Apr
7
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Reacting to allegedly fraudulent election procedures, students are storming the presidency and parliament of the small eastern European country of Moldova. It is reported that they used Twitter to organize. Currently twitter and blogs are being used to spread word of what is happening since all national news websites have been blocked. If the 1989 Romanian revolution was the first to be televised, is this the first to be lead by twitter and social networks?” Jamie points out this interesting presentation (from March 2008) by Ethan Zuckerman about the realities of online activism, including how governments try to constrain it.

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Comments Off on Organized Online, Students Storm Gov’t Buildings In Moldova | tags: google, network, news, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
intersys writes “A new fundamental law of economics has been formulated by Rod Beckstrom, former Director of the National Cyber Security Center. In Words: The value of a network equals the net value added to each user’s transactions (PDF) conducted through that network, valued from the perspective of each user, and summed for all. It answers the decades-old question of ‘how valuable is a network.’ It is granular and transactions-based, and can be used to value any network: social, electronic, support groups, and even the Internet as a whole. This new model or law values the network by looking from the edge of the network at all of the transactions conducted and the value added to each. One way to contemplate the value the network adds to each transaction is to imagine the network being shut off and what the additional transactions’ costs or loss would be. Beckstrom’s Law replaces Metcalfe’s law, Reed’s law, and other concepts which proposed that the value of a network was based purely on the size of the network (and in the case of Metcalfe’s law, one other variable).”

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Comments Off on New Fundamental Law of Network Economics | tags: google, network, security | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
Documentary on the early stages of social networking on the web.
Comments Off on We Live In Public Trailer | tags: network, networking, web | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
candiman writes “The Australian PM, Kevin Rudd, has just announced that none of the private sector submissions to build a National Broadband Network was up to the standard, so instead the government is going to form a private company to build a fiber to the premises network. The network will connect to 90% of premises delivering 100Mb/s. The remaining 10% will be reached with wireless and satellite delivering up to 12Mb/s. The network cost has been estimated at 43 billion AU dollars over 8 years of construction — and is expected to employ 47,000 people at peak. It will be wholesale only and completely open access. As an Australian who voted for the other guys, all I can say is, wow.”

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Comments Off on Australia To Build Fiber-To-the-Premises Network | tags: google, network, tv, wireless | posted in technical news
Apr
6
2009
The next installment in the Fonera router family is set to make its debut in a couple of weeks, and the additions to the hardware are relatively impressive. Promising full support for networked storage, automatic downloads, sharing of a USB 3G connection, and a few other perks in addition to the normal range of functionality found in the Fonera routers this package packs quite a punch. “Like the original Fonera and Fonera+ routers, the principals of this hippie-love-in-styled product still apply. You buy the router and hook it up to your internet connection as normal. The trick is that the router shares a part of your bandwidth on a public-facing connection. Other Fon owners can log in and use this public network for free. In turn, you — as a Fonera owner — can travel the world and use other Fon hotspots. It’s a neat idea and everybody wins, except the money-grabbing telcos.”

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Comments Off on Fonera 2 To Launch With Extended Functionality | tags: 3G, google, network | posted in technical news
Apr
6
2009
snydeq writes “InfoWorld’s Dan Tynan offers up 7 ‘even dirtier IT jobs’ in a follow-up of last year’s 7 dirtiest jobs in IT. Number four? Zombie console monkey. ‘Wanted: Individuals with low self-esteem and high boredom threshold willing to spend long hours poring over server logs and watching blinking lights on a network console.'”

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Comments Off on Even Dirtier IT Jobs | tags: google, network | posted in technical news
Apr
6
2009
“In 2007 and 2008, telecommunications pioneers, consumer activists and privacy advocates in the United Kingdom and the United States were disturbed to discover that a few telecommunications providers were participating in experiments to test the use of a network management tool in targeting marketing campaigns and advertisements at specific . . .”
Comments Off on Series of Essays on Deep Packet Inspection | tags: network, privacy, telecommunications | posted in technical news
Apr
5
2009
An anonymous reader writes “My father is a veterinarian with a small private practice. He runs all his patient/client/financial administration on two simple workstations, linked with a network cable. The administration application is a simple DOS application backed by a database. Now the current systems, a Pentium 66mhz and a 486, both with 8MB of RAM and 500MB of hard drive space, are getting a bit long in the tooth. The 500MB harddrives are filling up, the installed software (Windows 95) is getting a bit flakey at times. My father has asked me to think about replacing the current setup. I do know a lot about computers, but my father would really like the new setup to last 10-15 years, just like the current one has. I just dont know where to begin thinking about that kind of systems lifetime. Do I buy, or build myself? How many spare parts should I keep in reserve? What will fail first, and how many years down the line will that happen?”

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Comments Off on How Do I Provide a Workstation To Last 15 Years? | tags: computers, database, google, network | posted in technical news
Apr
5
2009
zxjio writes with this excerpt from a New York Times article about just how much networking infrastructure costs vary between the US and Japan: “Pretty much the fastest consumer broadband in the world is the 160-megabit-per-second service offered by J:Com, the largest cable company in Japan. Here’s how much the company had to invest to upgrade its network to provide that speed: per home passed. … Verizon is spending an average of 7 per home passed to wire neighborhoods for its FiOS fiber optic network and another 6 for equipment and labor in each home that subscribes, according to Sanford C. Bernstein & Company. … The experience in Japan suggests that the major cable systems in the United States might be able to increase the speed of their broadband service by five to 10 times right away. They might not need to charge much more for it than they do now and they would still make as much money.”

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Comments Off on The NYT Compares Broadband Upgrade Costs in US, Japan | tags: 3G, google, japan, network, networking | posted in technical news
Apr
4
2009
craig writes “CBS11 News reports that the raid on Core IP networks is in the result of an investigation into unpaid telco access fees paid by CLECs and VoIP carriers to terminate calls on their networks. They also report that this raid is linked to the March 12th raid on Crydon Technology’s datacenter, which also hosted VOIP providers. Anyone in the telco business will tell you access fees to other carriers are a total mess and lots of carriers have unpaid balances out there. It gives you the feeling that the FBI is acting as a collection agency for AT&T and Verizon.”

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Comments Off on Data Center Raid About Unpaid Telco Fees | tags: google, network, news, technology | posted in technical news