Archive for September, 2005

Pie of Woe

Monday, September 19th, 2005

This speaks for itself

Business leaders for sensible priorities suggest 15 percent of the Pentagon budget could:

- Provide Head Start & Early Head Start for all eligible kids: $ 5 billion/year
- Provide healthcare for all uninsured US kids: $15 billion/year
- Rebuild America’s schools over a 10 year period: $15 billion/year
- Achieve energy independence, with clean technology: $10 billion/year
- Double US humanitarian aid to poor countries: $20 billion/year
- Reduce debts of impoverished nations: $10 billion/year

We could quibble over the details, or just stand in awe of them and cry for a generation.

Power Farmers

Monday, September 19th, 2005

I read with interest an article in Scientific American today regarding the sequestering of CO2 underground. The model they presented was a power plant that scrubbed CO2 out of emissions and then pumped it into a shale bed 2km down for permanent storage. It struck me that this idea is suffering from the same problem that computing suffers from, and that proponents of grid computing are trying to solve.

Computer scientists have recognized that building a bigger, more powerful computer is not as practical as linking hundreds or thousands of small computers. Thus the name grid computing. The same insight should hold for power production. Who has the biggest grid of land suitable for power production? Famers? Who needs the byproduct of power production, CO2? Farmers and their plants. (more…)

Input Convergence

Sunday, September 18th, 2005

People tend to misunderstand Marshall McLuhan’s famous dictum “the medium is the message.” What he means is that the various technical environments we build for ourselves condition the direction our society evolves. The medium of television is itself the message we should be listening to and watching because it is television’s influence on our cognitive, economic and social development as a species that is far more important than anything the television can be used to tell us. Same goes for railroads in the past, and nanotechnology in the future.

Enter Nintendo’s new game controller device(s). In addition to defining a whole new spectrum of repetitive stress disorders, this device is utterly ingenious and utterly familiar. So familiar that I wonder if it isn’t already old, but more on that below. It combines new technologies with old technologies, and it taps into very deep structures already in place for decades. Here is is: (more…)

Networks

Friday, September 16th, 2005

Is Bill Clinton the first (unofficial) President of the World? I mean, really. Where does a guy like Clinton go once he’s finished in US politics, having been taken out at the top of his game by the US Constitution? Well, first he has a heart attack, undoubtedly brought on by having nothing to do, sitting on a couch eating pizza watching George W. Bush on TV. Then he recuperates. Then he gets involved in a multi-national initiative like the response to the Asian Tsunami. Fresh from the insights gained throught that experience, he does what other Democratic Presidents have done (if they aren’t assassinated) and founds a global civil society organisation. Bill’s is called the Clinton Global Initiative.

Jimmy Carter did it and his Habitat for Humanity is a paradigm example of what global civil society needs to look like. Can Clinton do the same? I hope so. I don’t expect a world saviour, but I expect Clinton will show the difference between Democratic Presidents and Republican Presidents. Can you imagine seeing George W. Bush out building houses for poor people five years from now? I didn’t think so.

Anyway, Bush-bashing aside, networks are replacing nations. They have done so on the economic side in the process known as globalization, and now they need to do so on the political side. This will happen first through the emergence of a global civil society with serious actors like Clinton leading the charge. It will happen equally at the grassroots level with social networking technologies allowing activists from all parts of the world to coordinate global actions.

Networks cross borders, but the globe is the current delimiting container. Our economy is now global. A side-effect is that our society is now global. Time to reflect that in our institutions.

Keys and Wires

Wednesday, September 14th, 2005

Two things that frustrate me in life are wires and keys.

Wires spontaneouly tangle as I approach. Example: I neatly wrap my headphones and put them away, only to find upon retrieval that their are hopelessly tangled and deserve to be thrown across the room. Time and patience lost. Neatly wrapped computer cables always become entangled when out of view. Removing one USB device from its jack inevitably leads to a power shutdown and data loss.

Keys are no less irritating and conspiratorial. When carrying multiple items approaching a door, keys are always in the wrong pocket, or wrong hand and, as I fumble with them, they inevitably drop to the floor. If there are two keys that look the same, I pick the wrong one first and must switch. Time and patience lost.

Today I picked up my iPod and the wires had become entangled in my keys. As I pulled, the whole Medusian mess upset became tangled with other objects on my desk and they all wound up on the floor. I’ll remember not to leave them alone together again.

I for one look forward to the time of ubiquitous, standardized bluetooth and inexpensive biometric security. The time and patience savings of never having to think about wires and keys will be a great advancement - at least in my books.