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I’m at Blog Indiana Richmond watch along with me

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http://www.blogindiana.com/tv/

I tried to embed the video but for some reason ustream hates me so just click the link up there


Written by threethirty

March 15th, 2010 at 5:15 pm

You’ve got the Power

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One of the things that really frustrates me about the new technologies which we're acquiring, is that we're not acquiring new technologies. Put simply, what we've now got access to isn't necessarily because it's new, but because it has become accessible to the masses. Twitter, for example, was technically possible way back when - but it's only now that people have been given access to the idea to use RSS feeds to send out 140 character messages, that people use it to send out 140 character messages. There's a similar story with facebook. I was watching my local news bulletin, North West Tonight, when a big bloke was being filmed walking around a trashed house with a full camera crew, and lamenting the fact that facebook had trashed his house - and assigning them responsible. Unfortunately, the blame does lie with his 16 year old daughter - who arranged a house party whilst her parents were away. News of the party got onto facebook - apparently from a post that she authored - and thus more than the 'gathering' of friends anticipated turned up - and some opportunist vandals trashed the place. However, that's not facebook's fault - necessarily. Now, the one thing that facebook probably needs to do is start to set default privacy settings which are in favour of privacy, rather than it's advertising customers. Sure, facebook is free because of the absolutely unrivalled profiling that it can achieve as compared to any other medium - but once that information is on the servers, then it should be up to facebook to parse it - rather than leaving it open for the world and his wife to have a go at processing. It suprised me when I first sat down to write a facebook program just how easy it was to "spider" information, that is, if you can access a friend of a friends information, assuming each person has 100 friends, then if you access 1 person, you can access 10,000 profiles of information. That's quite a few from just one person adding your application. So yeah, perhaps facebook has some housekeeping to do - but the end user also has to take responsibility. Facebook is not a ring-fenced safe place where you can communicate in privacy with your friends - it's a worldwide noticeboard that allows millions of people to interconnect. The techology provides us with the ability to do things that were limited to the few people who had the resources and finances to kick things off. Some of the technology though is getting abused. As Rory Cellan-Jones put in his dot.Blog this week regarding 4 Square. Though in itself it's an innocent enough application (it tells people you're location realtime via GPS) - it also notifies people that you're not at home. Unfortunately the technologies are moving too fast for the end user to think "actually, what information have I just reliquished to the masses?" On the flip side, used thoughtfully and the technology can open up some incredible opportunities. As Uncle Ben says in Spiderman - "With great power comes great responsibility." The average Jo(ann)e now has more power at their fingertips that ever before. In just a few clicks, we can reach millions of people with our messages, and new opportunities are springing up like never before. As an example, just this week a band called "Die Antwoord" have taken over the internet. I've had the pleasure of listening to some of their stuff a few years back - the mother of 'Waddy' is an absolute legend, as she nursed my mothers grandparents during their final years. The internet is providing us with fantastic broadcasting opportunities - it's up to us to use them creatively and responsibly.

Written by Andy

February 23rd, 2010 at 5:15 pm

Code snippets

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I’ve created a new page where I will upload small code snippets that I created and which might be useful for some. Most code snippets are released in the Public Domain. The code snippets might not have the highest quality, so feel free to propose improvements to them if you feel like it.

PS: I have moved the “safe replacement for gets” blogpost to the code snippets page and have moved over all the comments as well.

Written by Wesley

August 12th, 2009 at 10:38 am

Posted in Linux,blog,programming

100 visits by 50 unique visitors

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This blog has been back on line for 5 days now. I am using Google Analytics to obtain statistics about the visitors of this website. Don’t be scared though; no personal information is collected. I thought it would be nice to discuss some of the statistics, as I have now had 100 visits by 50 unique visitors in total.

I should note that at this early age of my blog the results aren’t very trustworthy, but they should give you a rough sketch anyway.

Webbrowsers

Visitors of this blog seem to prefer Firefox (56.44%), although there have been a lot of visits by the Safari (28.71%) webbrowser as well. Chrome and Mozilla are a bit less popular among my visitors, both have a share of 5.94% individually. The most shocking however, is the low amount of visits by the Internet Explorer webbrowser. Less than 2% of visits to this blog have been made using this webbrowser. I can only applaud that. Okay, perhaps the results aren’t that shocking after all, knowing that this blog is primarily aimed at Linux users and/or developers.

Operating systems

44.55% of all visits were made by people using the Linux operating system. This is not a big surprise, as my blog is primarily aimed at Linux users. More surprisingly however: an astonishing 31.68% of all visits were made by people using the Mac OS X operating system. A possible explanation is that a lot of my blogposts are about cross-platform development and that a lot of the posts about Linux are applicable to Mac OS X as well (both operating systems are fully POSIX-compliant). Only 22.77% of my visitors use the Windows operating system.

PS: I have created a Request article page. If you are interested in something about Linux or programming or anything else that I might find interesting to write about, just tell me by posting a comment on that page!

Written by Wesley

August 7th, 2009 at 6:44 pm

Posted in Linux,blog

It’s alive!

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This blog is back! After nearly a year of silence, I decided to recreate my old techblog.
Thanks to some handy UNIX tools (vim, grep, sed) I was able to reformat my old MySQL dump into a format which is accepted by this newer version of Wordpress.

I have currently hidden all my old posts though, but most of them will come on line again after a small review, because some posts contain broken links and broken images.

edit: mosts posts are back online! :-)

For the future of this blog, I will write all my blogposts in English. That way I can reach more people. I don’t think this is a big issue, since most guys and girls who are interested in technology will know enough English to read my blog. But if you have another opinion on the matter, please do tell me.

Written by Wesley

August 2nd, 2009 at 9:49 am

Posted in Linux,blog

Social Networking in the ‘Enterprise’ – & OpenID

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Disclaimer: This is not a dodgy Star Trek sequel (for that, click here)

As social networking moves into the focus of the mainstream media, more and more businesses are taking the opportunity to get on the ‘new media’ bandwagon and implement their own social networking in order to both ‘innovate’ and ‘leverage’ the increased productivity potential.  The actual technology of a ’social network’ is fairly simple; aside from prohibitive storage costs preventing ‘free’ social networking - the essence of social networks could have been manufactured in the late 90s.  Therefore, the question to ask then, is ‘Why Now?’

If social networks are all about creating a ‘circle’ of friends, then the enhanced values of social networks are the tangents..  One of the earliest ‘3rd party’ applications allowed on facebook was the ‘Friend Wheel’ - by Thomas Fletcher (incidentally, a student @ Bath University).  This generated a wheel of friends - grouping people by the number of mutual connections.

friendwheel

The essence of the algorithm used to create this wheel was to identify connections - and then to group people.  However, if one were to take the algorithm further, (and be able to host the information yourself so that manipulating it can be done easier,) people could be grouped by the level of interaction, rather than just ‘connections’.  Used in an organisation, this would be an effective way of actually analysing ‘teams’ - if there were several potential employees suitable for a role, it would make sense to look and see at their previous levels of interaction with members of a potential team.

The drawback to such application, is that the likelihood is there’s a general trend towards mediocrity.  Those people who may be good friends will probably communicate outside the realms of their corporate social network - choosing instead a ‘neutral’ platform, such as facebook - where in all likelihood they already have an established presence and friendship environment.  The upshot of this is that their communications on the corporate social network may be reduced.  In contrast, corporate communication may be the best way to contact some colleagues - to make clear that the relationship is purely professional.

Trying to leverage the power of ‘a social network’ is a poor way of looking at it.  Whilst the technology can easily be ported across to within corporate boundaries, the essence of the networks cannot.  Isolated corporate networks may have their uses, but they will only ever been a means of internal communication rather than a hotbed of creative development.

However, there is an alternative approach that corporate networks can take, for the benefit of the knowledge economy.  That is to create open networking opportunities for their employees, in essence this is what facebook have done with their ‘business networks.’  I can log onto facebook and for many of my friends (those working for medium/large businesses) their ‘Company’ network is displayed in their profile.  However, the information is all held by facebook - and manipulating the data is at the behest of facebook.

There are other social networks than facebook - there is a choice.  MySpace & Bebo have been prominent alongside facebook - but now more and more social networks are opening up their doors.  Friends Reunited was forced to open its doors as a ‘free’ service - when it realised people would jump ship to facebook.  However, there are still relatively successful smaller networks being set up for dealing with niche markets.

Rucku has been set up by Will Carling (ex-England Rugby Captain) for a bit of banter in the style of a rugby clubhouse.  Whilst many people wouldn’t be so comfortable posting such messages on facebook due to the cosmopolitan mix of contacts on there - rucku is defined as a place where this banter is actively encouraged.  If someone wrote ‘I bet you had your hands down your pants when you took that photo’ on my facebook profile photo - it would have severely different connotations than a message which is beligierant banter by a fellow rucku user.

However, networks like rucku will have short shelf lives if they cannot be open to integrate their userbase with other networks.  Rucku was originally built on elgg - a free and open source ’social network’ platform.  It therefore has the potential to implement OpenID - an decentralised authentication system backed by Microsoft, Google, Facebook, IBM, PayPal and others. Rather than having the overhead of setting up new profiles on individual sites and recording the information seperately - all this can be centralised with a chosen provider.

OpenID has the potential to hold you ‘core’ profile information in one place - allowing you to give other sites access to that data if they request it.  The killer feature is that because it’s a decentralised source - you can choose which provider holds your most important data.  Instead of having several companies all holding your password - having it in one place means you can choose a mroe secure password - as you’ll only ever have to remember the one.

For corporate networking, this means that your employees can use their OpenID to use your network.  Although barriers to registration can be forcibly be removed by requiring registration as company policy, this more effectively lowers the perceived barriers to use.  It will also help cultivate the integration between networks, and allow collaboration between fields where a link may not have previously been recognised.

The Long Tail theory is something that appeals to me as a concept that only relatively recently has been realised as having hidden potential.  In the book “Fermat’s Last Theorem”, Simon Singh provides us with a fascinating insight into the potential of unrealised collaboration.  At the time, there were two schools of mathematics, both of whom were trying to solve Fermat’s last theorem.  It’s an extension to pythagoras, to prove that:

If an integer n is greater than 2, then the equation anbncn has no solutions in non-zero integers a, b, and c.

As it turned out, it took over 350 years for Andrew Wiles, in 1995, to unify two disciplines to solve the theorem.  Collaboration often brings hidden benefits - therefore pushing co-operation and cultivating open networks has the potential to bring just as many.

The fragmentation of social networks is not necessarily a bad thing.  Facebook have a wealth of information on all of us, and it can only be healthy for this information to be shared across multiple organisations and disciplines.  In the current economic climate we need to be moving fast to work out new ways of communicating effectively.  We need businesses to be open in order to allow the transfer of knowledge in order to create a new economy to help develop and sustain future generations.  It would be nice to think this new economy is not based around financial greed, but quality of life.  If so, then sharing a bit of knowledge is going to be a good thing )

Tagged: andrew wiles, bank, blog, crash, economy, Facebook, fermat, knowledge, pythagoras, recession, social networking, theorem, twitter, wordpress

MS hiring to fight Ubuntu

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From the twittersphere to the blogosphere:

Microsoft’s new desktop hire can only be focused on Ubuntu, for a variety of reasons: http://tinyurl.com/anrlmd

@mjasay
Matt Asay

   Tagged: blog, Microsoft, mjasay, twitter, Ubuntu   

Written by andylockran

February 7th, 2009 at 8:17 am

Outlaw Archives

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If you want to manually download episode files or are looking for those elusive old episodes that aren’t in the feeds anymore, please check out outlawarchives.com — here you will find all our episodes in mp3 and Ogg format listed with download links for your listening pleasure.

The Outlaw Archives will provide an alternative download destination to the Libsyn servers as well as a convenient place to refer to our back catalogue. This should address most of the issues some of our listeners voiced with mirrors and discoverability. Enjoy!

Written by Fab

January 7th, 2009 at 6:58 am

Posted in Linux,blog

New Beginnings

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I’ve had a bit of an upheaval over the new year. I’ve had a fantastic VPS for the last 12 months, but in the spirit of lowering my ‘personal’ online costs, I’ve moved what I can to ‘free’ services online, including moving the blog over to wordpress.com.

I hope that this doesn’t adversely affect the performance, and hope that the recent DNS malarky (my own fault) is all cleared up and you can still get me on my old blog of http://blog.zrmt.com.

I’ve got some pretty big changes coming up, and this blog is hopefully going to become a fairly important part of that. My readership is widening out of just the tech sphere, so the posts are going to change to reflect that I think. However, I hope to continue to be active for some tech writing, or at least comment - as that’s what’s made the blog the most success.

Happy New Year to everyone in 2008, and I look forward to a busier year of blogging ahead.

      

Written by andylockran

January 6th, 2009 at 10:54 am

Episode 2…Coming soon.

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Episode 2 is recorded and I am in process of editing. It is probably going to be something around an hour, with 17 pages of show notes. I will be working on it this weekend and hopefully get it out the first part of next week.

Written by VulcanRidr

November 14th, 2008 at 2:34 pm

Posted in Linux,blog,episode 2