Tesco direct have Acer Aspire One for 198 pounds

I have been considering getting a netbook or as I'm starting to call them cloud terminals for a while now. I've always wanted a replacement for reading ebooks on without dragging my quite heavy Dell XPS M1210 around with me everywhere. So at BarCampLondon5 either Tom Morris or Cristiano Betta suggested a session titled “bring your gadgets.” So you can just imagine the things pulled out for the session.

Sam from Orange showed off his Acer Aspire One. When I asked him about the price he said he had got his for 199 pounds from the PC World sale a while back. Now it seems Tesco have jumped in on the same game. It needs more more memory as the default had 512meg of memory to be honest, what more would you change? Oh thanks to James Cridland for the tip on the price point.

I like the Dell mini-9 too but its the wrong end of the price bracket for me. I found this compare chart very useful, but there's nothing like feeling the keys of the machine its self. I learned I could use the Acer keys quickly without a problem unlike the Asus eeePC models.

Oh is it payday already… And I actually do need to order food for the flat, question is if I order today will I get it before going to Berlin?

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Twitter IM bot not coming anytime soon

From Twitter Status blog

In October 2006, just three months after Twitter launched publicly, we added IM support—i.e., the ability to get and send tweets via XMPP/Jabber/Google Talk. I was a big fan of this feature, because this interface, which millions of people were already familiar with, seemed a perfect fit for Twitter’s real-time nature.

In December of 2006, we extended that support to AIM, enabling a much bigger number of users to interface with Twitter via the same system they talk to their friends on all day.

While off to an early start, since then, our IM feature has been, well…spotty. We first killed AIM support after struggling for months to make it reliable (which was a side-project to trying to keep the service as a whole reliable). And our Jabber support has been up and down until about four-and-a-half months ago when it’s just been…down.

Oh yeah that's why I'm using Ping.FM alongside a range of other microblogging services such as Indenti.ca and Jaiku.

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The future of “open” webapps 2008


Back from the Future of Webapps and it was a good one. Lots of interesting talks around web applications and the web generally. I unfortunately could only be there on Thursday, but I did make it back for Diggnation Live (number 172) on the Friday night, which was pretty mental again.

Without sounding negative, it was interesting to note that out of tons of speakers (47?) only 5 of them were female and one of those replaced a male speaker who dropped out earlier. Diversity beyond gender was worst still, guessing from there profiles only 3 speakers from a non-white background. But what was really on the tip of peoples tongues was the amount of American speakers. There seemed to be a buzz around the conversations in the Fox afterwards about the lack of British speakers and if having all the fanboys/girls join FOWA is good or bad?

My take on this has always been the same. Until Carsonified's FOWA there were no really big conference celebrating the web in this way. FOWA is huge, loud and hyped up to the max, more like a festival about web development, design and business that just conference. And although our britishness tells us we should avoid it, we actually quite like it. Its a good thing to finally have something so large only the best in the field come along – No matter where they maybe from. The affect of all of this is that all those developers, designers, ux people who don't usually attend things like barcamps, geekdinners, usergroups, etc get a feel for what its like to rub sholders with different people in the same industry who might give them good advice about attending other events. Diggnation is at the end of FOWA and people who don't want to attend can just go if needed. For the rest of us, its a bit of fun at the end of a long day and before hitting the party.

Back to the Tech, the theme running through most of the sessions I felt was around the open stack as David Recordon calls it. I didn't attend a lot of talks because I was away on Friday and too busy sorting out other stuff although I did catch Suw Anderson-Charman, Kevin Marks, Ron Richards talks in the business area. I also saw Alvin Woon, David Recordon, Blaine Cook and Joe Stump. I heard great things about Tim Bray's talk which he changed at the last minute and Ryan's interview with Mark Zuckerberg.

I do think it was a shame the University stands didn't get used that much. They could have been better used if maybe they targeted students directly. Maybe they could have been used for birds of a feather sessions or for new speakers to get there first chance at public speaking or something? But don't get me wrong the whole conference was great and this is more me being picky. Glad to see videos going up straight away too

Two things overheard while at the FOWA party on Friday. One, the UK government is considering buying Yahoo Inc. Yes the same Yahoo we all know and love. It sounds crazy, but the people I was talking to, made really good points including the one about the Microsoft. When Microsoft considered buying Yahoo inc, there share price was 34 dollars a share. Now its 12 dollars a share. A buy into a technology by a government could settle other investers, bring about confidence in the economic system and future. The Second was something to do with Google's low profile at FOWA this year. But I'm sure its just Google being Google.

Excellent work Carsonified, can't wait to see what happens next year.

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Boxee + dropbox = P2P sharing of media

I called it a while ago I'm sure. It was obvious that with Boxee allowing you to see and share what you currently watching/listening to, the ability to actually share that media wouldn't be far off.

dropbox enables users to share files between computers in a super-easy way.

once you install dropbox it adds a folder to your PC/Mac that you can
share across your own computers or with friends (watch the video on
getdropbox.com it’s pretty straight forward).

it becomes really cool when you add your Dropbox folder as a source on boxee.

go to Settings->Media Sources choose to add a Local Source and select the Dropbox folder.

now whenever a friend is uploading new pictures/music/videos you can
see it immediately on your boxee. in case of Music or Video, boxee will
automatically scan it, and you’ll see the artwork appear in Recently
Added in the home screen of boxee.

Awesome, will try it out once I get home tonight. To tell the truth I've not been using Boxee much since XBMC Media Centre beta 1. I'm sure once it catches up with XBMC again, I'll use it more often again.

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Pacemaker: Handheld Dj System

Pacemaker being shown live in a crowd of people

Interesting interview with the guys behind the Pacemaker here. Of course some really good quotes to get you going.

What was the inception of Tonium?

MR: Two and a half years ago, I met this odd fellow. He came up to our agency that we had at the time; it was called New. We were doing lifestyle graphic design and advertising for music clients and culture things and fashion. He came up to us and told us about this idea that he had. He was talking about computer processing capacity, developing, portability and the digitizing of music. He held up this little cardboard cutout mockup—it looked like an iPod. He said, ‘What if this was a DJ system?’ And we were like, ‘That sounds like fun. What are you paying us for this?’ At about the same time, the two colleagues at this agency with were drifting off into another focus where they wanted to be more involved in real art stuff and more graphic design. At some point, this guy, Jonas Norberg, asked me if I wanted to join the company—there wasn’t any [real] company—and I said, ‘Yeah,’ because it sort of summarized all the stuff that I had been doing up until that point with music and design. That was two-and-a-half years ago.

You had it in the street and the public gravitated towards it and instantly wanted to know more.

MR: Yeah, I mean this is a huge conference. I was totally blown away when I came down there because I’m not really a house music or an electronic music fan myself. [I’m] much more old school. I thought there should be around five, ten thousand people there, but it was over 150,000 people there, and [all of] Miami was all about the ‘dunka dunka.’ It was really cool to be down there with this thing because, since it’s portable, all you need is some sort of portable speaker system. We had this little tent for meet-and-greets with the industry, but then we had our guys with us that would play it and showcase it and we were just walking around Miami with this portable speaker playing and people were just huddling around us and were really just astonished with it.

Is the cost something that was an obstacle for you perhaps?

MR: When we developed [the Pacemaker], we had this naïve attitude: ‘Let’s not care what it costs; let’s just do something that we want.’ So, it ended up being pretty expensive. Some of the reactions that we’ve been getting is that it’s too cheap. [But] because the people that are most interested in this device are quite young—they’re in their early twenties—for them, $6,500 kronor is a hell of a lot of money. We’re looking into it [to] maybe see if we can offer a version that’s not as big a hard drive.

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The music industry is so out of touch its not even funny

Slotmusic is a collaboration between Universial music, Sony BMG, Warner music and EMI. Basiclly its DRM free music distrubuted on microSD cards. Yes microSD cards, why? I don't know, but it shows how out of touch the music industy really is. Not defending the iphone or ipod but like it or not there the most popular at the moment and they don't support microSD cards. Does the Zune? Don't think so either. I also have no idea whos going to pay for music on MicroSD? I bet the cards are locked to the drive, so that means swapping the · Online and P2P distrubtion is the way forward period. Hell I just bought 12 tunes from Audiojelly.com yesterday. Cost me about 16 pound in total.

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Flights booked and here’s whats getting me excited about the Web 2.0 Expo


Web 2.0 Expo Europe 2008

So I have laid down the money for the flights and I'm going for sure now. I decided to go via Liverpool Airport, because getting to Luton Airport was always going to painful from Manchester. It either ended up with me sleeping at the Airport, Traveling on a Coach for 5 hours or spending time in London then going to Luton early in the morning.

I've also been planning my days through the schedule, here's some of the highlights which I want to attend.

All interesting stuff… but I'm wondering if 15mins is long enough to cover the woman in technology problem? I don't know if there is a girl geekdinner in Berlin? But maybe it might be a good place/chance to really delve into the issues. Tara Hunt ran a session at BarCampNorthEast which went into a lot more depth that anything I've heard before. I got a feeling Suw is certainly look at the issue at that level and deeper. I will try and get as much of it on camera of course.

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SockStress could make every TCP service vulnerable

The Laughing man from ghost in the shell

I found this by listening to Security Now number 164, it sounds very dramatic and most of you will be thinking yeah yeah whatever but…this seems like the real deal. Rather than try and explain it, here's a subset from the notes of Security now. I did look at a couple other places, but Steve Gibson has the best non-packet hacker description of what's really going on.

“SockStress” (not publicly released) reportedly uses several new techniques to create a low-bandwidth (as low as ten packets per second) local resource depletion attack resulting in denial of service /images/emoticons/laugh.gifoS) by TCP servers (www, ftp, smtp, pop, etc.) running Windows, Linux, BSD, undisclosed routers, and other Internet appliances.

Although the researchers plan to demonstrate their techniques on October 17th, at the end of the second day of the forthcoming T2'08 conference in Helsinki, Finland, their 44 minute interview on September 30th, 2008 for the De Beveiligingsupdate site (see original and edited audio links below) provided far too much detail — enough so that any informed packetsmith who understands the TCP protocol would be able to easily recreate their attacks.

As a consequence, they effectively “went public” with their discovery of these vulnerabilities after informing other vendors only a few weeks beforehand

So generally the Finnish guys have found a way to mess with the TCP stack to the extend that you can cause a deinal of service on ANY server which uses TCP including web, ftp, etc. Using a very low amount of hardware and bandwidth. Not even IPv6 escapes this problem.

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Using Hamachi again but on your phone too

In my Windows days I would use Hamachi for my VPN client and server. But when I switched to gnu/linux I attempted to stick with it but got fed up of the weird UI's and lack of stability I was experiencing. So I stopped using it and looked into openswan and other VPN clients/servers solutions. Problem is I never quite got on with those either although I did get as far as having the PTP/OpenSSL option in my networking

Well after months of not using any VPN options at all. I found the ideal Hamachi client for Linux and got Hamachi working on everything including my old download machine and even my phone! Yes you heard me right, I have the same powerful VPN technology on my Windows Mobile phone too. There's not much you can do right now but its working in 0.30 beta form. I found it because I was thinking they've had a Nokia 770 version for ages but why not Windows Mobile? I imagine Android won't be long behind the Symbian and Windows Mobile versions if things go well. Iphone version? Nahh I can't see Steve Jobs allowing that in the Apps store.

Some of you may say why do you need VPN for phones? Well at least with Hamachi, its a direct connection to my machines, so I'm able to for example see how a download is going at home (although to be fair I've also got a XMPP/Jabber bot which does this too). You can't do it yet, but imagine, being able to pull files back and forth over the network, sync and print to the remote printer. Actually these are possible if you've got some web front end on the remote machine right now. I can't even imagine the possibilities if you turn it the other way around and added some core phone API support. VPN into your phone and flip the goodbye forever switch if its stolen? Who knows…

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Just bought a ticket to the official after party for Web 2.0 Expo


Web 2.0 Expo Europe 2008

The official LateCrunch Party to Web 2.0 Expo, costs roughly 12 pounds, starts at 10pm and ends 4am in the morning. Seems perfect if your planning to catch the easyjet flight (Redeye) back to London at 6am. This also means I'm now committed to going now. Yes I'll be going to BarCampBerlin3, yes I'm going to the conference too. But somewhere in between I need to spend some time with my great german friend Carl who's putting me up at his place during the week. Shame I'll be out most of the time. Anyway i'll make it up to him somehow.

Good on Tim Oreilly too…. Stop building crappy apps and build stuff which changes the world. This is certainly why Backstage and myself finds things like scripting enabled, AMEE and Operation Sleeper Cell really important.

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