Saturday, March 19, 2011

Last post

This is the end of the blog. The class is over and my days as a high priced blogger are over. I thank all three of my followers. I hope you enjoyed my ramblings. I am off to other adventures.

Robert

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Moon base by 2028

The moon has been hanging over our heads since before anyone can remember. It is there taunting us, wanting us to dream. As for going and living on the moon. That has also been a dream of those that love science, those that want to explore and maybe even those that want to just get away. As for me, I am amazed on how little energy this country has to exploring. We are so focused on just living that we refuse to dream of the possibilities. This is at odd with our current state of affairs. At no time in history have people had it so very good. Today, our definition of poor are those that cannot afford cable TV, internet, and designer shoes.

Yet, today our spirit to explore the vast beyond is so very tempered. In most conversations about space travel or moon bases, people retort that it is a waste of money. We should spend that money on feeding the poor or educating the children. We should not be explores for economical reasons. As a person that is not hungry, cold, or wet I can comfortably disagree with such logic. I can reflect back on all the things that exploration brought to humanity. From the technology that powers today's society to the stories that entertain us our evenings. It would seem that exploration should be a passion of our species.

Beyond the economical reasons there are also political issues that get in way of such great ideals. If one party wants space travel it becomes a drum that the opposing party will beat on how those that fund such activities are wasting tax money. It does not matter which of the two parties has the vision for a moon base the opposing party will use the idea as against them. It is political.

The technology promise book forecast a permanent moon base by 2028. Maybe it is possible. But maybe not in our current economic times. I would love to see this change. How neat would it be if this could spark the scientist in all of us. Maybe it create a new generation of kids that dream of science, exploration, and engineering. This would be a vast departure from our dreams today. We dream of being rich but without direction. We dream of be famous but without purpose. Can this change? Yes, I believe so, but I don't know how.

Robert

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Animoto Video - Natural disasters

When I grew up cell phones did not exist. Yet we lived. Today how we function depends on cell phones. If the service does not exist people are at risk. It is not that we are more fragile. Or that we got soft. But instead it is that we have changed our behaviors to rely on that little device hanging on hips for safety, security, and piece of mind. However, cellular networks are not designed to be able to withstand a natural disaster. This has been clearly document after hurricane Katrina. Now there are thousands of smaller disasters that interrupt communication services. While scale is small the impacts are huge.

Robert

Create your own video slideshow at animoto.com.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Podcast episode 1 or 1

Attached is a link to the first podcast on disaster in a series of one.  This podcast is being cross posted on my Disaster Blog.  All in the name of getting better Google rankings.

Podcast Episode 1 of 1

The loss of our privacy



The trend that I selected was predicted in 2007 in World Trends and Forecast.  This prediction has a little age behind it.  I find it interesting to look at some trends that have started to show progress in become true.  Maybe I am still suffering for the sting of not having flying cars, by 1990.  In 2007 it was predicted that the development of wireless communication would challenge our existing notions of privacy.  Our privacy will slowly disappear.  If it disappears slowly enough we may not even care.  What is the impact to our privacy when the cost of a camera is just a few dollars, the size is as smalls an eraser and there are hundreds of millions or billions of them in circulation?  What is the impact on our privacy when everybody is carrying a GPS receiver that is tied to the Internet?  What is the impact to our privacy when we pay all our bills, perform all correspondence, and view all our entertainment on the internet?  What is the impact when all of our medical records, car records, and school records are connected into the internet?  What is the impact with the cost of a terabyte is less than $100.  What is the impact when face recognition software is near perfect?  What is the impact when you can do picture content search?  Answering any one of these questions starts to paint a picture of the impact on our privacy; the answer to all of these questions paints a picture where privacy may not exist.    Today is not that we cannot gather much of this information.  What keeps our privacy is the fact we are part of a huge crowd.  We just cannot wade through all of it to paint a complete picture of an individual. It is too fragmented on different incompatible systems.  Overtime search engines will get better, integration between systems will improve, and tools to combine all of the pieces will start to emerge.  When that occurs a complete profile on an individual will be simple.
There are forces that both support and derail our privacy.  On the technology front greater computing power, larger and cheaper storage, and greater interconnection of systems will help enable systems to piece together all of your information into a single profile.  You add this together with improvements in face recognition, side-channel tracking, cookie tracking, government systems, security systems, and all the rest of the devices that watch you it seems that shortly there will be algorithms that will be able to create these individual profiles.  A second force that drives the technology forward to remove your privacy is economic.  There are many companies that are working to build profiles on you.  Some of these companies plan and will do it in a way to help you.  Their motivations are good and honest.  They want to be able to predict what music you want to listen to or what shows to watch on NetFlix.  They want to create an accurate credit score.  However, as the technology gets built it will be used for other purposes.  The bad people will get the same technology.  It will be used for bad purposes.  Today, I wonder how much information a person sitting at a desk at Verizon can gather about an individual.  Unless the usage is encrypted, I would expect they could trap every IP packet the person sends both via their ISP landline and their wireless IP connection. 
There are also forces attempting to protect an individual’s privacy.  To start with there are technology forces that are starting to gain ground.  A group of people attempting to push companies to encrypt their internet connect published an incredibility easy FireFox plug in that allows anyone to highjack user names, password, and sessions.  The plugin is called Fire Sheep.  24 hours after the launch of the plugin there were over 100,000 downloads.  I don’t know what the total number of download is but it may be in the millions.  There has been some positive movement.  The plugin was available for download in October 2010 and on January 27th 2011 Facebook announced that they will start using HTTPS, an encrypted page interface.  This really brings into point two forces that are attempting to slow or protect a person’s privacy.  There is a social force of people working to protect a person’s privacy.  There is also a technical force that is helping those that want to protect their privacy.  The third force is again economical.  It seems the economical force always plays both sides of a controversy.  Companies will and are working to help people protect their privacy.  However, it always seems that those helping to protect privacy are behind those that are attempting erode privacy.  However, the force is there.

Protecting privacy will become a growing challenge due to new technologies. A wireless device in your shoes to record your miles while jogging could be turned into a stalker’s handy tracking device. And cameras have become small enough to be disguised as shirt buttons to invade people’s privacy on the sly. Engineers are scrambling to counter that trend with privacy protection devices, such as a light-absorbing capacitor that blocks the signals of digital cameras. — World Trends & Forecasts, May-June 2007, pp. 12, 13


Thursday, February 17, 2011

Mountain Project - Web 2.0

I have stated in a previous post, I use a number of web 2.0 tools. The one that I will highlight in this post is a site call www.mountainproject.com. The purpose of Mountainproject is to be a social community of rock climbers that share information on climbing areas, routes, and conditions. It also has a few forums for talking about general climbing topics. From what I understand of the site, there are four guys that act as the main system administrator. They do the programming, feature improvements, and some content. It is not their full time job, but instead a hobby. There are 62 mountain administrators. They own specific areas, these can be states or countries. Their role is to police, add content, and organize the their area. They don't get paid. It is just a contribution to the community. These people change every know and then but I am surprised at how long they stay in the role. Many have been their since 2002 when the site started. After that there are thousands of individual contributors. I am one of them. I use the site to get information on climbing areas, routes, conditions, and to meet people. In addition I also contribute content. I have been a member for the past 1 1/2 years. In that time I have contributed 317 items to the site. Some are simple like a comment on a site about conditions or the route. Others are much more involved. I have developed 28 route pages, 8 areas, and added 67 pictures that document the routes. When I add a picture that documents that route I take picture in a specific fashion that allows others to understand the route. I then move it into PhotoShop and add important pieces of information to the picture. I would say each picture takes me 1 hour. In total have probably put 100+ hours into the site development. Here is a link to a page that includes both what I climbed and what I added to the site, link. To encourage people to add content the site provides people points. You don't get anything for the points, just a ranking. Last year I was ranked 493. That is low. It means a lot more people are putting up a lot more information. I know a few of these people. They put in 10 hours a week or more adding content. It is a way to help be part of the community. Here is a picture of a route area that I create. This one is just outside of Barcelona Spain. In an area called Montserrate.


As with all of my Web 2.0 organization it also has a real life aspect. I don't just do this in cyber world. I go out and climb. I meet others that climb. I talk about what I have logged, and we help each other place content. It is using the web to help "real life" not replace it. I see this as an important piece of Web 2.0 for the vast majority of society. I realize that there are people that enjoy and will stay only in a internet world. They will have Facebook friends that they never meet, or different personalities on websites that never see "real life", but for a lot of people the value of Web 2.0 is to build a community that is shared between "real life" and the internet. The internet becomes a tool to organization, communicate, and stay in touch.

Robert

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Disaster tolerant nationwide wireless network

Outline for Social Technical Plan – Disaster tolerant nationwide wireless network
The United States needs a wireless communication network that can support the needs of its citizens during a time disaster. Today people rely on wireless communication for both safety and security. There is an expectation that they can dial 911 when they need help. However, the need for communication goes much farther than just the ability to dial 911. We use this technology to reach out to others for security. It can be just a quick word of assurance from the baby sitter, or the ability to check on weather before we head out. We rely on wireless communication to keep us safe. This nation needs a wireless communication network that citizen can count on during a time of personal or natural disaster.
Scope - Elements of the social technical plan
• Standards for wireless design that enable fault tolerance
• MANET – Mobile Adhoc Networks
• Wireless priority Service (WPS)
• Cellular Mobile Alert System (CMAS)
• Self Optimizing and Self Organization Networks (SON)
• E911 to support text messaging and data application in addition to voice
• A federal 911 center to handle and support something
• Aggregation of 911 centers from local PSAP to at least statewide centers
Elements that support a disaster tolerant nationwide wireless network
• Social changes where people are more and more relying on these services
• Ethical changes in the expectation of computer systems
o In the past computer and wireless systems have been given a pass on the social ethical requirements of their effectiveness. Ie we don’t treat the development of Twitter the same way we treat the design of a bridge.
• Technical advancements are making the possibilities more probable and cost effective
• Global changes – With the introduction of LTE the world will be on a single communication protocol.
• Side advancements of other technologies – Other more commercially viable technologies will aid in the objective listed above. These objective will get support from other activities.
• Legal – Over time it can be expected that laws will be passed that will start mandating central levels of disaster tolerance
o Katrina order was one example, though it got repealed
 U.S. Court of Appeals for District of Columbia. (2009). CTIA v. FCC Katrina Order Vacated No. 07-1475.(FCC 06-119).
Elements that detract from the development of a disaster tolerant nationwide wireless network
• Economic – The development of a fault tolerant wireless network cost.
o Investment in disaster tolerant systems would not be easy to monetize

• Political – Many of the changes needed have political implications.
o Local 911 centers would loss control and funding
o Power for dispatch would be moved from local to state level
o Elements with the industry will resist government mandates

To achieve the objectives above a few steps or actions can help gain traction
• Seek political support from organizations outside the industry
• Raise awareness of the issues
o Show example of when and where it breaks down
o Write case studies on how and why communication broke down
o Raise awareness to the general end user
• Seek support from those that started with the Katrina order
• Sadly when another disaster occurs political favor and support will help
• Seek support from emergency response organizations
• Start small and invest in the concepts within a single organization
In the 10 to 20 years I would fully expect that there will be good movement towards a nationwide disaster tolerant network. There are forces that will help achieve the objectives even without specific action by industry or government. The key will be the speed and level of safety net that is created. For there to be full success these concepts need to be pulled together into a complete plan. Its growth without a plan can and will create inefficiencies plus it will leave hole within the systems development.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Innovative Idea SON

The area I selected to focus on is self healing/optimizing (SON) 4G wireless networks. While not as sexy as flying cars or designer babies the impact to our society is very important. Today’s society has become dependent on wireless communication, most notably cellphones. We use them for casual conversations, business deals, security, and safety. When they are not available we are left without an important tool to communicate. The loss of that tool can and has cost people their lives. The acronym SON has a few common definitions. I have seen it listed as self optimizing, and as self organizing networks. A key concept is that by a series of algorithms a wireless network can reconfigure or make change to account of external conditions. Those external conditions can be major traffic shifts, cell site outages, others today unknown conditions. Today, the idea of a SON system is widely desired. In the LTE specification there is a specification for the development of SON. A few of the vendors are starting to develop simple systems. In all cases, the vendors doing this development are really talking about the end state as in complete self healing, plug and play hardware, and self optimization. However, the actual implementation of these solutions is far closer to the Model T than it is to flying cars. If we were to look at this on the Hype Curve, we are at the peak of inflated expectations. This can spur development. However, there will be a trough of disillusionment and it will be at the point that SON will either gain its legs and move into mass adoption or stall until it receives another push.

SON has a number of supporting forces. First and foremost is that is current has momentum. A lot of great ideas never reach maturity because not enough people believe in those ideas. Momentum is not enough to push the technology into mass adoption. With SON it has a few of the “AL” words that also support it. The first is that there are strong economical reasons for the technology to continue to be developed. In theory SON should reduce the complexity of network design thereby allowing few engineers to design the network. It should also improve resource utilization. A well turned SON system would be able to move resources around based upon need and thereby reduced total cost. There is also global support for SON. SON specifications or maybe API is a better term is part of the LTE specification. LTE will be the 4G technology for >95% of the world. This massive size should aid in the development of SON. There is also a social force that will help in the development of SON. Society is becoming more dependent on wireless communications. It is starting to come to the point that the government is seeing wireless phones as a necessity for the safety and security of its citizens. The need for the wireless networks to be more reliable particularly during natural disasters is becoming more understood. It is possible that if we have another disaster like Katrina we will see further regulation on the wireless industry. It is sad but always true that it take disasters to help people see the need for great safety and security. Society’s use of these devices has changes, and so that technology needs to change to keep up with people expectations.

There are also forces that could slow or stop the development of the technology. The most notably is economical reasons. Today wireless carriers have to expend huge amounts of capital to deploy LTE. Because the costs are so large they are looking for ways to cut expense or at least control expenses. One way can be to invent only in what is absolutely necessary. It is like buying a car. If you feel you cannot afford the cost of the car you start scaling back features. SON is a feature that might never get enough funding to move past its rudimentary beginnings. A second force that can slow or hurt SON is trust of automation. Current vendors understand this well. They are talking about the need to have a system that allows for first recommendation, then semi-automation, and finally full automation. The concept of SON is not new. There are even small examples of it working today in wireless networks. However, there have also been many failures. These historical failures have lead to many people that are hesitant. This fear of turning the keys over to a computer has engineers concerned.
To understand the development of SON a Delphi model would work very well. There are many technical experts that could contribute to an analysis of its success or failure. This would also help in charting a course that would be more holistic and could help push the technology forward. How this is done has its pluses and minuses. Because there currently are not any strong political views on the topic, unlike global warming, I think that this would be a good topic for an open conversation among experts. It would not be possible to get everyone together but instead it would be possible to due the conversation over the internet.



http://business.motorola.com/experiencelte/pdf/LTEOperabilitySONWhitePaper.pdf
http://www.3gpp.org/LTE

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Ted Talks - Mobile phone

http://www.ted.com/talks/jan_chipchase_on_our_mobile_phones.html








Jan Chipchase is a researcher at Nokia mobile phone. He takes a different via of technology in the future. At the start of the presentation he states that he does not know what the future of technology will look like. He does not even seem to care about how technology looks. What he is concerned is how people will behave in the future. This strikes me as an interesting way to look at the future. Can we be more accurate in understanding of technology by not extrapolating the current technology but instead by understanding the behaviors of people in the future? This ties to our textbook the The Fortune Sellers. Sherden (1998) states that a problem with predicting the future is that we base it upon our lenses of present. Can we be more successful in predicting behavior rather than objects (technology)? It is an interesting idea. An important point to note is that Nokia is loosing market share at a very rapid rate. They seem to be behind in the Smartphone race. Apple, Samsung, Motorola and other are gaining market share from Nokia. This is a good reference point, but this can turn fast. Motorola was on its death bed two years ago. Their hit phone the Razor was only news and nothing they had interested customers. People expected Motorola to disappear. Well they jumped on the Android bandwagon and built the Droid. Now Motorola is back in the game.

Jan starts with the question of what do people carry. Clearly we all own a lot of stuff. I still have stuff in a box from the last move I did ten years ago. So with all of this stuff what stuff is important. Well clearly what we carry must be important. It may be the most important. Jan’s research shows that people carry keys, money, and a mobile phone. Key provide them access and transportation. Money allows commercial interaction with other people. It gives them undefined resource. The mobile phone provides the individual with a recovery device. Jan used that term. I don’t know why. I have heard of people describing a mobile phone as a security blanket, or as a person’s lifeline. No matter what the term a mobile phone provides a person with access. That access might be to social network, people, services, or resources. In all cases Jan states that people carry devices that support needs on the bottom rungs of Maslow’s need hierarchy. At this point Jan’s logic makes a jump that I did not connect. There seemed to be a gap or a piece that he did not explain. His presentation jumped from behaviors to the impact mobile phones will have on the future of innovation. He then went to explain how the mobile phone will change the social way ideas and innovation move through society. The first idea is of no surprise. The speed of ideas will increase. This then moves into not only speed what is a big idea or a significant idea will increase. Your idea may be trumpeted or made obsolete before it even gets started because of somebody’s idea. A great example would be what if Facebook moved so fast into society that MySpace never really got started? Or maybe it did? Does this start to change the VHS verse Betamax dilemma? His second prediction is the immediacy of objects. All objects, things, and ideas become immediate. The gestation period for technology decreases. The third prediction is that innovation will occur at the street level and it will come from sources that we will not expect. In 1910 we could expect innovation to come from a limited number of people that were attached to a limited number of organizations. In 2020 the number of people and the location of innovation expands to “the street”. His last prediction is that there are a lot of people that are demanding to be part of this innovation conversation. This cannot be contained in within a countries boundary, an economic class, or an educational cast. People are demanding to have role. Innovation becomes global because of the mobile phone. 

Bringing this conversation back to our AL words. Clearly it is about how the mobile phone is going to bring a global innovation. It also shows the social impact of the mobile phone. There is a cost to carrying something, so those things that we do carry must have value. If universally money, keys, and mobile phone are the most important things to carry than that has meaning. 

Robert

Saturday, January 15, 2011

The future of how we interact with cell phones.

What do you carry?  People carrier what they value and today cell phones are what people value.

Nokia researcher Jan Chipchase's investigation into the ways we interact with technology has led him from the villages of Uganda to the insides of our pockets. He's made some unexpected discoveries along the way.

Animoto Video exercise

A fun little exercise using Animoto video.



Create your own video slideshow at animoto.com.

Friday, January 14, 2011

2010 Horizon assignment

The 2010 Horizon report listed mobile computing as a short term trend that will have major impact on the education community.  Mobile computing via devices like smart phones, netbooks, tablet computers, and specialized devices like the Kindle has or is moving into the mainstream population.  From personal experience over half of all mobile devices sold in November and December 2010 at one wireless company were smart phones.  The rest of the phones sold are either feature phones, a somewhat specialized mobile computer, or a lower cost voice only phone.  This trend is even more aggressive in under developed countries where the mobile device is cheaper for the individual to purchase, less expensive to build the infrastructure, and quicker to deploy.  It is in these under developed countries that mobile computing may not only dominate computing but these areas may never experience desktop PC era.  The power and usability of these devices continues to increase.  The worldwide adoption of 3G data and the usability impact of the iPhone sparked this trend towards mobile computing.  As the industry continues to develop more capabilities in the phone with faster 4G bandwidth and even greater usability with improved interfaces from the Apple, Microsoft, Google, or RIM we can expect more abilities to be developed into mobile computing.
 
Educational organizations are starting to find ways of leveraging this trend to mobile computing.  Teachers are beginning to provide course material such as lesson plans, books, grades, and instructions on mobile devices.  In other cases they have leveraged the social aspect of these devices and developed mobile learning communities.  Still others have gone farther and started to develop specific applications that aid in research.  The Horizon report references Bluegrass community and technical college and how these have replaced chemistry cookbooks with a mobile application.  Harvard has released an iPhone application that about the H1N1 virus.  This application provides the symptoms, shows outbreak zones, and even provides the user with method to prevent the disease.

Mobile computing will have a profound change on the education system.  The calculator is a good example.  What is the value of a college student being able to find the square root of a complex number when a calculator is able to provide the answer in a few key pushes.   By using the calculator the student can focus more time on other more complex aspects of math.  Mobile computing has the potential.  If the world of information is always at our finger tips is it critical that we are able to remember all that information or that we know how to find it.  What year did Columbus sail the ocean blue, well lets Google that.  The technological changes brought by mobile devices will change the education system at its core.
The social aspect of mobile computing creates a number of ethical concerns.  At the most basic level is should teachers be allowed to “friend” their students in Facebook?  Then if do what happens if they see Facebook posts that are questionable in content?  Who gets to determine questionable content?  What if it is legal, but in bad taste?  Who’s taste rules?  Then there is content.  If a learning community posts information on a social website how owns that information.  Traditionally college declared ownership of all information produced by students.  However, when it is public who owns it?  What about the content used?  How does the school ensure that protected content is not used?  There is a lot of questions that will need to be answered in the next ten years.  While the Horizon report indicated that mobile computing is a current trend, the impacts change mobile computing will make in the education community will have a long tail.


Robert

Thursday, January 13, 2011

The TWiT Netcast Network with Leo Laporte

The TWiT Netcast Network with Leo Laporte

If you struggle with password control, LastPass is a possible solution.  Steve Gibson spend an hour analyzing the security of LastPass.  If you prefer to read the report, http://www.grc.com/sn/sn-256.htm.  Check it out.

Robert

Welcome - Class Blog

The purpose of this blog is to meet course requirements.  It will be used to support homework.  Other content will be placed on other blogs.