Will Steger and Global Warming 101

Will
Was at a fundraiser this afternoon and evening for the Will Steger Foundation and to learn more about some of the foundation’s efforts like GlobalWarming101 while also breaking out my checkbook to help fund it.

Wikipedia says that this amazing explorer "...joins Amelia Earhart, Robert Peary, Roald Amundsen and Jacques-Yves Cousteau in receiving the National Geographic Society‘s John Oliver La Gorce Medal
for "accomplishments in geographic exploration, in the sciences, and
for public service to advance international understanding" in 1995.
"

Being a Minnesota boy myself with a love for this State and especially the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and my beloved, two feet down in water level Lake Superior‘s north shore, I’ve long admired Steger and his exploratory path in life. This admiration was always tinged with thoughts like, "Geez it’s damn cold in those places…how can he do that?" when reading up on his latest adventure.

It’s now become fashionable to be "green" and care about global warming but only someone like Steger — who truly loves these places, the earth in general as well as the people and animals out of sight of most of us who are already impacted by it — can forget about fashion and just charge ahead to raise awareness.

This man isn’t the most eloquent, charismatic speaker nor does he seem comfortable pitching or marketing himself, but his drive to carry the message outweighs his reticence. This is a message that the world is finally ready for and I can’t think of anyone better to be the bearer of it. He’s focusing on delivering it to everyone regardless of political, ethnic, religious or corporate affiliation. We all live here on this planet and Steger emphasized tonight how we’re in this together which is why he, a progressive, is also keen on carrying the message to conservatives. He’s seen first hand the warming of our world, has the street cred to be completely credible and I can’t think of anyone in a better position to keep the fashionable focused on global warming.

Willadvs

Where’s the outrage?

Gun_constitution

I’ll bet that if the FBI went through your neighborhood and community house-by-house conducting searches without warrants, you’d be the first one to scream bloody murder and call the newspaper, your elected representatives and tell everyone you know how you’d been violated.

Further, I’ll submit that if you discovered that some miscellaneous US intelligence agency opened all your mail while it was at the post office, scanned it and stored it, you’d raise holy hell.

Lastly, imagine driving home after work and instead of the legally sanctioned random highway stops, your State Patrol stopped and searched every single car? I’ll bet you’d go ballistic as would everyone else on that highway and it would be a major incident covered nationally.

Then why aren’t people outraged over something that is actually happening and is on a scale bigger than any of those three hypothetical examples? The revelation that the National Security Agency is doing exactly that and domestically (which they’ve always been mandated not to do) allegedly on all internet traffic without anyone’s approval or oversight is deeply troubling, but I’m wondering why people aren’t in the streets protesting and filled with rage.

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Newtek and the Video Toaster

Had a conversation with a buddy about the Video Toaster and the shrink-wrapped copy of the VHS marketing video I still own called “NewTek Revolution.” This friend sent me a link to this video below which I haven’t watched for at least ten years. Underneath the video is an original post from 2005 I did that I wanted to repost since this conversation brought back a lot of fond memories made more acute in today’s time of user generated content, video delivered everywhere on the ‘net, and how startling it is that the tools have changed so dramatically in such a short time.



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Why did Dave Winer delete my comments?

Davewhiner
Yesterday, Dave Winer did this post about why he’s not happy with Apple’s latest operating system, Mac OS X Leopard. Since I’ve been reading Dave for several years — and mostly been a silent cheerleader of his efforts, an admirer of his perspectives, while sometimes puzzled by his musings — atypical for me I left a comment under this post.

Dave deleted it.

The gist of my comment which I didn’t save — since I’m one of the most transparent, authentic, glass-is-51%-full optimists and probably least-deleted commenter out there — was to mention that I’d successfully upgraded a whole bunch of Mac’s without a problem. I then mentioned how curious I was that a guy 10x more technical than I am seems to wrestle so mightily with what I (a tiny propeller-on-my-beanie guy) find quite straightforward.

Moments ago I was doing my usual end-of-the-day RSS reading and saw another Scripting News post referencing yesterday’s. Peeking at yesterday’s (under which I had commented) I noticed the deletion so left another comment that asked Dave, “Why did you delete my comment from yesterday?

Dave deleted that comment too.

Now wait just a minute Winer. Is this how you expect blog discourse to flow? Why have comments if you’re just going to delete them? If you and I were face-to-face having a conversation, whenever it was my turn to talk would it be OK to put your hands over your ears and shout “LA-LA-LA-LA”?  In effect that’s what you’re doing by deleting comments like the incredibly benign ones I left.

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Will US Technology Win the “War”?

Packagedrop
This is a great example of amazing technology that — among other things — could enable sensors to be dropped all over a war zone with pinpoint accuracy!  Seems that, “A ten-person Arizona based start-up has claimed victory in the annual US Army precision airdrop competition, claiming to have hurled disguised spy sensors from a plane flying at 10,000 feet. The “five pound fake rocks” landed “within ten, seven and three metres” of their intended touchdown points more than two miles away.

STARA’s main technology is small, custom-built autonomous guided parachutes which can be dropped from a wide variety of military aircraft to deliver smallish payloads with great accuracy. Their packages can be released from existing flare or chaff dispensers, dropped from drone aircraft, or simply “hand tossed” from the ramp of a C-130 transport to fly themselves down using a mixture of satnav and inertial guidance.

Reading this article over lunch today got me to thinking: with technology like we have, why is the US so seemingly challenged in rooting out and fighting so-called “terrorists?”  The answer is that the “war” isn’t about terrorism, spreading freedom and democracy or ensuring we have the latest technology (since we could crush any country on earth now). It’s about the oil that’s feeding our economy which is a resource you’re apparently going to be paying $4 per gallon of gasoline for by next summer and is one that would grind our economy (and the world’s) to a halt if materially disrupted.

According to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), “Iraq holds more than 112 billion barrels of oil – the world’s second largest proven reserves. Iraq also contains 110 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, and is a focal point for regional and international security issues.

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Holy Schnikey! The Scale of the Open Handset Alliance

Oha
Google’s announcement of the Open Handset Alliance made my jaw drop due to the size, scope and scale of this undertaking. Coordinating and orchestrating something of this magnitude is breathtaking and only someone with the market cap and influence of a Google could pull this off.

A new, open source platform was announced: “Androidâ„¢ will deliver a complete set of software for mobile devices: an operating system, middleware and key mobile applications. On November 12, we will release an early look at the Android Software Development Kit (SDK) to allow developers to build rich mobile applications.

Built on the Linux kernel, it is a complete mobile phone software stack. It includes everything a manufacturer or operator needs to build a mobile phone. Android will be made available as open source via the Apache v2 license which means that yes, it isn’t controlled by any single company and all players have to contribute back into the code base. There will be complete documentation and a software developer’s kit available on November 12th.

Here’s the game-changer to this anouncement — besides the obvious shared platform upon which multiple mobile phone providers can build — and why I’m so enthused by this announcement: in the same way that Apple has built the incredible value-added Mac OS X atop BSD unix and the Mach kernel, this provides the mobile telephony marketplace with the same opportunity to innovate atop Android. (From this Wikipedia article: The Apache License is a free software license authored by the Apache Software Foundation (ASF). The Apache License requires preservation of the copyright notice and disclaimer, but it allows use of the source code for the development of both free/open source and proprietary/closed source software.)

Here’s what’s curious to me about today’s announcement:

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Internet TV Studio & a Free, Live, New Media Event

Ntv_mog
Mogulus just announced to their 15,000 beta testers that they were adding some new features (a “grid” to watch multiple channels at once) but that is not why I’m posting about them. Instead, it’s that you, yes you, can start and run your own TV channel and Mogulus is your very own TV Studio online.

This startup is also going to be broadcasting the NewTeeVee Live event on November 14th for free and using it as a pre-launch (end of November is launch) proving ground for what they’re offering.

Why is this a big deal and why should you care?

One reason is that you’ll be able to “attend” the NewTeeVee Live event as stated on their blog, “For those of you who can’t make it, the conference will be broadcast live by Mogulus, who prepared the promo below to give you a flavor of what’s to come. Joyce Kim of The GigaOM Show will be hosting the Mogulus broadcast with live hallway interviews.” More here.

Besides free attendance to this event, it also means that you have an atypically intriguing method of delivering high value video content with Mogulus and are able to connect and switch live to multiple, geographically disbursed people (who can be “talent” or content experts on webcams), switch to video feeds from rooms or events with a live television-like production method, and then run recorded videos 24/7 afterwards. The Mogulus player — though skinned with what I think is their default butt-ugly gray or even their special NewTeeVee orange like you see above — can be embedded anywhere (and I hope they provide different skins upon launch!).

Take a peek at the Mogulus video after the jump and watch the whole thing as you’ll get to the good stuff how Mogulus works, etc.) about halfway through.

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