

manage to raise any money at a valuation of over $100m? At the most there is a down round coming. The more likely scenerio is total failure.

Pssst, for those of you watching at Vivato, its time for another layoff.

Will the last person to leave Spokane please turn off the lights?



Jim on 10.13.04 @ 01:50 AM PST [link]


Tuesday, October 12th

Could they be any more obvious?


Check this out, Follow this thread, where someone named Jeff V. Merkey bad mouths the GPL and then offers them $50,000 for a snapshot of the kernel, with permission to dump the GPL and slap a BSD license on it instead/

Say what?

This, my friends, is why ESR's "open source" movement is a dangerous and foul abortion. We didn't need a plethora of new licenses. We had three that worked, MIT/X, GPL and LGPL. We didn't need a fourth, but thats what our "friend" Eric gave us, when he allowed Netscape to invent a new license, equate it with linux, and then "blessed" it with an organization that he controlled.

Linux under the BSD license would suffer a quick death, to be sure.

ESR's has sold-out the Free Software community to corporate rule. His agenda is entirely pro-corporate, and aims to mainstream Copyleft and then massage it into something else.

I'm fine with any software author using the license of her choosing. What pisses me off is that Erik and his band of merry pranksters usurped Free Software and pasted any goo they wanted to the side, and then fought a marketing campaign to declare it "better".

If nothing else remember this: GPL is Freedom, OSI is Marketing.







Jim on 10.12.04 @ 06:24 AM PST [link]


Another confused VP of marketing


Eric Norlin takes on Don Marti via Doc Searls

oh really? i've got one that's good -- DRM in the computers in our national security infrastructure (think NSA).....i guarantee that people not having all of our sensitive information is a good use of DRM.

Here's another: DRM around medical records. How 'bout your tax records? Your kid's IQ test? Files in your lawyer's office? Your shrink's office?

ahhh yes -- it would seem there ARE good uses for DRM.

i'll paraphrase Plato: ANY statement taken to its logical extreme becomes *absurd*. Mr. Marti appears to have fallen off that cliff.

Of course, Don was quoting Jean Bedord who was talking about ebooks.

But fuck all that. Its not the first time a young, misguided startup exec searches for the applicability of his company's sole technology as the solution to everything, and Eric can be forgiven for this, but to confuse DRM with a compartmented mode security system shows that he is perhaps both too desparate and too ignorant to succeed. What makes this worse, of course is that Erik used to work at the NSA, and ought to know the difference.

If you check the NIST site, you will find that Identity Mangement is a very small piece of the prooblem, and that DRM has NOTHING TO DO with security and everything to do with propping up the Copyright State and its captive government.

There are no good uses for DRM. Period. DRM violates the right to read.

I'm left to wonder if Erik is listening to his advisors.


And your system is only secure once you patch suser() to always return TRUE
. There was a PDP-11/34 at UNLV a long time ago that had this patch installed. In essence, everyone had the root password. It was a peacefull place, but that was, as I said, a long, long time ago.

Jim

(and yes, I know that linux doesn't use (f)suser() anymore.)




Jim on 10.12.04 @ 01:43 AM PST [link]


Friday, October 8th

Roach Coach


The project-based element of "Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine" consists of a cockroach-controlled mobile robot: a mechanical system that amplifies and tranlates the bodily movement and intelligence of a giant hissing madagascan cockroach into the locomotion of a fast, agile, and viscerally dangerous machine. The hybrid biorobotic system will strive to illustrate that the simple embodied intelligence of a living cockroach provides a substantially captivating and novel control center ("central processing unit", CPU) for a mobile robot, producing tounge-in-cheek "emergent" and complex behavior akin to the goals of artificial life and artificial intelligence research.

link

Now I just need a giant hissing madagascan cockroach.
Jim on 10.08.04 @ 04:34 PM PST [link]


Distracting Noises outside


For the past two days, the Blue Angels have been practicing overhead here at Chez Thompson. They've got an air show this weekend.



Jim on 10.08.04 @ 04:32 PM PST [link]


Thursday, October 7th

Vivato next-gen outdoor sneak peak


While its not released yet, the second generation Vivato outdoor switch is out in beta testing. Photos can be had here, here, here, and here.

Unless things have changed radically, it has the same internals as the VP2200 indoor unit, and therefore about the same performance, even though its half the size. The price is still "up there" at $10,000.

Does this mean that the 1st generation stuff is dead, or at least sold-out? Enquiring minds want to know.

Jim
(the proud papa, even though I don't work there any more
Jim on 10.07.04 @ 07:53 PM PST [link]


Tuesday, October 5th

VCs blow


In "Hiring A CEO", Sevin-Rosen's Jackie Kimzey waxes on about CEO replacement.

"If you're a founder CEO in the process of deciding whether or not to replace yourself with a CEO from outside, you'll have to ask yourself a lot of tough questions'and answer then honestly. You'll need to evaluate your ability to fill the CEO's shoes, just as any other company stakeholder would."

[Unstated] And if we don't like your answer, we'll install our buddies and kick you to the curb.

Anyone else see a pattern?

Jim

Jim on 10.05.04 @ 03:33 PM PST [link]


Monday, October 4th

Go ahead, try this at home


High fps video of an F-4 slammed into a concrete wall at 500MPH (testing the wall material for protection of nuke plants):


Jim on 10.04.04 @ 06:44 AM PST [link]


Friday, October 1st

WiFi as backbone (film at 11)


Municipal Wi-Fi in OK by Phil Windley:

Dave Fletcher points out that Oklahoma City is building a 400 square mile Wi-Fi network at the cost of $78 million. As Dave says "Wow!" What's sad is that this is just for public safety--no citizen access as far as I can tell. Even if it were, they' still wouldn't be able to do any interesting broadband projects that involve significant bandwidth, such as video. Utopia opponents were always saying "Wi-Fi is cheaper and will obsolete fiber." This proves them wrong.


Phil is one of the proponents behind UTOPIA

UTOPIA is a consortium of 14 Utah cities engaged in deploying and operating a 100% fiber optic network to every business and household (about 140,000) within its footprint. Operating at the wholesale level, it supports open access and promotes competition in all telecommunications services.

This, my friends, is a real "community network", unlike those proposed by various wireless proponents, some of you have yet to find a clue about how RF works.

Getting an entire county together to make this happen seems like a large hurdle, but I forsee a rapidly approaching day when neighborhoods as well as condo and apartment complexes get themselves wired up with fiber optics in a neutral architecture a lot like UTOPIA's. I would picke a Metro Ethernet solution over MPLS, but thats probably Monday morning quarterbacking.

Think of it as Wayport (done right), and on a slightly grander scale.


Jim on 10.01.04 @ 12:49 PM PST [link]


We can and will win (or not)


Watched the debate tonight (later than most, since it started at 3pm local time, and I watched the re-broadcast on the local PBS affiliate.) A transcript can be found here.

Bush got shellacked. For the past week the Republicans have been joking about how Kerry is a sweater, would sweat during the debates. But it was Bush who the camera captured wiping sweat from his brow. He was rambling, and incoherent. His answers wandered not only off topic but out of comprehensibility. In short, all of the things the President's handlers have been hiding from the public - got stuck right out there in the bright light.

Now, my opponent says he's going to try to change the dynamics on the ground. Well, Prime Minister Allawi was here. He is the leader of that country. He's a brave, brave man. And when he came, after giving a speech to the Congress, my opponent questioned his credibility. You can't change the dynamics on the ground if you've criticized the brave leader of Iraq.

One of his campaign people alleged that Prime Minister Allawi was like a puppet. That's no way to treat somebody who's courageous and brave that is trying to lead his country forward.
(--Shrub)

Dianne Feinstein (who I am no fan of) apparently thinks that the Bush campaign team allegedly wrote a large portion of Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's speech to Congress last week.

Bush kept insisting that we can win "No, the way to win this is to be steadfast and resolved and to follow through on the plan that I've just outlined." (--Shrub) what has essentially become a guerilla war.

"The A.Q. Khan network has been brought to justice," said Shrub bragging about his national security record. Excuse me? This man, who gave nuclear secrets to Libya, Iran, and North Korea, was pardoned, with Bush's blessing.

Overall, Shrub resembled the Rain Man - repeatedly stating that Kerry, "changes positions." "He sends mixed messages." "He changes positions." "Mixed messages." "He changes positions." (I am not exaggerating here - I am accurately reflecting the number of times Bush mumbled these phrases.) "Mixed messages." "Mixed messages." "Mixed signals." "Mixed signals." "Mixed messages." "Mixed messages." "Waver."

And he only stopped babbling that mantra when he was saying seven times, that Kerry had called Iraq, "...the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place," and eleven times that it is, "hard work," fighting terrorist (in addition to pointing out twice people were, "working hard," at it.

Over and over, "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "Hard work" "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "Hard work" "Hard work" "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "Hard work" "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "Hard work" "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "Hard work" "This is the wrong war at the wrong time at the wrong place." "Hard work" "Hard work" "Working hard." "Hard work" "Hard work" "Working hard." "Hard work"

Only interrupted by, "Changes positions." "He sends mixed messages." "He changes positions." "Mixed messages." "He changes positions." "Mixed messages." "Mixed messages." "Mixed signals." "Mixed signals." "Mixed messages." "Mixed messages." "Waver."

Bush's ranting also constantly reminded of this Herman Goering quote:

"Why, of course, the people don't want war," Goering shrugged. "Why would some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best that he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece. Naturally, the common people don't want war; neither in Russia nor in England nor in America, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or a Parliament or a Communist dictatorship."

"There is one difference," I pointed out. "In a democracy the people have some say in the matter through their elected representatives, and in the United States only Congress can declare wars."

"Oh, that is all well and good, but, voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same way in any country."


I'm not a Kerry fan, but Shrub has gotta go.



Jim on 10.01.04 @ 05:21 AM PST [link]




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