Currently:
2002-09-02»
At home, at ConJose»
I've spent the last few days at ConJose, the 60th World Science
Fiction Convention. It's like a bank-holiday weekend visiting relatives.
Fandom is clearly closely allied to the people and sub-culture I know, but
with its own rituals and relationships and strange, orthogonal paths. Like
family, it's been by turns exasperating, entertaining, informative,
irritating, and a bit wonderful. So far, the best bits have been listening to
Vernor Vinge's presentation on the Singularity; the panel on
nerdcore sf writing with Cory, Eileen Gunn, James Patrick Kelly and Charlie
Stross; and the Hugo Awards.
The Hugos go to show how witty an awards ceremony can be if most of your
winners are writers. It also has the side effect - given the underappreciated
lot of most of them - of creating almost infinite gratitude in the recipients,
which is much more fun to watch than the usual self-grooming celebs. Neil
Gaman seemed genuinely amazed and moved to win Best Novel. His fine
acceptance speech ended with him trailing off, staring at the statue, and
saying "Fuck.
I got a Hugo.".
The Hugo
list, as I suppose is the plan, is now my reading list for the next few
months. I've just read Ted Chiang's award-winning short story "Hell is the Absence of
God", online at FictionWise. You can download it for free at that link.
It's fantastic - a great short story, sf or not. And if you haven't already
read Charlie Stross' Lobsters (again
free online), you're missing a treat. Vinge's novella "Fast Times at Fairmont
High" is the next on the list.
I was also supposed to be at ConJose to meet a trade mission of publishers
to brief them about the EUCD, but
someone at the DTI
nixed that when they found out I was a journalist. You see? Just days into
accepting the description, and I'm already getting excluded from all the best
parties.
It turned out okay: Seth covered the meeting
better than any journalist would, and instead that evening, I shared a ride
with the man who plays Mr Shake Hands on the American version of Banzai.
2002-08-30»
Tufte on Flash»
I haven't seen this before (except from whence I stole the link, at web-graphics).
It's Edward Tufte on the uses and abuses of Flash.
He likes praystation!
2002-08-28»
Ellisfeed»
Warren Ellis, comic author of the perfectly respectable Transmetropolitan, creator of the
mighty hypercolumnist Spider
Jerusalem, terrifyingly prolific prose writer, and unremitting booster of
the comics economy now has a blog.
As well as one the best domain names you can get these days, damn him.
die puny humans is my newsmine. I
wanted a place to put my research that was accessible, searchable, and,
crucially, not cluttering up my bloody computer. This is it. Means I can get
to my stuff from anywhere with a web connection. Anything I find on my daily
trawls around the web that interests me goes up here.
Via Technovia
More advantages to remote access.»
Tom "plasticbag" Coates just had his machine fixed by a friend,
remotely via ssh for the first time, and does appropriate
double-backflips of delight. Unix is so cool that way.
2002-08-27»
Update to the previous update»
Doc says that
I'm being a bit hard on Apple and Microsoft, both of whom sell similar
applications to the home server idea.
That's true - but they're not very heavily encouraged among home
users. The very fact that I can't work out a way of explaining how to do this
to Sunday Times readers is an indication of that. Running a PHP Webmail app,
or a home iDisk, for instance, really isn't rocket science: it just doesn't
fit either of these companies current business models.
One of the real albatrosses around the symmetrical net for now is that the
principal big server apps for the computers on the edge of the Network is
still file-sharing. Telcos feel they can legitimately complain about
"bandwidth abuse" when it's conducted by suspected copyright criminals. As Doc
says, they'd find it a little harder to moan if it was baby photo album
sharing.
(I'm beginning to see the big hole in both Apple and Microsoft's thinking.
Microsoft treats its customers as though they were businesses. Apple treats
them as though they were consumers. What if we're neither?)
Brief summary of home server responses»
Recap: I've been looking for an all-in, no messing, Webmail app, file
sharer, and Webserver that would run from my home machine - saving me from
forking out on .NET, .mac, and .johncobblyandall services. Lots of people
wrote in with partial suggestions. Nothing leapt out for me, although a
couple of people wrote in to say that if I found what I was looking for,
they'd buy a copy.
Barnaby James wrote to suggest Apache Tomcat with a fistful of java servlets. A nice, and
integrated idea, but I'm not sure it's the point-and-click solution I was
looking for.
Dave, as you'd suspect, suggested
Radio Userland , which
I'd certainly thought of - but it doesn't handle mail. Yet.
Doug Hacker suggested ACI's 4Dmail Mail app.
Azeem
suggested a cheapo NetApp style standalong box, perhaps integrated with your
router. Bit pricey currently, and I think it's the idea of linking directly to
your desktop that makes this appealing. Still, it'd be nice if home routers
let you set up at least a port 80 passthru to one machine on the home
network.
Henry Minsky had a very profound suggestion, which he describes in
detail on his Personal
Virtual Server page. If I can horrifying cripple his thoughts by summary :
your personal computer is boiled down to a portable state image, on which you
can install different applications. You can move this image wherever you
like. Keep it at home, or on a hosting service, or on your laptop or PDA. So
you effectively run your PC and all its services wherever you go.
One thing I did thrash out over a few conversations was that you'd need at
least one external Net service to get this working - DNS, probably with dyndns-like dynamic
updating. Azeem also suggested an outgoing mail relay, but I'm not sure that's
necessary. Direct SMTP connections are hard, true - but sendmail and its
simpler cousins, once configured, is a commodity. And this is a very trivial
sendmail setup.
Does the need for dynamic DNS spoil the principle push of this idea? I'm
not sure. I did originally conceive of this home-based server as a way of
shaking off the shackle of unnecessary Web service subscriptions. With
dynanamic DNS, we're left with a single one-off sub. It's less ideologically
pure, but I still think it's appealing. One of the things I dislike about all
these other Web services is that while each of them is pretty cheap, it'd cost
a huge amount to subscribe to all of them. And I hate the paying less for
bundles when not everything in the bundle is the best in class. It's an
unnecessary compromise.
Oh, and Lloyd pointed out another advantage to working your Web services
from home. When you don't pay yours subs at a Webmail service, they suspend
your access to your own e-mail.
I think there may be a market for a product here. That is, if Thomas C.
Greene of the Register doesn't convince us to turn off our broadband connections in
terror.
2002-08-26»
Stay In Your Homes»
So I wrote a piece in this week's Sunday Times about running services from
your broadband-connected home computer: mainly, services that you'd otherwise
have to pay for, like Webmail, online file space, and calendaring. It got a
huge response, with dozens of people writing in asking how they could do
this.
For most of them, I admit I have no idea - I'm a Linux guy, so all of these
server-ish features come pretty easily to me. I feel a bit dumb replying to
people with "Use SSH! And Debian!", though. If anyone has any suggestions on
how you could reasonably set up IMAP, Webmail, Web folders (WebDAV) and maybe
even a calendar server on a home Windows install, I'd love to hear it.
The piece, incidentally, is currently
here, but it's registration-protected up the wazoo. Brits can log in as
cypherpunk/cypherpunk. Anyone else has to pay. Also the link will die soon, as
NewsCorp shovel the piece into their exclusively-priced archive, so what's the
point?
Hold on though: I do believe I own the copyright on this article. I'll stick
it here, and then when I've time, I'll set up a proper archive. It's all about
DIY, after all.
This virtual life: Danny O'Brien: Why I am not paying
All over the web, companies are switching from offering free services to
charging a fee. The latest to cross the line is Apple, who recently changed
its @mac.com webmail and iDisk online file-storage service from zero to a
£65
annual subscription. That has prompted many to ask whether others such as
Hotmail or Geocities will follow.
I am always sceptical of paying for web stuff. Most of it is, frankly, ripping
off the gullible. People are tempted to pay for these subscriptions because
they appreciate not having to search high and low for freebies. But as the net
improves at delivering what we want, finding the cheapest price grows simpler.
And online, the cheapest price is almost always "free".
And so it is with web e-mail and file space online. Checking e-mail on the
move and dumping Word documents or photo albums where others can find them
are, to me, indispensable. If Hotmail started charging a subscription, or
Geocities refused to give away its precious web space, you would think I would
be the first to pay up.
Think again. Because I have those services free - from my home computer. I
have an always-on broadband connection, so I can check my mail from anywhere
by logging in to my home computer from any net connection. And I do not need
spare storage on someone else's server as I have enough spare disk space at
home, thanks very much.
There are other advantages to being able to connect to my own computer. I can
grab a webcam snapshot of what is going on in my flat; I can print out
documents ready for me to pick up when I arrive home. I even run a little
website off my home machine to pick up important documents.
It is not difficult to do any of this - in theory, at least. The software
is readily available, but advice on how to set it up is remarkably scarce.
Even though connecting to your home computer from anywhere is a great feature,
broadband providers, if they mention this at all, generally couch it in
protective terms. "We'll provide you with a firewall, so that nobody
can get into your home PC," they promise. What if I want to get in?
Software companies such as Microsoft and Apple seem very reluctant to write
the software that would make setting up your home computer as a server a snap.
Of course, Microsoft owns Hotmail, and Apple charges for all those .Mac
services. Maybe they do not appreciate competition. Especially from the likes
of you.
petit disclaimer:
My employer has enough opinions of its own, without having to have mine too.