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PC World - Seagate Ships Super-Secure Hard Disk Drive
Topic: Technology 1:15 pm EDT, Mar 12, 2007

Putting encryption into a hard drive is no mere security window-dressing. According to Seagate, any U.S. company that loses a laptop using the Seagate drive in conjunction with the launch security management system from Wave Systems, will not have to give public notification of the loss, even if the data is of a highly confidential nature.

This is cool. Next question, is there a government mandated backdoor that will mean it's all for naught?

PC World - Seagate Ships Super-Secure Hard Disk Drive


Designing Interactions
Topic: Human Computer Interaction 1:30 pm EST, Jan 27, 2007

Business Week: "This is one hell of a book"
Bruce Sterling: "This classic has no rival in its field"
Don Norman: "This will be the book"

Digital technology has changed the way we interact with everything from the games we play to the tools we use at work. Designers of digital technology products no longer regard their job as designing a physical object--beautiful or utilitarian--but as designing our interactions with it. In Designing Interactions, award-winning designer Bill Moggridge introduces us to forty influential designers who have shaped our interaction with technology. Moggridge, designer of the first laptop computer (the GRiD Compass, 1981) and a founder of the design firm IDEO, tells us these stories from an industry insider's viewpoint, tracing the evolution of ideas from inspiration to outcome. The innovators he interviews--including Will Wright, creator of The Sims, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, the founders of Google, and Doug Engelbart, Bill Atkinson, and others involved in the invention and development of the mouse and the desktop--have been instrumental in making a difference in the design of interactions. Their stories chart the history of entrepreneurial design development for technology.

Moggridge and his interviewees discuss such questions as why a personal computer has a window in a desktop, what made Palm's handheld organizers so successful, what turns a game into a hobby, why Google is the search engine of choice, and why 30 million people in Japan choose the i-mode service for their cell phones. And Moggridge tells the story of his own design process and explains the focus on people and prototypes that has been successful at IDEO--how the needs and desires of people can inspire innovative designs and how prototyping methods are evolving for the design of digital technology.

Designing Interactions is illustrated with more than 700 images, with color throughout. Accompanying the book is a DVD that contains segments from all the interviews intercut with examples of the interactions under discussion.

Interviews with:
Bill Atkinson • Durrell Bishop • Brendan Boyle • Dennis Boyle • Paul Bradley • Duane Bray • Sergey Brin • Stu Card • Gillian Crampton Smith • Chris Downs• Tony Dunne • John Ellenby • Doug Englebart • Jane Fulton Suri • Bill Gaver • Bing Gordon • Rob Haitani • Jeff Hawkins • Matt Hunter • Hiroshi Ishii • Bert Keely • David Kelley • Rikako Kojima • Brenda Laurel • David Liddle • Lavrans Løvlie • John Maeda • Paul Mercer • Tim Mott • Joy Mountford • Takeshi Natsuno • Larry Page • Mark Podlaseck • Fiona Raby • Cordell Ratzlaff • Ben Reason • Jun Rekimoto • Steve Rogers • Fran Samalionis • Larry Tesler • Bill Verplank • Terry Winograd • Will Wright

Designing Interactions


Wired News: Computer Privacy in Distress
Topic: Internet Civil Liberties 7:07 pm EST, Jan 20, 2007

My computer is my most private possession. I have other things that are more dear, but no one item could tell you more about me than this machine.

Yet, a rash of recent court decisions says the Constitution may not be enough to protect my laptop from arbitrary, suspicionless and warrantless examination by the police.

Wired News: Computer Privacy in Distress


Laptops at U.S. border: No privacy rights - Technology - International Herald Tribune
Topic: Civil Liberties 2:28 pm EDT, Oct 24, 2006

Until recently, their biggest concern was that someone might steal the laptop. But now there's a new worry: the laptop will be seized or its contents scrutinized at customs and immigration checkpoints upon entering the United States.

Laptops at U.S. border: No privacy rights - Technology - International Herald Tribune


Face to Face with the International Authoritarian Police State
Topic: Civil Liberties 6:05 pm EDT, Aug 25, 2006

Man this is infuriating... Dude goes to the bathroom on an airplane and his ipod drops out of his pocket into the toilet. What would normally be an annoying situation turns into yet another police state farce, now seemingly a daily occurance, in which an airplane is diverted to the nearest airport and the passengers and plane are dissected with a fine tooth comb by a bunch of authoritarian assholes who think that they write the law.

Included in this adventure is the now ubiquitous laptop examination for evidence of thought crime, which occured AFTER they had already determined that there was no threat to the aircraft!!

What the hell does the below have to do with preventing terrorist attacks!?

NOT A DAMN THING!

He then asked me to turn on my laptop. I did, and he began using it. I saw him open Spotlight and begin searching...

I waited in total silence for about 10 minutes as he kept searching and searching, until I finally asked him, "What are you looking for?"

"Contraband," he said without looking up at me.
"Such as?"
"Child pornography, hate propaganda."
"Child porn I can understand, that's illegal. But hate propaganda is protected speech."
Now he looked up. "What country do you think you're in?"
"Oh, it's illegal in Canada?"
"I honestly don't know. But that doesn't matter. I get to decide what goes in this country. Do you have a problem with that?"
I paused for a long time while I thought about what I should say to this. "Yes."
"Yes, you do have a problem?"
"Yes, I do. If it's illegal in Canada I'll understand, but saying 'I don't want it in my country' isn't good enough when you're a government official."

Now he was pissed. "Don't fool around with me. I'm sure you want this to end as much as I do. So I will ask you questions, and you will answer. Do you understand?"

Face to Face with the International Authoritarian Police State


Laptop Slides Into Bed in Love Triangle
Topic: Humor 10:41 pm EDT, Aug 24, 2006

Katie Hafner is getting a little silly with the reporting these days ...

Mr. Smith is all too aware of his wife's mounting disapproval of his routine and suspects that a laptop-in-bed ban could be imminent.

"You kind of want the bed to be a sacred space," she said.

Mr. Anderson, a senior researcher at Intel Research, has found more technology ending up in the bedroom.

"It's kind of like a vibrating 24/7 secretary."

Laptop Slides Into Bed in Love Triangle


ZERO Halliburton going mainstream. NOOOOO!!!!
Topic: Travel 12:20 am EDT, Aug 17, 2006

“We had a flurry of phone calls from travelers in Europe asking where they could buy our laptop cases. Some were even calling directly from Heathrow wondering if we sold the cases there at the airport,” says David Sebens, VP of sales and marketing at ZERO Halliburton.

The Salt Lake City-based company makes a line of high-end aluminum laptop cases with a shock-absorbent polyurethane foam interior. More closely resembling a portable bomb shelter than a briefcase, the bag also has an aura of geek chic that makes it popular among the techie crowd. The company, which sells thousands of the cases each year, says it has seen a spike in demand in the past week.

DAMN THE TSA! DAMN THEM TO HELL!

Decius bought a ZERO Halliburton years ago, which he almost never used. I took custody of it about a year ago. Since that time, I have truly fallen in love with it. Love. Pure love.

Not only does it fit my 17" Powerbook perfectly (few cases fit it at all), but it protects the hell out of it. The internal padding does an amazing job of absorbing sock, and the aluminum can stop anything up to a carbine round. (No, I have not tested this.)

But the best thing about it, is the fashion statement. And I'm not much one for fashion. It stands out. When you trod along kicking the Halliburton, people notice. You can watch their eyes drift down to the case. One look at it says a thousand words. Words like "bomb", "cocaine", "unmarked $20 bills", "negotiable bonds", "guns", "classified documents", "plutonium", etc.. When I plod around the campus I attend classes at, I get asked at least once a week, without fail, "what's in the case?" I have about a dozen answers. "Schemes and plans" tends to be my favorite.

Now, thanks to TSA, everyone is going to have one. It's like when your favorite band gets popular with people you hate. I feel it coming. DAMNIT.

Update: Must... fight... turning into hipster.. must.. not.. turn.. into.. hipster..

ZERO Halliburton going mainstream. NOOOOO!!!!


Link to AOL data release
Topic: Surveillance 2:02 am EDT, Aug  7, 2006

Unbelievable. AOL released a file containing the search engine queries of over 500,000 users during a three month period. It's being mirrored all over.

Here is a screenshot of the download page before it was taken down, complete with a spelling error.. "ananomized"

Update: I've imported the data into an SQL database so I can do some data mining. It's about 3.5G worth of SQL, so the process of building indexes and performing any useful queries is really slow going. Sometime in the next 24 hours, I should be posting up some statistics. I have to think about it some more first... From what I've gathered so far, there is no liability in doing so.

AOL fucked up. This data is in the hands of many, many, many people. That being the case, I want to see how the data frames the issues we all have with this kind of data being available to law enforcement, marketers, and others.. Anyone who has any ideas about what questions we should be asking, reply to this with your thoughts.

Since the hot button issue most directly connected with this is child porn, I've been doing some research focusing on that. The Justice Department wanted Google and other search engines to hand over exactly this information so they could build a profile of what people are searching for when they search for child porn. I've been attempting to do the same thing. Thus far, I've gotten a pretty expansive table of users (over 300) that have been blatantly searching for child porn. I've done a fair amount of work eliminating false positives, such as people searching for information about how to protect their kids, researching court cases, or looking up information about specific offenses. I've tried to limit the list to people blatantly repeatedly searching for illegal pictures of pre-teens and whatnot. I'm working on constructing a list of "what people who search for kiddie porn search for."

I also have some indexes building that will allow me to mine general statistical data on what the top queries are and stuff like that. Since I'm working with a laptop that only has a gig of ram and not too speediest of a hard drive, it's going to take awhile. I expect my machine to be churning for the next few hours.

Update: I don't have powerful enough hardware to mine this. I'm waiting on more resources to become available later tonight.

Link to AOL data release


Wired News: A Sixth Sense for a Wired World
Topic: Technology 11:13 am EDT, Jun  7, 2006

What if, seconds before your laptop began stalling, you could feel the hard drive spin up under the load? Or you could tell if an electrical cord was live before you touched it? For the few people who have rare earth magnets implanted in their fingers, these are among the reported effects -- a finger that feels electromagnetic fields along with the normal sense of touch.

Why do I suddenly feel the urge to go reread my cyberpunk stuff?

~Heathyr

Wired News: A Sixth Sense for a Wired World


Rattle and Decius at Alito Confirmation Hearing
Topic: Politics and Law 12:04 am EST, Jan 22, 2006

Decius and I where lucky enough to be able to attend the last day of witness testimony for the Samuel Alito Confirmation Hearing. Thanks to Tim Ball and John Flym, we were able to acquire a pass to witness part of an important historic event.

As the story goes, Professor Flym was having a problem with his laptop causing him to be unable to file his statement in time to give testimony. Tim's boss told him to do anything necessary to solve his problem. In the process, due mostly to chance and good timing, "anything necessary" wound up involving Tom and I. We were not able to completely fix John's problem the first night, but we were able to get him in a position where he could get his work done. The next day we returned to completely fix the problem, and John gave us a witness pass he had.

Having watched what must amount to several solid months of C-SPAN, being on the other side of the cameras was interesting. The hearing room in the Hart building is like being in a pressure chamber, more so than any court I've been in. I can only imagine the stress felt by those testifying. Tim was busy the entire day, so Tom and I took shifts attending the hearings. I was present during Flym's testimony, as well as that of Ronald S. Sullivan Jr., Amanda Frost, Reginald M. Turner, Jr., Theodore M. Shaw, among others, and the closing of the hearings. Tom will probably chime in with his take on the hearings, but I remember him being very happy about being there for the testimony of Fred Grey, who defended Rosa Parks.

Later at Shmoocon, there was some humorous discussion about if the badge qualified as a ticket to the "Nerd SuperBowl" or the "Nerd World Series". At the time, I was strongly on the side of "Nerd SuperBowl", but lacking a well worded concise argument for why. Given some time to think about it, its clear that "Nerd SuperBowl" does fit best. The "Nerd World Series" would better fit a string of WTO and G8 summits, while the Security Council would be the "Nerd World Cup". Its good to be a nerd.

Anyway, joking aside, this was a really cool experience. Both Tom and I spend much time thinking about legal problems. It was a honor to be present in person for even the small portion of proceedings we were. On the linked page, I included a few pictures and screen captures from C-SPAN where I can be spotted. I was unable to find any screen shots where Tom was present. Since he knows where he was sitting and at what time, maybe he will have better luck.

Rattle and Decius at Alito Confirmation Hearing


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