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September 22, 2005

Give us a wink and make me think of you

Journalists everywhere are describing Hurricane Rita as Bush's, or FEMA's, or Homeland Security's, chance for redemption. This, for example: "Stung by criticism that it was slow to respond to Hurricane Katrina, the Bush administration on Thursday sought to portray itself as engaged and in control as a powerful new storm bore down on the Gulf Coast." Who really thinks this "second chance" is indicative of anything?

Seems to me, Rove and the protégés shouldn't be let off so easily. This time, mayors from Florida to Texas took the threat seriously. Evacuees fled days in advance. Television exhorted caution and exalted paranoia 24/7. Where's the leadership in blowing with the wind?

If I toss a football at you when you're staring right at me, but it bounces off your nose, you probably won't get picked for the NFL draft. If I toss it to you again moments later, will your second reaction make you a quarterback?

Let a year or two go by. Watch a few Category 5's downgrade to drizzles before landfall. Rebuild Biloxi and a whole coastline of particleboard McMansions on stilts. Then, when we're nicely complacent, bring on an Isaac or Floyd or Katrina. That's when we'll know who really learned something from Katrina.

Lovely Rita tells us nothing.

September 21, 2005

I am sorry, Dave.

A computer glitch in Japan brought down parts of NTT Communications Corp.'s corporate data services, disrupting about 35,000 lines. A glitch in a new computerized financial aid system, developed by Oracle Corp for Lansing Community College, stalls financial aid checks. Technical problems prevented Comcast SportsNet from airing the White Sox' game Wednesday night. Earlier this week, Overstock.com shares fell after a computer glitch prevented them from updating their product listings. Pilots on a Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 from Perth to Kuala Lumpur battled to gain control of the plane last month after an unknown computer error caused the aircraft to pitch violently and brought it close to stalling. My normally stable home computer crashed twice while attempting to post this entry. Really.

September 19, 2005

TiVo pauses live commerce

As of 19 September, TiVo's online store is still offline with the note "TiVo gift shoppers: While we work to complete improvements on the TiVo store, we are temporarily unable to offer gift subscriptions. Please accept our apologies and return soon. Thank you!"

Rumor has it what really happened is that TiVo's third-party sales center operated by Metron went under. Details at Gizmodo and RealTechNews, sourced from tivocommunity.com.

Metron was one of DirecTV's two largest distributors, and also outsourced for XM Radio, TiVo, Toshiba, Philips, and Circuit City.

September 18, 2005

House releases Broadband Internet Transmission Services working draft

On 15 September, the US House of Representatives released a working draft of a Broadband Internet Transmission Services ("BITS") bill for comment. Interestingly, the Energy and Commerce committee is chaired by Texan Rep. Joe Barton, from one of only a handful of states that tax Internet bandwidth and Internet services (such as web hosting) provided to out-of-state customers.

This bill ostensibly levels the playing field for VOIP and traditional telecom, but what about the playing field for digital video? Broadband video can be delivered through wireless transmissions (satellite, over-the-air) or wired technologies (cable, DSL, power lines), and that's before getting into content origination, codecs, digital rights, and carriage. This bill clearly needs fleshing out.

Broadband video service providers should download the BITS draft PDF and read through sections 301 - 306, which include provisions for registration of broadband services, franchising regulations, and broadband video carriage agreements.

Gap analysis

Several e-commerce stores belonging to Gap (Banana Republic, Old Navy, Gap) which were shut down on 24 August for an upgrade are back online, but have been limiting traffic by only opening to select customers. Details at news.zdnet.com.

Creeping features, bloating scopes, and Dave Barry

We don't need more features; we need to improve the features we already have. I recently purchased a Samsung refrigerator, because it was the only model that improved the basics without adding pointless complexity. I can't imagine why a manufacturer would add buttons for 7 ways to make ice and a television, without first updating the archaic analog temparature dial numbered 1 ("Cold") to 10 ("Coldest") on the inside. Wouldn't you rather know your fridge is at an accurate 34 degrees and your freezer at a safe -10, than choose between chopped and crushed ice?

Little has changed since humor columnist Dave Barry wrote an article for Miami Herald in February 1999, "In a war with kitchen appliances, I'm toast". Vermont's Times Argus and California's Monterey Herald reprinted the article today.

In war with kitchen appliances, I'm toast
Article published at www.timesargus.com on Sep 18, 2005

Recently, The Washington Post printed an article explaining how the appliance manufacturers plan to drive consumers insane.

Of course, they don't SAY they want to drive us insane. What they SAY they want to do is have us live in homes where "all appliances are on the Internet, sharing information" and appliances will be "smarter than most of their owners." For example, the article states, you would have a home where the dishwasher "can be turned on from the office" and the refrigerator "knows when it's out of milk" and the bathroom scale "transmits your weight to the gym."

I frankly wonder whether the appliance manufacturers have been smoking crack. I mean, did they ever stop to ask themselves WHY a consumer, after loading a dishwasher, would go to the office to start it? Would there be some kind of career benefit?

YOUR BOSS: What are you doing?

YOU (tapping computer keyboard): I'm starting my dishwasher!

YOUR BOSS: That's the kind of productivity we need around here!

YOU: Now I'm flushing the upstairs toilet!

Listen, appliance manufacturers: We don't NEED a dishwasher that we can communicate with from afar. If you want to improve our dishwashers, give us one that senses when people leave dirty dishes on the kitchen counter, and shouts at them: "PUT THOSE DISHES IN THE DISHWASHER RIGHT NOW OR I'LL LEAK ALL OVER YOUR SHOES!"

Likewise, we don't need a refrigerator that knows when it's out of milk. We already have a foolproof system for determining if we're out of milk: We ask our wife. What we could use is a refrigerator that refuses to let us open its door when it senses that we are about to consume our fourth Jell-O Pudding Snack in two hours.

As for a scale that transmits our weight to the gym: Are they NUTS? We don't want our weight transmitted to our own EYEBALLS! What if the gym decided to transmit our weight to all these other appliances on the Internet? What if, God forbid, our refrigerator found out what our weight was? We'd never get the door open again!

But here is what really concerns me about these new "smart" appliances: Even if we like the features, we won't be able to use them. We can't use the appliance features we have NOW. I have a feature-packed telephone with 43 buttons, at least 20 of which I am afraid to touch. This phone probably can communicate with the dead, but I don't know how to operate it, just as I don't know how to operate my TV, which requires THREE remote controls. One control (44 buttons) came with the TV; a second (39 buttons) came with the VCR; the third (37 buttons) was brought here by the cable-TV man, who apparently felt that I did not have enough buttons.

So when I want to watch TV, I'm confronted with a total of 120 buttons, identified by such helpful labels as PIP, MTS, DBS, F2, JUMP and BLANK.

There are three buttons labeled POWER, but there are times — especially if my son and his friends, who are not afraid of features, have changed the settings — when I honestly cannot figure out how to turn the TV on. I stand there, holding three remote controls, pressing buttons at random, until eventually I give up and go turn on the dishwasher. It has been, literally, years since I have successfully recorded a TV show. That is how "smart" my appliances have become.

And now the appliance manufacturers want to give us even MORE features. Do you know what this means? It means that some night you'll open the door of your "smart" refrigerator, looking for a beer, and you'll hear a pleasant, cheerful voice — recorded by the same woman who informs you that Your Call Is Important when you call a business that does not wish to speak with you personally — telling you: "Your celery is limp." You will not know how your refrigerator knows this, and, what is worse, you will not know who else your refrigerator is telling about it ("Hey, Bob! I hear your celery is limp!").

And if you want to try to make the refrigerator STOP, you'll have to decipher Owner's Manual instructions written by and for nuclear physicists ("To disable the Produce Crispness Monitoring feature, enter the Command Mode, then select the Edit function, then select Change Vegetable Defaults, then assume that Train A leaves Chicago traveling westbound at 47 miles per hour, while Train B...").

Is this the kind of future you want, consumers? Do you want appliances that are smarter than you? Of course not. Your appliances should be DUMBER than you, just like your furniture, your pets and your representatives in Congress. So I am urging you to let the appliance industry know, by phone, letter, fax and e-mail, that when it comes to "smart" appliances, you vote NO. You need to act quickly. Because while you're reading this, your microwave oven is voting YES.

Dave Barry is a columnist for the Miami Herald. He is taking a leave of absence from writing his weekly humor column. This classic Dave Barry column was originally published on Feb. 27, 2000.

September 16, 2005

LA trips over the power cord, plans Skynet deployment

Our Los Angeles datacenters kicked over to emergency power last week for several hours thanks to "human error" that affected two million customers. The AP article says the power company estimates two weeks to explain why humans make mistakes, but somewhat longer to deploy Skynet so they can Terminate future problems.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - An inaccurate work order led to the power outage that shut down elevators, traffic lights and ATMs across much of the city earlier this week, the Department of Water and Power said.

"It was a case of miscommunication," said Henry Martinez, assistant general manager of the DWP.

The outage, which affected about 2 million people, happened when a utility crew cut several control lines in the San Fernando Valley.

Martinez said DWP engineers had directed that the lines be left intact, but inaccurate work drawings called for the lines to be cut. The DWP was trying to determine who drafted the order.

DWP General Manager Ron Deaton told the City Council on Tuesday that power was restored to nearly all customers within an hour and a half, but that he was perplexed that such an accident would affect so many customers. He said he would work on finding a fix to limit future outages.

City Councilman Tony Cardenas said Thursday that engineers should have double-checked the work drawings.

"The bottom line is what are they doing to minimize these incidents," said Cardenas, who chairs a committee that oversees the DWP.

About 756,000 households and businesses with almost 2 million people from downtown Los Angeles to the San Fernando Valley lost power Monday for as long as 2 1/2 hours during lunchtime. There were no serious injuries or damage.

Power authorities intend to compile a report in the next two weeks explaining what happened. They also plan a longer investigation to determine what can be done to prevent any further accidents.

Hmm. Let me know when they work that one out.

September 15, 2005

Apple includes DRM video support in iTunes 5

Just a rumor at this point, but picked up at http://www.betanews.com/ and their feed is usually reliable.

Here's an excerpt of what beta news has to say:

Bloggers have discovered an image resource within iTunes 5 that suggests Apple has future plans for a video store. Three buttons with the terms "Gift Video," "Buy Video," and "Add Video" were found along with references to a "protected MPEG-4 video file" within text strings in the code of iTunes 5.

I'm not going to speculate on fairplay for MPEG4 AVC just yet.

Paypall ATM withdrawals double efficiency

eBay/Paypall has sorted a way to double your profits. Just stop by an ATM and withdraw $200. A couple days later, check your balance. Look, there's your $200, and there's another $200 drawn out for good measure. But---they didn't give you an extra $200 at the machine? Time to jump on the forum at eBay and chat about with everyone else having the same issue. More here....

September 13, 2005

Ukraine Politics

President Viktor Yushchenko fired his former ally Yulia Timoshenko on Tuesday:

He leveled sharp allegations at his one-time comrade-in-arms, accusing the popular politician of trying to use her post to wipe out $1.5 billion in debts owed by a defunct energy company she once headed.

Tymoshenko, in a brief phone interview with the AP, called Yushchenko's allegations a shock, saying he was trying to revive the "old repression that (former President Leonid) Kuchma had used against me and my family."
Back in 2001, Yulia Timoshenko was accused of smuggling and falcification of documents, according to the following BBC news report:
"The deputy prime minister is accused of funnelling more than $1.1 billion dollars out of the Ukraine and of cheating tax authorities to the tune of nearly $150,000 between 1997 and 1999. Ms Timoshenko, 40, denies any wrongdoing and claims that her political opponents, who are upset by her handling of energy reforms, are behind the legal moves and want to wreck her career".
What next?

September 08, 2005

The zero button mouse

A sudden temperature drop in Hades on 11 August 2005 signaled Apple's launch of a (gasp) two button mouse. Now Mac users can click twice as much. Aren't more clicks great? Maybe not...

At http://dontclick.it/ you can play with a world that doesn't need clicks. At first, the experience felt awkward. I had a nearly overwhelming urge to do something to the interface. Then zen set in, and I began to simply flow through the site.

Much of the text is static, but there are quite a few dynamic interfaces to discover, from site stats to video games. After a few minutes, I wished all sites worked so intuitively.

To me, the biggest idea here is that the interface is "attention" driven. As you pay attention to a resource by moving the mouse over it, that portion grows to takes over center screen, while the next natural navigation elements move to the visible periphery. I've always hated the Minority Report style futurist interfaces. What's the benefit of a virtual screen if you have to wave your non-virtual arms around to use it? Reach over there, grab that, pull it here, put it away again... klunky, tiresome, and uninspired.

As you use the dontclick.it imagine surfing with your eyes alone. We already have technology that can move a mouse cursor with the flick of an eye, but then the application expects a click. Some proposals suggest clenching a jaw, some require a thumb button, and some hypothesize a foot pedal.

Me, I want zero buttons. In a world with no clicks, you could surf at the speed of thought.

September 01, 2005

Analyze this

Imagine having to explain highly chaotic events, such as daily market fluctuations? While much easier than predicting the future, it may still present a challenge on a choppy sideways day such as today.

September 1, 2005. Here's a sampling of today's financial news headlines.

6:49 am ET MarketWatch via Yahoo! Finance: "U.S. stocks edge higher; retailers, data, oil in focus" ...

7:42 am ET CNN Money: "Manufacturing pulls down stocks". The title has since been updated to say "Stocks straddle breakeven". Stocks were mixed Thursday, hovering on either side of breakeven as investors tried to grapple with conflicting economic news and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

11:01 am ET Reuters: "Stocks fall on high gas price jitters" ...

11:54 am ET Reuters: "Stocks rise on hopes of slower rate hikes" ...

12:50 pm ET AP: "Stocks Rise on Strong Retail Sales Data" ...

1:50 pm ET Reuters: "Stocks little changed but oil shares up" ...

2:16 pm ET AP: "Stocks Decline on Economic Concerns" ...

3:18 pm ET AP: "Stocks Mixed As Economic Worries Intensify" ...

Can someone just admit it, "we don't know why the markets did this"? :)