Scott C. Lemon | Digital Identity Management, Net Tools, Wireless Connectivity, The Brain, Lemonisms | Thursday, February 26th, 2004

When cameras are everywhere …
This is an amazing article, with a link to a web site that shows just how advanced criminals are becoming … and how they are leveraging technology.

The concept is simple as described below … what is wild is that they are using some fairly simple technologies to accomplish this. Just the other night I saw an episode of Law & Order where a high school student took pictures of other students in the gym locker room … with her cell phone … and then sent them to other people. I hadn’t even thought about the portability of these “wireless cameras”. This all makes me think about where we are heading when miniature cameras can be carried and left just about anywhere. And people are thinking that we can protect privacy?

ATM Skimmers with Wireless Cameras, Pickups. Automated Teller Machine customers now robbed wirelessly without knowledge: The University of Texas at Austin police have a compelling page that shows how a skimmer (which scans ATM cards before they’re inserted into the ATM) and a wireless camera in an innocuous position nearby can steal a card and the PIN. The skimmer reads the magnetic stripe; the camera can see the PIN being entered. The thieves park nearby and retrieve the information wirelessly. This is reminiscent of last month’s story of a wireless Israeli post office money heist. It may be just me, but after years of being warned about shoulder surfers in the 1980s and 1990s, I often cover my hand when entering a PIN on a phone or ATM. I guess my paranoia pays off. Also, I only go to one bank’s ATM machines, which are uniform. I think I’d notice a weird add-on…. [Wi-Fi Networking News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, The Brain, Lemonisms | Thursday, February 26th, 2004

Freenet still alive and kicking …
When I first read Ian’s papers about Freenet (quite a long time back) a group of us immediately set up nodes for testing and experimentation. It was very crude back then, and several months ago I even stumbled on one of my old NetWare servers that still had the directory structure and files. It was good to see this update and to see that Freenet is still making great progress. I just downloaded it to see about getting it up and going again. It appears to have come a log ways …

Freenet Project More Stable, In Need [Slashdot]

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Scott C. Lemon | Web Site Stuff, Lemonisms | Thursday, February 26th, 2004

There is one standard … until there is the next one!
I enjoy talking with Phil … he gets it. All of the people who argue about “which standard” to adopt, completely miss the point that they are only going to evolve and move forward. Pick something and go with it … and be prepared to embrace change … prepare to adopt the next standard when it arrives. I didn’t see them mention Atom!

Enjoy the Politics of Difference. John Gotze talked to Mr. Safe recently. The conversation is about whether to use RSS 2.0 or RSS 1.0 since they’re both part of the Danish Government’s Reference Profile (which I had a hand in creating). John’s advice to Mr. Safe was to publish both formats. Here’s the most important part of the conversation: [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Thursday, February 26th, 2004

You can’t stop it … gene therapy is going to change everything
After reading the article below, along with this article, about this particular discovery I realized that the genetic revolution is coming much faster than we believe … and its not going to stop. And no matter what the various sports and Olympic groups believe, they are only going to fall behind the times if they think they can “test” for “enhanced humans.”

As we learn more and more about how genes work, and how to perform “gene therapy” the modifications that occur are going to become more and more “natural” … harder and harder to detect. The only differences between this, and “breeding” people is that this can be done in less time. “Genetic manipulation” is going to become a way of life … we might attempt to control and regulate it here … however there will be other places or countries that capitalize on allowing it. And it will be tough to tell the difference between “natural” and “genetically manipulated” …

Gene Therapy Shows Its Muscle. Scientists working to help muscular dystrophy patients have developed a gene therapy that could be used illegally to build super athletes. Sports officials are looking for ways to detect the genetic manipulation. [Wired News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Web Site Stuff, Lemonisms, The Eye | Thursday, February 26th, 2004

Sharing photos … and information
I liked reading about this application since it reminded me of a project that I set aside. A couple of years ago, I began to work on my “slide-show screensaver” … something that a lot of people have. A screensaver that flips through a directory on my hard disk, displaying each of the photos saved there one after the other. This is no big accomplishment, except that I then expanded it to begin to sync the directory with one on my server. Now I have a screensaver that pulls the photos from my server when new ones are placed there … by anyone.

What makes this a useful application is that I don’t have to go looking for photos for my screensaver. I don’t have to update the photos on my hard disk. If I, or anyone that I permit, puts new photos on my server they just start to show on my laptop. And on any other laptop running my application.

I really believe that it is the ease of use - and the automation - of applications that makes them more and more usable. And more accepted. This is why RSS news aggregation makes so much sense, and is used so heavily. I don’t have to go looking at web sites to search out the news I want … I subscribe and receive the information automatically.

I like this application … I’m going to dig up my source code and experiment with my screensaver again … this gave me some new ideas!

Share That Photo: Hit Save. Some photo buffs have so many pictures from their digital cameras, they don’t know what to do with them. And sending by e-mail is clunky compared with new technologies that make storing and showing as simple as pie. [Wired News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, The Brain, Lemonisms, Network Management | Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

The Operating System Monoculture dilemma
It is often fun to speculate and point at problems … the solutions, however, do not always come easy. This article is about the issues surrounding a paper written about the “Windows Monoculture” … proposing that so many people are running Microsoft Windows products that a single major flaw could be discovered that causes massive damage (to the entire human race?) when millions of computers are effected.

There are a number of “flaws” with this model, although it points at some potential issues to be learned from. One thing is that no real solution is outlined … and the “obvious” solution is that the world ought to be running on tens or hundreds of different operating systems to solve this dilemma.

Replacing one ‘monoculture’ with a different ‘monoculture’ is not a solution. So having GNU/Linux dominate the earth would simply spawn a new group of “anti-GNU/Linux” people who would call that wrong, and create their alternative. There are only two real ways out … to create something within the technologic substrate that is superior to what is possible in the biologic substrate … or to have a large and diverse number of operating systems.

I actually think that what we are going to find is that the technologic substrate will allow for the emergence of entities that far exceed the capabilities of the biological world that we are a part of.

Warning: Microsoft ‘Monoculture’. A security expert warns Microsoft’s dominance of software is a set-up for global disaster — and promptly loses his job. His comparison is to biology, where species with little genetic variation are vulnerable to catastrophic epidemics. [Wired News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, The Brain, Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

Autonomic tools from IBM … the coming abstraction
I found two articles recently that cover the release of the IBM tools for Autonomic computing. Even if you are not interested in IBMs tools, there is a lot of very good reading about its core concepts.

The article below, and this NWFusion article both give a brief overview of what IBM released, and contain links to where you can download the tools or read more about them.

I do believe that they are introducing some powerful models for developing software that are able to exist in highly-distributed networks, and that are able to deal with failures effectively. Much of this is accomplished using some very simple concepts.

There are several of the same areas that we have been exploring with our web services work, and our application substrate. I really like their Installation and Deployment model as it mirrors much of our same functionality … there might be some aspects that we embrace. All of this continues to support a growing abstraction above the operating system.

IBM delivers autonomic tools. Big Blue packages up the results of its research into self-managing systems with an open-source toolkit that plugs into the Eclipse development set of software. [CNET News.com - Front Door]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

Good comments on the leaked Windows source code
As usual … this is a interesting read about the Windows source code that was floating around the net last week. It seems pretty objective …

We Are Morons: a quick look at the Win2k source. A quick, superficial look at the style and content of the leaked Windows 2000 source. I quote from the comments but not the code, so this should be safe for developers to read. [kuro5hin.org]

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Scott C. Lemon | Digital Identity Management, Net Tools, Directory Technolgies, Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

More hope for less spam … soon …
This appears to be some good momentum in the anti-spam area, as a good first effort to combat the problem. There are no doubt other proposals and standards that will emerge.

This specific solution will force companies to define their mail servers in DNS in a way that allows them to be held accountable for spam. This will provide a way to deny e-mail from being received, if the source of that mail can not be tracked down. It’s a very good start.

eWEEK: New Anti-spam Initiative Gaining Traction. A grass-roots movement to improve the SMTP protocol that governs e-mail traffic is gaining acceptance, and its lead developer hopes to get fast-track approval by the Internet Engineering Task Force to make the emerging framework a standard. [Tomalak’s Realm]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms, Nanotech | Wednesday, February 25th, 2004

The nano arguments continue
There is a brewing storm as more and more progress is made in the areas of nanotechnology. I agree with some of the first comments on this article … it is too easy as humans to underestimate what is possible.

NanoCreationism [Nanodot: Nanodot: Nanotechnology News and Discussion of Emerging Technologies]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Blogging direct from Iraq!
I found this a good article for a variety of reasons … however the most important was that it linked me to a lot of blogging that is going on in Iraq. I enjoyed this blog in particular, and the other blogs that it links to. I must have spent a couple of days just reading posts and being impressed by the overall opinion that the Iraqis have of our efforts to free them from Saddam, and introduce them to Democracy.

I am thoroughly impressed … and I look forward to the day that I get to visit Iraq …

The Blogfather’s Hit List. InstaPundit.com is the most visited blog in the world. Glenn Reynolds keeps it that way by focusing on important facts that don’t make the headlines. Wired magazine gets the lowdown on Reynolds’ reading list. [Wired News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Where to get .Net?
I liked reading this article, in the Register, about .Net / Mono / dotGnu. I do like the idea of C# and .Net on all sorts of operating systems, however the author hits on some key points about the open source efforts.

I like to see C# and .Net on more operating systems since it only continues to make the operating systems commoditized. Who cares what operating system if they all support the same applications? The point this author seems to make is “Who wants to get a partial solution that is a copy of something?” It will be interesting to see what happens with Mono and dotGnu … I wish them the best!

Mono and dotGnu: What’s the Point? [Slashdot]

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Scott C. Lemon | Web Site Stuff, Lemonisms, The Eye | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Open Source Audio/Video Editing
I am always impressed with where audio and video editing software is going. When I upgraded to Windows XP on my latest laptop, I was pleased to find the Windows Movie Maker … a very easy-to-use software package for creating digital videos. I’ve been using it lately to create animations from the .png images created by PieSpy.

This is an impressive package that takes things even further to the professional level. It is amazing the software that is being created.

Cinelerra 1.1.9. A complete audio and video production environment for Linux. [freshmeat.net]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wearable Computers, Lemonisms | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Cool processors for fanless applications
I have been using Via processors for a number of years in my Wearable Computer experimentation. It is amazing that Via has created such a niche for themselves with their technology. I am always surprised that more people are not aware of them.

Via keeps 1GHz fanless chips cool. Via Technologies hopes to carve out a niche in appliances and embedded devices with its latest Eden chips, which don’t require a sophisticated cooling system. [CNET News.com - Front Door]

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Scott C. Lemon | Directory Technolgies, The Brain, Lemonisms, Location Based Services | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Virtual Annotation … Aura at Microsoft
This is one of the Microsoft projects that I have been reading about and studying for the last week or so. I believe that this *is* going to be a big deal.

A number of year ago, some friends and I were reading an article in Wired magazine about “Virtual Graffiti”. The idea was that as more people in the future are wearing “augmented reality” glasses (glasses that allow a computer to overlay additional information into your view) then “Virtual Graffiti” becomes possible. I can simple “draw” a picture on a building, or add my comments to a sign using specialized software. The graffiti will not actually exist on the building or sign, instead being stored on my server on the Internet. Other people, when tapped into my server, would then “see” my graffiti when they looked around the world.

Aura research is moving in this same direction … and beyond. They are using a wider range of input devices to allow for the identification of an item or place, and then allowing for others to add annotations or information to that item or place.

This is another good article about Aura … and this is another good article.

This is extending our ability to “see” more about something we are near or can “scan” … adding to the saying about “… more than meets the eye!”

ETCon 2004: Eat Me and I’ll Kill You. Every product has a story to tell and some of them say “If you
eat me, I’ll kill you.” So says
Marc Smith,
Microsoft’s resident sociologists. Marc is describing a research
project called

AURA
. Combine a PocketPC, a barcode reader, and Wi-Fi or mobile
wireless and you’ve got the ability to find out lots of information
about any product with a barcode. The project maps barcodes to
names. Once that’s done, all kinds of things are possible: [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

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More power in your phone
This is another great presentation … and I really like the “miniGPS” link that Phil posted. Over the last week or so I have seen numerous new applications for Cell Phones that are really extending the capabilities of the phone. GPS and Location Based Services are the biggest.

The miniGPS link is really fascinating as they are using a completely different model for location detection and notification. They have an application that monitors the actual cell towers that you are connected to, and the signal strengths. They then allow you to assign events to particular towers, etc. The example that the author uses is that his phone will alarm when it comes into the cell near his house … notifying him that his train station is coming up …

Kill Apps for Your Cell Phone. Rael Dornfest and others are talking mobile hacks. There was lots of fun things, but here’s a few killer cell phone apps I didn’t want to lose track of: [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

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Scott C. Lemon | Digital Identity Management, Directory Technolgies, The Brain, Lemonisms | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Digital Communities, their Laws and Hierarchy
I would have liked to hear this presentation. This is covering an area that I am very interested in … digital identity and digital communities.

The hierarchy within a digital community is extremely important to maintain order, and to prevent chaos from spreading. If there is no hierarchy and “law” then the community will collapse. This looks like it was a fun presentation!

ETCon 2004: Robert Kaye on Social Networking-Based File Sharing Networks. Robert Kaye (slides) is describing social network file sharing systems.
The primary purpose of the social group is to share, discover, and
protect network. He proposes a hierarchy or tribes, chiefdoms, and
states with leaders at each level and “tribal elders” who set the
policies about who gets in. This sets the trust network. [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

Technorati and tracking the world of blogs
I really liked seeing that Technorati has developed a set of APIs for developers to begin to integrate with this site. This is also a major emergence in “Web Portals” … they are not just “human consumable” but are now becoming more and more “machine consumable”. IMHO, all of this contributes to the “soft take-off” that Vernor speaks about in his thoughts about the Singularity.

ETCon 2004: Dave Sifry on Technorati. I’m at the session being done by Dave Sifry, creator of
Technorati.com [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Monday, February 23rd, 2004

The future applications run on … the Internet!
I didn’t go to ETCon this year … but Phil has been blogging his experience. I am catching up on reading and saw this one about Tim’s presentation. I agree completely. The next generation applications are emerging and the Internet is becoming the platform.

In addition, many of these applications are being developed in abstracted languages like Java, Perl, and/or PHP … so they are not even being developed on a particular operating system … but instead in virtualized environments above the operating system.

This is the future …

ETCon 2004: Tim O’Reilly Keynote. What’s on Tim’s Radar: [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Friday, February 20th, 2004

Busy with research and development
Once again, I have got myself too many things to do. I found the really cool PieSpy tool for diagramming Social Networks. I’m going to post some of my animations that I’ve been developing.

I have to admit that this is a very interesting area for analyzing and inferring value from existing communications infrastructure. That got me back into looking into knowledge management in general, and into a variety of projects that Microsoft is pursuing around ‘Aura’. Anyhow … I have to catch up on posting some … I have a ton of articles to comment on.

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms, The Ear | Friday, February 20th, 2004

More free music from Epitonic … and cool Diesel ads!
Sometimes I just can’t figure out why people have to steal music. There are more and more legal sources of music, and I can now download more free music than I have time to listen to!

Quite a number of years ago, I came across BeSonic“the free MP3 download portal” … and I’ll go there every now and then and queue up a couple of hundred songs to download. Today I found another similar site!

One of the bands that I really like is The Grassy Knoll. Today I did a search on Google to see if they might have a new CD out … and I found Epitonic“your source for cutting edge music”. The title of their web site says “Hi Quality Free and Legal MP3 Music” and that is what I found. No only did I get three new cuts of The Grassy Knoll (and found out about their new CD) I grabbed about a hundred other songs. As an added benefit, I even got to see some of the new Diesel ads being done by AirLock … very cool stuff.

So now I have two sources of more music that I could every want. So why steal music from people who don’t want to give it away?

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms, Memetics | Tuesday, February 10th, 2004

Evolving perspectives of ’science’ and ‘technology’
There are a couple of very powerful sentences in this article that I like. Both of them relate to how we perceive the universe, and how we believe the universe “works”.

Theoretical physicist John Archibald Wheeler has coined the phrase it from bit to convey the idea that the entire universe is the result of a series of yes-or-no choices that take place at the level of quantum mechanics.

I agree with these thoughts and believe that humans underestimate our ability to ’cause’ the universe. Consider the possibility that humans have the ability to cause quantum decoherence more than we believe. This is an area that borders on what we call “faith” …

“Scientific theories are more properly viewed not as discoveries but as human constructions. It’s already happening in physics: Philosopher of science Andrew Pickering suggests that the quark, which in its unbound state has not - and some say cannot - be observed, should be regarded as a scientific invention rather than an actual particle.”

This is another spin on the same theme. Consider the possibility that we create stories about the world that we perceive … and that these stories are then ‘true’ due to the fact that we live that they are true. This is often a very difficult concept for people to accept. It places considerable responsibility on the individual and the community. It would mean that we are where we are because of who we are being, and what we believe.

Most people are more comfortable being a ‘victim of the world’, instead of owning what they have created. We are starting to learn that maybe there is proof that Wheeler is accurate in his models …

The Computer at Nature’s Core. Think technology is just applied science? You’re wrong. It’s the other way around. A commentary by David F. Channell from Wired magazine. [Wired News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms, Nanotech | Tuesday, February 10th, 2004

Breakthroughs continue in hydrogen energy research
One of the potential fuels of the future is hydrogen. As this article mentions, it is still far too expensive to create pure hydrogen from electrolysis. In the plant world, hydrogen is stripped from water molecules on a regular basis … and how they do this has long been a secret. Until now … as we are gaining an understanding on how it is done!

Plants Give Up Their Secret of Splitting Water [KurzweilAI.net Accelerating Intelligence News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, Lemonisms, The Eye, Location Based Services | Tuesday, February 10th, 2004

More automated video security
I have always enjoyed working with video. There are numerous ways that it can be used for entertainment, and also for applications like security. This is a very impressive suite of applications for video security.

As PCs and their web-cams are becoming more cost effective, software suites like this can now be used as extremely ‘intelligent’ solutions for monitoring a home or business. This software has the ability to detect motion on any of its cameras, and then begin to record to generate notifications. What was really impressive was that it even supports multiple zones to monitor within a single camera image. The screenshots give a more detailed explanation of the features.

As I get some time … I might give this a try. I have some ideas on what I can do with something like this …

ZoneMinder 1.17.2. A Web-based video camera security, motion capture, and analysis suite. [freshmeat.net]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, Lemonisms | Tuesday, February 10th, 2004

Making spam more difficult or costly to generate
I do like this track of thinking … how to create the various hurdles that have to be jumped … how to make spam more difficult or costly to generate.

Microsoft project aims to make spammers pay for spam. The goal is to use technology to make it expensive for spammers who send out millions of unwanted e-mail messages, according to a Microsoft researcher. [Computerworld News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, Web Site Stuff, Lemonisms | Monday, February 9th, 2004

KISS … for a Wiki
Keep It Simple, Stupid … and this is a very simple implementation of a Wiki. I like it. I’m going to experiment with it.

Guiki .9. A graphical Wiki. [freshmeat.net]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Monday, February 9th, 2004

Wired about US jobs going to India
Yes … this is a well written article. When I grew up, I was lucky enough to live in Pittsburgh, PA. I grew up as the US steel industry was hitting some very hard times … and steel jobs were going off shore. I remember the arguements and anger … I remember how people suggested that it could be stopped … and *should* be.

Eventually people accepted the inevitable …

Jobs to India — A Broad Look [Slashdot]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wearable Computers, Wireless Connectivity, Lemonisms | Monday, February 9th, 2004

802.11 is here to stay …
I really like this perspective on 802.11 wireless networks. I have to agree with most all of his points.

There was one other quote in here that blew me away …

“And while many technologists would tell you that the x86 architecture is anything but elegant and certainly far from optimal, Intel recently shipped its billionth x86 processor.”

One billion of anything is a lot!

Why 802.11 is underhyped. Venture capitalist J. William Gurley sees parallels in the history of how the x86 architecture and Ethernet unfolded to dominate their respective markets. [CNET News.com - Front Door]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Friday, February 6th, 2004

Oblix? Buying Confluent?
Knowing both of these companies, and people working at them, I was initially confused by the announcement of this acquisition. Why would Oblix purchase Confluent?

Oblix is the maker of software to manage user identites within large distributed software systems. Confluent provides a web-services security management solution. It seemed to me that there must be some common thread … and then I found this article:

U.S. Postal Service taps Oblix for identity management
It’s designed to allow the Postal Service to manage millions of user identities
Briefs by Linda Rosencrance

FEBRUARY 04, 2004 ( COMPUTERWORLD ) - The U.S. Postal Service has selected Oblix Inc.’s NetPoint to give online customers secure and password-protected Web access via single sign-on to software tools and resources.

Once fully deployed, NetPoint will offer business customers and consumers a simple and collaborative interface through Web services, Cupertino, Calif.-based Oblix said in a statement.

Ok … now it makes sense. Oblix lands a large government contract … is adopting web services standards in their product … and immediately requires security for this solution!

Nice project to land … congrats to Oblix *and* Confluent!

Oblix buys into Web services management. The maker of identity management software plans to acquire Web services management start-up Confluent Software, accelerating consolidation in the marketplace, CNET News.com has learned. [CNET News.com - Front Door]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, The Brain, Lemonisms, Network Management | Friday, February 6th, 2004

Planet-Lab … planetary-scale applications platform
While looking around at some interesting monitoring software (Ganglia link below) I came across an Intel Research sponsored project that I hadn’t seen before … PlanetLab. The home page of their web site states:

PlanetLab is an open, globally distributed platform for developing, deploying and accessing planetary-scale network services. PlanetLab nodes support both short-term experiments and long-running network services. To date, more than 200 research projects at top academic institutions have used PlanetLab to experiment with such diverse topics as distributed storage, network mapping, peer-to-peer systems, distributed hash tables, and distributed query processing.

This is a very impressive project, and I downloaded a lot of their documentation and courseware to read through. I can only imagine what is going to occur as we all contribute our computers into communities of machines like this!

The link below is the distributed monitoring system that I was checking out …

Ganglia 2.5.6 (Monitoring core). A scalable distributed monitoring system. [freshmeat.net]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Friday, February 6th, 2004

Another result of plentiful processing power
This is an article that takes a slightly different look at what we can expect from all of the processing power that is being made available by the evolution of microprocessors. I have commented on why I think this makes ‘virtualization’ more and more probable, however this article explores what we’ll get from the ability to ‘brute force’ analyze data.

The Rise of Intelligent Agents: Automated Conversion of Data to Information. Automated tools that can make sense out of mounds of information are just a few years away, consultants Martha Young and Michael Jude predict. Will your network be ready for the deluge? [Computerworld Software News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Digital Identity Management, The Brain, Lemonisms | Friday, February 6th, 2004

Modernization of naming conventions …
Yes … like the article says … he decided against “Junior” or “II” … and went for 2.0 …

This is the BBC article mentioned in Ray’s blog …

US father names son ‘Version 2.0′ [KurzweilAI.net Accelerating Intelligence News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Friday, February 6th, 2004

hard disk capacity trends 2005
These are the five words that I typed into Google to see what I could find about growing hard disk capacities. One of the articles that I found - Trends in the Development of an Ultra-small Hard Disk For Mobile Terminals - was exactly the type of info that I was looking for. In addition, this paper from IBM provides some very good insight and analysis of the hard disk density trends.

Overall, I am amazed that I am able to buy hard disk storage for ~$1/GB … or less. A quick check at CompUSA on-line will show a number of 160GB-200GB hard disks priced around this number … and they are not a “cheap” store. At other on-line stores the prices are even cheaper. I’m amazed to see this 200GB, 7200RPM Seagate hard disk for $199.99!

Combined with our 4Ghz processors that are coming from Intel this year, computers are continuing to meet and/or exceed the estimates of Moore’s Law. I’m thinking about when exactly I’ll own my first server with more than one ‘terabyte’ of storage? It’s only a few years away … if that.

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Scott C. Lemon | Digital Identity Management, Directory Technolgies, Lemonisms | Friday, February 6th, 2004

LDAP and C#
I haven’t yet started to write code in C# … it’s something that I want to take a look at. I saw this posting and started to think that maybe I found some examples that might get me going. I enjoy developing code that uses LDAP directories and the data they contain … and this article demonstrates Novell’s work to continue to ease the development of LDAP-aware applications.

Jan 18th, 2004: LDAP class libraries in Mono tutorial.. Sunil Kumar has written an introduction to Novell.LDAP class libraries, which are part of Mono. [Mono Project News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wireless Connectivity, Lemonisms | Friday, February 6th, 2004

MP3s in the car? Been there … done that …
When I travel, I always take my laptop, and make sure that I have a good collection of MP3s on it. I rip all of my CDs to MP3 for portability, and often connect my laptop to the stereo in my truck. Because of 802.11 wireless technologies, I also realized a while ago that I can sit in my truck and download MP3s from my server in the house!

Last summer we picked up a small travel trailer and I am slowly outfitting it with current gear. I have a Sony multi-CD changer, and we have some surround-sound speakers that we aren’t using in the house. I’m also going to install a small server with full wireless connections - both client and access point. While the trailer is sitting at home, out by our barn, it will be on my home network … so we’ll be able to copy MP3s and other software to and from the trailer.

Rockford is offering a similar capability with their jukebox … which might be easier to use for the average user. I know that I’m not interested … I have my solution.

Download Music to Your Car. Rockford Corp. is offering a jukebox that sits in the trunk of a car and downloads music from a PC: Users could pull their car into their garage and at a predetermined time each night the jukebox would download new music from a PC in the house. The product retails for $600. This is a good idea but I’m not sure what the benefits are over using any portable digital music player in the car. I have an iRiver and recently bought an adaptor so I can listen to music from the iRiver in my car stereo. My method doesn’t do automatic downloads but that seems to me a small benefit to using the jukebox in the trunk…. [Wi-Fi Networking News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Thursday, February 5th, 2004

Lots going on at Oracle …
Although all of the messages from Oracle are that things are going well, it seems that a lot of changes are going on at the database giant. Just the news since the first of the year indicates that something is going on.

When looking at the Oracle home page, its easy to see that they are looking to move beyond being “just a database company.” (As of today its talking about showing you Oracle Web Conferencing!) They have to do something. The Open Source database servers are coming … MySQL and PostgreSQL … and how do you compete with free?

Some of the recent articles, to me, indicate something is being felt … big time. “Oracle CFO to leave post, become chairman“, “Ellison: No need for wall-to-wall Oracle“, “Oracle CEO, CFO to preplan stock sales“, and “Oracle ships 10g database, cuts price” … all of these show that they are reacting to market pressures … IMHO.

It will be interesting to see how Oracle leverages its installed base, and where it goes next.

Oracle ships 10g database, cuts price. The database heavyweight ships the Unix versions of its much-anticipated 10g database, matches Microsoft on pricing and cuts the cost of its clustering features. [CNET News.com - Front Door]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Thursday, February 5th, 2004

Living Machines
This is a really good read from Wired about a variety of areas of technology and science … and more.

“Copernicus demoted humanity by removing Earth from the center of the universe. Darwin showed that, rather than being made in God’s image, people were merely products of nature’s experimentation. Now, advances in fields as disparate as computer science and genetics are dealing our status another blow. Researchers are learning that markets and power grids have much in common with plants and animals. Their findings lead to a startling conclusion: Life isn’t the exception, but the rule.”

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Scott C. Lemon | Wearable Computers, Wireless Connectivity, The Brain, Lemonisms, Location Based Services | Thursday, February 5th, 2004

More mesh network attention
This is an article by an IBM employee about mesh-networks. Some interesting perspectives and research going on …

City-Net: The future of wireless. Imagine a wireless meshing network that connects emergency workers, traffic signals, message signs, public transit vehicles, information kiosks, video cameras and other city resources. [Computerworld Mobile/Wireless News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Lemonisms | Thursday, February 5th, 2004

Stay away from the red plants …
This is a very impressive project that is taking genetic engineering into whole new areas of usage. Yes … as the title of the article reads … they have created a plant that will change it’s color if its roots come into contact with a landmine. Green is good … red is bad!

I found two articles about this:

Genetically Engineered Plant Can Detect Landmines. Red Nova Jan 27 2004 7:00PM GMT [Moreover - moreover…]

Flower Power Takes on Land Mines. A Danish biotech company develops a genetically modified flower that changes color when the plant is close to a land mine, making it easier to track down and remove the hidden explosives. [Wired News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wearable Computers, The Brain, Lemonisms | Thursday, February 5th, 2004

More progress in flexible displays and organics
This is an example of the progress being made with flexible displays based on organic materials. This company with working on “electronic paper” as one of their products, and is working towards replacing the glass-based LCD panels in laptops and other devices. Here is a Washington Post article, along with an article in Scientific American. This was also mentioned on Slashdot.

Polymer Vision Produces 5″ Rollable Displays [Slashdot]

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Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, The Brain, Lemonisms, Network Management | Thursday, February 5th, 2004

Visualizing Social Networks
While working with network management software I always enjoyed creating ways to visualize the networks, and more importantly their traffic patterns and flows. I am hooked on visualization. This is a very cool tool written to visualize the social networks on IRC (Internet Relay Chat) channels. Very good work …

Inferring and Visualizing Social Networks on IRC. By using an IRC bot to monitor the activity in an IRC channel, it is possible to infer a social network that connects the users in the channel. Visualizing these social networks is not only interesting, but has a variety of potential applications. [Advogato]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wireless Connectivity, The Brain, Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 4th, 2004

I’m impressed with Netgear, and their wireless products
I was recently looking at some new 802.11x access points to see what I want to use in some new projects. I came across the Netgear WG302 and was truly impressed with this product. It has some very good radio specs, and a long list of advanced management capabilities. The advanced capabilities all seem to come from the fact that they have based the core functionality on embedded Linux.

This is now the second 802.11g access points that I have found that provide a full embedded system that could be extensible to add additional “edge” computing. This article seems to align with what I am seeing … that some people at Netgear are really thinking, and producing some very strong products.

Wireless gear boosts NetGear’s optimism. The company says it is raising its fourth-quarter outlook, as well as launching a secondary offering on behalf of its shareholders who are selling 9 million shares [CNET News.com - Front Door]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 4th, 2004

More vitualization coming …
This is a good article that offers some interesting views on Server Virtualization. With the latest announcements from Intel of possibly seeing 4Ghz processors this year, it seems that virtualized environments are only going to increase.

Plan on Server Virtualization. Running multiple “virtual” operating systems on a single machine can help you cut costs, boost security and improve software development, say Avanade’s Chris Burry and Craig Nelson. [Computerworld Software News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wireless Connectivity, The Brain, Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 4th, 2004

George … are you listening now?
When I attending one of the George Gilder/Forbes Telecosm conferences a number of years ago, I got up and asked a question at the end of a Qualcomm presentation. My specific question - a leading question - was about 802.11 as a “disruptive technology”. At the time, I had been working with 802.11 and it’s predecessor for several years. It was amusing to me to hear the response that basically boasted about the bandwidth coming via the cell companies. This article was fun to see. George … what do you think now?

Wi-Fi is Bona Fide. Edge Consult says that Wi-Fi increasingly resembles a bona fide disruptive technology: This report actually has a handful of interesting tidbits about the development of the Wi-Fi market. [Wi-Fi Networking News]

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Scott C. Lemon | Wireless Connectivity, The Brain, Lemonisms | Wednesday, February 4th, 2004

Mesh is getting real IEEE attention
I will continue to say that wireless mesh networks are the future. This article is demonstrating more of the momentum picking up. I have to admit that although this looks promising, I am not convinced that WDS is the solution that is going to dominate. I can be convinced though … and I know that mesh is inevitable … in some form or fashion.

Mesh Group Approved by IEEE. IEEE approves formation of mesh task group for 802.11 protocols: The IEEE has approved the formation of a Task Group for fulfilling the promise of the wireless distribution system (WDS) that’s been part of 802.11 since the beginning, Robert Moskowitz of TruSecure’s ICSA Labs wrote in to tell us. The mesh task group will work inside of the 802.11 Working Group to take the extremely vague specification for the WDS and provide a protocol for auto-configuring paths between APs over self-configuring multi-hop topologies in a WDS to support both broadcast/multicast and unicast traffic in an ESS Mesh, according to the group formation proposal that was approved. [Wi-Fi Networking News]

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Tuesday, February 3rd, 2004

IBM Patents Developer Payment Method
As IBM continues down the path of Open Source and Linux support, they are also continuing their efforts - in full force - with proprietary software and intellectual property. I recently read where IBM has filed the most patents of any company in 2003. It was also interesting to learn from this article that one half of their patents are coming from software, along with generating ~$1 billion in *PROFIT* from licensing their technologies.

Thit article hit me as almost amusing … they have now patented a process for paying Open Source developers to create software. So the Open Source community will have to pay IBM to license this process if they happen to conflict with the patent or violate any of the claims. Who pays licensing fees for the Open Source community? (Ok … I’m kidding!)

IBM Patents Developer Payment Method
Darryl K. Taft, eWEEK

In a nod to the open-source development model, IBM has patented a scheme that maps out a method of payment for broad numbers of developers working together on projects, a move that has upset some developers. The patent describes the current software development environment, where pressure to turn out quality software quickly is pushing companies to rely on developers outside their corporate walls. IBM’s patent defines a mechanism for paying programmers who work in an open-source-like model.

http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,4149,1462778,00.asp

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Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Lemonisms | Tuesday, February 3rd, 2004

Get used to being an “earthling”
Of course, then you’ll have to get used to being a Solar System Inhabitant (SSI?) or some other abstracted categorization. It’s all just a matter of time. In the mean time, you might want to consider that if you continue to think and believe that you are an “American” and everyone else is a “non-American” then you are going to continue to grapple with the issues presented in this article.

With all of the technology and innovation that we create, we further enable others - and other countries - to grow and develop more rapidly. This is an ongoing process of creation, replication, commoditization, and abstraction.

With the first step, something new is created … I’ll refer to this as a ’substrate’ … be it biological or technological. If it is valued and works within an environment, you will see this new substrate replicated and copied. This is where things like “network effect” begin to kick in and real growth occurs. The next stage is commoditization … where the relative cost of this substrate begins to erode and this only adds to the adoption and usage. Lastly, there is the abstraction phase. This is where the substrate has become so available and present that a new substrate emerges and builds on top of the previous substrate.

John Smart writes about this a lot, and introduced me to these intertwined evolutionary models. From his web site:


There is apparent further support for the resource limits argument when we consider the nature of biological growth within any particular species. The classic pattern is called logistic or “sigmoidal” (”S curve”) growth, where population growth is initially exponential, but matter, energy, or space limits and competitive species interaction (another form of resource limits) always slow down this growth, leading to a “saturation” in a population size over finite time.

This same model can be applied to the technologic substrates that we are creating. And as we improve and commoditize these products and solutions they are usable by more and more of the worlds population. As we enable the worlds population, they are able to - and hungry to - contribute to the momentum by using these enabling products and solutions to create new ones. The cycle continues.

What once could only happen in American - due to the conditions present for the emergence of technology - is now able to happen around the globe. The communications infrastructure required for teams of people to create, and then market, their products and solutions has expanded via the Internet and is now global.

This article discusses some of the growing trends that we are actually enabling. People worried about “American Jobs” ought to begin to think about “Earthling Jobs”. We are going to see a growing trend of technologically enabled humans from all parts of the globe beginning to fight for their “fair share” of the “American Dream” … and are going to be doing it at home. They are not coming to American to get it. They are turning it into the “Earthling Dream” and are building in their own countries.

I hope that the average American is ready to work just as hard - or harder - for their dreams. They are going to have to.

Creative Class War: Reverse Brain Drain in US?. AlterNet is carrying an interesting article by CMU’s Richard Florida called the Creative Class War. The article details the decline of what the author terms the “creative class” in the US and how these people are now both not immigrating to the US and how US policies are resulting in a reverse brain drain of educated people fleeing the US. Among examples cited are how Peter Jackson’s (LOTR) new movie facilities in New Zealand contributes to the decline of Hollywood, IT outsourcing trends, how MIT had to cancel a large AI project “because the university couldn’t find enough graduate students who weren’t foreigners and who could thus clear new security regulations,” down to individual examples such as stem cell researcher Roger Pederson leaving California to do research in the UK because “they haven’t made such a political football out of stem cells.” Overall, a fascinating and thought-provoking article. [kuro5hin.org]

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Scott C. Lemon | Personal Life, Lemonisms, The Eye | Tuesday, February 3rd, 2004

Snow storms and bald eagles
Last night the snow started to come down again. We have had several weeks of beautiful sunny weather (although cold) and it’s been great. The snow had started to leave, however with this storm we had another 4″-6″ at my house this morning … and the ground is well covered here at work.

The drive to work is always interesting in this type of weather. I drove here at ~30mph behind a group of cars that were being *extremely* cautious. What made the trip worthwhile was the section of Provo Canyon just before the Sundance Resort turn off. As I came out of the last turn, I was joined by a bald eagle that chose to fly above the Provo River, just off to the left of my truck. He glided along for almost a third of a mile or more, and then slowed and gently banked away.

I have seen a mating pair of these birds in my back yard for the last week … I wonder if this is the same one. They are incredible birds to watch. And even during a snow storm, they make their flight look so effortless. What a great way to start the morning!

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