Archive for June, 2007

iPhone impressions – Day 1

We biked down to the Apple store in the University Village here in Seattle today and picked up an iPhone. I know there were lines waiting for them to go on sale yesterday, and I heard from someone who was down in the Village a couple of hours after us that there were lines then too, but I just walked into the store and purchased mine with no fuss.

When I got it home I was pleasantly surprised to find that it was already charged and ready to go. When I connected it to my G4 iMac, the iMac fired up iPhoto, which showed the iPhone as a device, but the activation process wants iTunes to see the phone – which it didn’t.

I then moved it to the Intel Mac Mini that has all my music on it, and that machine’s iTunes saw it right away and from that point on the process worked very well, walking me through registering for a plan and getting the phone activated.

Once the phone was activated it found my Apple Airport Extreme WiFi hotspot with no problem. Browsing the web with Safari worked fine right out of the box, as did Google maps and playing YouTube videos from the most popular list. The screen on the iPhone is bright and sharp, far better than any mobile phone device I’ve had previously. The menu structure is clear and intuitive, also a far cry better than my previous mobile experiences.

Setting up the phone for email Google Mail was very easy, and configuring the UW IMAP and SMTP servers was straightforward, though getting used to the touchscreen keyboard will take some time – so far I keep hitting P when I’m trying for O. The IMAP client is far superior to the experience I’ve had with IMAP on my Nokia E62 – the defaults are sensible, and the response (at least on WiFi) is snappy.

One confusing point I’ve found so far is in transferring music onto the phone from iTunes on my Mac. I was not able to just drag tunes from the iTunes library onto the phone’s Music directory like I can with my iPods. Instead I had to set up a playlist of songs I wanted on the phone and then set the phone to sync with that playlist in iTunes.

I also encountered what seems to be a problem with YouTube search – I was at dinner tonight talking with my friend Ed about Jorma Kaukonen and Hot Tuna (those under fifty might not remember these icons of San Francisco psychedelic folk-rock) – Ed noted that there were some good videos on YouTube featuring Jorma, so I whipped out the iPhone and did a search. The phone was unable to connect to Ed’s home Linksys hotspot, so I assumed it was searching on the cellular network, but at any rate it did not fine any results, and the phone kept wanting to search the term Norma instead of Jorma. Searching on my laptop at home right now shows about 123 results for the term “jorma kaukonen”. I don’t know what’s up with that, but I’ll prod at it some more over the next few days.

So far my impression of the iPhone is that it is indeed a revolutionary step forward in really useful handheld Internet devices, and I think it should have a great influence on the marketplace going forward.

I’ll report more on my use of the iPhone as it happens.

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Kenmore concert series in St. Edwards Park

One of the best kept summer secrets in the Seattle area over the last few years has been the free summer concerts in St. Edwards State Park in Kenmore, sponsored by the City of Kenmore, KBCS radio, and Bastyr College. This year’s lineup looks like a good one again – these are Thursday evenings from 6:30 – 8 pm.

July 5 – Laura Love
July 12 – The Zydeco Locals
July 19 – Santa Cruz River Band
July 26 – Clinton Fearon & Boogie Brown Band
August 2 -Erin McKeown
August 9 – Johnny Conga & Sabor Tropical
August 16 – Dya Singh
August 23 – Uncle Earl

Future use of collaboration technologies

Harvard prof Andrew McAfee has an interesting post analyzing a recent Gilbane Group poll of 1000 Facebook users of ages 18-34 on which collaboration tools they believe they’ll use on their jobs in two years.

Andrew writes: The largest difference, and a statistically significant one, is that the younger crowd has less faith that email will continue to dominate. As a group, the 18-24 year olds plan to make more use of text messaging (a channel technology) and social networking sites (primarily a platform technology, although Facebook does allow communication over private channels). Interestingly, they seem less enthusiastic about instant messaging than does the older set.

Given that we in higher-ed deal with those age groups as primary parts of our constituencies, and that these are the folks who are rapidly becoming our faculty and staff as well as students, we need to be thinking about what happens as these trends accelerate.


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Howard Rheingold’s class on Virtual Communities next fall at Stanford

This is a great looking syllabus for a course Howard Rheingold will be teaching next fall called Virtual Communities and Social Media – wish I could take it!

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Federated identities in action – Confluence and Shibboleth

One of the emerging themes at the UW (and in higher ed in general) is increased interaction across the boundaries of the institution. You can see that in action in the thrust to virtual organizations in research initiatives (see NSF’s program in Engineering Virtual Organizations for example), in the establishment of the Global Health department, in the growing cross-institutional software development projects like Kuali and Sakai and in many other spaces.

I’m increasingly hearing (and experiencing) needs to work collaboratively with folks from other places. Unfortunately, most of our systems require a local identity (in our case a UW NetID) for access control. This is where the concept of federated identity systems like Shibboleth should help – and by golly, it does!

Here in C&C we use a Confluence wiki, which recently was Shibboleth-enabled (notes on how to do that are here), enabling users of our wiki to permit access to people with credentials from any of the members of the InCommon federation. One of the InCommon members is ProtectNetwork, an independent identity provider.

So yesterday, when a question came in about collaborating with people who are not UW folks (nor affiliated with any of the other InCommon higher ed institutions) I thought “they should be able to get ProtectNetwork IDs and then we could grant them wiki access in Confluence”.

So I went out and got myself an ID and tested it out – and it worked! Here’s a screenshot of the Confluence permissions-setting screen with my ProtectNetwork ID circled. How cool is that?

Screenshot 03

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What’s with those Mac memory prices?

Now that the WWDC has come and gone and Apple didn’t introduce the long-rumored light notebook, I was looking at Macbooks today, thinking about ordering a new laptop. Figuring that the laptop will probably be my main machine for the next while, I was looking at the Macbook Pros. I was thinking it would be good to trick one out with the full 4 GB memory config, but I was totally blown away by what Apple charges for the upgrade from 2 GB to 4 GB. $750 for 2 GB of memory? Are you kidding, I thought?

But it’s not just Apple – Lenovo is charging $845 for the same upgrade on its Thinkpad T60 series. There must be something I don’t know about DDR2 memory that causes the prices to be so high.

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What’s with those Mac memory prices?

Now that the WWDC has come and gone and Apple didn’t introduce the long-rumored light notebook, I was looking at Macbooks today, thinking about ordering a new laptop. Figuring that the laptop will probably be my main machine for the next while, I was looking at the Macbook Pros. I was thinking it would be good to trick one out with the full 4 GB memory config, but I was totally blown away by what Apple charges for the upgrade from 2 GB to 4 GB. $750 for 2 GB of memory? Are you kidding, I thought?

But it’s not just Apple – Lenovo is charging $845 for the same upgrade on its Thinkpad T60 series. There must be something I don’t know about DDR2 memory that causes the prices to be so high.

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[ECAR 2007 Summer Symposium] Higher education and the future of U.S. Competitiveness

David Attis, Senior Director of Policy Studies, Council on Competitiveness, is giving the final talk.

Concerns about U.S. competitiveness now appear almost daily in the national news – every country is facing this in the global environment, and feel they’re behind. There as sense that we’ve taken our eye off the ball. Industrial leaders link competitiveness and prosperity to leadership in science and technology. And politicians on both sides of the aisle have followed their lead. There’s a broad political consensus that has emerged through the legislative process – the agenda is increased basic research funding in science and engineering, increased funding for graduate education, increased k-12 science education, high-skilled immigration, and r&d tax credits.

These proposals implicitly assume that higher education is the linchpin of U.S. competitiveness. The assumption is that if more funding gets pushed into the system, more innovation comes out. What do we mean by innovation? Doesn’t have a precise economic definition, though politicians love the term. Secretary of Commerce now has a commission on measuring innovation. We have some idea of how to increase the number of PhDs and publications, but that’s not necessarily innovation. And how does that translate into jobs?

In 80s US was responsible for 46% of RD investment, now it’s 37%. In 1986 US produced 52% of new doctorates in science and engineering in 2003 it was 22% – what does that mean for our future? China’s the top high tech exporter now, and five of the top 10 countries are developing economies. China is a leader in production, but not in innovation – it’s a lot of foreign companies producing in China. China’s investment in R&D spending grew 19.3 percent 1995-2004.

David cites the shrinking influence of Great Britain in the world between the 19th and 20th centuries as perhaps a good model of what happens to the U.S. in the near future.

The rise of global research networks – the location of corporate research labs. China and India are cited as the best places to put new R&D facilities.

Dispite significant increases in basic research funding, output (publications, patents) have grown slowly.

Regional knowledge spillovers – putting people into one place and foster relationships and networks fosters innovation. Innovation as a contact sport – happens through personal connections, not licensing and patents. The amount you spend on R&D determines how many people go into science and engineering – getting these people trained and out into working environments is how innovation spreads. Tacit knowledge – what cannot be captured in publications and patents – is the most valuable.

What does that mean for education? There’s been a lot of talk about the shortage of scientists and engineers. There’s a real gap between what CEOs see and what students see. Students see higher wages for MBAs, JDs and MDs; long routes to specialized degrees; more S&E’s working outside the profession; rising unemployment rates for S&Es; middle-aged S&E’s struggling to find work; rapidly growing S&E workforce in developing countries.

What are employers really looking for – survey by conference board:

1. critical thinking/problem solving
2. information technology application
3. teamwork/collaboration
4. creativity/innovation
5. diversity
5. leadership
7. oral communications

13. math
16. science

Most PhD programs don’t typically teach these soft skills. Technical skills are not enough. Cites Georgia Tech’s computer science program as an example of an integrated program that puts things together for a CS major – “Threads and Roles”

“Send me engineers who are adaptable – who can think across disciplines.”

“Industry needs employees who not only understand the technical nature of their projects, but the business and legal aspects as well…” IBM exec

“We need engineers who think like artists and artists who think like engineers”

The Spellings Commission report – misses a lot of these points.

Information technology: a double-edged sword?

Driver for growth: productivity growth; lower prices; more efficient markets; higher quality goods and services; innovation and new products and services.

Disruptive force: IT-enabled dislocations; offshoring; skill-biased technical change.

Churn is essential to dynamism and growth, but it’s disruptive to workers. Average household income has actually declined from 2001-2006.

Will off-shoring hollow out our economy? We don’t have good data – it’s hard to measure. Companies don’t say “we’re taking our jobs here and moving them to India”.

How many jobs have been lost – estimate is about 1 million – a drop in a bucket. There’s no net loss of jobs in the US economy.

What types of jobs are likely to be offshored? If you can do it remotely, it can be offshored. Call-centers, programming, reading radiology, some high-end R&D.

How many jobs could potentially be offshored? Consensus is about 20 million. It’s really guesswork – can’t predict the effects of technology.

How many jobs will actually be offshored? 4-5% of some regions of US, 2% of others.

Will there be any offsetting increase in jobs due to expanded exports? Could be that there’s no net loss.

The returns to education rose significantly in the late 90s, but stalled after 2000 – is this a long-term change or not?

Higher order skills continue to increase in importance across all occupations. The “New Geography of Work” – routine work will be done offshore or by machines, creative work will be done here by people. New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce report (2007). Recommend re-inventing high schools, putting everyone in two year schools and then some move on to higher ed.

Technorati Tags: , , ,

[ECAR 2007 Summer Symposium] Higher education and the future of U.S. Competitiveness

David Attis, Senior Director of Policy Studies, Council on Competitiveness, is giving the final talk.

Concerns about U.S. competitiveness now appear almost daily in the national news – every country is facing this in the global environment, and feel they’re behind. There as sense that we’ve taken our eye off the ball. Industrial leaders link competitiveness and prosperity to leadership in science and technology. And politicians on both sides of the aisle have followed their lead. There’s a broad political consensus that has emerged through the legislative process – the agenda is increased basic research funding in science and engineering, increased funding for graduate education, increased k-12 science education, high-skilled immigration, and r&d tax credits.

These proposals implicitly assume that higher education is the linchpin of U.S. competitiveness. The assumption is that if more funding gets pushed into the system, more innovation comes out. What do we mean by innovation? Doesn’t have a precise economic definition, though politicians love the term. Secretary of Commerce now has a commission on measuring innovation. We have some idea of how to increase the number of PhDs and publications, but that’s not necessarily innovation. And how does that translate into jobs?

In 80s US was responsible for 46% of RD investment, now it’s 37%. In 1986 US produced 52% of new doctorates in science and engineering in 2003 it was 22% – what does that mean for our future? China’s the top high tech exporter now, and five of the top 10 countries are developing economies. China is a leader in production, but not in innovation – it’s a lot of foreign companies producing in China. China’s investment in R&D spending grew 19.3 percent 1995-2004.

David cites the shrinking influence of Great Britain in the world between the 19th and 20th centuries as perhaps a good model of what happens to the U.S. in the near future.

The rise of global research networks – the location of corporate research labs. China and India are cited as the best places to put new R&D facilities.

Dispite significant increases in basic research funding, output (publications, patents) have grown slowly.

Regional knowledge spillovers – putting people into one place and foster relationships and networks fosters innovation. Innovation as a contact sport – happens through personal connections, not licensing and patents. The amount you spend on R&D determines how many people go into science and engineering – getting these people trained and out into working environments is how innovation spreads. Tacit knowledge – what cannot be captured in publications and patents – is the most valuable.

What does that mean for education? There’s been a lot of talk about the shortage of scientists and engineers. There’s a real gap between what CEOs see and what students see. Students see higher wages for MBAs, JDs and MDs; long routes to specialized degrees; more S&E’s working outside the profession; rising unemployment rates for S&Es; middle-aged S&E’s struggling to find work; rapidly growing S&E workforce in developing countries.

What are employers really looking for – survey by conference board:

1. critical thinking/problem solving
2. information technology application
3. teamwork/collaboration
4. creativity/innovation
5. diversity
5. leadership
7. oral communications

13. math
16. science

Most PhD programs don’t typically teach these soft skills. Technical skills are not enough. Cites Georgia Tech’s computer science program as an example of an integrated program that puts things together for a CS major – “Threads and Roles”

“Send me engineers who are adaptable – who can think across disciplines.”

“Industry needs employees who not only understand the technical nature of their projects, but the business and legal aspects as well…” IBM exec

“We need engineers who think like artists and artists who think like engineers”

The Spellings Commission report – misses a lot of these points.

Information technology: a double-edged sword?

Driver for growth: productivity growth; lower prices; more efficient markets; higher quality goods and services; innovation and new products and services.

Disruptive force: IT-enabled dislocations; offshoring; skill-biased technical change.

Churn is essential to dynamism and growth, but it’s disruptive to workers. Average household income has actually declined from 2001-2006.

Will off-shoring hollow out our economy? We don’t have good data – it’s hard to measure. Companies don’t say “we’re taking our jobs here and moving them to India”.

How many jobs have been lost – estimate is about 1 million – a drop in a bucket. There’s no net loss of jobs in the US economy.

What types of jobs are likely to be offshored? If you can do it remotely, it can be offshored. Call-centers, programming, reading radiology, some high-end R&D.

How many jobs could potentially be offshored? Consensus is about 20 million. It’s really guesswork – can’t predict the effects of technology.

How many jobs will actually be offshored? 4-5% of some regions of US, 2% of others.

Will there be any offsetting increase in jobs due to expanded exports? Could be that there’s no net loss.

The returns to education rose significantly in the late 90s, but stalled after 2000 – is this a long-term change or not?

Higher order skills continue to increase in importance across all occupations. The “New Geography of Work” – routine work will be done offshore or by machines, creative work will be done here by people. New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce report (2007). Recommend re-inventing high schools, putting everyone in two year schools and then some move on to higher ed.

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[ECAR 2007 Summer Symposium] Evening at NCAR

We spent last evening at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, which is located in an I.M. Pei building up above Boulder. We got to hear a terrific talk on the science behind proving and predicting global warming by Susan Solomon. Solomon was one of the first scientists to propose chlorofluorocarbons as the cause of the antarctic ozone hole, and is now the co-chair of Working Group 1 of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

After Susan’s talk we had a wine-tasting conducted by master sommelier Bobby Stuckey, owner of Frasca restaurant in Boulder. Bobby talked and demonstrated the impact of global warming on wine by having us taste two Italian whites and two Italian reds, one each from a “classic” year and from a warmer than normal vintage. The point is that the heat makes a real difference in the quality of wine, and many of the recent years have been increasingly warm.

For the record, the wines we sampled were:

Keber Pinot Gris DOC Collio 2004 (a classic vintage) vs. the Gini DOC Soave Classico Superiore 2005 (warm vintage); and Le Macioche Rosso di Montalcino 2004 (a fabulous classic vintage that I drank a little too much of) vs. La Spinetta Sezzana 2003.

During the meal we were entertained by Deco Django, which as you might imagine, is a gypsy jazz group from Boulder. They were nice enough to invite me to sit in on bass for a couple of numbers, which was great fun (thanks, fellas!).

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