WISP.Org … coming soon …

Scott C. Lemon | wisp.org | Tuesday, October 26th, 2004

Several companies in the Wireless ISP market have all realized the
value of building community to increase the sharing of knowledge. 
80211.net L.L.C., working with TenX Networks, is glad to announce the coming of WISP.Org!

WISP.Org will be the on-line resource for Wireless Internet Service
Providers. Using current generation Open Source software (phpBB),
WISP.Org is going to create an on-line community that will tap into the
minds of leading providers of wireless products and services.

Stay tuned … look for updates … our planned rollout will be December 1, 2004!

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Utah storms, and various outages

Scott C. Lemon | 80211.net | Monday, October 25th, 2004

We apologize to ur Wasatch County, Utah customers as we had quite a
week of storms … and problems … up here.  It turns out that
some of out new outdoor wireless equipment was not as waterproof as
they had hoped.  With the large storm system that came to the
county a week ago Sunday, we lost a total of three new pieces of
equipment due to water leaks.

The vendor was great about things.  We lost our main wireless
tower at our headquaters on Monday morning, after the initial front hit
us.  We exchanged this device with a spare that we had on
hand.  The next night - Tuesday - we lost that spare, and the Wing
Pointe apartments location.

On Wednesday, we were able to get the repairs completed with assistance
from the great folks at Euclid Timber Frames.  The vendor has
determined the problem and replaced our units.  We are back up and
running, and continuing to upgrade the network.

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80211.net Heading to WISPCon

Scott C. Lemon | 80211.net | Monday, October 25th, 2004

80211.net will be at the upcoming wireless tradeshow - WISPCON VI
which will be going on in Las Vegas from October 27 - 29, 2004. 
We will be present at the show with two of our partners TenX Networks,
and Renasis
Engineered Products.

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Wells Fargo On-Line Banking

Scott C. Lemon | Web Site Stuff, Personal Life | Monday, October 25th, 2004

I have to admit that I am impressed - over and over again - by Wells
Fargo and their On-Line Banking. When my old bank - First
Interstate - was acquired, I immediately joined the new Wells Fargo
On-Line Banking program, and was impressed that I could manage my
personal and business accounts in a single application. The user
interface was easy to use, and I even was able to mix personal and
business on-line bill paying in an efficient manner.

A while back, they further impressed me when I had to locate some old
bank statements for one of my companies. Not only did they allow
my to locate them on-line, they provided them in Adobe .PDF format …
for NO charge! I was able to download and print the statements that I required to complete my taxes …

Today … more. When I happened to go and look at one of my
business accounts, I noticed they added a new link next to each check
that has cleared - View. Yes … when I click the link, it
provides the scanned image - front and back - of the check
itself! Oh yeah … and it appears to be free … no additional
charge!

I’m impressed with Wells Fargo On-Line Banking …

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What the BLEEP do we know!?

Scott C. Lemon | The Brain, Personal Life, Lemonisms | Monday, October 25th, 2004

On Friday night, my wife and I went to see a movie that was recommended by a friend. What the BLEEP do we know!?
is an amazing film that is like no other. Do not expect passive
entertainment, or the typical story lines. This is a film that
explores the reaches of science into quantum mechanics, and it’s
effects on our perception of reality. It begins to explore our
ability to “cause” in the universe, and how we shape our own reality by
our own behaviors.

The movie is receiving mixed reviews … and that is a good indicator
of controversy! Anyhow … I would recommend this movie to anyone
… and be prepared to think … not just watch!

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Mesh Networking continues to emerge

Scott C. Lemon | Wearable Computers, Wireless Connectivity, The Brain | Friday, October 22nd, 2004

More than five years ago, I was introduced to the concepts of “mesh
networking” at George Gilders TeleCosm conference.  A speaker from
MIT talked through the basic concept of turning every radio in a
network into a “packet repeater” that was able to send and receive
packets of data … and also forward them on for other users of the
network.

Mesh has slowly been evolving in the various research circles … and
is now emerging in various projects and commerical companies.  One
of the places to look for more information is the IETF Manet working group.  There are several experimental standards that have been developed.

In the commercial space, there are now several companies coming up - LocustWorld is an interesting system being used in the UK, PacketHop is a company using research out of SRI, and now Strix Systems mentioned in the article below.

I am currently working on two different embedded Linux systems … both
of which I want to embed mesh/manet software.  I’m working to have
demonstrable units this winter …

DON’T LAUNCH — The Structured Wireless Revolution.
Mesh technology allows networks to be redefined around business needs,
work operations, data and employees, says Strix Systems’ Bob Jordan. [Computerworld Mobile/Wireless News]

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Open Source BPEL Engine

Scott C. Lemon | Web Site Stuff, The Brain | Monday, October 18th, 2004

While working on our Web Services Substrate, we did a lot of looking at
the coming BPEL standard.  While it doesn’t do everything that we
wanted, it provides some powerful functionality, and will only evolve
to be better and better.  I happened to stumble on this Open
Source project providing a BPEL engine … I’m going to go take a look
at it …

ActiveBPEL 0.9.2. An engine that executes BPEL processes. [freshmeat.net]

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LiVES Video Editing System

Scott C. Lemon | The Eye | Sunday, October 17th, 2004

I’m always a fan of video editing systems.  Over the last 10 years
they are getting more and more powerful, with rich features.  This
appears to be a pretty nice one for Linux … I’m going to give it a
try!

LiVES 0.9.1-pre3 (Development). The Linux Video Editing System. [freshmeat.net]

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Interview with Ray Kurzweil in CIO Magazine

Scott C. Lemon | The Brain | Sunday, October 17th, 2004

Over the last decade, there are few people that have impacted my thinking, and my perspective of technology and the future, as Ray Kurzweil.
He is an astounding individual who has been able to think far beyond
the bounds of the average person. He has also built and sold
companies that have capitalized on his foresight … and he continues
to move forward.

There is a new interview with Ray Kurzweil in CIO Magazine
that presents some of his current thoughts on where we are, and where
we are going. With my view of the world, I do not question his
predictions of the future … we are living in incredible times …

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Problems with PayPal IPN

Scott C. Lemon | Web Site Stuff | Tuesday, October 12th, 2004

I am slowly learning about the issues with relying on an Internet
service like PayPal. They have somehow totally screwed up their
software, and it is no longer calling our system to notify us of
payments as of today.

We use PayPal to allow our 80211.net
Internet customers to purchase Internet Access on-line. When they
make a payment, they expect to be able to use the Internet
immediately. This has been working great up until now, using the
PayPal IPN (Instant Payment Notification) service. Somehow PayPal
has screwed up their systems, and the IPN notifications are no longer
hitting our server … so people are paying, and their accounts are not
being updated. So today I have been fielding calls and having to
manually credit people’s accounts … which sucks.

This is just another example of where the concepts around the Internet
and hosted services breaks down. It is really too bad that PayPal
didn’t test their software updates better before deploying them on
their “live” site. People complain about Microsoft and Windows
… but this is a more important example to me since it is costing me
time and money … and there is no one that is going to recover the
costs for me.

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The Federal VolcanoCam

Scott C. Lemon | Inevitabilities | Monday, October 11th, 2004

I love it … my friend just sent me a link to the official US Government VolcanoCam for Mount St. Helens!  They even have videos that you can download.

I’m not sure that I saw the official HurricaneCams …

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Installing qmail

Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, Network Management | Sunday, October 10th, 2004

I’m going to be writing a series of posts that detail my experiences in
installing a new mail server on Linux.  I have been running a mail
server called the Mercury Mail Transport System on Novell NetWare for a long time.  The NLM version of Mercury
has been robust and works … although it is lacking in some more
recent innovations in e-mail systems.  On top of that, I want to
get rid of my NetWare servers … they just aren’t what I want to be
running any more.

I have installed a server with Fedora Core 2, and as of this weekend I
finally dove in and began the actual installation of the mail
server.  After a lot of looking around, I chose qmail - “Second most popular MTA on the Internet” - and I also wanted to add the TMDA anti-spam solution.

I read through the qmail installation instructions and have to admit
that I was a little worried … until I found the “lazyinstaller for
qmail” at lazyinstaller.net
This is one amazing script, and it made the entire process a
breeze.  Once I had the script on my machine, I simply edited a
few parameters to define my primary domain, some paths, and a few other
items.  (NOTE:  I noticed later that I could have used their
on-line generator to create my customized script ready to download!)

Once I had customized the lazyinstaller script, I ran it and was
impressed.  It downloaded all of the source tars, unpacked them,
built the projects, customized configuration files, and set-up qmail
complete with smtp, pop3, imap (both SSL and non-SSL!) and web-based
administration tools.  There was only one error in the script that
I ran (v2.0.2) where a directory was not created for binqimap … I
created the directory and copied the contents of the config file from
the script into the new directory.  At the end of the install,
there was a short note on creating the start-up and shut-down scripts
… and I was ready to go.  I started up the services, and
everything has been running smoothly!

I have already started testing with some virtual domains, and
everything seems to be working fine.  As of tonight, I installed
TMDA, and have now started my testing with that.  I just completed
the first tests there, and it’s working great.

I have a total of ~15 mail domains with 40-50 users that I have to move
to this new server.  I’m looking forward to moving one of those
tomorrow … I’ll post more about my success!

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Novell NetDrive … a dying product?

Scott C. Lemon | Net Tools, Web Site Stuff | Thursday, October 7th, 2004

I have been using NetDrive
(http://support.novell.com/servlet/filedownload/uns/pub/ndrv41862.exe/)
for years now, and it is a very innovative piece of software. It
completely alters the way that people use FTP to transfer files …
making it as easy as “mapping a drive”. With NetDrive I can “map”
a drive letter, say “N:” to my FTP server on the Internet. I can
then “drag and drop” files just like any other drive on my system.

The real issue with FTP is that it is not the most secure protocol that
you can use. Most Linux and UNIX users are using SSH and SCP
instead. SSH is the “secure shell” and combined with SCP, a
“secure copy” it allows you to access your remote boxes through an
encrypted connection. I use both of these all day, and what hit
me was that the usability of SCP - even using WinSCP - is not equal to
that of NetDrive.

I started to check and see if Novell had released a version of NetDrive
that would use the secure protocols, and found that I could not locate
any newer versions of NetDrive! The last one I can see if from 17
Apr 2003! And there is no apparent work on a version that
supports SSH/SCP …

Here they have a very powerful tool that could be used to “seed” the
market and alter how people access Linux from Windows … branded with
Novell’s name … and they seem to be letting it die.

Novell … drop it into Open Source … or update it! You are again allowing a valuable beachhead to disappear …

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More attacks on Open Source

Scott C. Lemon | Inevitabilities | Tuesday, October 5th, 2004

This is actually a pretty impressive situation … and further demonstrates the potential use of Patents to attack Open Source projects. The NoCat
project is a pure Open Source solution that could be quickly adopted by
many of the wireless HotSpot companies that are doing redirection of
web access for logins … and if they did, will this company sue the
NoCat users? Would they go after all users of the project?

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Abstraction of the Operating System

Scott C. Lemon | Inevitabilities | Tuesday, October 5th, 2004

Former BEA Execs Launch New Open-Source Venture

This is a really good topic to examine. There are numerous trends
that are coming up in the world, and these are the next big software
companies … they have realized the writing on the wall.

The software platforms of the future are being built as “abstractions”
above the operating systems … and far above the kernels in use.
The world is very quickly becoming one filled with interpreted
languages, scripting languages, and virtual machines. Hardware is
becoming so powerful and so cheap that the compute inefficiences are
quickly masked, and “good enough” performance emerges. This is
even further demonstrated by the rapid growth in hardware “emulators”
or “virtualizers” like the VMware, Qemu, and Virtual PC solutions.

On top of this, we are actually watching the entire computer software
industry converge towards a complete “UNIX-compatible” set of APIs and
development tools. NetWare? Novell is moving to
Linux. Macintosh? It’s now based on Darwin.
Windows? Even they have SFU (Services for UNIX) that supports all
the same applications. UNIX-compatible software is what the
market is actually embracing … not “Linux” or any specific version of
kernel.

Most people do not realize that the majority of any “Linux”
distribution is actually a wealth of GNU tools and UNIX-compatible
software. In my research only ~3% of any distribution is “Linux”
itself … the rest is all of the common libraries, languages and
applications that we all hear about - Apache, MySQL, Perl, PHP, C#,
Java, Gnome, gcc, X Windows etc. - and all of those are
“UNIX-compatible” applications and services or have versions that run
on UNIX-compatible kernels.

If the world is now going to see a mass commoditization of the kernels
… with complete compatibility around a common set of development
tools, then the real play - that SourceLabs is pursuing - becomes the
certification and support of the wealth of Open Source software.
And if I were going to do it, I would ensure that I could provide all
of this software across *ALL* of the UNIX-compatible kernels in
existence … or at least the core four for now - Linux, Darwin,
FreeBSD, and Windows/SFU.

With a strategy to become the de facto provider of software across all
of these platforms, you would be able to provide the solutions to your
customers and not care about kernels. If there are problems with
one … you can move them to a different kernel without issues.
If they are a Windows shop, you get them to adopt SFU and
UNIX-compatible applications as a “migration preparedness”
strategy. If they are a Linux shop … you are ready to move them
if the legal issues take a turn for the worse.

In all cases, you are setting yourself as the optimal software
development solution … being paid to maintain and enhance the
software that truly hits the users and customers … while further
commoditizing and making irrelevant the kernels and low-level code that
everything runs on.

In addition, if you play this right you are able to take over Open
Source projects, and demand the copyrights be signed over for all
contributions … allowing you to further control the “fork” of
software that you are driving forward. Yes … people could
attempt to fork a project in a new direction, however it takes a lot of
effort … and if that occurs, you still charge your customers to
support and maintain the new fork … win … win … win.

So when I see this announcement, I have to say that I see this as being
the real win in Open Source and the current market craze.
Companies like IBM are well placed to capitalize on this also … and
you see that even the big IBM does not have a “distribution” of Linux
they sell … they are moving on beyond the lower layers, and up to the
applications. Companies like this are going to be well positioned
to allow their customers to take advantage of the newest kernels …
and move away safely from those that can not survive … or to ones
that are cheaper or free …

The abstraction of the operating system is well under way … and this
is the birth of a new business that is doing to the operating system,
what operating systems did to the processor.

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Adwords Adventures

Scott C. Lemon | Inevitabilities | Tuesday, October 5th, 2004

I just started to experiment with Google Adwords
It is amazing what they have created, and how it all works.  One
thing that I would really like to see is a set of APIs so that I can
monitor my Adwords in near-real-time.

While searching (on Google of course!) for such APIs, I found a number
of fun articles about Adwords.  The first one was about The Google Adwords Happening … a very funny post.  Linked from there was the WifiSM page … again … some fun stuff!

After reading this, I started to wonder what might be some fun ads to
create … just to grab some attention … it would be amusing!

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Time to buy your own toy rocket!

Scott C. Lemon | Inevitabilities | Tuesday, October 5th, 2004

Ok everyone, it’s time to go out and buy your own “next generation” model rocket
The folks at Hokkaido Aerospace Science and Technology Incubation
Center (HASTIC) in Japan have created a rocket for the home hobbyist
… only $19,000!

“Measuring 1.6 meters (5.25 feet) long and weighing 10.5 kilograms (23
pounds), the rocket has a cavity that can carry a small payload, such
as a camera, weighing up to half a kilogram (1.1 pound), it said.”  It can go up to .6 miles high!

We’re back into the space age … first the X Prize … now home
rockets that use liquid oxygen!  I’m glad they are requiring the 2
day safety course!

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