Cool! New membranes for fuel cells.
Cool! New membranes for fuel cells.
Happy to trust the government…
Or not. I’m so glad the feds are constantly telling the truth and pushing for full disclosure. It makes me proud to be an American and gives me warm, trusting feelings towards the current administration.
Or not.
I’m impressed with the technology and ingenuity of recombinant ideas in new photo-sharing sites that TR discussed, but once again I don’t want to have my stuff controlled by someone else. I’m very interested in using facial recognition for good instead of evil, such as the auto-indexing of pictures that Riya is doing. Including a blog by the CEO where he actually apologizes for the company making mistakes… acknowledgement of the reality of life, what a concept!
I want to be able to ensure my pictures are archived, backed up, indexed, never altered, and able to be hidden. I’m not sure a hosted service will give me such assurances, even though I’m willing to pay for that. I’m currently paying in my time and hardware, and I’m not ignorant enough to count that as free. Maybe if there was a way to back up the entire image database associated meta information offline…
Now, let’s hope Gallery puts it in version 3?
Blended fuels instead of batteries?
So gas prices are headed back up but Consumer Reports still says hybrid paybacks are minimal. As an alterative, MIT folks figured out how to combine existing technologies with better data gathering and predictive power available in car-borne computing to produce a dual-fuel vehicle that is about as efficient as current hybrids. The part that frustrates me is the 5-years-to-market (2011!?!)…
Possible upgrades to home systems
Snipped from a slashdot post about energy efficiency and still retaining features within appliances:
(Score:5, Interesting)
Start with the firewall.. I had a Dell server running linux and
iptables, freeswan, traffic shaping etc. It rarely even broke a sweat
as a firewall, although I really liked having a linux shell on my edge
router for testing purposes.. nothing beats tcpdump for figuring out
whats going on, and you can’t get that type of functionality from even
a fancy hardware firewall.
Or can you? Enter the linksys WRT54G. It’s a tiny little box with no
moving parts. It essentially has 5 nics which can be grouped into
switches. It has a 802.11g interface and allows easy connection of big
antennas. But most importantly, it runs linux. It runs linux, iptables,
tc etc very well, and all the diagnostic tools I wanted to have are
still available. This thing has easily paid for itself in power saved.
Next stop, the file server. We all need a box that runs 24/7 and stores
massive amounts of files (read pr0n). Once again, I was able to replace
a full server with a tiny box. This one is called the linksys NSLU2…
a tiny box with two usb ports and a nic. It runs linux, actually it
runs Debian which is incredible and kind of blows my mind. But anyways,
now all my files are served up by this little thing. It also runs
postfix and does some network monitoring for me. Another great feature
is that since the drives are all USB, I can turn off the ones that have
things I don’t need all the time on them. When I need something off
them, just turn the drive on and a few seconds later its available.
Third and final optimization was my combination of both a linux
and a windows desktop. Todays PCs are really fast, kind of ridiculously
fast if you arent playing the latest shoot em up. VMware is free now,
and I have found that as long as you have plenty of ram, running linux
on win or win on linux are both very usable. So two desktop machines
have become one with an extra GB ram. Even better, I can fire up an
extra windows box if I want to test something that I don’t trust on my
real machine (experimenting with WMF’s and such) or an extra linux box
to try out a new distro etc…
So I’ve gone from 4 PCs that ran 24/7 to one (and of course a laptop, and a hx4700 ppc, etc etc The small toys don’t count
.
I originally thought that these little devices would be unreliable,
after all they are pretty cheap. But, both currently have uptimes over
100 days. I even kept the firewall/wireless ap running during a
hurricane here last year, they run forever on a ups that wouldn’t keep
a PC running 15 minutes. It’s suprising how quiet the office has
become. Over time you don’t notice the noise that several PCs can make,
but it’s significant. I can watch TV in there and hear it without
disturbing anyone late at night. The room used to be significantly
hotter than all the other rooms in my house, now it’s not noticable.
I’ve reclaimed a huge amount of space in my office. Sure, visitors
might not immediately realize that I am a total geek, but sometimes
that’s ok.
PS I don’t mean to be advertising Linksys stuff.. you can get
similar devices that run the same firmwares and linux distros from
other vendors. Check out http://www.openwrt.org/ [openwrt.org] and http://www.nslu2-linux.org/ [nslu2-linux.org] for more info.
Universal Authentication requires too much trust
I don’t trust anyone to have all of my personal details – and I know it is somewhat naive of me to think I can hide them – but the issues I keep having with ideas of Universal Authentication are that I want to control my own data. I don’t want any specific repository, I don’t want the software deciding what information is appropriate to share, I don’t want to have conflicts with other users when we have the same information… I want to be the one deciding what to distribute.
I even – gasp – lie to some sites. The LA Times (free login required) thinks I live in Kansas. How will the Shibboleth system handle my lies?
OK, so it’s way too expensive and looks goofy, but a real Lithium-battery car now exists, beyond just a prototype. If we can only get a major manufacturer to now decide to offer them…
A cool OpenMedia PVR – too bad it’s only sold in New Zealand.
Passwords are inadequate, part 2
More writings on the inadequacies of passwords and the difficulty when ‘best’ practices are enshrined without thought… including the question of what we should really be monitoring for security instead of always pointing at lazy users or relying on some magic entry authentication.
Technorati Tags: passwords, best+practices