About Scott C. Lemon

I'm a techno futurist, interested in all aspects of humanity, sociology, community, identity, and technology. While we are all approaching the Singularity, I'm just having fun effecting the outcomes of the future!

More attacks on Open Source

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?

Abstraction of the Operating System

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.

Adwords Adventures

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!

Time to buy your own toy rocket!

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!

Mermaid Books, and A Cup of Joe

One of our most popular spots in town – A Cup of Joe – has changed
owners in the last several weeks.  After several conversations
with the new owner we were surprised to find out that he is installing
his own Internet services.  He informed us early last week that we
were welcome to remove our services at any time.  Instead of
leaving our customers without access, we looked at what other
businesses might be in the area.  As of Friday, we have moved …
across the hall!

We are glad to announce that we have now partnered with Mermaid Books,
and are able to provide the same Internet services – at the same prices
– at the same location.  Mermaid Books is a very cool shop
offering a variety of books and other items … and has a great owner!

Our Cafe PC is now in the sitting area at Mermaid Books, and we still
have the same wireless access – 24×7 – that covers the same areas and
upstairs.  If you want to, you ought to still be able to get
access at A Cup of Joe … so continue to buy your coffee, hang out,
visit Mermaid Books, and enjoy your Internet.  If you have
questions or comments about your service, please feel free to contact
us!

wget timeouts

I finally resolved another outstanding problem that has been bothering
me for a long time. It’s funny that I didn’t try this experiment
sooner, however I just happened to stumble on this earlier today.

I write a lot of scripts that I use with mrtg. In many of my scripts I use the wget
utility to fetch a web page, and then I “scrape” the web page for the
data that I want mrtg to graph. When I started to do this, I
noticed that when the target device was down, it would take wget a long
time to timeout. In reading the man page, it said to use the “-T”
option to set a shorter timeout. I tried all sorts of values, but
was not able to shorten the timeout to seconds.

Today, while reading a variety of web pages, I found that there is a “-t” (note the lower case!) option that sets the retries.
I don’t know – and can’t find – what the default number of retires is,
but by updating my scripts to have “-t 1 -T 10” I am now getting a 10
second timeout!

So it seems that my problem was not the timeout, but instead the number
of times that wget was retying the request! I have posted my
updated NoCat Gateway Monitoring script that contains the fix. Now I’m going to go and update more of my scripts!

Animated web logs … the next steps …

A friend of mine sent me this link to a “animated web log post
… and it’s pretty funny.  The part that I really liked was that
someone actually took the time to create an animated blog post to
communicate something that they experienced.

This really relates to a project that I am now working on with my
father.  He wanted to begin to record video and audio stories
about his life and his experiences to be posted on the web, or made
available to the family and friends.

My parents are running on a new PC, with Windows XP, and they have the
free copy of Windows Movie Maker.  I am now working with him to
get a newer USB camera with microphone, and then we will begin to go
through the process of practicing how to “capture” his
presentations.  I’m really looking forward to getting this going
so that both my mom and dad can begin to make these recordings. 
It will be fun one day for my kids … or my kids, kids … to be able
to go and listen to stories from their grandparents, or
great-grandparents.

We are entering into an age where teaching and communication of
knowledge is going to radically shift.  We will soon have a much
richer type of historical content that will be available to anyone that
is interested.  I often think about the questions that I would ask
my grand parents about their lives and experiences … I’m glad that
I’ll have the opportunity to ask those questions to my parents, and
have them record their answers in a much richer medium.

Satellite Internet is coming quickly …

In my role at 80211.net I am currently
investigating satellite Internet access as a solution for some mobile
hotspots, remote locations, and rural users.  I am impressed that
years after hearing of the plans, there are several companies that are
on the verge of introducing satellite Internet access at competitive
prices.

There are several new technologies that are enabling this service, and
one of them is the Ka satellite band.  From what I understand, in
the Ka architecture, there are numerous satellites that are each
providing “spot” coverage that only covers a limited geographic
area.  In the one system that I am investigating there are 28
overlapping “spots” to cover the United States … up to 150 miles
offshore.

A user of one of these systems can expect to see decent bandwidth – up
to 3Mbps down, 1.5Mbps up – for a competitive price – somewhere around
$50-$80/month.  This is higher then in the center of a city
someplace, but that is the point … you can get satellite Internet
access anywhere!

The current generation of equipment seems to be based around fixed
dish, and “mobile” dish usage, however you can not yet use it while “in
motion”.  The completely stabilized versions are coming next year
… then things will get even better!

The rapid depreciation of technology …

There are a lot of little companies here in Utah that are run by
ex-Novell employees. One of them, run by some friends of mine, is
a company called MAS Computers. MAS Computers deals in a lot of used and surplus computer equipment, along with carrying some new equipment.

The other day I went to look for a used computer to replace an aging
system. MAS Computers usually has a good inventory of slightly
older Dell Optiplex systems for ~$200. While I was there, I ended
up talking with my friend Steve, and he indicated that they had a large
inventory of Cabletron/Enterasys equipment they had obtained. I
have a specific application where I am looking for a 10/100 Switch that
is capable of “port mirroring” so that I can use ntop
to monitor one of my wireless networks. I went with Steve back
into the warehouse and was amazed at the number of switches they
had. And these are not small cheap units … but the high-end
Enterasys solutions!

They had a whole shelf of the 2H252-25R “Workgroup” 24-Port Switches,
so I went on-line to see what the feature set included. As I read
through the feature list and technical specs on the Enterasys site, I
was floored. This is an amazing switch, with numerous high-end
features … being sold for next to nothing! MAS is charging $225
for each unit … I found similar units being sold for over $5000 at sites like this one … and yes … it does provide port mirroring.

What really hit me was that this is a model that is still listed on the
Enterasys web site product page. It is listed as “Legacy” on the current switching products
web page … but it’s there. This is a multi-thousand dollar
product … that is in fantastic shape … being sold for hundreds of
dollars.

In a matter of years, this technology has slipped to being sold at a
fraction of it’s price. Since MAS Computers is a such a great
bunch of guys, I was able to trade in an older “dumb” switch and pick
up one of these “new” ones for under $200. Even at CompUSA they
are selling brand-new 24-port switch – with none of the capabilities of
these switches – for ~$150 and up!

The power in used equipment is reaching astounding levels … it is amazing to me what is being made available …