Syndication

The more observant readers might have noticed the syndication link appear down there on the left hand side of this page. Actually, the blog has always been available to RSS headline services, but I’ve never put up the link.

Recently I have been playing with syndication of news services and even other blogs. My office machine has had the kNewsTicker running for some time, but with mostly large news organisations or the popular open-source software sites in the feeds list.

Yesterday, as well as enabling the link on my blog, I also installed the Undercover News applet for Konfabulator on my PowerBook, and I added the beta RSS service to the My Yahoo! portal page I use.

What feeds am I watching? On my Mac desktop I have the following:

On my Yahoo! home page I have the following:

I don’t have a good Windows headline viewer recommendation – if you do please leave me a comment. For that matter, if you have a good RSS headline reader application or news ticker for any platform leave me a comment. Oh, and remember to add my blog to your list of feeds.

Trust Me

Trust Me, a short story by Frederick Waterman was in the December 2003 copy of United Airlines Hemispheres Magazine. I started reading it only after I’d read everything else in the magazine, and just one page in I was hooked. Unfortunately, the Hemispheres website seems to be down so I cannot tell if they have the full text online.

The link above though is to the Row22.com website, and the story is one of a number that have been collated in a new book Row 22, Seats A&B, available from that webpage. None of the other online bookstores I searched had copies (and only Barnes & Noble and Campus I even knew about it).

SCO, Linux, Utah & Scams

I haven’t posted anything about this before on the grounds that I didn’t really have anything to add to what appears to be one of the biggest scams of all time. Then, while tidying up, I read an article in SD Magazine that had a new angle on the whole episode.

The article is available online, but you will need to register (free). The part of the article that caught my eye was a bullet list following a quote from the Salt Lake City SEC office boss, Kenneth Israel, that was first published in a Forbes article by William P. Barrett. That quote was simple: “There is a lot of fraud here per capita.”

The list can be summarised as follows:

  • David Boies’ law firm joins a partnership in which they received $1M & 400,000 SCO shares. They make the most if the stock rises and the parties settle (though it seems highly unlikely that IBM will settle at the moment).
  • Before the lawsuit SCO stock was hovering around the $1 mark; since then it has been as high as $22 (though it is only $8.71 at the time of writing), and they’ve issued 300,000 new shares at a par value of $0.0001 (yes, 1/10 of a cent).
  • Several SCO officers have sold large quantities of stock, and also received new options to buy the stock at that $0.0001 price. Could this whole lawsuit simply be a new take on the classic “pump & dump” scheme?
  • Finally, SCO used some of the new stock to buy another company, Vultus. So what? Well, Vultus was founded by the Canopy Group who also founded Caldera, the company that became SCO. They share a board member too: SCO Group Chairman Ralph J. Yarro III was a board member at Vultus. Conveniently, they were also located in the same office building as SCO before the acquisition.

The blueDonkey.org Executive Ratings for SCOX doesn’t have many votes at the moment, but they are all negative!

Turnitin Bot

Checking the logs for blueDonkey.org yesterday I noticed a bot/crawler that I hadn’t seen before (though it may well have been there before since I don’t normally look in the agents list): the TurnitinBot. Unlike most bots though, this one was polite enough to leave not just its name, but also the URL to the page that explains what it is, who owns it and how to stop it scanning your site if you want. Top marks to the folks at Turnitin for netiquette!

What is Turnitin though? Well, it is a fully featured school assignment management system as far as I can see, including a feature that scans student papers for plagiarism. That is where the bot comes in: it scans the internet and builds up a database of information on the internet that it can compare with submitted papers to look for possible plagiarism. Check out the sample report from their website (and also notice the use of Apple’s Safari browser in the screen shot).

Times have changed it seems since I was writing essays. Now there are websites that contain large numbers of essays available for a few dollars. They’re not hiding their purpose either using names like Evil House of Cheat. I’m not going to provide any URLs (if you’re going to cheat, at least show enough initiative to find the sites on your own). That said, it still seems to be a very low number that are really abusing these services and just submitting papers they buy online directly – check out the pie chart on Turnitin’s site that shows less than 1% of students handing in papers from the internet unchanged.

Wi-Fi News

There seems to have been a lot of wireless news this week (either that of I just became aware of a lot of these things this week). In no particular order…

  • AMD Hotspots – It seems that AMD is competing with Intel for 802.11 Hotspots. They’ve taken a different approach though and are supporting free hotspots rather than paid ones (like the Centrino branded T-Mobile hotspots.
  • Asoka USA’s Powerline Wireless Access Point – An interesting combination of wireless networking technology and powerline networking which should allow people to easily extend the range of their wireless network. Only problem is the price – the wireless repeater products that are available are much cheaper than this, and will also support the 802.11g rates whereas powerline only handles 14Mbps, so is pretty much limited to 802.11b.
  • Intel claims it cannot meet China’s WAPI deadline – Intel this week announced that it didn’t think it was likely to be able to meet the controversial Chinese government mandated WAPI encryption technology implementation deadline. This technology is controversial in a number of ways, but perhaps the most suspect area of it is the need for any foreign companies to work with one of a limited number of Chinese corporations, potentially exposing their IP to this partner.

T-Mobile Update

Well, it has been a couple of months now that I’ve had my new Nokia 6100 cell phone on the T-Mobile network, so I thought I’d provide a quick update on how I am getting on with it:

Coverage: For the most part OK. Somewhat annoyingly though my apartment in Alameda is a dead spot (except for when I place the handset on my pillow and use the hands free cord!). Other parts of the bay area have been great for the most part (we have had calls dropped on hospital curve where AT&T was dropping calls every time, but mostly it works flawlessly). The Chandler area in Arizona was not a problem either – it worked perfectly everywhere I tried from the Phoenix airport to Chandler. Tahoe was a little hit and miss though; in the cabin we rented there was almost no signal (though that seemed to be true for all networks we had represented).

Phone: The phone has been great. It is small, light-weight and contains almost all the features I’d like. The one missing thing is the camera, which I wanted to play with more than use seriously so I didn’t mind dropping it from my list when we went shopping in favour of the small size handset. Now though I have discovered a headset + camera accessory for the 6100, so I am going to try to get one and check it out.

Customer Support: Excellent. What more can I say. My 6100 is not a T-Mobile supported/branded phone so it did not come set up with all the GPRS settings for the internet and multi-media message services. I sent them an email last night through their support website, and this morning (Sunday morning!) I had a response with all the information needed to set up both services on my phone.