I have, for a while, been aware that this site breaks on IE6 sometimes, and probably all of the time on earlier versions. What am I doing about it? Telling the world to browse happy.
Category Archives: Internet
Getting into video podcasting
I really am enjoying it. Watch these on the bus to work most mornings (or when they’re out):
Sky News headlines
Sky News entertainment
Sky News technology
Rocketboom
The Show with Ze Frank
The Ricky Gervais video podcast (overrated, but entertaining)
TrailerCast.TV
If anyone has recommendations for better general news/tech/entertainment podcasts I’d be grateful, because the Sky ones aren’t great. I need to spend a bit more time with iTunes (v argh.0) working out what else is worth subscribing to. And any other ones I should be watching.
High tech neighbourhood
According to these guys, my neighbourhood is:
Your neighbourhood is categorised in the E-Society classification as being in group A : E-unengaged and type A06 : Elderly marginalised.
Which sounds about right. Note to self: move to younger neighbourhood before I match the local demographic…
via DoctorVee.
I love Firefox 2.0
Halfway through writing the last post, Firefox crashed. I mean, badly crashed – dead, no option to screengrab or copy and past the text out of the dialogue box – just plain gone. And I thought ‘crap, there goes the 3 minutes I spent typing that post, I’m not going through that again’ — or words to that effect.
Hereusment, Firefox’s new ‘restore session’ feature not only reopened the browser tabs I had open, but also somehow restored the text into my web interface.
Fabuloso.
It’s a thing of greatness. The reality is, no matter how stable your machine is (and even if you use a Mac or Linux).. there’s a chance that your machine will crash at some point. And that restore function will save your ass. Looks like Microsoft will be playing catch up with IE again… (although FF 2.0 is still not Sharepoint compliant ;( nerts).
Social Memedia
I thought I’d avoided the ‘5 favourite social media’ meme, but Danny kindly tagged me, so I’ll give it ago. The reason for avoidance? Erm, I’m not sure there’s anything particularly clever or interesting about my favourite five (I don’t rip, script, furl OR curl anything at all)… but here we go.
I love WordPress. Unsurprisingly. It powers this blog, and allows integration with all sorts of other cool things – including del.icio.us, Flickr, Last.fm, Amazon and more, thanks to some cool plugins.
I love Wikipedia. I’m one of those people who likes to know a little about a lot of things, most of the time, and occasionally a lot about a few, and the articles on Wikipedia invariably provide a useful starting point.
I love RSS. I love my RSS readers slightly less: Feedreader is good and is my desktop client of choice. What I really want is something that syncs with an online service so that threads I’ve marked as read on one are marked as read on the other, and so that I don’t have to subscribe to the same feed more than once. Does Newsgator do this? I’ll look into it at some point. Oh, my online RSS reader of choice is Bloglines, and I do like the way that public blogrolls can be shared on there. I should get into all this OPML stuff too…
I like del.icio.us a lot — currently more for my own edification than its social nature (I only have two people in my network) — but as someone who’s (1) never bothered to use bookmarks and (2) who likes to blog one-liners, it gives me good scope to find links I want to again and be pithy about amusing websites. The linklog on the right, btw, is powered by del.icio.us.
And for number 5? I guess Skype might win that one; admittedly it’s a long way from perfect, and arguable to what extent it constitutes ‘media’ as its output isn’t necessarily public… but its a great bit of social software, and there’s potential there (I read some good tips on Simon’s blog on how to record Skype conversations – something which may come in handy…!).
So there you have it. Tags? Don’t think Chris, Tom, Gareth, Ben or, erm, Neil Gaiman have done this (why not ask?). Share and enjoy, folks, share and enjoy.
Movie on demand, oh yeah
I was feeling slightly under the weather yesterday so came home an collapsed in front of the TV – to find that, as we’re out of season for most of my favourite programming (with the notable exception of the new series of Scrubs…) that there wasn’t much on.
So I finally got around to checking out the on-demand experience that is Lovefilm. Now, I really don’t like the Sky on-demand experience – and renting the film off Lovefilm cost exactly the same amount but was in a format that I – as an ubergeek, I guess – was comfortable with, and with a payment method I was happy with. £3.49 on my credit card and 20 minutes later (how long it takes for 1 gig of hi-res DRMmed video content to come down an 8 meg pipe), I had my movie.
An altogether painless experience.
Of course, rather too many stumbling blocks for the average user – I have TV-out, am unintimidated by the need to enter a password into Windows Media Player, erm, have the latest version of Windows Media Player… etc.
So just a little bit pre-mass market. But do recommend it to anyone with the tech-savvy to make it work.
Oh – the film, btw, was the Dukes of Hazzard (2005 remake). And I don’t recommend that, really, for any reason other than the pretty people in it. Which isn’t a recommendation. Don’t see this film. Under any circumstances.
Beta season
In a bid to destabilise my PC further, I’ve installed some betas: IE7 Beta 3, Firefox 2 beta 1 and the Yahoo Messenger 8 beta. Expect updates soon; for now, though:
* IE7 beta 3 seems considerably more stable and less memory intensive than beta 2
* Firefox 2 has some cool tricks (built in spellchecker, “undo close tab”
So we’ll see…!
Net nootrality
Amanda’s last Rocketboom show (ever, it seems) covered the topic of net neutrality, which got me thinking – where did I stand?
My nominal hippy liberal internet loving values were shouting – yeah, net neutrality, sounds great, let’s do it. But the part of me that maintained rationality wanted to look into it, and the relatively simplistic picture that Amanda paints in her video really didn’t sit right with me – it felt, erm, Michael Mooreish. And before everyone starts painting me as a right wing fascist – I agree with a lot of Michael’s more liberal views, but dislike his slightly patronising tone. Which, I guess, might be specifically targeting the American public, which might make sense, but hey… getting off-topic here.
Back on to the issue: the two tier internet. In many respects, Amanda’s hit it right on the head – a two tier internet will mean that there are some services that you have to pay extra for as an internet user. Despite her suggestion that it might be, most of what is currently Google will never be on a premium tier – the reasoning behind a multi-tier internet is to allow high bandwidth or serivices that require quality of service (see: [[QoS]]) to work properly, instead of delivering slightly mediocre services that crackle over the heterogenous infrastructure that that makes up the web. So… services like VoIP, VOD, IPTV etc might require a premium payment to work (not Skype, etc, but new, quality guaranteed services from, yes, the evil telcos Amanda references) – and this payment would cover the cost of building that infrastructure, and again, yes, probably make the telcos money (it’s called ‘capitalism’. A new idea, actually).
In short, I came around to thinking that a two tier internet might not be the evil thing its made out to be.
And to my surprise, Chris Anderson of Wired agrees with me. And on chatting to him tonight, it seems he shared some of the above views, and had a couple of other thoughts:
- That telcos could never sort themselves out to build and end-to-end two tier network
That regulating something before it became an issue would actually stifle the development of the internet – imagine having to get regulatory approval before launching a new video service.
Now, I didn’t really agree with the former as a blanket statement, but on further chat it seemed that Chris agreed that building cross-network end-to-end networks would be tricky (i.e. from one telco to another) — which makes complete sense to me, the WHOLE internet will never be two tier. But what you might get is ISPs who might push IPTV, VOD, etc services from their distribution centres direct to consumers for a premium fee.
Shock, horror! ;)
It is an interesting issue, and it was an interesting chat. I’m sure I haven’t begun to work through the complexity here – but thought I’d put the thoughts down and see what people came up with. Please, no flaming, even if you are geek enough to care!
Update – talking, and thinking about this more – a significant part of the argument for net neutrality hinges on how it will impact the average consumer’s experience of the internet. If you are forced to pay more to a service provider in order to gain access to regular web content — that would suck; as Amanda points out, many ISPs are in monopolistic control over their territories in the US (less so in the UK thanks to local loop unbundling). But if it happens as I imagine it will happen – with ISPs offering access to separate content and services for an extra fee – well, then, that’s a different story, IMHO.
I could be missing something, though. We’ll see.
Geek dinner
I’m going to my first ever Geek Dinner tonight; it’s with [[Chris Anderson]] of ‘Wired’ fame – he’s got a theory called ‘[[The Long Tail]]’ about how, in and amongst other things, markets and media are evolving from a few mass media, products and services into — thanks to a largely Internet powered world — a mass of niche media, markets etc. There’s a great, and very confusing, quote from Amazon in the Wikipedia article about The Long Tail which might serve to give a practical example of what that means.
I think the Geek Dinners are a great concept, and they seem very popular (at time of writing, there are 72 comments to rsvp, despite the fact that its on a Friday night) — so if anyone has an interest in the topic that’s reading this, please do come along and keep me company. I’ll be the one in the corner who doesn’t know anyone ;).
The importance of being division6
If a lot of the new, cool, social software out there survives, and I eventually get around to using it, I’ll probably want a consistent digital identity – division6… and was pleasantly surprised to find that I could have that username on both Digg and Reddit today. Now I’m thinking I need to go and register for every other service I might possibly use with my digital identity before I lose it to a bot…
Why not use my real identity? Not because I really really love to give fake names, but rather because invariably, after years of forgetting if I’d registered as armand, armand.david, adavid, adavid01, davidfly, ard30, jard30, etc etc, I’d had enough. And division6 is sufficiently obscure that I’ve been able to capture it on most of the systems I need to thus far :).