PSoTD

Wednesday November 30, 2005 at 6:44am

Day 2 of McAfee 8.0

And I gotta say, it's pretty damn invasive and pretty damn annoying, particularly the Privacy Service. I'm not enthralled that they discontinued the definition updates for my previous version in a fashion rather sudden to me. I would have paid the upgrade price for them to continue maintaining the definitions for a year, particularly since I just updated my subscription in July...

The Privacy Service and the Spam Killer on McAfee are just overkill, they slow down my email software and change the damn POP server settings every time I start up, and so far I haven't spotted a general override. Disabling Privacy doesn't seem to work, it is enabled every time I start up...

grrr...

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Wednesday November 30, 2005 at 6:44am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Tuesday November 29, 2005 at 11:35am

No More Blurry Pics

Good news for photographers like me...

BLURRY snaps could be a thing of the past with the development of a digital camera that refocuses photos after they have been taken.

The camera could be useful for action shots taken by sports photographers or for CCTV surveillance cameras, which often produce fuzzy shots due to poor lighting.

In an ordinary digital camera, a sensor behind the lens records the light level that hits each pixel on its surface. If the light rays reaching the sensor are not in focus, the image will appear blurry.

Now, Pat Hanrahan and his team at Stanford University have figured out how to adjust the light rays after they have reached the camera. They inserted a sheet of 90,000 lenses, each just 125 micrometres across, between the camera's main lens and the image sensor. The angle of the light rays that strike each microlens is recorded, as well as the amount of light arriving along each ray.

Software can then be used to adjust these values for each microlens to reconstruct what the image would have looked like if it had been properly focused. That also means any part of the image can be refocused - not just the main subject.

Of course, probably not good news for my wallet...

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Tuesday November 29, 2005 at 11:35am | Permalink | 1 Comments |

Sunday November 27, 2005 at 10:01pm

Digital Social Norms

I ran across a really interesting article, “Bloggers’ Expectations of Privacy and Accountability: An Initial Survey,” by Fernanda B. Viegas. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 10 #3 (Apr 2005): article 12. It available freely on the Internet here.

We as a society have come to some general understanding of personal space in a public setting. Unless an elevator is crowded we don’t stand close to each other. Smoking is prohibited in many public spaces. We have decided it violates our privacy when our social security numbers are used on everything from student id cards to health insurance cards.

The blogosphere, though, is still sorting through these things. A sense of what is private and what is public blurs in online journals. Where does someone’s virtual smoke end and where does our personal space begin? We’ve all read about people who lost (or found) jobs by virtue of their blogs. Many of us have heard about people who lost friends or significant others because of something written on their blogs. This isn’t really new. I remember Ma telling me never to put anything in print that I wouldn’t want to see in the newspaper the next day. When I was in college the student newspaper ran a photo of an elected student government official nude, from the back. It was taken and published with the man’s permission. Stories circulated about him nearly (or actually) losing a job when someone mailed the photo to his post-college employer.

Viegas looks at some of the emerging social norms among the 492 bloggers surveyed in January, 2004. They may not have been the most usual bloggers, as most had been blogging for over a year and only 10% were under 20 (46% between 21 and 30, 28% 31-40). A little over 40% said they had gotten into trouble over something written in their blog either to some extent (34%) or frequently (6%). One passage that really struck me was this:

Bloggers write not only about themselves but often also about other people with whom they interact. When asked whether they sought other people’s permission to blog about them, 66% of respondents almost never asked permission, and only 3% said they always asked permission first. Interestingly, only 9% of the survey respondents said they never blogged about people they knew personally.

This one also stood out for me:

Nevertheless, most bloggers must rely on limited indicators of past actions (access logs, comments, and trackbacks) in order to form a mental picture of who is reading their posts. This paucity of clues indicating identity and presence can cause distorted views of readership to emerge. For one thing, bloggers may begin to perceive the people whose presence is more tangibly obvious (e.g. commenters) as their entire audience.

And later:

This has significant implications for privacy in the sense that, once people start thinking about a small part of their readership as the whole of it, they may customize their postings for that particular group of people. For instance, if all the comments a blogger gets on his site come from close friends, he might forget that his actual readership is broader and might start blogging about things that he would only talk about with close friends.

75% of the bloggers responding to the survey thought they could not be sued for what they wrote.

These are issues I have struggled with as well, from both sides of the coin. Once I have posted an entry, even if I edit or delete it later, the original post can still be reposted or quoted by someone else somewhere else. When I blog I try to always be conscious of the fact that anyone I write about could read it or that the people who know me could read it. In part this is because a few of the people I interact with or whose lives intertwine with mine in some way blog and more than once me or mine has appeared in these blogs. In one case I have minimized my contact with someone because of how people were described in their blog. In one case it was me being described in less than glowing terms, in others it was people I care about. We were not mentioned by name but by circumstance described it was obvious. In another case the blogger was so mean spirited that I just didn’t want to be around them anymore, even if they were pleasant in person. In a third I have changed my route on a weekly trip because if even a small percentage of the things I have read about happening in that house actually happen I don’t want to be anywhere near it when the bullets start to fly. I doubt any of these people are aware that I know of their blogs because none of them use their full names (although some use photos).

If I know of these people I can only assume that at least of few of my readers know me, in addition to those I have told and who may stop in from time to time. There have been times when something interesting has happened and I have wanted to blog about it but could not shake the nagging feeling that it might infringe on someone else’s privacy. In some cases I have changed some of the details and gone ahead, but wondered if it was wrong to do so. If something is said in public it seems okay to blog on it, but if it was said in private or in a personal email I don’t, unless permission is explicitly given, but in the future I might. I struggle and want to stay on the right side of the line but am aware that I may have sometimes crossed it. As a parent I struggle with what can be said about my children. Much of my life revolves around them but their stories are their own and I try not to talk about them too much. Someone I knew years ago has a blog and discusses her children’s lives in detail and while I enjoy reading it, I wonder how her children will feel when they get older about this information floating around out there or how they will feel about some of the comments she has made about their father.

More than most people I am aware of how permanent the Internet is. Yes things do disappear but someone persistent enough can often find them again. Dumb questions I asked on listservs back in 1990 are still out there and come up every once in a while when I am looking for something else. It never fails to crush my ego when they do.

The digital social norms are still forming; I think Viegas’ article is a fascinating snapshot of what they were in early 2004.

(cross posted to Above Average Jane)

Posted by about average jane
Posted on Sunday November 27, 2005 at 10:01pm | Permalink | 1 Comments |

Thursday November 17, 2005 at 8:04am

Introductions

Like I said yesterday, I'll be on the road quite a bit over the next ten days, and I have a few new guest bloggers to join the irregular crew:

Dylan from Something Requisitely Witty and Urbane has agreed to pop in and post during my absence. Take a look at Dylan's site if you haven't been there before... it is as advertised.

Pennsylvanian bloggers ought to already know about above average jane, but that's not the case yet, and she deserves wider readership anyways. Thanks Jane for helping out while I'm gone.

Finally, both ericthek and lyzurgyk will be posting also. And I will be checking in from time to time to throw out something - you can take the boy from the blog, but...

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Thursday November 17, 2005 at 8:04am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Wednesday November 16, 2005 at 8:15am

Thanksgiving Travel

I'll be doing a lot of travelling the week of Thanksgiving and my blogging will be intermittent. I have a few guest bloggers lined up while I'm out which ought to provide some darn interesting reading during that time - and I'll introduce them tomorrow.

The travelling comes at a good time in my experience as a blogger. After a year of pretty active blogging, I'm starting to feel some sense of depletion over my blogging. I'm feeling a bit... scheduled and scattered in my content matter, if that makes sense. I don't think I'm coming up to a wall, but definitely a thick hedge. I would like to focus more on some of the issues that are of interest to me, but it takes a lot less time to find an interesting article, post the highlights and make some comments than it does to actually think out the entire content - and point - of a post.

So, while I'm on the road, I'll be thinking about where I want to go with this blogging activity. I do want to continue it, but this is a good time to think it through a bit further. Anyone who wishes to share their experiences in a similar situation - that is, anyone that has blogged up to a certain "wall" and kept going - please post. I'd be interested in reading your comments.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Wednesday November 16, 2005 at 8:15am | Permalink | 2 Comments |

Saturday November 12, 2005 at 7:54am

InterPlanetary Internet Special Interest Group

Someday, when you're enjoying your wireless internet connection in a coffee house on Neptune, you'll appreciate the work of the InterPlanetary Internet Special Interest Group.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Saturday November 12, 2005 at 7:54am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Tuesday November 8, 2005 at 6:50am

Cheap Space

Are you still using blogger or some other free server provider? Prices keep dropping on commercial server space, so don't feel handcuffed...

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Tuesday November 8, 2005 at 6:50am | Permalink | 2 Comments |

Monday November 7, 2005 at 11:38am

Gmail Losing Value

The past few weeks I've run into problems with it as an outgoing mailserver, being blocked by recipient mail servers due to spam considerations.

Any value to Gmail is considerably reduced if that problem isn't rectified. Note to Google: pay attention. Or else you're going to pull a "Blogger" with Gmail.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Monday November 7, 2005 at 11:38am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Monday November 7, 2005 at 9:08am

You're Never Too Old To Blog

Web logs, usually considered the domain of alienated adolescents and home for screeds from middle-aged pundits, are gaining a foothold as a new leisure-time option for senior citizens.

Three percent of online seniors have created a blog and 17 percent have read someone else's blog, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Compare that to online 18 to 29-year-olds. Thirteen percent of them have created blogs and 32 percent have read someone else's blog, according to the Pew data.

I wonder if there's a value of a blogger outreach program to senior citizen related venues, whether they be centers or living facilities or other locations. I can't help but think that the more bloggers we have in the United States, the better off the country will be in the long run, and at some point there should be some sort of outreach effort into less blogactive populations.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Monday November 7, 2005 at 9:08am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Friday November 4, 2005 at 7:08am

I Need Some Help

I'm looking for some guest bloggers for PSoTD from November 18 - November 27. Email me if you're interested. I'm not looking for a heavy commitment - it's not like you have to post everyday if you don't want, but it would be a minimum commitment of 3 posts within the nine days. Reposts are fine, as long as it all fits within the general scheme of things here. I'll still be able to post from time to time, and there are some other bloggers than will help, but 3 or 4 more volunteers would be great.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Friday November 4, 2005 at 7:08am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Friday November 4, 2005 at 7:02am

Clickstreams

Yesterday's question of the day yielded a very interesting response from Dylan at Something Requisitely Witty and Urbane which referenced an earlier post of his, which is about the data being developed on online searching:

But there is another form of data that is being created in the process, and that is the history of the sites we visit, or our clickstream. After a period of time, the clickstream may begin to provide some interesting insights into our intentions (that is, what we desired when we set out on the search in the first place). If that information could be harnessed and then redirected to better serve the searcher in the first place, then the very process of searching could become a powerful tool in fleshing out our online identity (that is, the virtual manifestation which represents the various parts of our lives that interact with the Internet. In the case of search, it represents our intentions and what our minds thinks is the best route to get to where we intend to go). Search would become a very important part of our lives.

Go read the rest. I'm ordering Battelle's book.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Friday November 4, 2005 at 7:02am | Permalink | 1 Comments |

Thursday November 3, 2005 at 7:33am

FRAPPR

Kind of a neat application here, you can create a map of your group at frappr.com.

Just for the hell of it, I created one for PSoTD readers. If enough folks add their info (just a blog or nickname, zip code and a shout out will do it) we can have a picture of where regulars are... or I can get a depressing visual of my lack of regulars...

So, don't depress me!

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Thursday November 3, 2005 at 7:33am | Permalink | 1 Comments |

Thursday November 3, 2005 at 6:58am

Pennsylvania Municipal Wireless Broadcast Networks

Received this email over the transom yesterday, for those who are interested.

The Pennsylvania State Senate Communications & Technology Committee will hold a public hearing on Act 183 of 2004 as it relates to municipal wireless broadband networks. The hearing will take place on Monday November 6, 2005 at Villanova University in the Cinema within the Connelly Center. Testimony will commence at 10 a.m. and continue until approximately 3 p.m.

MEDIA ADVISORY

November 2, 2005

Pennsylvania Senate Communications and Technology Chairman, Senator Rob Wonderling (R-24) will hold a hearing on Monday, November 7, 2005 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at Villanova University’s Cinema at the Connelly Center to examine the issue of municipalities providing wireless internet access. Specifically, the hearing will address whether or not a January 1, 2006 deadline under Act 183 should be extended to allow municipalities in Pennsylvania to develop without impediment public wireless fidelity networks, commonly referred to as Wi-Fi technology.

Act 183 provides a one-year window for local governments and authorities to develop a municipally-owned or created telecommunications network for advanced cable and telephone service. The window will close on January 1, 2006, after which time municipalities must offer the incumbent telephone company the right of first refusal to provide the proposed service. If the local telephone company waives its right, the municipality may then proceed in establishing its own network.

Several municipalities in the Commonwealth are offering service to residents through their own networks, or intend to by the end of the year. Other municipalities have expressed an interest in establishing their own network, but will not do so before the January 1st deadline.

The Committee will hear testimony from representatives of local governments who have their own networks or are working on establishing their own, including the City of Philadelphia, which recently announced it is providing citywide wireless high-speed internet access to its residents. The Committee will also hear from representatives of national technology companies who are assisting municipalities in Pennsylvania and around the nation with establishing networks. State associations and national experts who have concerns with the security and fiscal solvency of municipal networks will also testify.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Thursday November 3, 2005 at 6:58am | Permalink | 0 Comments |

Wednesday November 2, 2005 at 8:52am

Copying Without Reference

Ever wonder if somebody's copying your web content without referencing your site? You might give Copyscape a look, you plug in the URL and it finds common text threads.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Wednesday November 2, 2005 at 8:52am | Permalink | 2 Comments |