Cory Doctorow relates an odd and disturbing experience while travelling from London to Dallas on American Airlines. Ryan Singel contacts AA and receives this response…. Singel operates a useful blog – secondary screening.
Lafayette, LA Pro Fiber Blog
“Whoever builds a fiber to the home network is going to have a monopoly – whoever builds it. As a practical matter, I am opposed to monopolies. But I would much rather have a monopoly that I can touch and see and feel and affect, which is [Lafayette, Louisiana municipal utility operator] LUS.”
Via David Isenberg
Madison should be thinking like this as well.
Does Not Compute: Technology Implementations….
Nicholas G. Carr continues his analysis of failed software projects. Carr wonders if we should scale back our technology expectations:
Equally important, they stopped trying to be creative. Rather than try to customize their software, they began looking for cheaper, off-the-shelf programs that would get the job done with a minimum of fuss. When necessary, they changed their own procedures to fit the available software. Old, generic technology may not be glamorous, but it has an important advantage: it works.
It may well turn out that the F.B.I.’s biggest problem was its desire to be innovative – to build a new wheel rather than use an old one within easy reach. When it comes to developing software today, innovation should be a last resort, not a first instinct.
Carr is mistaken in telling technology drivers to slow down with respect to innovation. The real question is whether or not top management has made the commitment to align their business processes with the technology (and provide leadership when tough decisions must be made). Carr, of course does not mention the many successful technology innovations we take for granted today, such as
- Cell Phones
- The Internet
- Fast payment processing (credit cards)
- Travel reservation systems
We take these innovations for granted, but each one required risk, leadership, mistakes and a willingness to make it work. There are no shortcuts. More on Nicholas G. Carr.
AT&T’s CTO recognizes what is required to succeed:
“The biggest challenge is not the technology,” he said, “but being able to change the culture.”
Planes, Trains & Automobiles
This weekend’s snowstorm and the ongoing airline turmoil provides a perfect background to check out the John Candy/Steve Martin 1987 film: Plains, Trains and Automobiles. This film is full of laughs and strangely prescient for a nearly 20 year old movie. I’m not optimistic that air travel will improve a whole lot the next few years.
More Madison Snowstorm Photos
Saturday Snow Storm: Music to Shovel…. or a Snowstorm Playlist :)
A few selections from the music my ipod shuffled to while shoveling earlier today (Madison received about 8″ of snow).
- Pink Floyd On The Turning Away
- Dire Straits Every Street
- U2’s I will follow
- The Jesus & Mary Chain
Just Like Honey
Ironically, I received an email this morning from Tony Novak-Clifford, host of Manao Radio’s Sunday Mornings “Sunday Solstice” program as well as Monday & Tuesday morning’s “Academy of Errors”. Tony’s email mentioned a rainy Maui Saturday morning.
UPDATE:
Dave sends a link from Boston, which will soon have quite a bit of snow. More Madison Photos: Gala & James Gardner catch snowplow stuck in a snowbank. Ann Althouse posts two early morning photos. More later…
Lafayette, LA: Fiber to the Home; One time $1,079 per person
David Isenberg summarizes the latest news from LaFayette, Louisiana’s community fiber network plans (Madison should be so forward thinking!)
Finally, the price tag on the project is $125 million. The population of Lafayette is 116,000. That’s $1077.59 per person. Would you pay $1100 once to have fiber in your town forever after? N.O.B.R.A.I.N.E.R.
Sony admits their attempt to lock us in a box failed: DRM
Sony’s non mp3 support in it’s portable audio devices was a mistake, they now admit. Yuri Kageyama:
Ken Kutaragi, president of Sony Computer Entertainment, said he and other Sony employees had been frustrated for years with management’s reluctance to introduce products like Apple’s iPod, mainly because the Sony had music and movie units that were worried about content rights.
But Sony’s divisions were finally beginning to work together and share a common agenda, Mr Kutaragi said at the Foreign Correspondents Club in Tokyo.
Well, duh. Most of these DRM (Digital Restrictions Management) schemes will fail. Slashdot discussion.
DRM is not binary
Tristan Louis takes a useful look at DRM (digital rights/restrictions management):
What I am trying to highlight is that while proponents and opponents of DRM solutions both see the world in black and white, they may want to start a dialogue and realize that there’s a lot of gray areas out there.
Via Doc Searls.
Inauguration VR Scene
Travis Fox & Pierre Kattar created a very useful Quicktime VR scene, taken just above President Bush overlooking the Mall. There’s also a protest VR scene. Some great inauguration photos here
The whole thing was a big waste of money, of course. Shutting down a city seems a terrible price to pay for politics (and lobbyists).