About

This is my – Lee Geistlinger’s – blog, which I’ve been posting to since May 2001.

I was on blogger.com – which FTP’d to this site – until Google announced the end of such service as of sometime in March 2010. I don’t like the switch, but I think this move to WordPress (again, on my own site) will be – in the long run – a good thing. I’ll update as necessary.

This blog is mainly for my amusement, to scratch that writing itch, to give me a platform to combine writing, graphics, coding and so on.

It’s sort of a continual work in progress, my online sandbox in which I play.

If you find something of value here; sorry, that wasn’t my intention….

Consolidate…and Distribute

I’m a big literature fan – I graduated college with a degree in English – and one of my all-time favorite authors is James Joyce.

Yes, James Joyce – he of the incomprehensible. He got denser and denser with each book, but, to me, he’s still the finest English writer since Shakespeare.

He’s not the most quotable author, simply because of the density of his work. For example, one of his best quotations is the last page or or so of Ulysses, an inner monologue of Penelope giving in to the temptations of the flesh. Closer to music than prose.

That said, Joyce does have some sound bites (to use today’s vernacular) that are accessible and memorable. One of my favorites is the following:

Welcome, O life! I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated conscience of my race.

— (virtually) the last lines of Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

I was thinking about this quotation last week (why? I dunno), and it made me think of the internet, the web, and Wikipedia (in particular).

These virtual areas are, to a great extent, the “uncreated conscience of my race”: The online world is capturing, organizing (thanks, Google) and explaining the sum of everything for the whole human race.

It used to be groups of people (communities, traveling tribes), then cities and religions, then universities that took on such high-arching tasks.

Now the online world is the teacher, memory bank and zeitgeist – past, present and future – of all that we know we know. And then some. For better or worse.

Now, I’m not the first to see this relationship, of virtual to reality in the fourth dimension (time), but it really struck me after recalling the Joyce quotation.

Mash-ups (and associated open APIs [esp. HTML] ) really make this all possible, along with the power of the masses. I had to look up “snooker” today at Wikipedia, and there was so much knowledge about this game/sport that it was overwhelming.

Sure, some of the data is probably wrong/biased, but that’s what the community will correct.

So we’re collecting data that will be – to some degree – the sum total of what we are, what we know, what we believe and so on.

That’s impressive. And, to some degree, accurate.

Yet I read a news headline yesterday that made me think that, while we are collecting and centralizing information, we are also doing the opposite of aggregation: We are rapidly moving toward a strong decentralized form of “uncreated conscience.”

The headline?

Nokia to buy Navteq for $8.1 billion.

Nokia is a HUGE phone maker, and very forward thinking. Navteq is one of the largest GPS/mapping companies – and there are really only a handful of such companies.

When an 800-lb gorilla shells out serious money (in whatever form: stock/cash etc) for a scarce and valuable resource, it makes one take notice.

I did.

One of the touchstones of internet visionaries is that innovation happens at the edges: In other words, it’s not going to be Sun or Microsoft doing the “next big thing” on the web, it’ll be some small start-up founded in a dorm at Stanford University.

Yeah, like Google.

While Sun, MS and Google will continue to contribute to the growth of the web, it’s the people who just have an idea, a passion, that’ll change the web. Or move us off the web to something different, as Usenet/Gopher/Veronica etc gave way to this World Wide Web.

(Sir) Tim Berners-Lee just wanted a way to share documents at CERN. Whoops, it became the web.

eBay I didn’t get it. A garage sale online? And you’re buying from people you don’t know a continent (ocean…) away? Sure, I’ll be doing that…(not!). And the business model? eBay takes a small percentage of each sale (garage sale, remember, so they weren’t – at launch – selling BMWs). OK, take your cut of my sale of a dented copper cannister set for $5…

Seemed ridiculous.

Seems brilliant today.

OK, that’s my (over)view of innovation starts at the edges.

Today – as the Nokia purchase confirms to me – the innovation that is happening at the edges also includes the innovation at the edges that will remain at the edges, or pushed to the edges.

What the hell does that mean?

Well, it’s great that’s there this big honkin’ thing called Wikipedia, and there are search engines that can give me this or that, but my car just broke down outside of Hutchinson, KS: Who can I call for a tow, and – most importantly – who should I call so I, a city slicker whose knowledge of cars extends to opening the hood and confidently proclaiming, “Yep, that’s an engine” – don’t get fleeced?

Powerful stuff.

And before you say anything, yes, such an edge capability would be useful in most areas. Yes and no. Big city/suburb, you go to the Name (with a capital N) shop, or the one that looks best. Might not be the best bang for your buck, but you’re trying to not get totally screwed. In a town with two stations, and they both look like they were built in the 1930s and both run by some dude called, for whatever reason, “Dude,” it’s more compelling. One Dude will fix your car for $20 and that carton of cigarettes you have. The other Dude will sell your spare tire for a hit of smack.

It comes down to the “all news is local” concept. Apps that may – or may not – take data from centralized locations and delivering them where they are needed.

That’s powerful stuff.

Consider an area such as a college campus. Where are the emergency phones? (Fire, crimes, someone is following me!…). This doesn’t necessarily need to be in an uber-centralized place like Google or Wikipedia. But if I’m a student at Farber U., I should be able to pull that data up – via a centralized app that recognizes my location or something I subscribe to (RSS feed, for example).

I’m not articulating this well – gee, that’s a first.

But I guess I’m trying to say the following:

  • Innovation happens at the edges: I know this will continue.
  • Edge innovations of value become centralized: I know this will continue, as well.
  • Fruits of centralization are being pushed to the edges: But, more and more, in a very targeted, localized manner. This is the internet’s – and telco’s – next frontier.
  • Some edge innovations of value will remain there: Centralized weather pushed to location makes sense; the Avocado Ripeness Meter (making this up), however brilliant, is only useful in Castro, CA. At the edge.

Well, I began with a quotation; let’s end with another. This one explains, better than all I have written before, the value of The Edge:

“You’re still in touch. I guess that’s the test.”

“Barely–barely.”

“A psychiatrist could help. There’s a good man in Albany.”

Finnerty shook his head. “He’d pull me back into the center, and I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can’t see from the center.” He nodded, “Big, undreamed-of things — the people on the edge see them first.”

— Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Player Piano

SCO Filing for Bankruptcy

Well, it’s no surprise to anyone who has followed the lawsuits filed by/against SCO over the past three or so years, but SCO has finally filed for protection under Chapter ll.

SCO’s – love them or hate them – litigious ways have always seemed like a “bet the company” move. You don’t sue your customers (AutoZone and DaimlerChrysler) without raising more than a few eyebrows; when you sue IBM for, frankly, anything, you’re in for the fight of your life.

It looks like the company has lost its bet. Bad for the employees, bad for Groklaw, but – overall – a good thing and a long time coming.

What this does to Novell – who was supposed to start a trial next week to see how much SCO owes them – is less clear.

But this appears – finally – to be the true beginning of the end of SCO’s litigation against all things Linux.

Stating the Obvious

An AP story, via CNN: Men want hot women, study confirms.

Regardless of what men say they are looking for in a mate/date, they tend to want to mate/date good-looking women.

We needed a study for that?

This just in: Bears do shit in the woods…and the Pope is Catholic.

UPDATE: Coincidentally, Josh Marshall noted how lame – overall – CNN has become:

I’ve noticed this a lot recently on CNN, especially since their redesign. It’s not an issue of not fronting enough ‘good for you’ serious news versus tabloidy stuff. It’s more that they increasingly feature ‘weird but true’ stories as their lead. Not sure what that’s about.

Talking Points Memo, 9/5/2007

Just Another Day

You know, just another boring workday.

Get up, check email and server scripts to see any issues. Shower, dress and stop at Starbucks on the way to work.

Oh – stop at the Emergency Room to see if I have blood poisoning.

I did/do.

Just some dumb-ass mosquito bite that got infected somehow; I started to see the red line climb up a vein, so I thought I best have it checked out.

Everyone in the ER agreed.

A few hours later, I was out of there, but still on antibiotics for a week or so.

Good times…

Love the Electrons

On Thursday, Aug. 23, humongo storms passed (well, hung out for a while, then moved on) through the Chicago area.

The northern suburb in which I live – Mount Prospect – was particularly hard hit. One report put the downed trees (big-ass trees) in the hundreds, perhaps over 1,000.

Trees hit power lines. Power goes out. Storms flood streets.

Good times.

We lost power about 3pm Thursday; it came back on Sunday AM, over 60 hours later.

On Saturday, we held a “let’s BBQ all we can eat!” fest, cleaning out the freezer as much as we could. Ate well, as did the raccoons and/or possums that got our leftovers.

And threw away all else.

Good times.

The internet (Comcast) didn’t come back on until very late Sunday evening, so it was a weird weekend for me.

But love the electrons. Without power, what do you do?

Ah, but the tubes are back. Weird few days…

What’s Google Up To?

Robert X. Cringely – love him or hate him – usually has something interesting to say in his weekly I, Cringely column.

This week’s column talked about how Google may (or may not) bid for the 700Mhz spectrum that’s coming off TVs and onto wireless sometime in 2009.

But that’s not what I’m here to write about.

As part of his column, Cringely wrote the following (emphasis added):

Bill Gates likes to talk about how fragile is Microsoft’s supposed monopoly and how it could disappear in a very short period of time. Well Microsoft is a Pyramid of Giza compared to Google, whose success is dependent on us not changing our favorite search engine.

Hmm…makes a great deal of sense, to a degree. Search – or, rather, posting ads in search – is what pays the bills in a huge way at the GooglePlex.

But here is what I think, and have thought for over three years (I remember that because I mentioned same in a job interview more than three year ago): Google is an Application Company.

This was after the purchase of Blogger, but before Google Docs, Google Calendar, Google maps and so on.

The stuff that gets better every day. For example, I’ve only recently used Google spreadsheets seriously, but very impressed. Excel killer? Not today. Tomorrow????

These tools work so well because Google groks the web better than any other company I know (vast generalization you can easily shoot down, but you get the drift: Google is good). You could say Google gets the web like Microsoft used to understand the desktop (Steve Jobs ran with what Palo Alto and MS did well and did it better). MS, to me, shows its age with Vista, but that’s another rant.

Yet Google keeps giving these apps away. You wouldn’t catch MS doing that (well, except for IE, and that 1) Shows how little MS understood the web, and 2) Look at all the hot water it got them into).

No money to be made in giving stuff away, right?

Wrong.

Here’s where I think Google is headed:

  • Keep improving the existing online apps
  • Add more: some will live; some will die
  • Get to the point where a quorum has used/feels comfortable with the apps
  • Build an enterprise control panel for the apps. So you – the admin of a small business – can add/edit/delete apps and USERS of apps. Goodbye Office
  • The Gmail sign in for all Google tools is paving the way for this.
  • The admin tool will be paid (subscription, probably). It’ll be a low barrier to entry. Make it attractive to small businesses.
  • In light of what I’ve seen Google do in the past, the admin tool will be an “all you can eat” model, with various levels (with increasing prices). In other words, if you just need the basic apps and user control, $X per year – NOT per seat. 1 or 1,000 users, same price. But if you need Y, then it’s $2X per year – but, again, for everyone. Keep it simple stoopid – once the infrastructure’s in place, it’s mostly gravy but for (Google) internal bandwidth and storage, which it seems to have pretty much solved already: I was a beta tester of Gmail and I still use it like an FTP server. I just can’t get over the 4-6% storage mark!
  • Think of the power of this, and what that admin tool might (ultimately, not at launch) be able to do: Create access rules to areas the “company’s” (stored at Google) files, what apps certain folks could use, and so on. An individual leaves the company? One checkbox forwards all that email to an admin inbox, locks user out of company apps (though user can still use the generic Google apps) and so on. I’m sorry, this is incredibly powerful.
  • Imagine the power of backups! Sure, most/many companies have a “share” drive you’re supposed to work off of or back up to periodically, but…. Losing data just became harder.
  • With an online app, updates are seamless and update ALL systems at the same time. Wow, what a time saver!
  • One component will be a server that does need to be (auto) installed on a user machine – Google already does this with Google desktop, so they have a few 10s of millions of machines as Beta testers. This server will be for offline work, which will auto sync once a network connection (hard line or wireless) is found.
  • The options are limitless, because the application does not exist per se, as does MS Word, for example. It’s embedded into the fabric of the web. Wow.

Is this really where Google is headed? I dunno.

It makes sense to me, but what do I know?

All I know is that someone – probably many someones – is heading in this direction. That’s gotta be correct.

Google is in the right place; we’ll have to see if it’s the right time.

UPDATE: (a few minutes later) One large roadblock – real and perceived roadblock to this type of online suite is privacy. We’re putting customer financials on Google’s (or company X’s) servers. Are they going to peek? Are they going to accidentally add this data to the Google general index?? (Yes, this will happen at some point…) Legit concerns; issues that should be addressed before launching or adopting a service such as I have laid out above.

UPDATE 8/1/2007 – I don’t mean this to mean this is the only direction Google is headed, but one place they are going. Search/ads still pay the bills, but we must diversify…

Montana Pics

well, it’s been a couple of weeks since we got back from vacationing in Montana, and I still don’t have all the pics I want to post in the Montana gallery.

That’s for a number of reasons, which follow:

  • I’m posting more pictures than in the past. This is not necessarily a good thing (it means I’m posting more pics that have sentimental/informational value, as opposed to “good pics”)
  • It’s been a busy couple of weeks at work
  • It’s been a busy couple of weeks at work, and I pretty much (first pass) hand process pics before I post (when I have a pic to post, I then load and ImageMagik makes the full and thumb; uploads same. Home-grown tool: Linux/PHP/HTML/ImageMagik).

This means little to almost everyone but me.

This post is for me!

And – after I’m done with the Montana gallery, I want to break this out so all the Glacier National Park pics are also in a separate gallery. Glacier was, overwhelmingly, the photographic high point of the trip. I could spend a year there with a camera(s)….