2006/09/27

WONG/WSMS Network

Eight people met today in the conference room at Infinity Technology to discuss the launching of a users group for people interested in WSMS, or Web Search, Marketing & SEO (search engine optimization).

The WSMS Network, also called the WONG (Website Optimization Networking Group), is being formed because of strong interest shown at an Infinity Technology Tech Focus seminar on SEO held in early 2006. Because the people attending that seminar had so many questions about getting top placement in search engine results for their products or services, it was decided to launch this users group. Today's event was strictly an organizational meeting to make sure enough people saw a need for or interest in such a group, then to discuss what the meetings should be like and when the next one should be held.

The initial monthly meeting for WSMS/WONG (a name for the group may be one of the first items discussed at the meeting) is scheduled for 8 a.m., Wednesday, November 1, 2006. You can tell there are no accountants in the group. They'd all be at work doing month-end financial numbers. The meeting will be held at ITT-Green Bay. Phil Beukema, Sr. of Corporate Apparel Unlimited, Inc. agreed to develop the meeting topic and plan for the first meeting, and to also develop a list of ten proposed topics for the first ten monthly meetings. Phil, Sr. and his son, Phil, Jr., presented the excellent Tech Focus seminar about SEO for Infinity Technology.

All meetings will have a topic related to web search, marketing or SEO, and the first hour of the meeting will have an educational, organized approach to the topic of the meeting. The second hour of the meeting will be an informal, one-on-one or small group discussion period to talk about the topic of the meeting or to discuss other WSMS issues.

With the percentage of people using high-speed internet access for important daily tasks continually increasing, effective web marketing is becoming an essential tool for many small and medium businesses or organizations to be successful and effective. Because the technology for web marketing is relatively new, is much more complicated than putting an ad in the yellow pages of your phone book, and is continually changing due to technical innovations and the relative immaturity of the field, people need resources to help them with their WSMS needs.

With a little luck and a lot of work, this users group will be a useful resource for many people in the Green Bay area. If the Green Bay WSMS Network/WONG is successful, similar groups may be launched in other areas around the New North. For more details, feel free to contact me.

*****

2006/09/26

Vista/Gaming Box Is Successful!

Luke is quite pleased with the new toy he assembled yesterday -- the Vista/gaming box is a joy to use with Win Vista 64 bit RC1.

He stayed up a bit too late last night getting everything set up the way he wanted on the newly built computer. Also played a few games, just to make sure everything was working correctly...

As previously mentioned on this blog, make sure you get a minimum of 2GB RAM for any machine on which you want to run Vista. Your video card/on-board video should have a minimum of 256MB, with 512MB being preferrable in most cases.

Because of activities planned for tomorrow, details of yesterday's BarCampMilwaukee meetings and the details of the Vista/gaming box building will be posted tomorrow rather than today.

Having the Vista/gaming computer assembled and in operation is somewhat anticlimactic. The fun of reviewing different hardware options and trying to get the best value for our money has ended for another six to twelve months. There may be other hardware purchases in the upcoming months, but it's unlikely we'll design and build another box for ourselves in the next year. Luke will just have to find lots of myDigitechnician clients who want him to help them build their own high end computer. Guess that means a well-designed marketing campaign for the Black Ops Division of myDigitechnician is needed. Luke would love nothing better than to help one or two clients each week build their own high-end gaming or graphics and video editing computer system.

*****

2006/09/25

Vista/Gaming Box Parts 7 & 8: WinVista Is Loading!

Woo-hoo!! The Vista/gaming motherboard arrived today. Luke picked up a power supply locally and put the box together during tonight's NEW NET gathering.

Tomorrow's post on this blog will detail some of today's fun. For tonight there is only enough brain energy to post the news that the Vista/gaming box was assembled and is being loaded up with Vista RC1 64 bit and other assorted goodies.

In BarCampMilwaukee news, I met with Time Warner and several other potential participants and sponsors. Way too short of notice for them, but I didn't let that stop me from talking with them!

More tomorrow...

*****

2006/09/24

Bought A New Laptop / NNf

The IBM ThinkPad laptop used for mD and AMW work has at least one foot in the grave, so a $400 Toshiba Satellite laptop was bought this morning from Office Depot.

Either the hard drive is dying or the motherboard is failing on the ThinkPad that's a couple years old. It hasn't worked completely right since it was dropped a year ago, but it had been starting and running reliably. Two weeks ago it began to require several restarts to convince it to boot, and death appeared imminent. A week ago the hard drive light started staying lighted continuously, and the laptop has not been shut down or taken off the power adapter since then. The battery died two months ago, so it only runs when plugged into the adapter. The cost of buying a new battery and new hard drive or motherboard for the laptop didn't seem justified, considering other problems that had been happening since it was dropped.

Online and offline laptop sales had been checked out for the past few weeks. When Office Depot had a Toshiba Satellite for $400 this morning, it was too good a deal to pass up. Although close to the bottom of specs for current laptops, the Satellite has about the same horsepower and features of the ThinkPad that's dying. It would be nice to have a 17" MacBookPro, or a 17" widescreen Toshiba Qosimo Core 2 Duo laptop with 2GB RAM and a DVD burner, but it would also be nice to have a new car and no house payments. The Toshiba will let me compute pretty much the same way the ThinkPad did, and $400 is certainly a reasonable replacement cost.

The new laptop is a Toshiba Satellite M105-S1021, 14.1" widescreen XGA, 512MB PC4200 533MHz DDR2 SDRAM (with an empty RAM slot), 1.46GHz Celeron-M 410, 80GB HD, CD-RW/DVD-ROM, built-in 802.11b/g wireless with the Atheros chipset, built-in modem & LAN. With the 14.1" screen and a weight of 4.98 lbs, the Satellite is handier than the ThinkPad for everyday use outside the office. The only useful thing the Satellite doesn't have that the ThinkPad did is an IR port. That was used for printing wirelessly.

If you plan to buy an inexpensive laptop computer, check out the weekly ads for office supply and consumer electronic stores so you know the current specs and prices. Then consider buying your laptop on the day after Thanksgiving. The stores always have great sales on that day, and with Vista coming along soon, the computer manufacturers are eager to clear out inventory of laptops better suited to WinXP than WinVista.

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NEW NET at Mister Churro on Monday !

Below is the final list of issues for the Monday, 25 September 2006, NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology) 6:50 pm weekly gathering at Mister Churro, 207 N. Richmond St., Appleton, Wisconsin, USA.
  1. Microsoft to put Works Suite onto Web? http://blogs.zdnet.com/web2explorer/index.php?p=275 This post is at the top of the weekly issues list because Google may have once again caused a sea change on the internet. When Gmail was launched, it singlehandedly cause MS and Yahoo! to increase their mail storage by orders of magnitude.
  2. Tech manufacturers rally against Net neutrality http://news.com.com/Tech+manufacturers+rally+against+Net+neutrality/2100-1028_3-6117241.html Net neutrality is a misunderstood issue or highly polarizing or both. What’s interesting is how strongly some tech companies support net neutrality while others just as strongly oppose it.
  3. New Citizendium to correct Wikipedia's wrongs? http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060919-7775.html Who watches the watchers? It will be interesting to see how Citizendium and Wikipedia differ five years from now. Have you added any articles or info to Wikipedia? If not, got to Wikipedia today and make it a bit more valuable and useful.
  4. Teeny Linux PCs proliferate http://linuxdevices.com/news/NS7561066345.html These are “tiny, gumstick-sized single-board computers (SBCs) into miniscule packaged PCs that displace around 68 cc of volume and come with Linux pre-installed.”
  5. Gonzales: ISPs must keep records on users http://news.com.com/Gonzales+ISPs+must+keep+records+on+users/2100-1028_3-6117455.html The Attorney General wants ISPs and social networks to be legally required to keep two years of internet user info for the authorities to look through at their leisure.
  6. Yahoo pulls a Scrooge with forced unpaid holiday vacation http://www.valleywag.com/tech/yahoo/yahoo-pulls-a-scrooge-with-forced-unpaid-holiday-vacation-202752.php This is a sign of how much things have changed at Yahoo! over the past few years. Almost all US Yahoo employees are told to take a mandatory unpaid week off during the Christmas holidays. Let’s hope better days are ahead.
  7. Pirate-speakin' Google not be celebratin' no Pirate day http://thenewmarketing.com/blogs/thenewmarketing/archive/2006/09/19/311.aspx Some people would call this communication from Google unprofessional. To me it embodies the friendly, start-up attitude that Google should perpetuate.
  8. Experiences with Vista RC1—a brief report http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060919-7778.html This Arstechnica update on Windows Vista is hopeful, indicating the new OS is improved from the Beta 2 version. Ceasar feels a January 2007 release is probable.
  9. It's a start: one label offers one album without DRM http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060919-7777.html Right Where You Want Me by Jesse McCartney will be available through Yahoo! for $9.99 in mp3 format with no DRM. Will other artists and distribution channels start offering more like this?
  10. Prof told to pull podcasts http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060918-7770.html There have been a number of articles in recent months discussing how podcasts and the internet are impacting college classes. Administrators at colleges around the country are trying to figure out if their business models are starting to fail…
  11. VOIP - The Details Kill The Fun http://www.techcrunch.com/2006/09/23/voip-the-details-kill-the-fun/
  12. Inconvenience of two-factor security pushes banks to "single factor plus" for online banking http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=3648
  13. Senator calls for investigation of buried FCC study http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060917-7758.html
  14. Munich begins Linux replacement of Windows http://tinyurl.com/jac86
  15. War in Iraq fuels Islamic radicalism, report says http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/09/24/MNGNSLBRUI1.DTL
  16. Solaria raises $22M to lower cost of solar cell manufacturing http://venturebeat.com/2006/09/19/solaria-raises-22m-to-lower-cost-of-solar-cell-manufacturing/
  17. Don't Push the Product; Pull the Consumer Instead http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/21/AR2006092101778.html
  18. Creative Destruction in the Software Industry http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/techbeat/archives/2006/09/creative_destru.html
  19. New AIM Worm May Prove Tough to Exterminate http://www.cio.com/blog_view.html?CID=24911
  20. How to defend against VML zero-day IE exploit http://blogs.zdnet.com/Ou/index.php?p=323
  21. Soapbox: Microsoft enters YouTube waters http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2003265044_soapbox19.html
  22. Microsoft Legal Action Aims to Help Fight Piracy http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2006/sep06/09-19MSPiracyCounterfeitingPR.mspx
  23. 5 Simple Ways to Open Your Blog Post With a Bang http://www.copyblogger.com/5-simple-ways-to-open-your-blog-post-with-a-bang/
  24. Microsoft's Masterpiece of FUD http://www.linuxjournal.com/node/1000097
*****

2006/09/23

S5 Presentations For BarCampMilwaukee

For barcamp sessions, one of the recommended open source presentation options is the S5 slide show format "based entirely on XHTML, CSS, and JavaScript."

In the true spirit of BarCampMilwaukee, it seemed appropriate to try using S5 to prepare the session materials for the Portable Computing With A 1GB Flash Drive session. Online research was done regarding S5, and the initial draft of the session presentation was put together. It seemed pretty easy to work with, although limited knowledge of HTML means the presentation is not as 'nice' as it could be. A little research will be done over the next couple days to figure out formatting improvements.

Luke W and Zac W will be sent a copy of the draft presentation since they are session co-leaders. They can add the material they want to the presentation, then it should be all set to go.

Based on the experience this afternoon with S5, another proposed session was added on the BarCampMilwaukee wiki for discussing S5. In addition to exchanging tips for using S5, it would be good to find out what alternatives are out there and maybe look at high quality S5 presentations others have done.

(Off-topic: The darned motherboard for the Vista/gaming box still hasn't shown up!!)

*****

2006/09/22

Meeting Interesting New People

If you feel like you don't know anybody, or haven't met anyone new in years, help organize an event that's not sponsored by a group you're already part of.

Being part of the organizing team will introduce you to at least several new people. Those people are likely to have some passion and enthusiasm for the event topic if they're willing to help organize the event. That, by itself, makes them different and more interesting than many people. Organizing an event usually takes initiative and responsibility, as well as time commitment. Problems inevitably arise when organizing any event. Resolving those problems often introduces you to new people and always builds a shared-conflict bond with others on the organizing team. When people work together with you to solve problems, it brings you closer, and they have more trust in you.

People on the organizing team are often expected to personally recruit event participants. Talking to people about the event and inviting people you don't know to the event will almost certainly bring you in contact with some interesting new people. Depending on the event and how many people you invite, you will develop a good connection with either a few of those you invite or with many of them.

The third opportunity you'll have to meet interesting new people when you help organize an event is during the event itself. Part of your reason for being at the event should be so you can meet some of the most interesting participants at the event. Make sure you sit at a table with people you don't know. Introduce yourself to others and talk with them, not to them. Even more importantly, listen to them. Respond to what they say, asking them questions about what they said. Introduce yourself to some of the people who appear to be by themselves, look out of place at the event, or look like they maybe wish they weren't there.

Some people will seem especially interesting or seem to be someone with whom a genuine relationship might be possible. Ask them if they'd be willing to meet some time in the future, such as for coffee or lunch. Get the proper spelling of their name, get their phone number and email address, and tell them you'll call to schedule a get-together. After the event, make sure you follow up and do what you said you would. Ninety-nine percent of the people at the event are not going to ask you if you want to get together sometime after the event. Eighty percent of those at the event would be happy to meet with you if you ask them to.

Some of the new people you meet, whether on the organizing team, or those you invite to participate in the event, or event participants you meet during the event, will be people who may change your life. They may become lifelong friends or may introduce you to other people and ideas that you would have otherwise never met.

While doing organizing work today for BarCampMilwaukee, I talked with two people I had never before communicated with. One of them was extremely nice, and I will likely make the effort to get to know him lots better at the event. The other one was cordial and connected me to another person who can help me more with the event than she could. A third person I didn't know, B.L. Ochman, communicated with me about the event via email. Although she can't attend BarCampMilwaukee, she indicated interest in participating in a future barcamp. Who knows what fun, interesting and rewarding times I may share with those three people in the future, or with others to whom they may introduce me.

As Barb S said at Toastmasters yesterday, "Take a chance! Follow your gut." Meet someone new today...

*****

2006/09/21

Vista/Gaming Box, Parts 4, 5 & 6

The myDigitechnician Vista/Gaming box lacks only one part -- the micro-ATX motherboard, which is expected to arrive tomorrow!

Brown delivered parts 4 & 5, the RAM and DVD burner, on 20 September. The RAM selected was Crucial 2GB (2 x 1GB) 240-pin DDR2 SDRAM 667 MHz (PC2 5300) Dual Channel Kit System memory, part # CT2KIT12864AA667. This RAM was chosen over the other available sticks because of Crucial's good track record, the most reasonable price at this point, and the lower voltage on this RAM (1.8V) to meet the motherboard specs. The DVD burner was plain vanilla, a Pioneer DVD +/- RW, 111D, 16X DVD/40X CD.

Brown delivered part 6 today; the Ultra MicroFly micro-ATX model ULT33117 aluminum case with plastic windows on three sides, along with a side order of UV cold cathode lights. The two drawbacks to the case are the extremely flimsy feeling handle and the slightly large size of the case for a micro-ATX case. The case was bought knowing it was slightly larger than other micro-ATX cases, precisely because of that so there wouldn't be problems with standard power supplies, optical drives and PCI Express cards. The real problem comes when the Mac mini is set next to the desktop components in the micro-ATX box. Seems like micro-ATX should be able to be smaller. Maybe what's needed is a nano-ATX motherboard and associated components...

With some luck the Vista/gaming box will be assembled this weekend!

*****

2006/09/20

BarCampMilwaukee is Coming Too Soon

There are too many people who should still be invited to BarCampMilwaukee and too many things to do in preparation for the event.

Just today I invited eight more people I have never met and had never heard of before today. So far three of them responded, indicating an interest in the event. There are over 100 people on my list of BarCampMilwaukee invitees. All the inviting will have been worth it if five of those people participate in the event this year and another five become at least online acquaintances. For BarCampMilwaukee 2.0, at least another 100 people will find their way onto my invitee list. That list will likely start building the day after BarCampMilwaukee ends.

Attention for the next few days needs to focus on preparing for the Fab Lab & Media Lab session and the Portable Computing with 1 GB Flash Drive session, and on a few last minute sponsor invitations for BarCampMilwaukee. The event could use a few more sponsors to ensure adequate food and drink for attendees, and to cover the costs of complimentary BarCampMilwaukee t-shirts for all participants. The event will happen and will be fun regardless of what happens with shirts and food, but we just want to make BarCampMilwaukee as fun as possible for all the participants.

First thing for early tomorrow morning is to make a list of top priority BarCampMilwaukee tasks to finish in the next five days. So many things...so little time...but so much fun!

*****

2006/09/19

Passion on the Journey

The best way to live a full and worthwhile life is to find and be truly passionate about one or more aspects of your Journey.

No matter how many times you have heard it, it is still true that life is a Journey, not a destination. In many ways, you continually make choices about which direction you want to go and what things you want to see and do along the way. Think of life not as a jet ride from Chicago to Los Angeles, but rather a road trip along Route 66 to get from Chicago to LA. What you do along that road and how you interact with and treat people you meet along the way is a lot more important to a successful trip than is merely making it to Los Angeles.

Two examples of being passionate about the journey are Anousheh Ansari and Luke W (of myDigitechnician). Although living in two totally different worlds, they are both passionate about what they are doing on the Journey.

Anousheh Ansari lifted off into space on Monday, 18 September 2006, as the fourth private space explorer to visit space. She was first in many other respects and has given young people around the world a shining example and a hero to follow as she blazes a path to the stars. Many of tomorrow's astronauts and aerospace engineers/explorers will likely have been inspired by her. She makes me think of the Robert Heinlein and Isaac Asimov books I read in my youth. Anousheh is certainly passionate about space and about private industry participating in the pursuit of human travel and exploration in space. The passion and commitment she has comes through in many of her interviews and news articles about her on the web. There can be no doubt that she is passionate about what she does and truly enjoys it.

Luke W (co-founder of myDigitechnician) is similarly pursuing his passions on the Journey. He started using computers when he was three, beginning with an original 128K Mac. He could read already at three and enjoyed using MacPaint and other programs on the Mac, which was fantastically easy-to-use relative to the IBM PC and other competitors at the time. The reason I bought the Mac rather than an IBM PC was because the Team Electronics store salesperson said, "I'm with another customer right now, so I can't show you how to use the IBM, but if you want you can just start use the Mac while I work with this other gentleman." The salesperson was absolutely correct. Without any instructions, I was able to easily use the Mac to draw a flowsheet of the spent liquor recovery process for the pulp mill at which I worked at the time. Luke enjoyed the Mac thoroughly even though he was only three.

Twenty-one years later, he is the technology brains behind myDigitechnician, an in-home consumer computer services company. Although computers are not what he majored in during college, they are his true passion, and there is nothing he would rather be doing than running his own computer-focused company. As myDigitechnician grows and as opportunities are found, he will be bringing more emphasis to a fledgling sector of myDigitechnician called Black Ops Division. This part of mD relates to high-end gaming computer systems and working with teens and older computer enthusiasts to help them design, build and use powerful, leading-edge gaming computers. As the virtual worlds of the internet become more developed and software innovations are used to make marvelous things possible with these powerful computers, the Black Ops Division will become more and more important in the everyday business of myDigitechnician. In the meantime he loves working with whatever computers people have at home to make their lives easier, more fun and better connected with the world and the people around them.

Based on the comments made to me and to others, Luke is doing a great job of providing skilled and friendly, non-geek service to hundreds of homeowners. His attitude is that he's having fun providing the service to our home computer user clients, and he wants his clients to likewise enjoy and be able to use their computers effectively. He is working hard at building a new business that will have satisfied clients who want to use him for life for all their digital needs. People with his attitude and technical skill are rare, so working hard now will ensure he can build a successful lifelong business. Continual technical innovation in the computing field and the challenges that never-ending innovation presents to most people will result in Luke having a lifetime of opportunities in the field he loves. He knows he's fortunate to have the opportunity to make a living doing work about which he is passionate.

Not everyone is as fortunate as Anousheh and Luke. But everyone should find one thing or several areas about which they are passionate. Then they should learn everything they can about their passion or passions, build dreams around those passions, and take all the opportunities they can wherever their Journey goes to follow their dream, share their passions and help others pursue their own passions and dreams.

Follow Anousheh as she has an adventure like few before her. Read her blog, check out her main website, watch her on tv or the internet over the next few days, and bring some of her passion and Luke's passion to your life!

Oh yeah. Don't want to forget the plug for BarCampMilwaukee. Less than two weeks to go before we start 24+ hours of tech fun. After reading about Anousheh's new company, Prodea Systems, I sent them an invite to come to BarCampMilwaukee and lead a session on their new "comprehensive solution for the digital home." Since myDigitechnician's tagline is "Your friend for a better digital world", Prodea's comprehensive solution for the digital home is a perfect fit for many of our clients. I'm hoping we can connect with someone at Prodea so they'll come to BarCampMilwaukee even though it's short notice. If you know anyone who works there, please ask them to contact me or respond to the email I sent earlier today.

And if you're passionate about using or creating technology in any aspect of your life, come on down to BarCampMilwaukee and share that passion!

*****

2006/09/18

E-Seed Classes / NNf issues

Just finished speaking to an E-Seed class at the Appleton Library about entrepreneurship and business plan research.

Preparing for that speaking engagement and doing a few other unexpected tasks means an apology is due to any NEW NET people who looked at this blog for the final list of NEW NET issues for this week. That final list was supposed to be posted here by 3 pm Central time today, and that target was missed. I apologize to any who looked for it and couldn't find it.

In addition to the apology, it should be mentioned that the post titles for this blog now occasionally include the term "NNi issues" or "NNf issues." That stands for NEW NET initial list of tech/economy issues for the weekly gathering or final list of tech/economy issues for that week's meeting. That term is being added to the post to help people (myself included) more easily find the NEW NET issues list for the current week or for previous weeks.

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NEW NET at Atlanta Bread Company tonight !

Below is the final list of issues for the Monday, 18 September 2006, NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology) 6:50 pm weekly gathering at Atlanta Bread Company (West) by the Fox River Mall, 650 North Casaloma Drive, Appleton, Wisconsin, USA.
  1. Senate Judiciary Committee approves Big Brother bills http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060914-7751.html
  2. Canada Gunman Blogged on Violence, Murder http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/14/AR2006091400572.html
  3. Green Bay teens were obsessed with Columbine massacre http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-ap-wi-school-bombs,1,7845042.story
  4. Ford to sack one-third of workforce http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,20421635-5005961,00.html
  5. Wii no loss leader, says Nintendo http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060915-7752.html
  6. Microsoft's Zune Won't Play Protected Windows Media http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/004910.php
  7. Netvibes Five Million Users & Counting http://software.gigaom.com/2006/09/15/netvibes-five-million-users-counting/
  8. Sun CEO among the few chiefs who blog http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060917/ap_on_hi_te/blogging_sun_microsystems
  9. Security products sold despite freeware http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060917/ap_on_hi_te/free_security
  10. Seagate Claims Magnetic Storage Record http://news.digitaltrends.com/article11302.html
  11. Google and Microsoft vie for Earth domination http://uk.news.yahoo.com/12092006/152/google-microsoft-vie-earth-domination.html An updated Google Earth was released 12 Sep 2006, with a {“timescale slider used to scroll through time”}. Yoda’s real-time SkyNet/Big Brother monitoring may become a reality sooner than expected. Download it and try out the new feature.
  12. Google Interesting Items Module: Recommend Searches, Pages & Gadgets http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/060911-091407 Even though the new Google tool, Interesting Items For You, was given good reviews, it won’t likely land on this author’s computer for a while. One totally unnecessary thing is more interesting items. That category is already at 412% of capacity.
  13. Intuit and Google get together on QuickBooks http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060913-7738.html Smart move by both Google and Intuit to combine the top SMB accounting package with the top search engine and top SMB online ad-placing company. As more people make buying decisions online, this partnership is bound to be good for both sides.
  14. Google direct tap into the ‘net http://villagevoice.com/news/0637,gustin,74433,5.html Google’s new NYC HQ sits right over “one of the country's most important…physical connection points of the world's telecommunications networks and the World Wide Web.” Now we know where Neo will jack in! The article mentions Skynet…
  15. TOR anonymizing proxy servers seized in Germany on child porn charges http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060911-7709.html The bad news is, German authorities seized some TOR anonymizing proxy servers. The good news is TOR routers appear to be working as promised (keeping searches anonymous); the overall TOR system appears unaffected by the loss of seized servers.
  16. "Pirate parties" raid Europe, US http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060911-7710.html The Pirate parties are a good omen. To me it indicates a renewed interest in self-government and an attempt to use the information and communication power of the internet to make improvements on the political scene.
  17. Flash RAM replacement promises high speeds http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060911-7711.html PRAM (phase-change RAM) from Samsung is expected to be available in 2008, be “up to” 30 times faster than flash RAM, and last “up to” 10 times longer than flash. Guess that means I’ll soon be throwing out that slow puny 1 GB flash drive I just bought.
  18. News on new iPods http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060912-7723.html Lots of specs here on the new iPod lineup. An 8GB nano is available, and you can get Bejeweled & other games at iTMS for $5. Top of line is an 80GB iPod. Disney movie downloads are now available from Apple, and iTV is on its way…Apple vs TiVo?
  19. Live.com goes live http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060912-7724.html If you haven’t checked out live.com yet, you should. People have different ways of using the web, so it can be useful to try out different approaches to common tasks, e.g. “Image and Video searches…are more powerful...than their Google counterparts
  20. Chairman resigns, indictments likely in HP board brouhaha http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060912-7727.html For me, the most disturbing thing about this entire article was the second to last line. “Dunn will stay on HP's board after being replaced by HP President and CEO Mark Hurd as Chairman of the Board.”
  21. Facebook will be opened to ‘non-students’ http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/12/technology/12online.html Will Facebook cease being as popular amoung college students now that the doors are being thrown wide open? Maybe this is just an opportunity for another college student entrepreneur/geek to build something to take its somewhat exclusive place.
  22. Coming Zune http://seattleweekly.com/news/0637/zune.php Microsoft doesn’t seem to be gathering much marketing momentum for Zune. Its main value at this point appears to be as a way to keep Apple innovating on the iPod. The iPod has definite deficiencies; competitors efforts will make Apple fix those issues.
  23. The Carbonite Solution to Online Backups http://www.techcrunch.com/2006/09/17/the-carbonite-solution-to-online-backups/
*****

2006/09/17

Vista/Gaming Box Parts -- All Ordered

The remaining parts for the Vista/Gaming box were ordered today from three different companies.

Newegg got the order for RAM and the DVD burner. Performance PCs had a decent deal on the micro-ATX case. Zipzoomfly will be shipping us a motherboard.

The two parts that took the most time deciding on were the RAM and case.

DDR2 RAM prices are skyrocketing, apparently because of the upcoming Vista computers and manufacturing facilities that aren't fully ramped up. If you can wait until next year to buy DDR2 RAM, you should be able to get it a lot cheaper in the first quarter, or at least by second quarter. There are a lot more RAM choices out there than I had realized. For the ASUS motherboard and the Athlon processor being used in this system, there was a choice of 533/667/800 MHz RAM. And within those RAM speeds, there are a multitude of choices to make in terms of timing, heat spreaders, etc. Because this computer is sort of a budget box, a medium price point was chosen, and the favorite RAM of myDigitechnician, Crucial, was purchased. The odd thing was, the RAM cost $230 from Newegg, while the exact same RAM from Crucial costs $309. Newegg's must be priced from before the prices skyrocketed in the past month.

Good luck if you try to figure out what DDR2 RAM to buy in the next three months...

The case was the other parts choice which took a bit of research and discussion. Because the box will be used to demo Vista to customers, and to take places for gaming, a small box was preferred. Since myDigitechnician hadn't built a micro-ATX computer, that form factor was the top choice. There are a lot less choices for a quality micro-ATX box than there are for a standard ATX mid-tower. The Ultra MicroFly was stumbled upon while Googling and poking around on the web and appears to be a decent choice.

Luke's eager to put the box together. He'll be listening closely at the end of the week -- waiting to hear UPS and FedEx ring the doorbell for a delivery!

*****

2006/09/16

Vista/Gaming Box, Parts 2 & 3

A couple more parts arrived this week for the myDigitechnician Vista/Gaming box. The video card and processor, along with the hard drive, are eagerly awaiting the ordering and arrival of the remaining parts.

An AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ Windsor 2 GHz HT 2 x 512 KB L2 cache Socket AM2 Dual Core processor is burning a hole in Luke's pocket, just itching to be pressed into service. Raw power. Not a top of the line processor, of course, but new technology for myDigitechnician and certainly more power than any existing systems within the company.

An XFX PV-T73G-UGD3 GF 7600 GT 256 MB DDR3 128 Bit video card is likewise being held in check whilst the final parts are selected and ordered. Luke's video games keep saying, "GIVE us the GPU!"

The cost of DDR2 RAM for this system continues to rise. The plan is to review all the options tomorrow and order the remaining parts, including the RAM. With two weeks left until BarCampMilwaukee, the time is over for waiting for prices to drop (ha!). I'm not sure the waiting resulted in any of the prices falling, and the RAM cost definitely shot up.

A decision hasn't been made yet whether to assemble the system before or during BarCampMilwaukee. It might make sense to put the parts together as soon as they finish arriving. Don't want to waste time at BarCampMilwaukee assembling the system, only to find out the motherboard or power supply was DOA.

Another week to ten days and the new system should be ready to go, go, GO!

*****

2006/09/15

The Stinkin' Modem...

It's unbelievable that five days of system troubleshooting and not being able to send email was all due to a miserable malfunctioning modem.

More discussions today with my friend's ISP (see yesterday's post) led quickly to the conclusion that they had absolutely no suggestions for resolving the problem of being able to browse the web but not being able to send mail from his office using Outlook Express. The best they could do was suggest the computer be brought to their offices for troubleshooting. The ISP said they had no alternate SMTP server for us to try as a troubleshooting tool. Seems odd an ISP would have access to only one SMTP server.

The computer was running as well as it could be made to do (MS updates, malware scans, email virus scanner off, prefetch and temp folders all cleaned out, defragged, etc). The router was brand new. The laptop which could not send email via Outlook Express from the office had been taken home and worked fine sending emails from home via Outlook Express. So after verifying the computer still would not send email via Outlook Express this afternoon, the ISP was called and asked if a different modem could be borrowed from them to try for getting email working, even though they had tested the modem being used and said it worked fine.

The modem was picked up from the ISP and installed. Office computer was turned on. Outlook Express was opened and a test email was written to send to the friend's work email address. Not expecting anything good, the Send button was clicked.

The email was sent fine. No problem.

The ISP employee who had loaned the spare modem and worked with us throughout the five days to troubleshoot the problem was called. Upon being told the problem had been resolved and Outlook Express could now send email simply because the modem had been replaced, she said, "That's good."

When it was suggested she find new methods for verifying whether a modem was working properly because she had tested and ok'd the bad modem, she told me,

"Oh, I didn't check to make sure it would send email."

She had been told the office computer could access the web but not send email with Outlook Express! There's a good possibility the total hours spent working on this problem and probable lost business will be added up and an invoice for the total cost sent to the ISP...

The true meaning of "double check everything" hit home on this one.

*****

Vexing Email Troubleshooting

Most of yesterday was spent trying to help a friend troubleshoot a vexing and perplexing email problem at his office.

The friend owns a small business selling industrial equipment. Almost all of his transactions these days are conducted via email or faxes, with web access being very important also. When his fax line, email and web access stopped working properly, it interrupted his business big-time!

The exact chronology of the problem has been lost in the mists of time, but last Friday, he began to have problems sending email. Thinking the problem might be temporary, he left things alone over the weekend and figured he'd take care of it Monday morning. No such luck...

He has worked on this problem with:
  • The ISP via the phone and in person at their office
  • The telecom via the phone and a serviceman's visit to his office building
  • A serviceman from the company that installed his phone system and came to the office to check things out
  • Luke W and myself
He also bought a new router because it seemed to be dead. When he went to the ISP office, they tested his router and modem and said the router was dead and the modem was ok.

He has now spent the better part of four and a half days trying to get someone to help him get his fax to be able to send and receive, his email able to send and receive, and his computer able to access the web. The phone line, fax and web access were finally fixed today, and the rest of the day was spent on email. Neither Luke nor I were able to make Outlook Express send out emails, although it receives them fine. As a stopgap measure, Thunderbird was installed on his computer today, and it seemed to send emails fine. But later tonight when he tried to send a Thunderbird email with an attachment, it was only able to send very small attachments. Large attachments stopped T-bird emails in their tracks. A problem page on the web related to large attachments for T-bird listed several possible solutions. All were tried except using a different SMTP mail server. None of the listed solutions helped.

In between adjusting various settings on Thunderbird and researching potential problems/solutions on the web, an attempt was made at 9:30 p.m. to send email using Outlook Express, something that had not worked since the internet became accessible this morning around 10 a.m. Surprise -- Outlook Express sent an email just fine. One more was sent, then two more just to make sure it wasn't a fluke. But when my friend sat down to try sending one with Outlook Express about five minutes later, it had reverted to not sending out emails.

There's no way something this simple should take this long to troubleshoot. But it has, and it continues to drag on. Small examples like this show how much the internet has changed the way America does business, and how much trouble it would cause if the internet developed major problems for weeks or months. Scary...

*****

2006/09/13

Brewing = Niang Zao / NNi issues

It was learned by this reporter that 'Niang Zao' is the Romanized equivalent of 'Brewing' in at least one Chinese dialect. The proposed barcamp beer session title is hereby revised to "Bier. Niang Zao. Technology."

Yesterday's post on this blog discussed the idea of a BarCampMilwaukee session connecting three cities with rich histories of brewing beer; Berlin, Qingdao and Milwaukee. Requests have gone out to people connected with Berlin and Qingdao to see if they have an interest in participating in a collaborative session.

Got some good news today with respect to that project. Darrick H has registered to participate in BarCampMilwaukee. He has some ideas on ways to make the participatory nature of barcamp sessions workable via the internet with fairly common technology for participants both in Milwaukee and in remote locations.

Got some bad news today concerning the beer session. National Day, a main Chinese holiday which begins 01 October, may prevent a Qingdao connection to BarCampMilwaukee from happening in 2006. The connection with interested people in Qingdao will be pursued, however. If people in Qingdao who are passsionate about technology hear about the opportunity to BarCampMilwaukee, they may prefer to connect for the session even though it's a national holiday. If the BarCampMilwaukee/Qingdao connection won't work in 2006, perhaps the three-way session for "Bier. Niang Zao. Technology." can be scheduled for a separate time or possibly during a future barcamp.

Even if the three-way beer session is done after BarCampMilwaukee, there will still be at least one collaborative session with remote participants on 30 September or 01 October.

-----

Below is the initial list of issues for the ** Monday ** 18 September 2006 NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology) 6:50 pm weekly gathering at Atlanta Bread Company (West) by Fox River Mall, Appleton, Wisconsin, USA. The weekly issues list will be updated in a post in this blog by 3 pm on 18 September.
  1. Google and Microsoft vie for Earth domination http://uk.news.yahoo.com/12092006/152/google-microsoft-vie-earth-domination.html An updated Google Earth was released 12 Sep 2006, with a {“timescale slider used to scroll through time”}. Yoda’s real-time SkyNet/Big Brother monitoring may become a reality sooner than expected. Download it and try out the new feature.
  2. Google Interesting Items Module: Recommend Searches, Pages & Gadgets http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/060911-091407 Even though the new Google tool, Interesting Items For You, was given good reviews, it won’t likely land on this author’s computer for a while. One totally unnecessary thing is more interesting items. That category is already at 412% of capacity.
  3. Intuit and Google get together on QuickBooks http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060913-7738.html Smart move by both Google and Intuit to combine the top SMB accounting package with the top search engine and top SMB online ad-placing company. As more people make buying decisions online, this partnership is bound to be good for both sides.
  4. Google direct tap into the ‘net http://villagevoice.com/news/0637,gustin,74433,5.html Google’s new NYC HQ sits right over “one of the country's most important…physical connection points of the world's telecommunications networks and the World Wide Web.” Now we know where Neo will jack in! The article mentions Skynet…
  5. TOR anonymizing proxy servers seized in Germany on child porn charges http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060911-7709.html The bad news is, German authorities seized some TOR anonymizing proxy servers. The good news is TOR routers appear to be working as promised (keeping searches anonymous); the overall TOR system appears unaffected by the loss of seized servers.
  6. "Pirate parties" raid Europe, US http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060911-7710.html The Pirate parties are a good omen. To me it indicates a renewed interest in self-government and an attempt to use the information and communication power of the internet to make improvements on the political scene.
  7. Flash RAM replacement promises high speeds http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060911-7711.html PRAM (phase-change RAM) from Samsung is expected to be available in 2008, be “up to” 30 times faster than flash RAM, and last “up to” 10 times longer than flash. Guess that means I’ll soon be throwing out that slow puny 1 GB flash drive I just bought.
  8. News on new iPods http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060912-7723.html Lots of specs here on the new iPod lineup. An 8GB nano is available, and you can get Bejeweled & other games at iTMS for $5. Top of line is an 80GB iPod. Disney movie downloads are now available from Apple, and iTV is on its way…Apple vs TiVo?
  9. Live.com goes live http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060912-7724.html If you haven’t checked out live.com yet, you should. People have different ways of using the web, so it can be useful to try out different approaches to common tasks, e.g. “Image and Video searches…are more powerful...than their Google counterparts
  10. Chairman resigns, indictments likely in HP board brouhaha http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060912-7727.html For me, the most disturbing thing about this entire article was the second to last line. “Dunn will stay on HP's board after being replaced by HP President and CEO Mark Hurd as Chairman of the Board.”
  11. Facebook will be opened to ‘non-students’ http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/12/technology/12online.html Will Facebook cease being as popular amoung college students now that the doors are being thrown wide open? Maybe this is just an opportunity for another college student entrepreneur/geek to build something to take its somewhat exclusive place.
  12. Coming Zune http://seattleweekly.com/news/0637/zune.php Microsoft doesn’t seem to be gathering much marketing momentum for Zune. Its main value at this point appears to be as a way to keep Apple innovating on the iPod. The iPod has definite deficiencies; competitors' efforts will make Apple fix those issues.

*****

2006/09/12

"Bier. Brewing. Technology." Session

BarCampMilwaukee may have a session called "Bier. Brewing. Technology."

The middle word in the session title may change. A person who knows Chinese was asked what the Mandarin word is for 'Brewing.' The reason this question was asked is because a delegation from Qingdao, Shandong Province, China presented an excellent "Midwest Investment & Business Forum" today in Naperville, Illinois, hosted by Jerry R. Mitchell & Associates, Inc. At the forum, several people from the Qingdao delegation mentioned that Tsingtao beer is a well known product from the city.

Because plans were already in the works for a collaborative session about technology and beer between BarCampBerlin and BarCampMilwaukee, it made sense to extend an invitation to Qingdao to participate in a three-way connection for the session. A personal goal is to have participation via the internet in at least one BarCampMilwaukee session from a remote location. Connecting Berlin, Qingdao and Milwaukee would probably qualify as achieving that particular goal. The three-way connection will be especially appropriate because Germans established the Tsingtao Brewery and Germans had much to do with the breweries in Milwaukee.

Coincidentally, the moderator for the Qingdao forum today was Helen Y, who just happens to be a brewmaster and can maybe connect us with some Tsingtao Brewery people. We are hoping her schedule is open for BarCampMilwaukee so she can come to Milwaukee and be the session leader or co-leader!

It's amazing how small the world is, and how many interesting people you can meet if you try. Thomas Friedman likely made some incorrect conclusions or predictions in his book, "The World Is Flat", but he got more correct than incorrect.

*****

2006/09/11

BarCamp Planners: Get a Salesperson / NN issues

For any people considering planning a barcamp in their area, one piece of advice is get a highly successful salesperson on your planning team.

Many of the people involved with planning a barcamp will be tech enthusiasts and geeks. Those people are not always the best salespeople. Having a good salesperson on your planning team will give you an advantage in two aspects of barcamps.

1. If you want to get sponsors for your barcamp, the salesperson will likely be much more effective at getting sponsors than will your average geek. Someone successful in sales knows how to present the benefits of a product (or event) to the potential sponsor in a way that will help the sponsor make the decision to support your barcamp. Sales people also understand the meaning of a deadline and working under last minute pressure to get the desired 'sales quota', so they will work effectively within the short timeframe of most barcamps.

2. A successful salesperson will help the barcamp planners produce effective marketing and PR materials to both attract the target audience and appeal to the media, if your barcamp wants PR in established media (newspapers, periodicals, tv, radio, etc).

Having a passionate and successful salesperson be responsible for signing up sponsors and effectively handling the PR/marketing aspects of the barcamp will make it easier for the geek planners to connect with other geeks to get them to come to the event and to plan their own sessions for the event.

BarCampMilwaukee doesn't have any sales people involved with the core planning team (as far as I know), which likely caused the group more challenges than necessary. But the great thing about barcamps is, BarCampMilwaukee will happen regardless of how good the planning team is at sales and marketing. And it will be fun for the people participating in the event.

To make your barcamp run as smoothly as possible, include a successful salesperson on your planning team. You'll wonder how you could have done it without them!

-----

Below is the final list of issues for the Monday, 11 September 2006, NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology) 6:50 pm weekly gathering at Atlanta Bread Company (West) by the Fox River Mall, 650 North Casaloma Drive, Appleton, Wisconsin, USA.
  1. Doing it for free http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2006/09/doing_it_for_fr.html
  2. User Account Control: yes, you can turn it off http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060910-7703.html
  3. Suspicions and Spies in Silicon Valley http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14736379/site/newsweek/
  4. Microsoft Max and You http://ricksegal.typepad.com/pmv/2006/09/microsoft_max_a.html
  5. Amazon Unbox better left off your box http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060910-7704.html
  6. How Will Apple’s Marketing Maestro Marry the Computer and the Home TV? http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/11/technology/11apple.html
  7. Judge: ADA lawsuit against Target can proceed http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060910-7705.html
  8. Proposed Wipo Treaty for the Protection of Broadcasts http://www.eff.org/IP/WIPO/broadcasting_treaty/podcasting.php
  9. IDE to NDS Connection http://www.natrium42.com/blog/?p=39
  10. When Information Becomes T.M.I. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/10/fashion/10FACE.html
  11. Yahoo adds conference calls to message service http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060911/tc_afp/afplifestyleusinternetcompanyyahoo
  12. AT&T, Verizon Hit Streets To Promote DSL Service http://news.yahoo.com/s/adweek/20060908/ad_bpiaw/attverizonhitstreetstopromotedslservice
  13. Philadelphia opens high-tech school of the future http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060907/tc_nm/life_school_dc
  14. Penguin revives the serial novel for online buzz http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060907/en_nm/media_penguin_serial_dc
  15. Gore's "Truth" DVD boasts earth-friendly package http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060907/tc_nm/gore_dc
  16. Plantronics' Wireless Winner http://news.yahoo.com/s/bw/20060908/bs_bw/tc20060908004830
  17. Microsoft Seeks To Patent Verbs http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20060907/tc_cmp/192503744
  18. Wired News lets users write wiki article http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060906/ap_on_hi_te/tech_wired_wiki
  19. The end of VC? http://news.yahoo.com/s/infoworld/20060904/tc_infoworld/81385
  20. Mozilla Updates Firefox 2.0 Beta http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20060901/tc_pcworld/127009
  21. Supreme Court To Hear Arguments On Software Patents And Open Source http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20060905/tc_cmp/192501175
  22. Sony scales back PlayStation 3 launch plans http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7672.html
  23. Dispute over GPL could be headed to court http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7671.html
  24. Microsoft hefts a heavy mithril BrowserShield http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060905-7668.html
  25. Google releases open-source OCR tool with HP special sauce http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060905-7664.html
  26. NVIDIA introduces GeForce 7900 GS http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7674.html
  27. Discussion: Webified Desktop Apps http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/discussion_webified_apps.php
  28. Apple Cube reborn http://www.unwiredview.com/2006/09/07/apple-cube-ii-computer/
  29. Google News Archive Search http://blog.outer-court.com/archive/2006-09-06-n18.html
  30. Really Free Software http://www.forbes.com/technology/2006/09/05/linux-ubuntu-opensource_cz_mr_0906shuttleworth.html
  31. Fingerprinting WiFi could secure MAC addresses http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060905-7669.html
  32. BlackBerry Pearl 8100 http://www.techworld.com/mobility/reviews/index.cfm?reviewid=444&pagtype=samechan
  33. Mac and Linux Versions of AbbeyNet Firefox VoIP Plug-ins http://www.oreillynet.com/etel/blog/2006/09/mac_and_linux_versions_of_abbe.html
  34. Why windows takes so long to start up http://www.intelliadmin.com/blog/2006/09/why-windows-takes-so-long-to-start-up.html
*****

2006/09/09

NEW NET: New Night, New Place, New Format / NN isues

NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology issues) is trying a few new looks.

Well, they're not absolutely new. The new features for next week's gathering have all been seen at one time or another in the past couple years.

New Night: Monday! To make it possible for some people to attend who've not been able to on Tuesday nights, the tech enthusiast gathering will happen on Monday night next week. There were no NEW NET regular or semi-regular participants that could not meet on Monday. So we'll give a go at Monday nights to see how well those work. Monday night was when NEW NET met in its early days.

New Place: Atlanta Bread Company! To provide some change in scenery, a change for the palate, and possibly facilitate improved interaction amongst the NEW NET participants, next week's locale is Atlanta Bread Company (West) near the Fox River Mall. The plan at this point is to try a new location once a month. Change and a different perspective can be very beneficial in unsuspected ways. Most meetings will continue to be held at Mister Churro, but we will scout out new possibilities for once a month road-trip meetings. Possibly included in this will be meeting in communities other than Appleton if regular and semi-regular participants are willing to commit the extra time for this. Different locations will give those who eat at the meetings a chance to tickle their taste buds with something other than Mister Churro's scrumptious Latino food and not-to-be-beaten fresh churros. Andy M suggested the higher tables at ABC are also conducive to better interaction and more mingling betwixt the meeting participants. NEW NET has met several times previously at Atlanta Bread Company.

New Format: Discuss issues list & Demos/Meeting Topics! Recent gatherings have consisted mainly of informal chatting amoungst the group members. It was suggested a bit more structure be tried at the start of meetings. Announcing when and where we will meet is NEW NET's only formal meeting structure. Other than that, the gathering has consisted of providing whatever activities, interaction and tech information was of interest to those who show up for the meetings, especially catering to those showing up on at least a semi-regular basis. On 05 September 2006 it was suggested the meetings begin by reviewing the weekly tech issues list then spend some time on a specific topic, most likely having someone demo a product related to the topic for that day. At the 05 September meeting, Luke W demo'd HijackThis and TightVNC. A majority of the group felt they learned something of value from that, and it seemed a good use of the meeting time. Topics can and should be suggested by everyone who comes to NEW NET meetings. If NEW NET people are uninterested in the issues list discussion or in the focus topic for the day, they are encouraged to chat informally with each other during those sections of the meetings, but to do it in a way that doesn't detract from those interested in the issues list or focus topic. As always, the meeting format will evolve to meet the needs and suggestions of those participating.

-----

Below is the initial list of issues for the 11 September 2006 NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology) 6:50 pm weekly gathering at Atlanta Bread Company (West) by the Fox River Mall, 650 North Casaloma Drive, Appleton, Wisconsin, USA. The weekly issues list will be updated in a post in this blog by 3 pm on 11 September.
  1. Philadelphia opens high-tech school of the future http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060907/tc_nm/life_school_dc
  2. Penguin revives the serial novel for online buzz http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060907/en_nm/media_penguin_serial_dc
  3. Gore's "Truth" DVD boasts earth-friendly package http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060907/tc_nm/gore_dc
  4. Plantronics' Wireless Winner http://news.yahoo.com/s/bw/20060908/bs_bw/tc20060908004830
  5. Microsoft Seeks To Patent Verbs http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20060907/tc_cmp/192503744
  6. Wired News lets users write wiki article http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060906/ap_on_hi_te/tech_wired_wiki
  7. The end of VC? http://news.yahoo.com/s/infoworld/20060904/tc_infoworld/81385
  8. Mozilla Updates Firefox 2.0 Beta http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20060901/tc_pcworld/127009
  9. Supreme Court To Hear Arguments On Software Patents And Open Source http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20060905/tc_cmp/192501175
  10. Sony scales back PlayStation 3 launch plans http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7672.html
  11. Dispute over GPL could be headed to court http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7671.html
  12. Microsoft hefts a heavy mithril BrowserShield http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060905-7668.html
  13. Google releases open-source OCR tool with HP special sauce http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060905-7664.html
  14. NVIDIA introduces GeForce 7900 GS http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060906-7674.html
  15. Discussion: Webified Desktop Apps http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/discussion_webified_apps.php
  16. Apple Cube reborn http://www.unwiredview.com/2006/09/07/apple-cube-ii-computer/
  17. Google News Archive Search http://blog.outer-court.com/archive/2006-09-06-n18.html
  18. Really Free Software http://www.forbes.com/technology/2006/09/05/linux-ubuntu-opensource_cz_mr_0906shuttleworth.html
  19. Fingerprinting WiFi could secure MAC addresses http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060905-7669.html
  20. BlackBerry Pearl 8100 http://www.techworld.com/mobility/reviews/index.cfm?reviewid=444&pagtype=samechan
  21. Mac and Linux Versions of AbbeyNet Firefox VoIP Plug-ins http://www.oreillynet.com/etel/blog/2006/09/mac_and_linux_versions_of_abbe.html
  22. Why windows takes so long to start up http://www.intelliadmin.com/blog/2006/09/why-windows-takes-so-long-to-start-up.html
*****

2006/09/07

Tech Minutiae: nForce 430 vs nForce 500 Series

If you were building an Athlon 64 X2 AM2 computer, would you use a motherboard with an nForce 430 south bridge chipset/MPC (media and communications processor) or would you go with the nForce 5oo series MPC?

That's the question myDigitechnician faced this week regarding the Vista/Gaming box currently being spec'd out. As reported in previous posts, the basic Vista/Gaming computer design evolved in late July 2006, the first component for the new machine arrived in late August 2006, and the first sticker shock for this computer happened earlier this week. That sticker shock prompted some moves which may have been an over-reaction, but which will be helpful to ensure all the Vista/Gaming box parts are available for BarCampMilwaukee. The Athlon 64 X2 AM2-socket processor and GeForce 7600 GT video card were ordered this week after getting sticker-shocked.

The next design decision for the Vista/Gaming box was whether to buy a motherboard with the older nForce 430 south bridge chipset or the newer nForce 500 series. The 430 works with 754, 939 and AM2 socket CPUs, while the 500 series is designed only for the AM2 socket. The main concern was to ensure that the motherboard would both work well with the Athlon 64 X2 AM2 CPU and DDR2 RAM and that it would be gaining full benefit from that CPU and RAM. After some diligent search on the nVIDIA site and the ASUS site, along with a few other webpages, Luke W determined that a motherboard with the nForce 430/4 Ultra south bridge will work well with the CPU and RAM.

Because myDigitechnician has not yet built a micro-ATX computer, and because a small computer will be most convenient for demoing Vista to clients or taking to LAN parties, it was desirable to go with a micro-ATX board and case. The above south bridge research and conclusion was needed, however, to move ahead with the micro-ATX decision because micro-ATX boards with nForce 500 series are not yet commonly available.

Next step: Order the micro-ATX case, then the mobo, whilst keeping a close eye on what the 2 GB of DDR2 RAM prices do...

*****

2006/09/06

HijackThis & TightVNC Session at NEW NET

In addition to the usual tech banter, one-on-one discussions and good Latino food, last night's NEW NET gathering included a session on HijackThis and TightVNC.

If Luke W wants to expand on this post, he's welcome to do so. Since he was the leader of the session, he could best explain the basics and nuances of what he demonstrated for the rest of the group at NEW NET (Northeast Wisconsin Network for Economy and Technology issues). To begin with, Luke had everyone download and start up TightVNC on their laptops. He then gave everyone a password to log-on with, giving everyone a window on their computer showing a duplicate of the HijackThis window on his computer, complete with his cursor moving around. He then stepped through the basics of using HijackThis to identify processes and registry keys for both optimizing and de-lousing their computers. As people watched the HijackThis window on their computer, Luke explained with his cursor and highlighting various sections of HijackThis and how he uses the tool to identify malware or unnecessary items on myDigitechnician clients' computers.

Using TightVNC as Luke did was a good way for everyone to see exactly what he was talking about as he covered each point.

Future sessions will likely include using Bart's and some of the other anti-malware tools Luke has up his proverbial sleeve!

Next week's NEW NET meeting has been moved to Monday night at Atlanta Bread Company West, by the Fox River Mall. It will be interesting to see what topics are discussed at the Atlanta Bread Company. If you enjoy technology and want to share and learn in an open environment, meet us there at 7 pm, 11 September 2006. It's informal, free and, we hope, fun and useful.

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