Archive for July, 2010
Forget iPhone 4, just make my 3G iPhone work again!
by sky on Jul.30, 2010, under Mobile devices, Technology and geeky stuff
I made the mistake of letting my 3G iPhone go ahead and automatically upgrade to IOS 4 (the new version of the iPhone operating system) the day it was released.
What a mistake that was! But how could I have known in advance? I always upgrade my iPhone right away, hoping that it will do more and funner things.
More and funner I’m up for, but slower I was not expecting!
Now when the phone rings (if it rings at all), and I go to slide the green button on the screen to answer the call, it’s rare that the button even responds to my touch, let alone react fast enough to actually answer the call. The phone has turned into one little spinning beachball of death[1] with this software upgrade. [The suggested fix is in the last paragraphs of this article, in case you want to jump ahead.]
This video was so close to my own experience I howled with laughter:
Making products obsolete used to be a matter of adding new features to new physical products until you just felt you had to upgrade to the newest phone or computer, but now… (continue reading…)
HTML5 and geo-location
by sky on Jul.19, 2010, under Cyber-nomads, Mobile devices, Mobile issues, Our networked world, Software and online tools
I was reading an InfoWorld article on the benefits and features of HTML version 5, which isn’t a formal standard yet, but many elements of which are already incorporated into browsers.
Media: A major benefit for all of us will be that embedding media (videos particularly) will become standardized and greatly simplified, so the web developer won’t have to worry so much about plug-ins, players and compatibility.
Geo-location: But more fun perhaps than that, there is a geo-location feature built into HTML5, and it’s available today on some browsers (Chrome, Safari, Firefox). In this article Dive into HTML5 — You are here (and so is everybody else), there’s a cookbook for creating a web page that locates you and displays a Google map centered on your coordinates. My page will figure out where you are located and display the Google map — but only if you have an HTML5-compliant browser, sorry. Mobile browsers are particularly good for this because they know your location quite precisely.
I took an hour this morning to build the page, and subject to some debugging (and figuring out that the whole process is asynchronous), I had it working. Clearly if you’re at a wired location, Google is using your IP address and maybe some routing information to locate “approximately” where you are, but on my iPhone it gets much closer to the real location. I used the “You are here…” article, plus some advice from Google code.
Volunteers are donors and investors
by sky on Jul.16, 2010, under Making organizations work, Organizations and Sociology, Social Entrepreneurs
{File under Pitfalls of Startup Organizations…}
Every unpaid volunteer; every pro-bono professional; everyone working on some project without pay; all of them are investing in their particular futures. This is particularly true for nonprofit startups.
And I mean to use specifically that word—investing—this means they are giving of their talent and time with some hope or expectation that things will work out in a particular (and good) way in the future. They have some vision of what they are working toward. A truth that so few nonprofit CEOs understand is that volunteers are actually donors and they deserve the same respectful treatment as donors. (continue reading…)
Private armies in cyberspace? A kill switch on the Internet?
by sky on Jul.14, 2010, under CyberSpark, Our networked world, Security
The government of the USA was constituted “to provide for the common defense” among other things.[1] Unfortunately the line between public responsibility and private responsibility for defense in cyberspace could be rather blurry.
Clearly when there is warfare in the physical world the combatants are also likely to utilize cyber tactics of some sort, even if only for informational or propaganda purposes, but more likely as powerful tactics to take down their target’s ability to respond quickly or in a focused manner. Because governments aren’t really equipped to handle these types of attacks, which would include attacks against private infrastructure, not just government systems, they’d have to rely on private companies, individuals and groups — essentially private armies — to deflect or thwart any attack. (continue reading…)
I hope you’ll enjoy this mix of topics stemming from my ongoing experiences in the world of online communication. Oh, and sometimes the inspiration comes from face-to-face communications too. Many were sparked by my work as Chief Technology Officer of 