Wednesday, July 20, 2005
Today is Moon Day
Look up at the moon tonight and think about a few hundred footprints, left 36 years ago today by a few good men.
Friday, July 15, 2005
Retirement of the CTRVAX
So the first internet connected computer system I ever used has been retired. "CTRVAX" was a VAX6000 series machine that served as one of the primary computing resources for Vanderbilt University in the late 80's and early 90's. I think the year that I used it was 1992 or 1993, I don't quite remember. My mom, a teacher, was taking a computer training course at Vanderbilt/Peabody. I tagged along with my mom as the little kid that was super into computers. After asking me a few basic computer questions, a kind admin saw it fit to grant me an account as well...'hubbarn' was the username. My mom's was 'hubbarf'.I don't remember a lot about the class...I was too busy playing around with stuff they weren't teaching. I think they were teaching e-mail...which I had of course already mastered on my local BBS. At the time however, I didn't have real internet access at home, instead relying on AOL and 'The Nashville Exchange', a local internet connected BBS...so this was a new and exciting world for me. I immediatly found the 'Remote Hosts' and 'Internet' menus and started playing with NNTP and remote BBS's. I tried to get onto other servers but couldn't really figure out what was going on and ended up looking for files with Archie. I remember using 'Gopher' and 'FTP', which I thought was pretty neat. This was before the 'web' so that was about as close to you could get to what most people today think of when they hear 'internet'. I remember downloading the Anarchists Cookbook, which I already had downloaded from a local BBS at home, but it was neat to do it over the 'Net. I think it was stored in my CTRVAX account...hopefully for a suprized admin to find when they cleaned my account. After the few hours were over, we left and I was hooked. I convinced my parents that the internet was the future.
Anyway, kinda sad to see the CRTVAX go...but quite remarkable that it was rendering services up until a month ago.
/nostalgia
Saturday, July 09, 2005
London and the Social Net
First, I would like to say that what has happened in London is a complete tragedy. Whatever s**thead organization that did this needs to be drawn and quartered. Or turned into a glowing hole in the ground. Violence begets violence, whatever.
I am completely amazed at how blogs, flickr, technorati and wikipedia have provided coverage of this event. It's a testament to how well these social systems work. I went to CNN long enough to not be satisfied with the content. I went to Google News, but only got the same Reuters crap. Then I was sent a link for the London bomb pool for Flickr, which showed me pictures of the tragedy and the famous double-decker bus that the media kept mentioning. Which was totally ripped to shreds, horrible. Then I hit up Technorati for 'London' and read Londoner's blogs on the subject, a great number of which had been affected by the event. Then I hit up the Wikipedia article, which was marked as a 'current event - information may change rapidly'. And it was, at a rate of 4.17 edits per minute (2 hour average around lunchtime yesterday). Totally incredible that I got this much coverage without really checking out mainstream news channels. The "blogosphere" has been on my critical systems for communication map for a while, but Flickr just stepped into place along side it.
Back on 9/11, I calmly drove to work that day, talked to my co-workers who were trying to set up cable so we could check out CNN. I browsed Slashdot and found a few links to digital cams and digital pics that New Yorkers had put up of the event. At one point, I found someone who had a big directory of all the images that they had found and more were popping in by the minute. But it was instantly killed by huge amounts of traffic. A mirror popped up, I quickly mirrored it locally and provided everyone at work with the coverage of the event we couldn't get on CNN's site, thru the TV or other 'hub and spoke' style media outlets. If we had Flickr, Technorati and if blogs were more prolific back then, it would have been vasly easier to get the 'news' when we all needed to see it. It's apparent to me now more than ever that the mainstream media will be relied on less and less as enabling software becomes more and more popular.
I am completely amazed at how blogs, flickr, technorati and wikipedia have provided coverage of this event. It's a testament to how well these social systems work. I went to CNN long enough to not be satisfied with the content. I went to Google News, but only got the same Reuters crap. Then I was sent a link for the London bomb pool for Flickr, which showed me pictures of the tragedy and the famous double-decker bus that the media kept mentioning. Which was totally ripped to shreds, horrible. Then I hit up Technorati for 'London' and read Londoner's blogs on the subject, a great number of which had been affected by the event. Then I hit up the Wikipedia article, which was marked as a 'current event - information may change rapidly'. And it was, at a rate of 4.17 edits per minute (2 hour average around lunchtime yesterday). Totally incredible that I got this much coverage without really checking out mainstream news channels. The "blogosphere" has been on my critical systems for communication map for a while, but Flickr just stepped into place along side it.
Back on 9/11, I calmly drove to work that day, talked to my co-workers who were trying to set up cable so we could check out CNN. I browsed Slashdot and found a few links to digital cams and digital pics that New Yorkers had put up of the event. At one point, I found someone who had a big directory of all the images that they had found and more were popping in by the minute. But it was instantly killed by huge amounts of traffic. A mirror popped up, I quickly mirrored it locally and provided everyone at work with the coverage of the event we couldn't get on CNN's site, thru the TV or other 'hub and spoke' style media outlets. If we had Flickr, Technorati and if blogs were more prolific back then, it would have been vasly easier to get the 'news' when we all needed to see it. It's apparent to me now more than ever that the mainstream media will be relied on less and less as enabling software becomes more and more popular.
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