They Get All the Cool Techie Stuff



I was watching the races unfold tonight, as I have done in the past elections. The thing that I found just as interesting as the race itself was all the cool tech the news sources had to cover the election. The computing power in each news room was phenomenal.

First, there was CNN. They had the big screen behind with a map of the US color coding each state. In fact the map only covered half of the “Wall”. I wonder how much that one cost.

Then there is the “Magic Wall” – a big touch screen in which John King would be able to pull up stats and charts. Four big buttons on the left to let him choose how to run the screen. A big yellow box with an “X” in it to close out any windows he had open. No minimize button or task bar though.

In NYC, Times Square had some pretty flashy tech. From the Big screens showing off the candidates, to the ticker marquee that wrapped around the overhang. It was all pretty impressive to see as the race unfolded.

I didn’t see the projection of the US on the Rockefeller ice rink that NBC was going to do. I am still always impressed what we can do with tech nowadays.

The big question I have though is – what happens to that tech after today? Is it still going to be used in day-to-day news reporting, or will it go into the basement?

I can see this change the face of news itself. We have already seen changes in what meteorologists use to display the weather maps. Gone will be the day of a hand held clicker that moves from screen to screen. Not to mention the pull down maps they used to use in the 70’s and 80’s and definitely no magnetic icons of clouds blowing or smiling suns.

Now, you can touch a couple spots on the screen and move around without being tethered to a controller. Zoom in on areas, push it all to the left or right and call up important data. No more green screens, here.

If news stations started using that for the general news, there is no need for someone in the control room to flip though the pictures. Just a touch of the screen and we see a picture or a Google map or whatever the newscaster wants.

At any rate, if CNN is going to put the Magic Wall away, I have a great place in my living room in which they can store it. I just hope it comes with a remote control so I don’t have to get up to touch the screen and change the channel. Of course, I could always train the dog to nuzzle the screen to do that…


GNC-2008-11-04 #421 Fun Event at End of Show



First off, Yes I know I got the date wrong.. Ok folks it’s very important you listen to the whole show. I have a mission for everyone at the end of the podcast. This is about New Media invading Old Media it is gonna take all of you to make this happen ok… Link and Instructions are at end of Show Notes!

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Listener Links:
Gadget Bargains
Brain Communicating with Computer
Opera Mini not Rejected
www.oovoo.com

Show Notes:
Rayed Crater on Mercury
Great American Detour
Sideways Photo of Earth Atmosphere
Typical Work Week (Fun Non Tech)
Earth to Sun Flux Transfer Event
AT&T DSL Metered Bandwidth
Amazon Going Green
Cassini and Life on Saturn Moon
Circuit City Round 1 RIP
Netflix + Roku + HD = Coming Soon
Bye Bye United Airlines
1 Year Internet Ban for File Sharing
Apple no more New Products for Christmas
Windows 7 on Macbook Pro
Apple cuts iPhone Production
Yahoo Live Dead pool
Shuttle to ISS on Nov 14th
Phoenix on Life Support
Voting Machine Vulnerabilities
Windows Home Server Price Slashed
Apple fighting Jailbreak big Time
ISS Trash crashed in Ocean
IT Worker goes to Jail
Fungus + Grass = Oil
Why does MPAA get to play Trade Enforcer
UK + Open Wifi = Canceled Service

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United Airlines Introducing Co Pays on Mileage Upgrades



I received an email from United today introducing new Mileage Plus rules starting July 1st 2009. Having flown 90,000 miles with United this year I am a very loyal customer. I will easily break a 100k miles before the year ends.

Based on the new mileage plus rules to start in July 2009, it’s time to start looking at American Airlines or Delta again. These idiots are gonna implement a Co Pay when you use your hard earned miles to upgrade a ticket. Generally from Hawaii it cost 15,000 miles to upgrade from Coach to first one way. Starting July 1st not only will it cost you 15,000 miles you will also be required to pay a co pay based upon your class of ticket.

Not only that they are not going to refund miles on segments that are not approved when you request a upgrade.

I have choice of carriers when I fly, and I can guarantee you that these co-pays are going to have me look at other carriers. What a stupid idiotic thing to do. I have used mileage upgrades quite a bit this year.. But I am not going to pay a co-pay

United has for years had the worst first class cabin of all the Airlines that fly out of Hawaii. United considers Hawaii a domestic flight and the first class cabin is more like low end business. American and Delta beats them hands down when it comes to service and more importantly seats. I am not paying additional dollars when cashing in flight miles to sit in a seat that is marginally better than economy plus in regards to leg room.

I will vote with my wallet.. This is a great way to get rid of customers. Very dumb move United..


GNC-2008-10-31 #420 24hr Podcast Planning Underway



Fun Show tonight planning is underway for the 24Hr Podcast, CES 2009, in the pre-show I talk a little about the Podcast Awards, Taxes in Hawaii and me being stuck working on accounting all week.

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Listener Links:
Apple Blocks Operah on iPhone
X-Rays from Scotch Tape in Vacuum
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Flip Ultra Video Listener Submitter
Pain Relief with Ultrasound

Show Notes:
More Mars Water Evidence
Pirate Bay Founder Speech Highlights
Fewer Heart Attacks when clocks rolled back!
8Ft Lego Man on Beach (Weird)
7 Microsoft Research Projects
Native Podcast Download Support for iPhone
Hubble takes a Peek Outside
10 Phrases From Politics 2008
Motorola All in on Android
Hadron Collider is Broke Big Time but Fixable
Need to do your own PR?
G1 Beats iPhone in UK Drag Race
More Laptop Batteries on Recall!
WD Passport wifth Firewire 800
Samsung 40-inch OLED OMG!
Netflix Live Stream + TiVo = Happy Consumer
Big Patent Ruling
Pro Accounts = Web 2.0 Survival
Hubble Repair Pushed to May
Phoenix Lander #1
Phoenix Lander #2
Chevy Volt Up and Close
Camtasia Relay
Google has 10 Million Servers
Canadian Legislature No Gaming While Driving?

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The great firewall of……Australia



My blood has passed boiling point this week with the Australian government planning to put a mandatory firewall between me and the Internet. While the comparison to the Chinese firewall will be denied I am sure, this is essentially the same thing. A firewall will block all sites and content that the government decides are not suitable for us poor feeble minded citizens.

The reason of course is to “combat child pronography and adult content”, as if this measure has any hope at all of acheiving this. But then the lowest of acts are often wrapped in the noblest of reasons. Even before the legislation is even passed though, they are already talking of extending it to cover information on topics like anorexia. While they may think they are protecting us poor plebs, they are actually trying to restrict our access to information. Knowing something should not be a crime or restricted, only the actions we take. And in case you didn’t know there is no legislated free speech in Australia, even though we are a generally liberal country.

The problems I have with this are:

– This will not block the actual wrong doers, only prevent innocent people from accessing the complete Internet. Just like DRM annoys customers and is ignored by pirates.
– There is zero chance that this will only block the content intended. I am sure that a couple of sites that teach young girls to cope with anorexia will get blocked.
– Unblocking improperly blocked sites is likely to involve tortuous trips through bureaucracy.
– I left home over 25 years ago and have not needed parents to protect me from nasty people for some time, and my sensibilities are not so delicate that I need my eyes to be protected from naughty pictures.
– There is no clear method described for how what is blocked will be decided and how these decisions can be challenged.
– When the government proposed this before the last election there was supposed to be an opt-out clause which they have now removed. My lack of surprise at being lied to does not reduce my annoyance.

Thankfully the Australian Senate seems to be gearing up to block the legislation.


I Guess It’s Not My Data…



So today I got a client’s new website up and running. They had a service that basically built their website for them, which really wasn’t working for them. I ended up changing the whole service.

Before I did, I looked for a way to get all the photos off the old server. They had no FTP, no file manager and no way to get the photos off their servers. I emailed the support asking for a copy of all the pictures. What I got back really knocked my socks off:

Thanks for your message.

Unfortunately we don’t have any more access to your images than you do.

If you don’t have those images still on your own computer, the best way to download them might be to add them to a Photo Album, then view the album and download each image.

Sorry for any inconvenience!

Software Support Technician

Granted, the material on the site can be reproduced, but that means a little more work on my end. I was not too happy to hear someone couldn’t give back the content that is not theirs.

It’s not like this was a Geocities account. The company payed $20 a month to store data on. I can’t believe they just said “no” like that.

I know not everyone wants to know how to build a website. It’s not always the easiest thing to do. I’m just glad the site wasn’t too complex. I would’ve had a field day with their tech.

Instead, I canceled the membership and put the site on a trusted server.


A New Kind Of Comment Spam



I and others have been noticing a new kind of blog spam. Essentially relevant comments, being written by real people but linking to spam sites. I have noticed an increased number of these types of comments.

It is apparent that the battle on the comment spam front is starting to use real people. It is very apparent when you load the linked URL, they either try to link it from their contact info or are trying to hide a hyperlink in a period or single word so that it is not so obvious when you view the comment thread.

They are being pretty smart about it because a recent spammer I caught had left 10 comments without any external links. I assume this was to build trust within the system before he startrf to drop external links.

Bots are relative easy to beat but if spammers are using real people to leave relevant comments linking to their spam sites this will be a bigger challenge.

Talking with other bloggers with higher page ranks they are seeing similar tactics. I am at the point where I will ban any external URL’s from being posted by commenters.