one small voice

stpeter's blog on jabber, technology, history, philosophy, et alia

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2006-04-30

The Network Commonwealth Begins At Home

Radical decentralization as a cure for what ails America.

More and more, it seems that Americans disagree -- over the war in Iraq, immigration, gun control, and a thousand other topics of public interest. Each national election feels more momentous, or a least more vitriolic. Politics has been become personal in a nasty sort of way that does no one any good.

As far as I can see, one of the root causes of the American predicament is the ever-increasing centralization of power and decision-making. When most signficant policies are set in the District of Columbia, national elections take on ever-greater importance.

It wasn't supposed to be this way. When America consisted of thirteen colonies, most powers were local or state, not central. That used to be called federalism. Now federalism is practically synonymous with centralism. The results have not been salutary.

What is the way out? Arnold Kling has advocated 250 states. But the logic of power relations (eludicated by French scholar Jean Baechler) might mean that a USA of 250 states would be even more centralized, since the most stable arrangement for any power structure is to have around 5 major powers and several smaller ones (as evidenced by the traditional balance of power in Europe and, not coincidentally, by the early United States with its thirteen former colonies, only four or five of which were signficant in size and power).

A more workable arrangement might be what in The Anglosphere Challenge Jim Bennett defines as a "network commonwealth" -- a loose network of civic states, wherein decisions are localized and only a few powers (e.g., common defense) are delegated up to the commonwealth level. (We could see this structure as a kind of updated Hanseatic League.) One key here is that a network commonwealth would consist of civic states -- that is, states that are (according to Jim Bennett) "dependent on essentially voluntary forms for cohesion", likely with small populations since "consensus and coherence are easier to achieve among a limited number of people" (anywhere from tens of thousands to ten or twenty million, as in Kenichi Ohmae's region-states). A vibrant civic state also tends to have "a core population sharing strong ethnic or religious bonds" (and, I would add, cultural assumptions, legal structures, and often economic interests). (Quotes are from chapter 1 of TAC -- and yes, I need to clean up the HTML for that page.)

While the United States has traditionally had a strong narrative of shared culture and history, at 300 million people it is perhaps reaching the breaking point given the strong centralizing tendencies witnessed over the last 150 years. Rather than trying to decide everything in the District of Columbia, it makes more sense to form policy at the state or local level. Indeed, it may make sense to devolve many powers also to the regional level, along the lines of Joel Garreau's book The Nine Nations of North America -- out of those nine (or dozen or whatever) regions, four or five would probably dominate in size and power and thus set most of the (strictly limited) commonwealth agenda. In a sort of fractal design, it makes sense for those regions themselves to be commonwealths or confederations wherein regional power is again delegated up by the civic states making up the region. With around 325 million people in North America, the result would be perhaps 10-15 regions of 25-30 million people, where each region would consist of 10-15 civic states, each with 1-3 million people. At each level, there would be 4-6 main actors (leading to regional and continental stability) and several smaller actors (allied with the main actors on various issues).

Because only about 20 American states have populations less than 3 million people (see statistics), any kind of political devolution would likely result in a much larger number of civic states in North America, driven especially by division of high-population states such as California, Texas, New York, Florida, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Georgia, and New Jersey -- see the CommonCensus map for some possible fault lines (downstate vs. upstate New York, Chicagoland vs. central and southern Illinois, north vs. south Jersey, Philly-centric vs. Pittsburgh-centric Pennsylvania, the many varieties of California and Florida and Texas).

Will such a system come to pass? Probably not. But the current system is increasingly unstable (it goes well beyond the Red State vs. Blue State divide), and in a true crisis radical change might become palatable. Only time will tell.

(Cross-posted at Albion's Seedlings.)

Posted on 2006-04-30 at 21:17. File under politics.

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2006-04-29

Remembering Peter

More about Peter Millard.

Joe Hildebrand has posted some information about the memorial service for Peter Millard, which will take place on Wednesday, May 3, 2006 at 7:30 PM, at the Broomfield United Methodist Church in Broomfield, Colorado.

Peter's family has requested that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made in Peter's name to the following charities:

As promised, I am still thinking about ways to help Peter's wife Christina and infant daughter Zoe more directly.

Posted on 2006-04-29 at 21:39. File under personal.

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2006-04-27

Peter Millard

In remembrance.

Peter Millard, my friend and a longtime contributor to the Jabber community, died last night. Peter fought a tough battle with cancer last year and seemed to have won. Suddenly, in the last few weeks, he faced a new battle with complications from his cancer therapy; he fought long and hard but the damage caused by interstitial lung disease was too much.

Peter was one of the first people I met in the Jabber community in late 1999. He was unfailingly generous, dedicated, hard-working, and honest. His software (first Winjab and then Exodus) was used by hundreds of thousands of people across the world and introduced Jabber to Windows. He was an expert on Jabber technologies and often helped me understand obscure aspects of the protocols, especially in the early days when I was a clueless newbie. Over many years he led our efforts to keep the jabber.org infrastructure stable and reliable. In short, Peter is a big reason why Jabber technologies are where they are today.

Peter will be sorely missed in the Jabber community, but our loss is as nothing compared to the loss experienced by his wife Christina and young daughter Zoe. I plan to soon create a way for Exodus users and others in the Jabber community to help them in their time of need.

Rest in peace, my friend.

Posted on 2006-04-27 at 09:15. File under jabber.

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2006-04-24

PubSubbing

XMPP eventing galore.

As promised, I'll start to do a better job of describing what I work on all day in the wonderful world of Jabber / XMPP. Mostly I define protocols -- the bits of XML that Jabber clients, servers, components, bots, and other entities send back and forth over the wire to communicate. One protocol that I've been focusing on since the beginning of the year is something we call publish-subscribe or "pubsub" for short. The Jabber Enhancement Proposal ("JEP") that defines pubsub is quite large. It was originally authored by Peter Millard, who several years ago (while a member of the Jabber Council) volunteered to write a spec that would harmonize a variety of approaches that different developers had proposed. No offense to Peter, who did yeoman's work on the spec, but it needed some editorial revisions and a bit of an overhaul based on implementation experience. Given the size of the spec, it's taken me a while to get it ready for prime time, but the forthcoming version 1.8 is a lot cleaner and easier to read than 1.7, thanks in large measure to comments from the Wildfire team (check out their article for a friendly introduction to pubsub). It's amazing to me how long it can take to really get a protocol spec into shape, but I suppose it shouldn't be a big surprise since I tried to cover all the error flows and edge cases and such (with lots of examples -- "we put the example in example.com" and all that). In any case I hope that the Jabber Council will move forward on approving this (major) revision sometime in the next few weeks. We may even want to push out an unofficial last call (not strictly necessary, but I think advisable in this situation given the scope of the changes).

Posted on 2006-04-24 at 13:44. File under jabber.

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2006-04-20

What I Do

A job description of sorts.

Recently I realized that I don't post much about what I do day to day, since I assume that most folks who read this blog subscribe to the Standards-JIG list and therefore see all the specifications I work on. But that assumption is most likely false, so I will work to post more often about the items in my .plan.

First, I'll try to describe in general terms what I do all day long.

In essence, I have overall responsibility for ensuring that Jabber/XMPP technologies (i.e., the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol, its extensions and various implementations) are, and are perceived as, the open alternative and critical Internet standards for presence, messaging, and real-time communication. To that end, I do the following:

  • Author the vast majority of XMPP specifications and extensions in a clear, compelling manner that maintains the overall cohesiveness of Jabber/XMPP technologies, as well as shepherd them through the IETF and JSF standards processes over 1-4 year periods for each specification
  • Work smoothly with high-level technical respresentatives from leading Internet technology companies (e.g., Google, Apple, Sun, IBM) to extend XMPP technologies into new functional areas such as multimedia communications
  • Translate requirements from organizations using XMPP technologies (e.g., telecommunications, government, and financial sectors) into specifications that are broadly acceptable to the entire Jabber/XMPP standards community
  • Act as a technical and organizational liaison to other standards development organizations, such as the IETF, W3C, ITU-T, Liberty Alliance, and OASIS
  • Present compelling talks about Jabber/XMPP technologies at 5-10 high-profile industry conferences each year
  • Author clear, convincing technical articles about Jabber/XMPP technologies for industry publications
  • Regularly represent Jabber/XMPP technologies to both journalists and industry analysts
  • Consult regularly with open-source developers and with a variety of organizations regarding their existing projects in order to maintain forward momentum for the Jabber/XMPP community as a whole
  • Publish timely news and observations to maintain the "buzz" around Jabber/XMPP technologies, leveraging cutting-edge technologies such as weblogs and wikis
  • Manage the day-to-day operations of the Jabber Software Foundation; relevant aspects include financial (including recruiting and tending to sponsors, and setting financial goals), legal (e.g., setting intellectual property policies), technical (running the JSF's standards process and the functions of the Jabber Registrar), infrastructural (e.g., maintaining websites, servers, and discussion lists), and organizational (e.g., running XMPP interoperability events and potentially developer conferences)

It helps that I possess:

  • High standing in the Jabber/XMPP community in order to provide overall leadership regarding the direction of Jabber/XMPP technologies
  • Deep knowledge of open-source software but am also respectful of other licensing approaches, including commercial, freeware, and shareware
  • Outstanding organizational and time management skills, thus being able to maintain high productivity in the face of constant interruptions from developers, users, and other members of the Jabber/XMPP community
  • Extreme patience and humility, a positive attitude, and the political acumen and interpersonal tact to bring multiple (often competing) parties to consensus in a fully open manner

Yes, you can consider the foregoing a job description of sorts. Not that I always live up to the hype (cardinal rule: never listen to your own PR). :-)

Now, back to work...

Posted on 2006-04-20 at 09:37. File under jabber.

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2006-04-19

A Test

Or, how I sold out.

OK, despite my trepidations, I'm going to pilot-test inclusion of Google Ads in the right column of my blog. Consider this a temporary experiment.

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 21:47. File under personal.

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Paying Attention

Law or creativity?

Tyler Cowan quotes from Richard Lanham's new book The Economics of Attention as follows:

In an economy of stuff, the laws of property govern who owns stuff. In an attention economy, it is the laws of intellectual property that govern who gets attention.

Wrong. What governs who gets attention is who creates interesting, attention-grabbing content (yes, I loathe the word "content", sorry to use it). The laws don't matter. What you create can be in the public domain -- covered and controlled by no laws whatsoever -- and you can still receive plenty of attention (after all, that's exactly what a classic is: an older work in the public domain that continues to garner attention). In fact this blog and my websites are in some ways an existence proof that Lanham is wrong, and I don't even work hard at getting attention, since I'm not particularly interested in that form of currency.

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 21:29. File under publicdomain.

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Got PKI?

Why digital signatures are not working.

Barry Leiba observes that the public key infrastructure (PKI) and related personal encryption technologies are simply not working. Sure, the cryptographers have figured out pretty secure hashing algorithms and all that, but the usability and logistics of encryption and digital signatures are challenging even to geeks, let alone Aunt Tillie. Bob Wyman argues that we don't need PKI in order to have digital identity, which is true up to a point, but personally I think that strong digital identity is important because many kinds of messages can be forged and in many contexts identity-based encryption is a good thing. But it's not easy now and unfortunately it's not getting any easier, because it's hard to get it right (in part because the metaphors are not familiar to normal people). Barry says "we should be able to get certificates when we get a passports or driver's licenses"; the folks in Estonia have done that (population ~1.3 million), but doing it in the USA (population ~300 million) or even one American state would be a challenge, I think.

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 14:21. File under identity.

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Ten Years

My online life.

It seems I forgot to mention that my website recently experienced its tenth anniversary. Back in January of 1996, I started converting The Ism Book and some of my essays to HTML, and the first, ultra-basic version of my website went live in February or March of that year. Although I had been active on various email discussion lists since 1993 (yes, I'm a relative latecomer to the Internet), I was still a clueless newbie when it came to things like HTML (which I probably edited in MS Word!) and FTP (which I recall confused me to no end at first). That sure seems like a long time ago now, but we've all got to start somewhere...

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 14:03. File under personal.

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Code-O-Rama

Summer of Code, 2006 Edition.

Yes, the Jabber Software Foundation will be a mentoring organization for Google's Summer of Code this year as we were in 2005. The Jabber community is coming up with some project ideas (ping me if you need a wiki account) and the Jabber Council will once again be approving the applications. Oh, and if you are a Jabber/XMPP developer who might like to act as a mentor, let me know (you get a free T-shirt and perhaps other goodies as well).

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 12:01. File under jabber.

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Concord Hymn

Happy Patriots Day.

Today is the 231st anniversary of the Battle of Lexington and Concord (more here). My favorite remembrance of those events is Emerson's Concord Hymn:

By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood
And fired the shot heard round the world.

The foe long since in silence slept;
Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;
And Time the ruined bridge has swept
Down the dark stream which seaward creeps.

On this green bank, by this soft stream,
We set today a votive stone;
That memory may their deed redeem,
When, like our sires, our sons are gone.

Spirit, that made those heroes dare
To die, and leave their children free,
Bid Time and Nature gently spare
The shaft we raise to them and thee.

Amen.

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 09:37. File under politics.

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Making Money

Blogging for food.

Stowe Boyd says that "the top 20,000 blogs or so (today) can make serious bank, enough to be, as Fleishman puts it, a "significant minority" of the author's income." Technorati says that my blog is ranked around 30,572. I suppose that if I worked at it -- blogged every day, added comments, used a real blogging tool instead of my homegrown system, etc. -- I could crack the top 20,000 quite easily. Then I could replace one of the columns in my layout with Google Ads and I could make some money off these scribblings. But do I want to? I'm not sure...

Posted on 2006-04-19 at 09:03. File under personal.

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2006-04-18

IMbox

Yet another Jabber/XMPP update.

Here are some Jabber happenings I've seen or heard about of late:

Posted on 2006-04-18 at 12:07. File under jabber.

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2006-04-17

Differing Assumptions

SIP vs. XMPP.

I found this quote interesting (from an editorial published in Business Communications Review):

SIP's original mission was to move intelligence out of the servers and into the endpoints. For the vendors, it makes a lot of sense: Transform the phone into a single-purpose computing device, a nice fat client sitting on every desk, and sell it for at least as much as the corresponding TDM phone -- and maybe more.

Contrast that with our philosophy in the Jabber community, as captured in our protocol design guidelines:

Keep clients simple ... a client-server architecture has enabled the Jabber community to force most of the complexity onto servers and components, thus keeping clients relatively simple. This principle has served the Jabber community well since the very beginning, and forms an important basis for further innovation.

Posted on 2006-04-17 at 12:57. File under jabber.

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Off the Wagon

Personal productivity redux.

I admit it: I've lapsed. In particular, my email inbox is no longer clear. Too much of travelling and catching up, not enough of following my personal productivity regimen. It's time to get back on track...

Posted on 2006-04-17 at 11:47. File under personal.

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2006-04-16

Hypomania

The search continues.

I skimmed over John D. Gartner's book The Hypomanic Edge last night but came away disappointed. The bulk of the book consists in character studies of prominent American entrepreneurs (Andrew Carnegie and the like), but very little empirical or historical evidence is brought to bear in support of Gartner's thesis that America is a crazy nation. So the search for understanding America continues. Aside from the usual Tocqueville, here are some books that Gartner references which might be of interest:

  • Baritz, City on a Hill
  • Brooks, On Paradise Drive
  • Jaspers, Restless Nation
  • Kulikoff, From British Peasants to Colonial American Farmers
  • Ledeen, Tocqueville on American Character
  • Martin, Profits in the Promised Land
  • Wilkinson, The Pursuit of American Character

It always gets back to Tocqueville, doesn't it? Whitehead once said that the history of philosophy is a series of footnotes to Plato; it sometimes seems that the history of trying to understand America is a series of footnotes to Tocqueville.

Posted on 2006-04-16 at 20:19. File under society.

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2006-04-13

Rending Fences

Some thoughts on immigration.

I've deliberately stayed quiet about the recent controversy over American immigration policy (mainly emigration from Mexico to America), but here are a few thoughts:

  1. America is a nation of immigrants, built on the foundation made by its original settlers (yes, there is a difference between settlers and immigrants). Immigration has always been good for America, making it a more dynamic, vibrant civilization. I see no reason to think that continued immigration will be a bad thing.

  2. The long border between Mexico and America is just about the only place in the world where the Anglosphere directly interfaces with another culture (the only comparable area of the world is probably the Irish Sea, but Ireland is essentially Anglospheric compared to Mexico, which is a staunch member of the Hispanosphere). This is in contrast to Anglospheric nations such as Great Britain (an island), Australia (a continent), and Canada (bordering only America). We would expect trouble along such an interface, and that's what we've got.

  3. When border enforcement was much more lax and a guest worker program was in place (e.g., in the 1950s and 1960s), people went back and forth as they pleased, often several times a year. More strict enforcement made it much harder to get in, but also much harder to go back, paradoxically resulting in more illegal immigration, not less.

  4. Some Americans resent the fact that immigrants can come into America and sponge off the welfare system (whether they do so in greater numbers than existing citizens is an open question). Here's a solution: get rid of the welfare state and find localized, voluntary solutions to social problems (not centralized, bureaucratic programs instituted and controlled from the District of Columbia).

  5. All the racist claims that Mexicans have lower IQs, will never assimilate, are too different (etc.) were made against the Irish, Italians, Slavs, Chinese, and so on throughout American history. Yet all those groups assimilated just fine. The same is happening for second-, third-, and fourth-generation Mexican-Americans, who overwhelmingly speak English rather than Spanish, are starting lots of small businesses, etc.

  6. One obvious solution to illegal immigration is this: make legal immigration easier. But couple that with a strong commitment to assimilation, assimilation, and more assimilation (welcome to America, you will be assimilated!). English immersion in the schools, English only for governance and business, and a dedication to accepting everyone as Americans (no hyphenation, please) if they abide by American (really Anglospheric) norms and cultural assumptions such as open debate, high trust, common law, respect for the individual, personal responsibility, and economic flexibility.

  7. The root cause of the Mexican exodus to America is not how attractive it is to live in America, but how unattractive it is to live in Mexico. After the Iron Curtain fell, many countries in central and eastern Europe had net out-migration, but that was perceived as a bad thing. Why would you want the people (especially the young people) of your country to think that life is way better somewhere else? The only long-term solution is to make Mexico a good place to live and work, not the hotbed of corruption it is now. Unfortunately that will require a kind of cultural imperialism that is much out of fashion these days, since in essence it would require that Mexico ditch the Hispanosphere for the Anglosphere, or at least develop a kind of hybrid culture with a higher radius of trust, stronger rule of law, more open competition, a more flexible economy, and all the rest. This would give new meaning to the phrase Hispanamerica is coming. It would also present quite a challenge to both Mexico and America. But in the long run it would be much more beneficial to America than, say, the damn war in Iraq.

Posted on 2006-04-13 at 15:39. File under politics.

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Nashville Bound

Yet another conference.

I'm heading to Nashville today to give a talk tomorrow at the VoIPossibilities conference. Unfortunately I don't think I'll have time to check out any hot bluegrass. Maybe next time...

Posted on 2006-04-13 at 11:31. File under personal.

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2006-04-11

Understanding America

Consequences of the principle of first effective settlement.

I have this working theory about America: it's essentially a nation full of crazy people. The basic notion is a corollary of the principle of first effective settlement -- i.e., the fundamental character of a place is set by those who settle it. Now, who settled America? For the most part, crazy Englishmen. The latter part ties America to the Anglosphere. But it was the crazy ones who got on a creaky boat for a two-month voyage across the stormy Atlantic (with a 20% or greater chance of death) only to be plunked down in a howling wilderness with none of the comforts of home. Those crazy settlers started to carve out a new civilization, and lots of crazy immigrants joined them -- originally from England, Scotland, and Wales, but then also from Holland and France and Germany and Ireland and Italy and China and now the entire world.

I've been meaning to write up this idea at greater length, but it seems that John D. Gartner has beaten me to it. I'll be reading his book soon.

Posted on 2006-04-11 at 22:07. File under society.

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There Is No Such Thing As Europe

Questioning assumptions.

While in London recently I had dinner with Helen Szamuely, my co-blogger at Albion's Seedlings. In the comments here, Helen introduces an idea she mentioned to me in person: "there is no such thing as Europe." (As noted by Jim Bennett, the point is also made by Daniel Johnson in his most recent Letter from London: "The European Union is not only more diverse but also more divided than ever.")

What does it mean that there is no such thing as Europe? We Americans tend to think of Europe as this monolithic entity lurking across the ocean -- we used to call it the Old World. But despite the existence of a European "union" (looking less united all the time), Europe has no enduring social reality. You can't have a functioning democracy without a demos, and there is no single demos (people) in Europe -- there are Poles and Spaniards and Swedes and Italians and English and Germans and all the rest. Can you envision a politician running for President of Europe -- say, an Austrian campaigning in Portugal and Greece and Ireland and France and the Netherlands and the Czech Republic? The very idea is risible.

It is possible for many peoples or at least language communities to function together if they have a robust tradition of federalism -- the Swiss have showed that for centuries. But the EU is not the Helvetian Confederation -- it is a strongly centralized state-in-the-making, but lacking a foundation in the social reality of a people having common cultural, legal, and social assumptions. The EU is a grand experiment in nation-building, an attempt by the ruling elites of its member nations to foist their centralized, bureaucratic, one-size-fits-all decision-making on the many peoples who inhabit the European continent. I fear the consequences when those peoples realize that they've been had.

UPDATE: Helen has posted her own thoughts on the topic.

Posted on 2006-04-11 at 21:47. File under society.

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2006-04-05

Jitneys, Anyone?

On the further dangers of centralization.

So the local bus drivers are on strike here in Denver (word has it they want wages on par with their colleagues in New York). Which got me to thinking: in just about any other profession, unhappy workers at one company would simply quit and go work for somebody else. The problem is, there is no "somebody else" in the public transport business, because it's a local monopoly. Here's a better way: take all the huge public buses off the streets and simply let private vans and other jitney services stop at the existing bus stops (or build new ones if they want). Let a thousand entrepreneurs compete for the rider's dollar and determine the best routes, best schedules, and best prices. Open competition: what a concept!

Posted on 2006-04-05 at 21:41. File under politics.

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AstJab

Jingle + Asterisk = Mind-Boggling.

Dave Greenfield has posted some fascinating observations about the forthcoming integration between Jingle and Asterisk. This is going to be big!

Posted on 2006-04-05 at 13:21. File under jabber.

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2006-04-04

Freenet

More conceptual convergence.

The folks at Freenet have released 0.7 alpha. From their release we find out that:

Freenet 0.7 represents a major new approach to peer-to-peer network design. To protect the network, and the user's anonymity, Freenet users will now have the ability to connect directly to other people that they know and trust, together forming a "global darknet" making it extremely difficult for any third party, whether a government or another powerful organisation, to determine that a user is participating in Freenet, let alone what they are doing with it.

And:

The new Freenet employs a simpler and more flexible routing model than previous versions, which in the future may allow diverse applications ranging from efficient search, to near-real time instant messaging and chat between anonymous participants.

So it seems that Freenet has absorbed the meme of "the buddy list is the center of the universe" (connect only to those you know and trust) and are looking into IM as well. Interesting...

Posted on 2006-04-04 at 16:25. File under technology.

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Going Mobile

The implications of ubiquitous wireless networking.

I spoke at a telco-heavy event last week. Really I do not see what their future is, other than to provide fat pipes. Once WiFi (or WiMAX) is prevalent in the cities and people start using IP phones (Skype has announced one and rumors are that Apple is readying one for the market), the combination of fast 'net access and open standards will drive innovation to really take off at the edges in radical new ways. And the telcos are not known for innovation, so they will, I think, more and more be left behind.

Another challenging idea: the average time to pay off investments in the older generation of switching equipment was 30 years (according to one speaker at the conference I attended). The time to payoff is now 3 to 5 years but technology generations (read: software-driven innovations) are on the order of 18 months, and accelerating. So anyone who is deploying expensive infrastructure and expecting to reap the profits from their investments is deluded. What happens when technology generations occur every 6 months or less? (Yes, the time is coming.) Forget about all that centralized telco stuff -- only small, decentralized technologies will thrive.

Final thought: once IP phones take off, presence will indeed become the new dial tone (why call someone if they're not available?). So the buddy list will become the center of the universe, even more than it is today.

May you live in interesting times. :-)

Posted on 2006-04-04 at 15:09. File under technology.

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Jingling Along

More news on Jabber VoIP.

The folks at FreeSwitch have released a cross-platform code library for Jingle named libDingaLing. Cool beans!

But does it support the newest Jingle transport? ;-)

Posted on 2006-04-04 at 12:01. File under jabber.

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2006-04-01

Paying Respects

Honoring Chris Tame.

I spent today attending the funeral of Chris Tame. I never met Chris in person -- we corresponded only by email over the years. He re-published several of my essays at the Libertarian Alliance and encouraged me to write several new ones especially for LA, which I did in 2004 (Ayn Rand and American Culture and Ayn Rand and the Ascent of Man). I had always wanted to meet Chris if I ever got to London. This week I got to London but Chris was gone. May he rest in peace.

Posted on 2006-04-01 at 15:13. File under personal.

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identity...

Peter Saint-Andre

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