Archive for October, 2006



Qualcomm Hands Off Eudora to Mozilla

Talk about the end of an era.

Terry pointed this one out:

Qualcomm on Wednesday joined up with the Mozilla Foundation to announce it is transitioning Eudora into an open source e-mail client that will be based upon Thunderbird. In turn, all future versions of Eudora will be free and Qualcomm will discontinue the current paid client.

Although it may seem like Eudora is simply abandoning its e-mail software, which has a small but strong following of loyal users, the company claims the Thunderbird-based client will retain “Eudora’s uniquely rich feature set and productivity enhancements.”

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Cyberinfrastructure Working Group

NSF’s Advisory Committee on Cyberinfrastructure – ACCI is chaired by Duderstadt. Diana Oblinger is Educause rep.

Findings of University Breakout Group:

- NSF should develop a CI communication plan – group members all had different perspectives on CI
- NSF needs a coordinated strategy for working with universities including an incentive system
- Cluster propagation is a major issue on campuses
- Pay attention to the needs of minority serving and other “non-elite” institutions
- NSF should provide leaderships in all four areas of CI – not just hardware.

Five Pillars of CI
1. – Campus Communities and Constituencies: enabler in partnerships wiht researchers; administrations as a community; engaging students including undergrads; federated id management; education – workforce training; Candidate communities to engage in CI discussion
2. – Computing and Communications: Interaction between central and local; Data center issues; Balance between big iron and the needs of the majority (specific metrics to judge balance); Campus networks to include interfaces to research networks; Information security
3. – Information management: policies on data management; hardware architecture for mass storage/archival – responsibility?; Data life cycle management – researchers often at the mercy of the students; Institutional data surveys; legal liabilities of departed PIs.
4. – Virtual communities: Software support; IRB coordination for inter-instititional data collaboration; federeated ids;
5. – Partnership Strategies: agencies seem to fgavor small autonomous cluster approach; balance between partnership and competition; range of support – collaborator, service provider; central v. local support – transition in business model

Impossible to know how much money is being spent on hardware by the agencies.

NSF is grappling with what to do with American Competetiveness Initiative.

The idea of a Cyberinfrastructure Environmental Impact Statement is brought up – monitoring proposals and/or awards for cyber infrastructure.

NSF is increasingly oriented towards metrics, not narratives. Need to quantify claims that our cyberinfrastructure is serving masses – what’s the niche vis a vis things that NSF does fund.

There’s a trend towards projects that want to depend on cyberinfrastructure, not build their own.

NSF cyberinfrastructure panelists have so far preferred to pay for training of CI folks within disciplines, as opposed to generalists.

[educause06] Ray Kurzweil

Ray Kurzweil is talking about being able to predict the advance of information technology. The key to success of being an inventor is in being able to estimate when technologies will be advanced enough to make an invention possible – timing is critical. Over thirty years of doing this he’s found that the models he worked out to predict future technology trends has worked pretty well.

If we can measure information content of an area, we find that growth is exponential, with roughly a doubling every year – the power of technologies expands by a billion every 25 years, while the size of technology shrinks by a factor of a hundred every ten years.

Ray shows a new pocket-sized print-to-speech reading machine – he’s been involved with reading machine technology for thirty years now. In 2002 he predicted that technology would be available for a pocket reading machine would be available in May of 2006, and that development of such a machine would take roughly four years. In July they introduced the pocket reading machine.

Ray goes on to talk about the extent to which artificial intelligence programs are providing generally useful functions now, and the narrowness of these applications are getting less narrow over time.

The Paradigm Shift Rate is now doubling every decade. People tend to extrapolate in a linear way, when progress is almost always faster. The rate is actually accelerating. He gives examples – the phone took half a century to be adopted by half of the US population – the cell phone did it in seven years. Another trend is the democratization of knowledge creation, which is fueling an explosion of knowledge. The amount of knowledge is also growing exponentially, doubling every year.

He shows a graph that he calls Countdown to Singularity, which shows technological evolution in a continuum with technological evolution, in a straight logarithmic trend line.

People criticize Kurzweil for thinking that exponential growth can continue – and it’s true that each particular technology runs out of steam, but new technologies evolve that keep the trend going. When Moore’s Law runs out in current chip design, we’ll see three dimensional molecular computing rise to keep the growth going. There’s nanotube-based memory set to hit the market next year.

By 2013 we should have computers that can equal the processing power of all regions of the human brain.

It’s remarkable how smooth the trend lines are, given the vagaries of the activities of millions of people. It’s like other examples in science where we see predictable activity come out of random, chaotic individual events. The classic example from the 19th century is thermodynamics. Technology evolution just such a case of predictable behavior.

Our consumption of information technology more than keeps pace with the growth of capacity.

In biotechnology we’re using technology to reprogram biology. He’s involved with one company that has cured pulmonary hypertension in animals by injecting a new gene – it’s now going into human testing. There are thousands of these developments happening now. This is a new paradigm in drug development, designing drugs using technology instead of just discovering them.

He talks about repirocytes – robotic red blood cells that are already being tested by animals.

The ultimate source of utilizing the power of information technology will come from reverse engineering the brain – we’re now getting to the point where we can scan brain data to see individual activities. The design information of the brain is a billion times simpler than the apparent complexity of the brain – we know this because of the amount of information the genome can contain. We will succeed in modeling the brain within the next twenty years – which will fuel truly intelligent systems.

Ray shows a video of a prototype of a translating telephone, where he speaks in English and the person on the other end hears him in German, and vice versa (also in French). He says these systems will be common in cell phones in the next ten years. This translation is done through pattern recognition informed by large databases.

By 2010, computers will begin to disappear – images written directly to our retinas with ubiquitous high bandwidth connections at all times and electronics so tiny they’re embedded in clothing and glasses. Full immersion virtual reality will be feasible, and augmented reality (eyeglasses that tell you the name and birthday of the person you’re talking to) and effective language translation will exist.

By 2029 we’ll have 30 doublings. $1k of computation will buy 1,000 times the capacity of the human brain, reverse engineering of the human brain will be completed, computers will pass the Turing test, and nanobots will provide expansion of human intelligence.

Human life expectancy was in the 20s when life evolved. By 1800 it had reached 37, by 1900 it had reached 48. According to his models in twenty years we’ll be adding more than a year of life expectancy to the lives of living people every year.

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[Educause06] Award for Course Management Systems

Educause has given its first ever “Catalyst Award” to Course Management Systems for their “broad impact on higher education”.

This strikes me as a wrong-headed award to a class of software that is largely a prime example of a siloed environment provided by systems that really shouldn’t have had to exist in the first place.

I’ve said this before, but just to reiterate – most of what you get in Course Management Systems are a set of common communication functions (easy web authorship with templates, discussion forums, group management, etc) wrapped in a thin layer of workflow management. But the blog or wiki or mail list management tool contained in a CMS is unlikely to ever be as good as the individual tools that are widely available – would you rather blog in Sakai or WordPress?

If we really had the tools we deserve we’d be able to integrate the good tools that are continually appearing on the open market with our own workflow and data from our student systems to provide the rich functionality that our students and faculty really deserve.

I do seem to have a minority view on this one, but as I watched the video honoring our late colleague Howard Strauss while writing this post, I thought Howard would agree with me on this one.

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[Educause06] Student Perspectives on Music Piracy

I’m in Dallas for the Educause 06 conference – just me an 7,500 of my closest friends. Most of my time here is committed to working meetings, but this morning I’m taking in a talk by Ross Housewright, a grad student at UC Berkeley, who’s done a study of how students feel about the ways in which they download music.

There’s nothing revelatory here, but Ross found that almost all students are using P2P file sharing to get music, and that the file sharing networks are (despite years of the industry battling against them) are still more convenient to use than any legal service – more comprehensive, less restrictive, and free.

Students know that file sharing is illegal, but they think of it as illegal like speeding or jaywalking. As far as education goes, they find industry efforts as unconvincing – it’s seen as poor college students vs rich rock stars and the huge entertainment industry. Students don’t know the details of the law, and they don’t care to learn. They don’t think they’re likely to get sued.

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An Earshot 2006 festival playlist on eMusic

If you’re interested in the artists appearing at this year’s Earshot Jazz Festival I’ve put together a playlist on eMusic that has links to recordings of many (though by no means all) of the artists appearing. You can listen to samples, and if you’re an eMusic subscriber, download recordings in full non-copy-protected mp3 format.

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More fun with Windows Vista, this time RC1

I installed the Windows Vista Release Candidate 1 yesterday, over the Vista Beta 2 release, which had been stable, if unexciting.

I also installed Office 2007, with a fresh download from the Office Beta site.

The new release started crashing on me immediately. Vista crashed a couple of times, and even after a restart Office kept crashing. So I turned off the computer, and like any sensible professional, called it quits for the day.

This morning, I came in and rebooted, and Vista runs, but IE7 crashes right after launch. I gave it my assent to go look to see if there are any known solutions to this problem, and I got back the following:

A Micosoft analyst has reviewed this error report and determined the problem you encountered will be resolved in a Windows Vista release, which will be available in the future.

Not very informative.

It’s really interesting to realize how much work you can’t get done without a functioning Web browser in this day and age.

I did manage to create a second user account, and IE7 seemed to run ok there. So, fearful of the same problem happening, I decided to use IE to download Firefox, so I’d have a second browser available. I installed Firefox and the Foxmarks extension, and then Firefox crashed on me. Now, after a reboot, IE7 crashes on that user account too, but Firefox 1.5 seems to work.

This is a release candidate? Sheesh – c’mon Microsoft, you can do better than this.

Andrew Benton tells me that RC2 is due out later this week – we’ll see if that’s any better.

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