Very cool “sniffer” application …
I couldn’t help but read through this application description. Very innovative … I really like it. This application not only “sniffs” IP traffic off any Internet connection, it looks for images being transferred over HTTP connections, and grabs the images … displaying them for your viewing pleasure! (Or displeasure!)

What I really like is that this demonstrates how insecure your connections can be … it looks for specific data types and snatches them … and could be a very usefull tool for administrators. This again shows how VPNs and SOCKS proxies can really provide you more security … if implemented correctly.

Driftnet 0.1.1 (Default). Picks out and displays images from network traffic. [freshmeat.net]

The next steps … MP3’s ain’t nothing compared to this …
So I’ve been down the MP3 and WinAMP route for years … but now I’m into digital video. And these guys are building the future! This is the most incredible vision that I have seen in a long time … it’s the ultimate Internet video/content distribution system to date, IMHO. And their web site visuals are awesome!

Go check out KGBE and Jamby!

Geographic Traceroute … and more GeoSpacial applications …
As I continue to think about the various applications that I want for my wearable computing, and navigating in physical space, I like it when I find more and more geographic location services. I saw this post yesterday:

Geographical Traceroute 0.0.4 (Default). A geographical traceroute utility for X. [freshmeat.net]

What’s really nice about this is that they are drawing from a netgeo database maintained by CAIDA. This application starts to explore the concept of distributed location servers, and the ability to query them for different types of resources. In this case, the netgeo servers are oriented towards the location of routers, and internet infrastructure. I can see where in the near future there will be more and more of these servers popping up around the Internet that will provide look-ups of almost any type of physical world resouce and it’s longitude and latitude.

An Open Source search engine … for my FlowMining project …
I have been looking around for a while for an Open Source search engine that can be used for my FlowMining project … I’m thinking of giving this one a try.

ASPSeek 1.1.4 (Development). An Internet search engine. [freshmeat.net]

About three or four years ago, I was doing a lot of research into Proxy/Cache engines and the various applications that can be developed on top of them. Here at Novell we developed one of the most scalable Proxy/Cache engines available on Intel hardware – BorderManager – and then created an appliance version called ICS that has been licensed to a range of hardware vendors. Since then, we have spun off that division of the company as a company called Volera. Although many people had a focus on the ‘bandwidth savings’ that a Proxy/Cache might deliver, I really saw two core capabilites that excited me – content distribution networks and community services. I’ll comment on content distribution networks laster … this search engine relates to community services …

One of my interests is in the areas of community, and leveraging the power of the humans operating in teams. All of this contributes to efficient and productive operation of communities and other organizations. When a Proxy/Cache is shared by numerous people in any particular organization or community, the Proxy/Cache could be enhanced with additional services that would provide value for the community. For myself, I would often find that as I cruised the net, I would later want to find the web page where I had seen a particular comment or statement made. This caused me to look for a solution where I had my own personal search engine … something that would index the content that I was reading as I read it. I would then be able to go back and search through the pages that I had read … not the entire Internet.

My leap to the concepts of FlowMining was when I realized that if a group of user were using a Proxy/Cache, we could have the content of that cache indexed automatically. So that as a team, we would now be populating the search engine with the web pages that our team had found and read. Doing this, we could leverage some our ‘human web crawling’ capabilites. If I implemented this in a Proxy/Cache engine, then we would actually be ‘Mining’ the ‘Flow’ of content through the Proxy … FlowMining.

Articles like this one in KMWorld outline the issues related to the current trends and techniques for creating taxonomies of information. I’m thinking that a community of people might benefit from a taxonomy that they built. And so I now have found the search engine … and am going to give it a try to hook it up to our Proxy/Cache engine and see what I can create … this will be fun …

Bluetooth for security …
This is actually a pretty cool application for Bluetooth wireless. They talk about a watch which has Bluetooth, and it communicates with the Bluetooth in your laptop. If you move too far away, then your laptop locks up! Of couse, what do you do if you loose or forget your watch?

reports. Electronic Business reports on Bluetooth security solutions. [The Bluetooth Weblog]

Palm integration for Linux?
This is a valuable cause … Open Source Palm Sync for Linux, etc. … which opens up a whole new line of potential applications for integrating the Palm world and the Open Source world of Linux, etc. I have to say that as I eye the Linux marketplace in corporations, there are a number of software capabilites that I see as really required. Palm support is a good one to have!

ColdSync 2.1.0-20010415 (Development). PalmPilot synchronization tool [freshmeat.net]

Very cool … ScriptBasic for Linux …
I have always believed that BASIC is the language for the rest of the people. I learned it at a young age, and still use Microsoft’s Visual Basic to develop quick apps and prototypes … it is a very powerful scripting language … and complies well also. One of the Linux resources that I have wanted for a while is a good BASIC for Linux. If I were able to combine this with Glade … then I’d really be happy!

ScriptBasic 1.0b23 (Default). Linux/Win32 BASIC scripting language. [freshmeat.net]

Two XDrive articles in one week …

Windows XP is going to use XDrive …
It appears from this ZDNet article that Windows XP is going to be offering XDrive on the desktop … or advertising a partnership on the desktop. I’m wondering if this is being done with closed, proprietary protocols, or with any WebDAV (or other?) standard protocol and solution.

Another failure being designed before our eyes?
I am always amazed when these types of adventures begin. IMHO, I believe that they are doomed to fail.

First, their storage costs are *so* expensive … why would I pay ~$70/GB/Month for storage, when I can buy a 30GB harddrive at Costco for ~$140?

Second, their main costs are not involved in the storage … it’s the backbone network costs. They are having to pay for the bandwidth for user to send and retrieve data across the backbone of the Internet … to their centralized location.

The way that I believe that this is going to be solved is when every ISP get’s into the storage and caching market … they’ll realize that they can offer their users storage and backup services for very agressive prices … and they already own the bandwidth of the last mile to their users.

Xdrive Sees Outage, Shelves Free Storage for Fee System. The Santa Monica, Calif. provider of storage for end users experiences a brief outage and gives up on giving out free storage for a subscription-driven model geared toward businesses. [internetnews.com: Product News]

Who is going to pay these centralized guys these rates? If people do, I don’t think it will last … I think they are dead already. I’m looking at how this will relate to, and effect, our Novell iFolder solution? We are putting any corproation or ISP into this business. So if an ISP installs iFolder for their customers, they could be getting a chunk of this revenue …

Network/Protocol Analyzer for free?
This is very cool … a low-level network analysis tool for free! I have been using Novell’s LANalyzer for years, but it was shelved a couple of years back, and the support of it went away. I don’t believe that I can get a Win2K version of it … let alone a Linux version. Now, I can get something here that will most likely satisfy any of my network troubleshooting and protocol debugging needs …

Ethereal 0.8.17 (Default). GUI network protocol analyzer [freshmeat.net]