Month: November 2004

marc canter on microcontent

marc canter gave a talk about microcontent to the berkman weblog group this evening (remotely over a free webx.com trial). it was most excellent, and while i had an idea what would be coming, i was still surprised by the scope of marc’s vision. this is something oscom should support, as it offers a migration path from content silos to new applications and services based on top of open source content. marc is evangelizing his ideas on a tucows-sponsored tour in Q1 2005.

Collateral damage

I have started to accept the collateral damage that is false positives and delete all emails on the server that spamassassin classifies as spam. Here is my procmailrc, ready for use with any Maildir based setup. If you use /var/spool/mail, just remove the DEFAULT line. enjoy, but don’t come crying to me if you miss emails.

#LOGFILE=$HOME/procmail.log
#VERBOSE=yes
#LOGABSTRACT=all
DEFAULT=${HOME}/Maildir/
# Send all mail through SpamAssassin
:0fw: spamassassin.lock
* < 256000
| spamassassin
# Mail that is classified as spam will be deleted
:0
* ^X-Spam-Status: YES
/dev/null

Recently, spam has hovered around the 4.5-5.0 mark in spamassassin. Looks like spammers try to send spam just below the default threshold (5), so I made my new threshold 4.5

Sushi dinner 2004

Gregor and I are conspiring to host my 7th annual sushi fest. This year it will be held at 21:00 on Thursday, December 9th. The dinner coincides with the first night of “Votes, Bits and Bytes“, The Berkman Center for Internet & Society’s conference about the impact of technology on politics. The location will be near Harvard Square with more specific details on the way.

mark your calendar! i’ll send out an invite shortly, if you want to be on the list and i don’t know you, leave a comment below.

RAIDb

just learned about RAIDb

RAIDb stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Databases. This acronym has been used in reference to the RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks) concept that achieves scalability and high availability of disk subsystems at a low cost. RAIDb aims at providing better performance and fault tolerance than a single database by combining multiple inexpensive database instances into an array of databases.

C-JDBC is a database cluster middleware that implements RAIDb, LGPL licensed.

community currencies

interesting writing over at the feature about community currencies. makes me wonder what their influence on monetary policy will be. they are not as huge as frequent flyer miles yet,

Estimating that the air miles currently in circulation are worth $500B, The Economist magazine labeled frequent-flier miles as the second biggest “currency” after the $.

, but are only bound to grow. what happens if these alternate currencies overtake the $?

Jaron lanier vs will wright

someone asks if the sims 2 promotes consumerism, will responds that it has a deterioration built in. jaron calls monoculture the biggest mistake of the IT industry, mentions that textbook publishers slipped through legislation to make non-book learning materials not part of the requirements, which stifled VR worlds. will mentions that kids make purchasing decisions for educational titles as early as age 7, needs to be taken into account for marketing. jaron is an adviser for linden labs. jaron is really bugged by the narrowness of archetypes in online worlds, mentions vixens. how can the level of education be improved given that most kids have access to “the library of congress” on their desktop? will thinks it is a motivational problem, and richer tests etc could help. jaron, on the other hand, thinks that “touching reality” can increase learning acquisition. will riffs that technology is an extension of the human body, and increasingly, that body is in the computer. jaron: “bits don’t mean anything, they only encode information in context to reality.” thoughts on teledildonics? jaron: where are the women? 🙂 will: i hear this topic a lot, but never has a woman brought it up. will mentions introverted people that were able to express themselves. someone asks for a powerful meme to spread about the value of play for education. jaron: first some dark thoughts. the privatization and stratification of education (fueled by the minority of white people in the us for the first time) will lead to more future shock. he thinks that we can be gentler on the unwashed (who mostly dislike educated people). will: trust kids, they know what is good for them, let them explore.. someone asks about addiction to online games. will mentions a great scene from a book of the 17th century of someone’s first encounter with someone else reading a book, with the other person completely absorbed. thinks it calls for a social solution, not a technological solution. some games have negative returns to defeat the 12 year olds that had infinite time. jaron wants to turn the question around, asserts that the best thing for a kid to become a highly performant mind is to explore things. mentions infinite games. is it addiction if it is productive? is writing a novel an addiction? what about the arts / science gulf? don’t we need a manifesto for arts education? will: the gaming industry has, in his experience, a much more balanced approach. also, he sees more artists crossing over to technology than the other way round.
jaron: the problem with AI is that there is always a need for a human to assess AI performance. the auto correction feature of word is a good example: is it actually a good feature or not? people have to bend over backwards and “learn” what the feature expects to make it work.