Category Archives: Uncategorized

i’ll be darned – thanks to the fact that i was stumbling through jonas’ archives, i discovered that even though i’d read the semantic web: a primer , i guess i skimmed over a blurb about a nice little tool called, tidy. it can do alot of things, not the least of which is acting as a preprocessor for xslt:

“Once the richer information has been embedded in a page, a program still needs to transform it into the format it requires. At this point another W3C technology, XSLT, has a lot to offer. Given an XHTML page as input, it is useful for selecting and transforming the contents of that page. It provides an excellent bridge from older HTML technology to the nascent XML-based Semantic Web applications. A tool of
singular utility when used in conjunction with an XSLT processor is Dave Raggett’s “Tidy,” which can take HTML and turn it into XHTML. As most web authoring tools still don’t have XHTML support, HTML will be created by web authors for some time to come. Tidy facilitates the processing of normal HTML with XSLT, enabling authors of such documents to participate in the Semantic Web.”

whump also points to an older article in webreview on using tidy to convert an existing HTML page into XHTML:

“Weighing in at under 200 KB, HTML Tidy is the closest you’ll get to a perfect HTML utility.”

uh, oh. looks like the grand ideal of a seemless web of computational artifacts may be a little further off than the hype promulgators would like us to believe:

“The IEEE-1394 interface appearing in the current crop of digital electronics gadgets fails to provide the interoperability system makers promised. What’s worse, industry experts say, the problems dogging
1394 today — such as mushrooming software complexity — could hold back other wired and wireless consumer interfaces as well, postponing the arrival of truly plug-and-play home networks for perhaps a decade.

“Plug anything — camcorder, PC, set-top — into Playstation 2 with 1394, and you’ll basically get no functionality,” said Mark Kirstein, vice president of research at Cahners In-Stat Group. “Similarly, only a few MPEG [D-VHS]-based VCRs can talk to DV camcorders. There is a chance of [consumer] backlash when things don’t work.””

hmmm – i didn’t know the dsl wholesalers were is such poor shape due to “at-risk” ISPs:

“”It has been personally very frustrating to have such a large portion of our ISP [Internet service provider] base deteriorate so quickly,” said Chuck Minn, chairman and co-founder of Covad, the largest competitive Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) carrier. Fully 26 percent of Covad’s installed base is connected through “troubled” ISPs, while another 32 percent is with “at-risk” ISPs. While it already had to re-report its
third-quarter earnings downward $10.4 million due to these problems, Covad last week projected that it would earn $20 million to $25 million less than the $85 million it was projecting for the fourth quarter.

“These [wholesalers] are really in life support mode, and there’s nothing they can do,” said Adam Giansiracusa, managing director of technology stocks at Frost Securities. He explained that all of the carriers are trying to get themselves to profitability by scaling back and not growing too quickly, since their ISP customers are performing so poorly.”

i’m not one for flagrant testimonials, and i’ve only had dsl for less than a week – but i’m totally and completely impressed by my isp, speakeasy.

not only did they give me two free months because of a delay that i admitted was likely my fault [i was screwing around with my e.mail account and brought it crashing down, just when they were trying to send me an e.mail that required confirmation to proceed with the installation], but they also sent me e.mails every other day to tell me how things were progressing:

“…covad has just informed us of your telephone delivery date…”

“…Your circuit order 824414 has been successfully delivered and tested with the local telco and you have been scheduled for a Covad installation…’

“… Your Covad install is swiftly approaching! …”

and that’s only a portion of the e.mails. currently, i’ve been trading e.mails with a support rep named caroline who is always prompt in responding to my doltish e.mails [ yes, i actually forgot my password, assumed that it was their fault – shot off an e.mail – only to find out 5 minutes later that i was an ass and had actually been typing in the wrong password. over. and over. and over.]

i might be going a little overboard, but i’ve been around the virtual block a few times and i have never seen customer service as good as this before. speakeasy gets it. they use a nice mix of automated and human interaction to deliver service. the type of service that makes people that have never written testimonials – write testimonials.

so, if you’re thinking about dsl and you have an option for an isp, my money’s on speakeasy sticking it out. if customer service has anything to do with it.

and no, i’m not getting any free service for writing this, you cynical bastard.

inspired by press nothing to continue, taylor’s “something something” reference and my strong desire to procrastinate, i decided to make my first foray into web-enabled voice applications using tellme. execute the following instructions correctly and you will hopefully enjoy a quote of the day:

0. pick up the phone
1. dial 1.800.555.TELL
2. after introduction say “extensions”
3. say or dial 32523

unfortunately the 800 number only works in the us and canada. if you’re outside that region, you can try dialpad or net2phone

awhile back, chris nolan commented on how the .com craziness was affecting technology journalism [sic]:

“”Both local papers, in their own ways, exercise judgments that undermine their credibility. The [San Francisco Chronicle’s] technology coverage harps on the same tired theme of amazement. My God, says the local paper, look at the wizards and their wonders. The Chron should justrun the same daily headline: “More Cool Stuff From Those Young People in Palo Alto.” The [Mercury News] regards the area’s newly wealthy as curiosities from another planet. The Merc’s recurring headline would say, “They’re Rich. They’re Young. What Does It Mean for People Who Are Poor Like Us?”” “One former editor at the Merc once stood shoulder-to-shoulder with Oracle CEO Larry Ellison at a banquet, but couldn’t bring himself to say a word to the billionaire. He told me later he didn’t know what to say to Ellison, whom he noted was at the time the wealthiest man in Silicon Valley.

How is it possible for an editor to be so awed by power, money or influence that he could not even shake another man’s hand? Such insecurity in the face of the area’s increasing wealth and sophistication is a sad commentary on the people who should be telling the valley’s stories””

the commentary is all the more amusing since dan gillmor [note that he his a columnist for one of the publications that chris took to task] has finally – eight long months later – decided to come clean with the pronouncement that tech stock boom was a legal con game:

“The technology boom has been called the largest legal creation of wealth in the history of the planet.
Maybe so, but that’s not the whole story.

As the events of 2000 have shown, it’s also been the greatest legal con game of all time.”

but does dan do any soul-searching? well – we do get four sentences:

“My own profession bears a share of responsibility for the debacle. Journalists served more as stenographers than skeptical observers while technology executives, public-relations people, market “analysts” and other self-serving participants in the con talked up the New Economy and insisted that some fundamental laws of economics had been repealed.

We celebrated the 21-year-old billionaire of the week. We raved about companies with tiny revenues and no prospect of earnings as the harbinger of a new world, when the newly rediscovered reality was firmly rooted in old truths.”

i hope that truer words have never been written:

“All those restless hackers, busy twisting the English language up and down with their obscure puns, busy donating their energy to public projects and passions — they’re still out there, following their coding stars. Their curiosity helped build the Internet, helped make code like Linux, BSD and Perl flourish to the point that the commercial world had to take notice.

But now that the commercial world is no longer quite as obsessed, that doesn’t mean they’ve gone away. They’ve just turned their energies toward even cooler stuff…”