Intel’s Chief, Clueless

Craig Barrett, Intel’s chairman, has been talking down the “$100 Laptop”:http://laptop.media.mit.edu/ (which doesn’t use Intel CPUs) targeted at the developing world by Nicholas Negroponte of the MIT Media Lab.

Barrett’s argues that such a device won’t be flexible enough to satisfy today’s users:

World’s poorest don’t want ‘$100 laptop’: Intel – Yahoo! News
Negroponte said at their launch in November the new machines would be sold to governments for schoolchildren at $100 a device but the general public would have to pay around $200 — still much cheaper than the machines using Intel’s chips.

But Barrett said similar schemes in the past elsewhere in the world had failed and users would not be satisfied with the new machine’s limited range of programs.

“It turns out what people are looking for is something is something that has the full functionality of a PC,” he said. “Reprogrammable to run all the applications of a grown up PC… not dependent on servers in the sky to deliver content and capability to them, not dependent for hand cranks for power.”

So, just how capable is this device? According to the “$100 Laptop FAQ”:http://laptop.media.mit.edu/faq.html, it has a 500MHz processor, 1GB of storage, and a 1Mpixel display (~1024×768). That’s about as capable as my home machine was 3-4 years ago. That was a few years back, but I distinctly remember being able to install and update it with new software. Not that it really mattered, because most of the time the only thing I used was a web browser and an e-mail client.

The truth is, most people in the developed world these days would probably be perfectly happy with a web browser to browse the web and use webmail running on a “server in the sky” somewhere. Throw in an instant messaging program or two and you’ve probably satisfied a bunch more.

So, would the developing world really be that much different? A crank gets around the problem of spotty electric power. WiFi mesh networks link the computers to each other, and to a server at the school. The server could provide file storage and help with store-and-forward e-mail through an intermittant or low bandwidth connection to the Internet backbone. 1GB total RAM+storage would still be more memory and storage space than most computers had a decade ago and would be sufficient for a core set of applications.

I don’t think Intel really has a clue about what consumers (anywhere) want. Their stock price has been pretty much flat for years. The average selling price of a PC has been declining for about as long. The average selling price of Intel microprocessers have probably been declining along a parallel curve. In the meantime, the video card has become more important than the CPU in influencing the performance of the most demanding mainstream applications (ie PC games). Does any of this sound like a company who has their finger on the pulse of consumer’s needs or desires?

Keep a Closer Eye on Your Congressperson

The Washington Post just brought a site online that lets you “browse every congressional vote since 1991”:http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/. It also lets you subscribe to RSS feeds to keep track of the ongoing voting of individual congresspersons.

Also notable, it’s powered by “Django”:http://djangoproject.com.

Check it out!

Scaling Apache beyond 20K concurrent connections

An interesting paper on “serving high-levels of concurrent requests with Apache 2”:http://www.stdlib.net/~colmmacc/Apachecon-EU2005/scaling-apache-handout.pdf

Virutal Makeup for Celebs in the HDTV Age

In the late 90s, I was involved with a company that produced high-end animation. Most of our customers were in the TV business and HDTV was finally getting a little investment.

At the time, I figured that HDTV would shorten the careers of a lot of on-air talent. I’m not sure that it has, yet, but it might soon.

Memorandum has captured a cluster of recent articles and posts on the “cruel impact of HDTV on our valuable national celebrities”:http://tech.memeorandum.com/051205/p20#a051205p20.

I have a solution: Virtual Makeup

Virtual makeup starts with a 3D model of a celebrities head, neck and shoulders. This then used to layer “virtual makeup” on their live image to correct imperfections and conceal flaws.

I have another solution too: Bring on the new blood!

Bare Trees At Dusk

Bare Trees At Dusk

6 frame panorama created with “Autostitch”:http://www.autostitch.net
Shot with Canon PowerShot S400 (37mm equiv, 1/25s f/2.8, underexposed 1 stop) at 4:55pm on Nov 30, 2005 @ Golden Gardens Dog Park, Seattle, WA, USA

Dave Doth Protest Too Much About The Wrong Things

Am I the only one (who doesn’t already have an axe to grind with him) who thinks that Dave Winer “repeated”:http://www.scripting.com/2005/11/29.html#When:2:41:31AM “complaints”:http://www.scripting.com/2005/11/25.html#When:12:42:42PM about “iTunes purging his music when he hooked it to a new machine”:http://www.scripting.com/2005/11/24.html#When:11:12:50PM are a little dubious?

Arrrgh, I plugged my new iPod into my old Mac and lost everything on it. Never got a confirmation dialog asking if it was okay if it wiped out the music and audiobooks that I painstakingly took hours of my time to set up. Never mind that the originals are on the other side of the United States. Honestly, how dare they design software that’s so brutal?

iTunes puts up a confirmation dialog when you hook an iPod to it that already has content on it letting you know that it will wipe all the existing content if you proceed. It does give you the option to go forward, and never see the message again.

Warnings aside, what really sucks is that Apple does their best to make it impossible for people to add content to their iPods from multiple computers. It may be that this scenario just didn’t fit into their (Steve’s) pure white vision of the iPod experience, but I think it’s more likely that it was a compromise to placate the recording industry who didn’t want to see the iPod used as the backbone of a P2P sneakernet.

Fortunately, there is software that makes it possible to move tracks on and off iPods in a fine grained fashion. “Sharepod”:http://www.sturm.net.nz/website.php?Section=iPod+Programs&Page=SharePod#download works on Windows, and can be run directly off the iPod. “PodWorks”:http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/17443 seems to offer similar features on MacOS. Sharepod and PodWorks aren’t the only options either, there are probably a half dozen alternatives on each platform.

Update:Dave has done experiments to confirm that “iTunes isn’t prompting him before overwriting his iPod”:http://www.scripting.com/2005/11/30.html#When:6:10:50AM when he hooks it to a new itunes library.