Archive for May, 2008

Scripting News for 5/13/2008

May 13, 2008

Demo of Firefly 

I’m at the offices of Betaworks in New York, meeting with CEO John Borthwick who I know for many years from AOL.

They have built a product called Firefly which is rolling out tonight at the Tech Meetup in New York.

He just gave me a demo and my first reaction was “You can’t do that,” then I asked if I could put a demo of it on Scripting News today and he said (to my surprise) Yes.

It’s so weird it’s practically illegal. You can watch people’s mouse move around the page, and then chat with them. Go ahead and give it a try.

Scripting News for 5/11/2008

May 11, 2008

Why decentralizing Twitter is hopeless 

To every yin there’s a yang. Here’s a brilliant counterpoint to what I’ve been writing here about decentralizing Twitter. I’ve excerpted the last paragraph because it is some of the best tech writing I’ve ever read. Wonderful.

Echovar: “The idea of building competitors to Twitter on the same platform, or redistributing Twitter to multiple players reminds me of the idea that New York City should be rebuilt in Ohio because it would be cheaper. Or perhaps we could distribute a little of New York City in every state of the Union. New York City is what it is because of the people who live and visit there. Building another New York City in Las Vegas doesn’t result in the phenomenon that is New York City. In a very important sense, Twitter is decentralized at its core, it is rhizomatic rather than arborescent.”

Now go read the whole thing, please. :-)

PS: As has been pointed out by several emailers, the idea of relocating cities in the virtual world appeared in a piece I wrote yesterday, where I said indeed it does happen. It can’t happen in the real world. But in defense of echovar, it would only happen if there were a war where platform vendors were fighting in vain to lock us in, and only when Twitter was so mature that we understood every nuance of how it’s used. Yes, we are, today, locked into Twitter. And I’m not comfortable about that. Eventually, relocating New York may be what we have to do. Charles Cooper is very correct though in his piece on this subject, it’s time for Twitter to get into this discussion and tell us what their thoughts are.

What do the images mean? 

From time to time people ask what the images in the margins of Scripting News mean. I don’t think I’ve ever answered the question on the blog itself.

There are many answers to the question because they mean whatever you want them to mean. The point is to stimulate creativity. If I wrote an article about Fidel Castro, for example, and put a fiery picture of Fidel next to the piece it would satisfy curiosity. “I wonder what he looks like?” Suspense eliminated. That kind of imagery serves to quell creativity, to push it down, stifle it. It answers questions as opposed to raising them. Lowers entropy instead of increasing it.

My goal is to stimulate thinking. If people say they disagree with me — excellent. Sometimes I disagree too. There are many sides to every question, and many of them are valid. To fix on one answer as being the only one would be to eliminate creativity, imagination. It’s why stories told on radio can be so incredibly vivid compared to movies or TV. You get to supply the visuals. So if the meaning isn’t obvious, you get to find your own meaning. That’s better sometimes than filling in all the blanks. Create new blanks.

My pictures are supposed to raise questions. The first one might be “Why did he put that there?” You may find you have an answer, but know that that’s your answer, not anyone else’s. It says something about you. Or you might look at the picture and say “That’s a weird picture” and not give it another thought. That’s also a valid answer. Or you might be tired of the pictures and see one and choose not to read the article. More power to you!

Esther Dyson once sent an email asking why there was a big picture of herself next to an article that had nothing to do with her. “I thought it was an interesting picture” is what I said. I told the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

I once got a call from a neighbor when I lived in the country, she said she was going to get some baby goats, and they might make a lot of noise as they were being weaned from their mother. I asked why she was getting the goats. She said she always wanted goats.

That’s pretty much what the images mean. :-)

Scripting News for 5/10/2008

May 10, 2008

What will Hillary do with her power? 

Oh the political debate is getting interesting!

Assuming the Democratic nomination is actually decided, then what is Hillary Clinton’s future role?

Last night on Larry King I heard Carole Simpson, a black woman, supporter of HRC, say that it’s white men calling for her to withdraw. (Transcript.)

Stephanie Miller chimed in “I have ovaries.”

Even so, it seems to me that people of all genders are conspicuously not asking Clinton to withdraw out of respect for her power, which she has a lot of. What she does with that power now will have a lot to do with what happens next. I know that’s pretty waffly, but I don’t know how else to say it. She could blow something up. She could ask women to get angry. If she does, it seems there will be some angry women. Maybe many very angry women. Scary thought. No sarcasm.

Perhaps her role will be analogous to Al Sharpton, sharp-tongued rallier of specialized anger.

HRC is potentially a political leader of women unlike any leader we’ve ever seen. There have been some powerful women politicians — Bella Abzug, Golda Meir, Margaret Thatcher, Indira Gandhi, Benazir Bhutto, Nancy Pelosi.

But what will Hillary do with her power?

How tech wars end 

The tech industry is organized around the concept of wars. In recent memory, the browser wars, the Java wars, before that there were wars over email APIs, desktops, GUIs, networking standards, you name it, if there’s money to be made in controlling users, there’s been a war to lock those users in. It’s been that way since the dawn of time, and it will always be that way. It’s in human nature.

It’s also in human nature for the users to realize they’re being used, get fed up, and create or discover the technology for themselves thereby routing around all the warring parties. It’s as if the citizens of France during WWII got fed up with the Germans and the Allies, and decided to create a new France on new land and all move there, leaving the armies to fight over nothing. You can’t do it in the real world, but it’s how it works in the virtual world.

Having seen a number of these wars, and seeing each of them end not in triumph, but irrelevance, I believe we’re getting closer to the end in the warfare defined by social networks. That’s the real lesson behind this article by Mike Arrington, about the three companies throwing vapor at each other, two publicly, MySpace and Facebook, and Google in the back channel. Somewhere lurking back there are Microsoft and Yahoo, each with also-rans no doubt coming soon. I wouldn’t pay too much attention to what the big players do here, they will be too constrained by BigCo thought processes, and a desire to appear to be giving stuff away without actually giving anything away.

Open is a funny thing, you can’t be partially open. You can’t edge your way toward open. You can’t be open and hold the valuable stuff in reserve for yourself. BigCo’s can’t afford to do what it takes to coalesce a popular maturing technology around their own platform. It won’t happen in BigCoLand. Only a little dude with nothing to lose can choose to build around something truly open. (The big guys are always forced to, eventually.)

The most famous war-collapse was when the web took over from the warfare between Microsoft and the Taligent team (Apple, IBM, Borland, Novell, lots of others). They were all busy blowing smoke at each other over the users when out of nowhere a network that had been around longer than any of them, that had already solved every problem they were trying to solve that was worth solving, swooped in and doused all the warfare. How? The users fell in love, and as we know, love is a very powerful force.

My guess, if I had to make one, is that the social network that we will all be building on in the coming years is already out there. It could be Twitter, after it’s federated, or it could be what FriendFeed is teasing about. Or it could be two kids in a garage that no one is paying attention to. Keep your eyes and ears open and trust your gut, you’ll know it when you see it.

When Obama wins… 

There’s a game being played on Twitter that goes like this.

“When Obama wins…”

The game is to fill in the blank creatively. .

Here are some examples.

Here’s my entry.

Scripting News for 5/8/2008

May 8, 2008

Coming soooooon 

We’re working to build a scalable, beautiful new TwitterGram, an application built on the super-powerful SwitchAbit platform.

Comments in Twitter? 

I just posted a Tweet: “After seeing comments blossom in FriendFeed, it seems either Twitter should have comments, or extend the API so someone else can add them.”

Why?

1. People still reply to tweets, expecting a response in a tweet. It’s noise to most of my followers. They send responses (to me) asking what am I responding to. If I answer that, then other people ask what I’m responding to in explaining the other person’s response. Twitter is not symmetric, that’s a good feature, but it makes for a shitty conversation medium, imho.

2. Far more people use Twitter than use FriendFeed. Yes, I think it’s great there are APIs and that makes it possible for FriendFeed to build on what Twitter does. But it is a competitive market and ideas should slosh around among all the products.

3. The length of this post should provide a clue why comments would be good in Twitter. I started writing #1 in Twitter itself, and went over 140 chars before I had expressed a single idea.

Testing Pownce public downloads 

I just uploaded a song I recorded on Tuesday to Pownce. After two tries, it worked. You have to be logged in to download the song but anyone can play it. Hmmm. That removes one potential application I had in mind, Pownce as a podcast-serving platform.

Here’s a screen shot of the post.

Anyone should be able to listen to the song even if they’re not a member of Pownce.

Screen shot of the prefs page for public/not public.

Update: Sometime after it was uploaded it stopped working, people were unable to download the song. Obviously there are still some glitches to work out.

Pownce becomes more useful 

Twitter is still my mainstay in microblogging, but I’m using FriendFeed more, and today Pownce removed an important limit that will make it useful in a way that neither Twitter or FriendFeed are. And because all three have APIs and excellent support for RSS, the chances to combine their strengths makes it possible for each to specialize.

Where Pownce is developing strength is in the area of payloads, but until today they were limited to members of Pownce and for non-pro users, to friends of the uploaders. Now it’s possible to upload files that can be downloaded by anyone. The size limit for payloads used to be 10MB, now it’s 100MB, and for pro users 250MB. Interesting new applications should be possible, making it competitive with services such as YouTube and blip.tv, and because it has an API it’s possible to develop applications with Pownce that are not possible with other services.

Is MySpace opening? 

This post on TechCrunch started a bit of discussion.

Ben Metcalfe posted an interesting video comment there, embedded below.

Scripting News for 5/7/2008

May 7, 2008

Obama, the Democratic nominee 

1. There’s no doubt now, Obama is going to be the Democratic nominee, and very likely the next President. I doubt if McCain has the sense of entitlement that HRC had but he’s going to run on experience, and we don’t want experience, we want intelligence, honesty and change.

2. Obama will show up once or twice in Kentucky and West Virginia, but it will be relaxed, he’ll do big rallies, town halls, meetups, take a bowling lesson, shoot some hoops.

3. At the same time he’ll tour the following states: Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, California, New Mexico, Colorado, Minnesota, Iowa, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin, Missouri, Illinois, Virginia. I must be leaving some out. The point — illustrate for everyone who might have been listening to HRC that he gets that these are the important states for any Democrat, and it doesn’t matter that HRC got more votes in some of these states, he plans to compete to win all of them. Campaigning in those states signals that he’s on to the next phase of his candidacy.

4. Take a breather, prepare for HRC’s concession, a big party somewhere, and then off to Europe in June to meet with the leaders of the western alliance. A motorcade down the Champs Elysees. The family visits with Gordon Brown’s family. Pay respects to the Queen of England. Show the folks back home that in the Obama Administration the US will have many challenges, but we’ll also have lots of friends to help.

What else? Not sure. What do you think??

Fred Wilson on Bootstrapping 

Fred’s heart is in the right place. He puts money behind technology he likes. This is bootstrapping. Then he bothers the developers with features he needs. He’s a bootstrapper and a hacker. Then Fred reads articles written by other people and listens to a Tim O’Reilly keynote and tries to get everyone into agreement. Reminds me of The Negotiator, William Shatner.

Fred believes in triangulating, I do too. It’s how you find the truth. Obviously I agree with Fred’s conclusion — just today I was working with Jay at Switchabit on a very small project. We spec’d it out, I went to work on it, and after I did it the way we discussed I realized there was a much more direct and simple way to do it, so I re-did it, and again I realized it was too complicated, and I re-did it, sent him a report, he integrated it into his project agreeing that it was much better than what we discussed.

People who believe in big-bangs miss that you learn stuff while you’re implementing stuff and that learning should be recycled back into the project, again and again.

There was an excellent series on PBS a few years back called Connections; in each episode they take you through a series of developments how little pieces of one thing became something much bigger, you start with something small and every step of the way make small improvements and before you know it you’re standing on the moon saying “One small step for man…”

A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.

I’ve heard bootstrapping described as “paving the cowpaths.”

Twitter was a bootstrap too. There were a lot of small things that needed to get solved before Twitter could work. It may look like it popped up out of nowhere if you don’t know how the pieces came together, but if you do…

One thing that’s feeding epiphany for me is that I’m working with Scott Rosenberg on his history of blogging, which promises to be a great book, and reliving all the steps that got us to where we are.

Soup 

Comcast’s 250GB limit? 

DSLreports piece says Comcast may impose a 250GB monthly limit for customers. If you go over, you pay $15 per 10GB.

Since I got shut down last month for being in the top 1/10th of 1 percent of their customers, without notice, I’m in a pretty good position to evaluate this plan from a customer’s perspective.

Comments…

1. They’re stating publicly that they have a limit and what the limit is. This is better than having an unstated limit that’s a moving target over time and geography.

2. They will provide a site where they tell us how much we’ve used.

2. It gives other ISPs something to compete against. They can offer plans with a 350GB limit or a 1TB limit.

3. It’s not fair to customers to change the terms after they sign up. People always argue it from Comcast’s perspective, never from the customer’s. They may have a right to do it, but it still isn’t fair.

4. How much bandwidth does a product like Slingbox use? Probably not a product Comcast loves very much, btw.

5. There’s a weird connection between this and DMCA notices. Makes me wonder what their real motivation is. Remember Comcast is in the TV business, and video on the Internet is a big bandwidth user.

6. Do you think Comcast should lease their cable to competitors if they’re not going to provide plain vanilla internet access?

7. I want neutral Internet service, so I can build whatever I want to out of it. I don’t mind if there’s a meter, but I don’t like the deal changing after I sign on, makes me wonder what’s coming next.

Scripting News for 5/6/2008

May 6, 2008

Gary, Indiana 

By popular request, my ode to Gary, Indiana — the town that is turning the world upside down tonight.

Japanese Twitter has ads 

Gotta admit Twitter has interesting bugs! A few minutes ago, while tracking election returns (Obama wins NC yesss!) all of a sudden the Twitter UI changed to Japanese.

Then we started getting ads.

Here’s one with a Toyota ad.

So much for not having a business model! :-)

IRC for Indiana/North Carolina 

I started a chatroom for tomorrow’s primaries.

irc://irc.freenode.net/#indianaNorthCarolinaPrimary

Please join if you want the firehose conversation! :-)

Breaking news on Twitter 

Read this post from John Borthwick, my partner in Switch-A-Bit.

http://www.borthwick.com/weblog/2008/05/06/future-of-news/

Breaking news covered by a loosely coupled ad hoc group of Twitterlings.

Update: Reuters was watching too. :-)

Scripting News for 5/5/2008

May 5, 2008

Boostrapping a decentralized Twitter 

Overnight Mike Arrington weighed in on the decentralized Twitter discussion. I’m glad he is getting involved, he’s a smart guy and is now using Twitter as an integral part of his communication system. But I have to disagree with the way he characterized my thinking.

I always work in bootstrapping mode, addressing the first big issue, solving the problem, then advancing to the next one. It’s why so many of the ideas I’ve worked on have become popular modes of communication. Big-bang approaches always fail. I’ve spent decades arguing with people who want to reinvent the world in one stroke. They always try anyway and always fail. Bootstrapping is the only way that works.

BTW, I’m not the only one who believes in bootstrapping. Doug Engelbart, who invented many of the things we take for granted today works that way as well.

So the first step in decentralizing Twitter is to get our data safe and stored off twitter.com. Then we need discovery, a way to find people through Twitter, and then without Twitter. There are many ways to do this that work and scale (DNS for one, Skype does it too, without a central server).

It’s also important that we work with Twitter and that they be rewarded for being the primary bootstrapper of this network. I think it’s important because it’s right, and also because we need to incentivize others to do the same.

Also, while others believe the conversational aspects of Twitter are primary, I’m not one of them. I buy into the original vision — “What are you doing?” — and also see it as a link-blogging environment. I have of course used it conversationally, I’ve replied on Twitter to others, but I don’t depend on it because I think this is going to “spam out” — in fact it already is going that way. Just in the last few days I’ve gotten replies from users whose Twitter streams look totally like splogs, and at least a few of them are clearly automated. I block every one of them.

Steve O’Hear: Respect what already exists. Amen!

Is Obama black? 

Yesteray at breakfast at the Sunnyside Cafe in Albany, we arrived late, all the indoor tables were taken so we sat outside. It was frigid cold, for California, in the low 50s. I wasn’t really dressed for it.

We started talking with the man at the next table about how cold it is, and I said it’s nothing, I grew up in NYC and went to school in Wisconsin. The man, who was black and wearing an Obama for President button, said he was from the Bronx, we started talking about the hometown and the good old days (we’re about the same age) and after a while talk turned to politics and he volunteered something that I found jarring. You know Barack Obama isn’t black like I am. Hmmm.

He said Obama was raised by his white mother in Indonesia and his white grandparents in Hawaii and his father who was from Kenya was not an American. I’ve been to Hawaii, it’s not like the Bronx or Chicago, LA or the Deep South where most black Americans live. If you look at a map you’ll see how far away Hawaii is from the US mainland.

So what’s the point? I don’t know, but if if the tables were turned and we were electing the first Jewish president, but his father was from Israel, and his mother was Christian, and he was raised far away from the cultural centers of Jewish life in the US, I’d wonder how much like me he was.

That’s all. I’m still voting for him.

IRC for Indiana/North Carolina 

I started a chatroom for tomorrow’s primaries.

irc://irc.freenode.net/#indianaNorthCarolinaPrimary

Please join if you want the firehose conversation! :-)

If the Dems didn’t have Superdelegates… 

I was wondering if the Democrats, like the Republicans, didn’t have superdelegates, where would the race stand right now. Here are the numbers…

At this moment, Obama has 1491 and Clinton has 1337.

There are 404 delegates remaining in 8 primaries and caucuses.

So with a difference of only 154 delegates, the nomination would not be decided.

However, to take the nomination by 1 delegate, Clinton would have to win 70% or the remaining delegates.

Scripting News for 5/4/2008

May 4, 2008

Why decentralizing Twitter is so important 

At dinner last night, Scott Rosenberg, researching his history of blogging book, said he couldn’t find any trace of the original version of Tim Berners-Lee’s original site, info.cern.ch. I found this amazing.

When I was maintaining the What Are Weblogs page on weblogs.com, in 2000, I said up-front that TBL’s site was also the first weblog. The crazy thing is I remember looking at the site, with my own eyes, and realizing that I was looking at history, like listening to the first telephone conversation or watching Thomas Edison turn on his first electric light bulb.

Today, in 2008, the network we’re building with Twitter is imho as historic as any of these things, we’re all creating artifacts and connections that are even more fragile than the early web, because, unlike the web, it’s 100 percent centralized. We all trust the owners of Twitter, but they’re human, even with the best intent, we all are taking a risk that the network could disappear at any time. And unlike the Internet which has huge amounts of redundancy built-in, if there’s any redundancy in Twitter, none of us outside the company know about it.

This is just plain unacceptable.

I’m on the case because I care so much about this medium, and if it were to disappear, I would feel partially responsible if I hadn’t raised a huge red flag warning about this very unreliable architecture we’re building on.

And, if you know where there’s a backup of the original info.cern.ch, please post a link here, in a comment.

Update #1: A new web service for Twitter clients.

Update #2: Marc Canter checks in.

Put this one on the calendar 

We had RSS Awareness Day, that was fun, so let’s have another new holiday, next Thursday, May 8 is Chickens Come Home To Roost Day.

You have to fit the phrase into conversation at least once during the day. Example. “It’s bad design to put all your eggs in one basket. One day your chickens will come home to roost.” :-)

Sunset over the bay 

Taken last night on Indian Rock.

A view of the back of Indian Rock on Google Maps.

A new web service for Twitter clients 

Yesterday I wrote about a way to prepare to decentralize Twitter, in the event of a lengthy outage. The goal is to create no extra work or complexity for users. I think this is the responsible way for developers to help because it’s 1. Not a good idea to build a centralized system around a for-profit company and 2. Users generally won’t do anything extra to decentralize to prepare for an outage, but when one happens, they blame us (technologists) for not protecting them. Right or wrong, this is the way it is. So I’m working on a step-by-step bootstrap that, if enough developers go along, will have us reasonably protected against a prolonged Twitter outage. It’s not to say that it’s the only way to do it, but it seems to me that it’s one way.

I said I might put up a web service to store user’s RSS feeds on Amazon S3, and I’d pick up the hosting bill, to help the bootstrap. One developer took me up on the proposal, so I went ahead and implemented it. Here’s how it works.

1. There’s a new XML-RPC service at this address: xmlrpc://rpc.twittergram.com/RPC2

2. The name of the procedure is twittergram.saveFeed.

3. It takes three params: The user’s Twitter username and password, and the text of the feed. The password is only used to authenticate, it is not stored on the server.

4. It returns the URL of the feed as its stored on feeds.twittergram.com.

5. Code (in UserTalk) that works.

local (server = “xmlrpc://rpc.twittergram.com/RPC2″)
local (username = “davewiner”, password = user.twitter.prefs.password)
local (feedtext = tcp.httpreadurl (”http://twitter.scripting.com/daveRss.xml”))
local (url = [server].twittergram.saveFeed (username, password, feedtext))
webbrowser.openurl (url)

6. You can call the routine at most once a minute. This may be increased if it becomes a popular service. My server is limited to 70 calls per hour. Again something will have to be done if it becomes popular.

Scripting News for 5/3/2008

May 3, 2008

Microblogging should be decentralized 

Scott Hanselman asks the question that should be on all our minds, as we come to depend more and more on Twitter. We need to do something about our over-reliance on a centralized system run by a for-profit company.

Read his whole post and think about what you can do.

One thing right off the bat — if you make a desktop tool for Twitter, you can offer the user the option to store their twitstream as an RSS feed. Just do it in parallel, transparently for the user (although it’s a preference). You can key off their Twitter ID. If you want I’ll set up a service for free hosting of the feed on Amazon S3 (it’s not a very expensive thing) or it’s something you could provide as a bonus feature.

It’s a step in a positive direction for decentralizing. It’s not the whole thing, but it’s a big part of it. And should Twitter ever go off the air for more than a few days, it’ll be the way we put the network back together.

Update #1: I took a walk, and thought some more about this. If there were a way to point, from your Twitter account, to an alternate feed, then your desktop client could cache a pointer to the feed for each person you’re following. If Twitter were to go down, then the desktop client would fall back to polling the feeds. It would probably be slower, but it would work.

If one of the people you follow didn’t have an alternate feed, you’d have to wait for Twitter to come back up to find out what’s new with them. But if they used a desktop client, and the client was maintaining the feed automatically for each user (subject to a pref), then it would notify Twitter where it was storing the feed. Twitter would just have to maintain one more string for each user, alongside the user’s location, link to their website, one-line bio, etc.

However: It would require support from Twitter, Inc. to work.

Rev Chickens-Come-Home-To-Roost 

We wasted another week on Rev Wright, hopefully the last one. No it didn’t drag Obama down, though the right wing is spinning their wish that it would. If only. Keep dreaming.

Yes, Obama is a gifted politician, and that’s why we like him. We need political leadership, we’ve done without it for the last four terms, sixteen years, and we hope that this guy really gets that the power is with us, that we pay the bills, fight the wars, and it’s our hard work and innovation that drive the economy that makes America powerful when we are powerful.

Wright? He’s a deer that got caught in a headlight none of us have ever been in, so we don’t really have a right to judge him. He spun around looking for friends, and found he was radioactive, and it really wasn’t his fault. He wasn’t running for office, in a rhetorical way he totally did inhale and exhale and inhaled again, and again. The only people who really liked his radioactivity were people like Louis Farrakhan and his followers who want to disrupt the US political process.

So what to do with the Wright legacy? I feel sorry for him, but I hope he finds some good people who aren’t out to destroy other good people and he skips writing the book, and he kicks back and lets the member of his flock take the leadership we want and need him to.

See also: Bill Moyers, yesterday, on Rev Wright.

What is a Dual-WAN Router? 

Imagine that water pipes were a new thing, and therefore not reliable. They work for most people most of the time, but sometimes they go down, and then if you want to take a bath or wash the dishes or cook a meal, no luck.

Then you learn that there are two types of water pipes, run by different companies, and it’s very rare that both go down at the same time. So, if you can afford it, you get both water suppliers to pipe into your house, and when one goes down, you go to the street, lift a manhole cover, go down a ladder, and disconnect the one that doesn’t work and hook up the one that does.

It’s a hassle for sure, but you always have water. Then someone invents a T-shaped pipe with two inputs and one output. You hook the two suppliers each to a branch and your house to the third. This way when one goes down, you don’t even know it. The water keeps flowing, you’re happy.

It works the same way with the Internet. Some days Comcast goes down, and others AT&T DSL, but they rarely go down at the same time. I have both because the Internet is still young and unreliable, and I’ve lived with its lack of reliability before and it’s worth a hundred bucks a month to have the luxury of uninterrupted service when one or the other goes down. But until yesterday, if I needed to switch over, I’d have to rewire my network just to switch to the other vendor. But, it turns out they make T-pipes for the Internet, they’re called Dual-WAN Routers. And I got one.

It took a fair amount of fussing-with to get it working, but it has a nice fractional horsepower HTTP server to configure the router, a good help system, and I kind of intuitively get what it does.

Comcast is going to like this, their service is so much faster than AT&T’s that I set it up so that AT&T is the backup. I won’t actually send any packets over their line unless Comcast goes down, or gets pissed at me (it happens) — but they should note that turning me off will no longer get my attention. :-)

And thanks to my parents for buying this lovely gift for me. How did they know I wanted one? Another innovation, Amazon Wishlists. This Dual-WAN Router thing isn’t something I would likely buy for myself, too speculative, I wasn’t at all sure it would be simple enough to set up, or that I really needed it. There is a recession going on after all. And they never would have had a clue that I was interested. But now I have one and I’m very happy to have it.

Why did I decide on Xincom? I read the reviews on Amazon and it seemed the most likely to work.

Sunset at Indian Rock 

A bunch of us went up to Indian Rock to see the sunset.

Click here for the set.

Scripting News for 5/2/2008

May 2, 2008

Government could help us use less oil and save money 

McCain and Clinton propose a moratorium on Federal gasoline tax for the summer to give the “average American” a break. It must test well with focus groups, but it’s meaningless, because the prices would immediately adjust. If you lower the price, people will take longer trips, drive instead of fly, increasing consumption, driving the price up. There might be a bit of a benefit to drivers for a very short period of time, but in the end it would be a wash. This is what economists say, and it makes sense.

President Bush wants more exploration, and to build more refineries, these are medium to long-term things that likely wouldn’t do anything for us right away.

But wouldn’t switching to smaller European style cars do more to ease the problem than increasing exploration or creating more refineries?

And the money we’d give up for Federal gasoline tax could be better spent on putting high capacity network lines under our streets to increase communication. Some of the car trips must be to exchange information that coud be replaced by moving packets around at gigabit speeds. It wouldn’t cost much to retrofit a few cities with really high speed lines, then we could get to work on developing the services that would make life more interesting, fun and efficient.