Archive for May, 2006



Off to Madison for CSG

The rest of this week I’ll be in Wisconsin. I’ll be attending the Spring Common Solutions Group meeting in Madison, where there will be a workshop on data center futures and I’ll be leading a short workshop on Thursday on social software. I’ll be blogging those sessions as we go. CSG is a small meeting, usually in the 50-75 people range, where IT leaders from 25 leading US research universities attend. It’s always a convivial and highly interactive experience, and I always learn a lot.

Next weekend I’ll be in Milwaukee visiting my friend Jim Fricke, who is now directing curatorial efforts at the soon-to-be-built Harley Davidson Museum, and my old college bud Bryn is coming up from Chicago. Should be great fun!

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The KEXP blog is now live

Over the last few months I’ve consulted some with the folks from KEXP radio, Seattle’s famous indie station, about how to get going with blogging.

I’m pleased to say that the KEXP blog is now live and on the net at http://blog.kexp.org.

The DJs at KEXP are extremely knowledgeable and highly opinionated – that’s a good thing in a DJ!

I look forward to keeping up with the posts from some of my favorite DJs, like DJ Michele, Jon Kertzer, Don Slack, Darek Mazzone, and (especially) John Gilbreath.

Nice work, Jason, Louis, and all!

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Look who else is online…

I didn’t realize till he just posted a comment here just now that my colleague Jim has a blog, which (just like Jim) is erudite and quirky, and a generally good read. I’m adding it to my subscriptions. I especially like his About Me page.

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Look who else is online…

I didn’t realize till he just posted a comment here just now that my colleague Jim has a blog, which (just like Jim) is erudite and quirky, and a generally good read. I’m adding it to my subscriptions. I especially like his About Me page.

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There’s got to be a better way to advertise

The first thing I do when I bring my Sunday newspaper into the house is remove all the advertising circulars and dump them into the recycling bin. I don’t read them, I don’t look at them, I don’t give them so much as a glance.

Today the advertising in the Sunday Seattle Times weighed just over three pounds.

I’d gladly pay the Times a bit more to not deliver those ads to me at all.

I can’t imagine that this is an effective form of advertising for the firms that purchase the ads – and it certainly doesn’t make any environmental sense.

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The Solstice development framework – from the people who brought you the Catalyst Web Tools

My colleagues and friends who develop the Catalyst Web Tools here at the UW have done an open source release of their Solstice framework. Solstice is a web app development framework for perl developers. It’s what the Catalyst folks use to develop tools that we use heavily, including the highly regarded (and recent award-winning) WebQ quizzing and survey tool.

Solstice is a model-view-controller framework (as is Ruby on Rails) that can make it easier for perl developers to build robust, maintainable, and highly functional web applications.

Next up the Catalyst team is working on open sourcing the web tools code, which should be widely useful as both apps to use as-is and as starting points for how to develop and extend Solstice applications.

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The Solstice development framework – from the people who brought you the Catalyst Web Tools

My colleagues and friends who develop the Catalyst Web Tools here at the UW have done an open source release of their Solstice framework. Solstice is a web app development framework for perl developers. It’s what the Catalyst folks use to develop tools that we use heavily, including the highly regarded (and recent award-winning) WebQ quizzing and survey tool.

Solstice is a model-view-controller framework (as is Ruby on Rails) that can make it easier for perl developers to build robust, maintainable, and highly functional web applications.

Next up the Catalyst team is working on open sourcing the web tools code, which should be widely useful as both apps to use as-is and as starting points for how to develop and extend Solstice applications.

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Some more writings on net neutrality

There’s a terrific article on the network neutrality debate by Farhad Manjoo in Salon. If you’re wondering what the fuss is about I urge you to take the time to read it.

Dan Gillmor got eloquently passionate about the issue when he gave the New Media lecture at Columbia University:

I’ve talked a fair amount about openness here. This is not only an issue for journalists in their own work. It’s one of the most important policy issues facing us all. If you think media consolidation is an issue today, it’s nothing compared with what we’re facing tomorrow.

Earlier, I mentioned a clear and present danger to the open Internet that has nurtured a more diverse media ecosystem. The threat, in America, is the dominance of the cable and phone companies in what we laughingly call broadband data connections. I say “laughingly” because the U.S. is falling way, way behind the rest of the developed world in providing broadband access, and one reason is the dominance of companies that grew up in an environment where they dominated their worlds, and really preferred it that way.

The cable and phone companies want to control not just the pipes through which our data moves. They also want to decide what will get delivered, in what order, and at what speed. They haven’t pulled this off yet, but they’re getting closer every day.

Yesterday, a committee in the House of Representatives voted down an amendment to a new bill that would have required what many of us call “network neutrality.” This is the idea that the people getting data — you and me — should make the decisions on what we get and in what order, and if necessary pay more for higher speeds. It should not be a decision made by Verizon or Comcast or Time Warner or the fake new ATT.

If they succeed in capturing the kind of control they want — and they’re closer than I would have believed possible — we’ll all be harmed.

I beg you to write and call your member of Congress and U.S. senators, and your state representatives — the duopoly is well-wired, in the wrong way, in our state capitals, too. Tell them you want an open Internet, not a walled garden or fortress where giant companies get to pick what innovations will succeed or fail.

Last week Dan posted about AT&T’s apparent participation in helping the NSA perform what may be illegal spying against American citizens, and noted:

There’s plenty of shame to go around, and you expect this from the current government. But one of the most disturbing parts of this is the phone company’s seeming eagerness to give up its customers’ most private information without appearing to care that it’s violating basic rules of business and decency.

And these companies are run by the people who want to control the Internet by ending any semblance of network neutrality. Feeling safer?

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