I am increasingly concerned about the fragility of the Internet. With our data living more and more in the cloud, we are vulnerable when networks fail. Without email, without the documents I’m writing or editing, I have to sit out any network blackout that takes place. This happens to me more often than I’d like – probably a couple of times a month in my home office. I’m on Comcast cable for my connectivity, and though I frequently get 10 megabits/second of bandwidth, and almost always have at least 1.5 mbs, there are times when it gets so unreliable it might as well not be there, and then there are times when it just stops working for a couple of hours. [Read more…]
I’m Getting Ahead of Spam. Never thought it possible!
I’m actually finding that I’m getting ahead of my incoming spam load. I get easily 800+ a day at intake end of my inbox. That is reduced by at least 50% by custom rules that I’ve added to my Kerio mailserver. (These rules have to be updated daily with new phrases, but they are quite effective.) And Kerio mailserver has additional behaviors that it uses to reduce spam – together they either bounce or tag most of the incoming spam.
Then another 50% of those that remain are tagged as spam by SpamAssassin (a server-based solution). And finally, each morning I go to webmail and look at incoming messages there, tagging the obvious spam and deleting it, before I have Entourage [Microsoft Office] pull my mail down to the computer. The personal webmail examination step requires 30 minutes of my time every morning, because I’ve gotta look at every title, but while I’m doing it, SpamAssassin is learning how to recognize today’s spammer tricks.
When Entourage picks it up, it uses SpamSieve (a Mac program that uses Bayesian filtering) to additionally filter the mail, and that catches almost everything else. I probably have to delete another 25 by hand from my inbox during the course of the day, and SpamSieve “learns” how to filter those out for tomorrow.
Interestingly, I miss the spam. The number of actual messages that I’m left with in my inbox to really read is maybe 50 a day. I still triage and only answer those that are ultra important right away, and my average turnaround time to respond is probably 24 to 48 hours for everything else. But I’m feeling like this filtering is finally effective for me.
Wireless data in London #TG2009
I’ve been informed that the Traveling Geeks will be provided with British Telecommunications [BT] OpenZone wireless connections while we’re in London in July. From what I read, BT has been building out these services for a couple of years now, and they prominently feature “outdoor” public access to wi-fi. Central London has some number of indoor hotspots and outdoor coverage areas. When I get there I’ll know better how this works in practice.
In the US, several cities have experimented with open or public wi-fi access. [Read more…]
Hey! We already thought of that!
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| Doug Engelbart in 1968 |
Once or twice a week I’m in a meeting, someone blurts out their fantastic new idea, and I have to bite my tongue instead of saying “hey, we thought of that years ago!”
If you’re over 30 you’re probably beginning to have that thought yourself once in a while. My favorite is when someone pops up in a meeting and says “Hey, I had this great new idea that we should use the web [or phones, or whatever] for online learning.”
When I tell them that someone first did this in 1954, why do they get so bent out of shape? (And then ignore the comment and go right back to claiming the idea as their own…) [Read more…]
A National Peace Academy
In the newsletter of The Dalai Lama Foundation for March, 2009, we announced that the second stage of a process leading to the founding of a U.S. National Peace Academy had been concluded at Case Western Reserve University. At this 3-day event, in a process called appreciative inquiry, a group of over 170 people explored the dimensions of the potential academy, and formed working groups that will bring this dream into reality.
Dot Maver and Mike Abkin visited the Foundation shortly thereafter, and they described, on camera, the Academy and some of the aspects of its founding. We have integrated these interviews into our Many Paths to Peace learning modules at The Dalai Lama Foundation’s online Learning Zone. [View the interviews online. If you’re not registered for the Learning Zone, you can click guest when asked to log in.] [Read more…]
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