The Foley Matter: History suggests that once a political party achieves sweeping power, it will only be a matter of time before the power becomes the entire point.

Outstanding editorial. And while this is certainly political, I don’t consider it overtly partisan; you could write the same editorial about Democrats in different circumstances. Indeed, the very point of the editorial (as noted in the above quote), is that power corrupts. Anyone. Worth remembering.

Note: since this editorial will end up behind a firewall soon *sigh*, I’m looking for alternate urls. Here’s one (though I think this one may expire as well): The Foley Matter (IHT)

Here is the blip.tv page, and direct MP3 download link for the second Sept. 22nd episode (I was ambitious. I also thought that I had figured out the secrets with the iPAQ mike. I was wrong).

An afternoon drive, rather than the morning one. This is the last episode that I’ll post from the iPAQ; I’ll be switching to the standard "record on PC" format until I find a better in-car recording option (if such a thing exists!). I talk about virtual worlds, virtual world podcasts, and old EGC episodes. Fun stuff.

Links mentioned:

(This completes my backlog of old, crappy audio uploads. Joy.)

Here is the blip.tv page, and direct MP3 download link for the Sept. 22nd episode.

Another morning drive! I express my dismay in the quality of the iPAQ audio, even as I continue to use it, I talk a bit about myself, and decide to review the podcasts I listen to as a way of giving an intro about myself.

Links to podcasts mentioned:

Note: I’m definitely still not happy with audio…I considered completely manually re-recording this episode (thus the lag between recording and upload). I may still be doing that w/ #3. RSS feed for podcast in QA testing as we speak *grin*.

One of the things I’m presently fascinated by is online presence and communications management; the interface of IM, VOIP, PSTN interfaces, online conferencing, etc. I’m impatient to enter the world where I can be engaged at any time with the people I want to be, without having to constantly fend off unwanted telemarketers and other voice spam.

GrandCentral seems to be an interesting tool for managing a piece of the puzzle; the regular telephone (PSTN) interface. GrandCentral provides a virtual phone number for free, in what appears to be any US (and maybe more, I don’t know) area code; and then helps manage calls to that number. You enter as many of your “real” phone numbers as you desire into the system for management purposes. Calling numbers can then be segregated into groups such as friends, family, and work, and via a web interface (hopefully an API coming as well), rules for each group can be set up. For example, calls from friends could ring your home and cell #s, calls from clients (work) could ring your work #, and all other calls could go straight to voice mail. Pretty nifty! Obviously, rules can be changed at will. Voice mail is also managed via the web, or you can login to the system from a phone and listen to them. Using the web interface provides the ability to download them, which is cool.

Pricing seems reasonable…after the beta (everything’s free right now), you’ll have 100 minutes of calls through the service a month for free; after that everything goes to voicemail. You can also buy blocks of minutes beyond the 100, or just go for the Premium account, which provides unlimited usage for $15/month.

So at a minimum, GrandCentral appears to be a free voicemail service that provides an easy path to upgrade to a paid service. I like that model (similar to Flickr); you get enough that it’s useful, but a taste of the extras.

With a few tweaks like a longer voicemail max message length (it’s presently 2 minutes, but I want to be able to leave myself podcasts! *grin*), and an option to forward to SIP numbers as well (which appears to be in the works), I could actually consider using this thing. I’ve already left myself a couple of voicemails, and the call quality appears to be pretty good. I’m keeping my eye on this. It’s an interesting alternative to both “regular” VOIP and IM/online voice tools, both of which provide some of this functionality, but not all. I love choices, don’t you?

UPDATE: I forgot to mention…in addition to the other cool stuff, the GrandCentral folks are using their powers for good as well. See the GrandCentral blog for details, but basically they have been giving out accounts to homeless people, battered women’s shelters, etc. in SF since April, and are working on expanding that program nationwide. It’s simple for them to do, helps test and tweak their system, and provides a HUGELY important service for people who don’t have any other way to give a potential employer, friend, etc. a point of contact without spending what little money they have on a pre-paid cellphone. It’s a great idea, and I applaud GrandCentral for doing it.

Wow…all journal content of the Royal Society (back to 1665!) is available online from now until December. That’s some serious history. Like Newton, Hooke, Boyle, Ben Franklin serious.

Maybe they’ll relent on some of the historical stuff; you never know! There’s alot of change brewing in the online journal world right now regarding open access; listen to Jon Udell’s podcast on the subject for a quick overview, or check out Open Access News for deeper discussion.

link from Contrary Brin

Well, I’ve spent several days over the past week working through various issues to get my first podcast episode out the door: Kenzoid’s Autonomous Zone: Episode 1. I haven’t solved all my issues, but I figured I’d go ahead and let all 4 of my reader’s know about it’s existence…*grin*.

I’ll be wiring the RSS feed into the page here hopefully later today. WRT the sound…ick! I know! I was hoping to use my iPAQ to kickstart things, by recording podcasts during my drive to and from work. No joy…the sound is marginal, and that’s being charitable. I have 2 more recordings that I’m just not willing to put up as is; I’ll probably re-record them on the PC to release. I’m looking for a better portable recording solution so that I can continue to use the drive period, as it’s one of the best times I have.

I’ve been toying around with the idea of a podcast for a year-and-a-half or so now, but I’m glad I finally just pushed myself off the cliff. It’s another way to interact, and I think it’ll be fun. Comments welcome!

UPDATE: That’s right, I wanted to put the text links over here as well. Once I have the RSS feed up and running, there should be no requirement to go over to blip.tv to pick up the MP3. If you want to, go ahead, but it’ll always be available here. So here are the links mentioned in this episode:

Flite (from festival-lite) is a small, fast text-to-speech engine designed for embedded use (low footprint, high performance). It’s NICE! Reimplements parts of the well-known Festival speech synthesis program in a smaller footprint (I always like small footprints), so that voices can be converted for Flite use easily from Festival’s collection.

I like the idea of text-to-speech for certain utilities, and I really like the idea of having something small and easy-to-use. I tried out some random webtext with the example tool (it’s really designed as a library to embed in your programs, but provides a pre-built command-line tool to show basic functionality), and it worked quite well! I have ideas…

Sonofabitch. Flash 9 is on it’s way to Linux. Penguin.SWF suggests an early 2007 release, and a beta (real beta, ie, mostly working) before then.

I don’t code to Flash, as it’s both proprietary, and makes for bad (though pretty) site design IMO. But having a working viewer would make my life a lot easier. Many of the new flash video player widgets, for example, are leaving Linux behind (at Flash 7).

Awesome! I just started checking out the map interface that Flickr put up to work with their new geotagging tools. It’s capable of filtering by group, by person, and now by date as well…very cool! Just set “on or after Sept. 1 2006” and zoom in on Atlanta to see the fantastic scifi-fantasy-gaming-costuming show that is DragonCon. (OK… searching by tag on ‘dragoncon2006’ makes more sense…but I’m playing w/ the map right now, ya see?)

Speaking of, a great time was had by all at Dragon*Con, and I think I’ve finally completely recovered. *grin* I MUST be getting old, when I have to take 3 days off AFTER the con to recover! (ok…that wasn’t the original intent of the extra days, but it sure was useful!)

*sigh* I hate to say it, but it’s true. We have lost our minds. Is it so difficult to understand that we’re doing what the terrorists want? (read that Schneier link, btw. mindblowing) We’re playing their game…let’s stop! Say it with me (and Kung Fu Monkey, who said it first)…am I scared? Errr, no. And if you are, you frankly should be a little goddam embarrassed.

Get a grip, people. Take it seriously…but get a grip.