Finnish Tablet

Nokia has released a “pocket-sized WiFi Tablet”:http://www.nokia.com/nokia/0,1522,,00.html?orig=/770.

This strikes me as a clever move on their part. It takes advantage of increacingly available WiFi bandwidth and does so with a device that’s cheaper than a portable PC and many smartphonesn (I’ve seen suggestions of $300 price points), which positions it well in a lot of emerging economies where penetration of said devices is relatively low.

It’s running Linux and appears to accept third party apps, which will no doubt attract a lot of interest from geeks, some of whom might turn out interesting software for it.

It also lets them start to dable in the VoIP market without freaking out mobile carriers too much.

It will be interesting to see how long it takes Skype to release a version for this device.

Now, there are lots of ways they could blow it with this thing. But I think this could be the start of a very interesting strategy.

One thing I know. I want one.

“More on eHome Upgrade”:http://www.ehomeupgrade.com/entry/984/nokia_launches_new

Indiana Superior Court Judge has amazing Acrobatic Abilities

A Marion County Superior Judge has barred divorcing Wiccan parents from teaching their child pagan beliefs.

Why he thought that he was somehow entitled to render judgement respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof is beyond me. Perhaps he’s figures that since he’s a judge, rather than a congressman, that the first amendment doesn’t apply to him? Or maybe he’s ticked off about the whole “daylight savings time thing”:http://www.mccsc.edu/time.html.

I’m more interested in knowing how he manages to sit on the bench with his head stuffed up his backside.

Apple as a Mobile Carrier

This is kind of wacky.

bq. “Mac OS Rumors :: The Original Mac Rumor Site”:http://www.macosrumors.com/20050523B.php
Because cellular network carriers have essentially all of the power in the equation, _Apple has been exploring the possibility of becoming one itself *by erecting towers at or near its retail store locations* and making an alliance with one or more carriers to “piggyback” on their networks._

p. Errecting towers at or near its retail store locations? What kind of crazy idea is that? If they were Starbucks, that might actually provide reasonable coverage, but even the Mac faithful are going to have a problem limiting their mobile calling to the tiny number of Apple Stores within the US.

On the other hand, Apple becoming a virtual carrier, reselling service on other networks makes a lot of sense, at least from the point of view of bootstrapping iPod phones and mobile sales from the iTunes Music Store without giving the carriers an exhorbitant cut.

Of course, if having some towers put Apple in a better negotiating position with respect to renting infrastructure from the major carriers, then that would makes sense

It will be interesting to see what happens.

Freakonomics Blog RSS Lameness

I’ve not read Freakonomics yet, but I’m going to. That didn’t stop me from trying to subscribe to the “author’s blog”:http://blog.freakonomics.com/ when I found out about it.

They don’t make it easy. Neither Onfolio nor Firefox’s feed detection mechanism was able to auto detect the feed. Which is odd, because there is a nice yellow XML button in the sidebar, along with button’s for adding the feed to various web based aggregators via their proprietary mechanisms.

Clicking on the XML feed button takes me to a feedburner page which again stymies Firefox and Onfolio. A little rooting around finds a link to an Atom feed, which I was finally able to add more or less manually.

What’s particularly absurd about all of this is that the Feedburner page is clearly trying to accomodate all comers. Onfolio might be considered a fringe RSS reader, but Firefox is rather popular in some circles, and its Feed detection mechanism interoperates with some RSS readers.

iTunes Sharing from a Linux Server

In the space of only few days from the first time she tried it, the other human in the house came to expect that she’d be able to use iTunes on her PC to listen to the music collection stored on mine using the music sharing feature.

The downside of this arrangement is that shutting down iTunes on my computer denies her access.

The solution was to install mt-daapd (sexy name, isn’t it!) on a linux box I’ve been putting together as a home file server and move my library to the linux machine. Whenever I add music it shows up in the shared library in short order and without further human intervention.

At this point, this seems better than the alternative of telling her to use the iTunes library via a file share since iTunes doesn’t automatically detect new files. The downside is that iTunes doesn’t let you add tracks from iTunes sharing to a playlist.

I used “this article”:http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/6067 as a starting point. I was able to avoid compiling it because the latest debian package available works properly. The flipside is that I had to compile howl, because the packages are appearantly no longer in the Ubuntu Universe (whatever the hell that means).

*Update (9/10/2005): It seems that iTunes 5 has changed the network sharing protocol and broken mt-daapd. Fortunately, there is a new version out:

Home – mt-daapd project site
mt-daapd 0.2.2 has been officially released today. This version is primarily to fix iTunes 5 compatibility problems.

Currently, only tarball and debian “sarge” packages are available, but SRPM and Fedora Core packages will follow shortly.