Charles Stross's Iron Sunrise – 50 Book Challenge

Iron Sunrise
Stross, Charles
A loose sequel to Singularity Sky in that it continues the adventures of that book’s protagonists, Iron Sunrise is a much more coherent and compelling story. Stross is setting up a nice post-singularity universe where the potent technologies and capabilities of his heros are nicely offset by equally potent capabilities among the bad guys.

Nobody’s a villain in their own story and Stross tells a great tale about how human conflict will continue to play out in a future filled with plausibly advanced technology and plausibly flawed human beings. Stross in definitely now on my list of must read authors.

Gregory Dicum’s Window Seat – 50 Book Challenge

Window Seat: Reading the Landscape from the Air
Dicum, Gregory
My travel preference is to book the window seat as a general rule. If you’ve been opting for the aisle seat, this book could change your mind. While I’ve always enjoyed picking out what I could figure out on my own, this book gives me a whole new set of things to look for. Better yet, it uses what you can see as a launching point into little lessons on geology and and human impact on geology. It’s a sturdy and compact enough book that you can toss it in your carryon bag just in case.

Todd Carter’s Microsoft OneNote 2003 for Windows – 50 Book Challenge

Microsoft OneNote 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide)
Carter, Todd W.
A useful quickstart to using OneNote, particularly given that you’re likely to get OneNote without a manual. Like most of these “manual replacement” books, the emphasis is on walking you through all the menus and options. What it doesn’t provide is much in the way of guidance about how you might want to use OneNote as a component of your day-to-day work. While there appear to be books coming out now that address that issue, I would suggest you start with Chris Pratley’s WebLog as a source of real insight into OneNote

Onion Routing

Looks like another potential tool for the bag of tricks.

Onion Routing. Ever wanted, or needed, to surf the Web anonymously? Intelligence officers have this need, but so do others. Anonymizing proxies can make it so that the site you visit doesn’t know who you are, but they don’t protect you from instream eavesdroppers or your own company or ISP. Now there’s an open source project you can use to protect your communications called Tor. [Windley’s Enterprise Computing Weblog]

Radio gets a product manager

This is great news for “Radio” users. Whether it will turn out to be enough help in enough time remains to be seen. I’ve been blogging with “Radio” from day one, courtesy of Scoble’s convincing me to join the beta program before it launched. It has served me well, despite its warts.

Recently, I’ve been giving serious thought to switching to a new blogging platform. In particular, I’ve been looking at WordPress and ExpressionEngine. Now, I’ll have to also give some thought to whether “Userland” can make enough progress with Radio to let it stay in the mix.

A Letter To Radio Users. steveKirksPictureSmile:

A Letter to Radio Users

My name is Steve Kirks, a Radio user since 2002. I have a Radio weblog and I’ve written some scripts using Radio’s native lanuage, UserTalk. Radio is a great piece of software that’s about to get better. UserLand has put me in the position of helping guide Radio’s future. That future includes you.

Why me?

I developed a relationship with Scott Shuda about six months ago after I posted an open letter on my weblog, wishing that UserLand was more active with developing Radio. Scott asked me a question in a private email: “What if you could talk to those guys directly?” Intrigued, I replied back with a link to my Radio wish list and a cell phone number.

Over the next six months, we spent time in email and on the phone, working together to determine a future for Radio. He was specific about UserLand’s resources and company direction. I was specific about the good and bad things with Radio. Combined, we came to an agreement: something had to change if Radio was going to move forward. I suggested that Radio needed a product manager, someone to promote and develop the product to a rapidly maturing market. He agreed.

Part of those first steps involved spending some extra time in the Radio discussion group listening to users and helping where I could. A frequent refrain: what’s going on with Radio? Most comments were polite and others were not, but they all carried a similar sentiment. The users were unhappy with the lack of changes, updates or bug fixes to Radio. The last major feature change was in 2003 with the addition of trackback–a common feature on other weblogging products. Upstreaming frequently has issues and few of those are recorded in Radio’s event log, leaving a user to wonder what did or didn’t happen.

What’s going on with Radio?

Radio is going to grow and improve. Later this week, we will release a Radio Roadmap showing the intended development milestones for the rest of the calendar year. We will modernize the HTML generated by Radio, improve the comment system, improve upstreaming and release new themes. These are fundamental changes that are required to make the Radio environment work better for users and be more attractive to third-party developers. If your subscription isn’t current, now is the time to renew.

The roadmap only goes to the end of the year for a reason: it’s not done yet. We need imput from you, the Radio user base. What do you like? What do you hate? What features are missing from Radio? Use the power of your weblog to your advantage: write your comments in a weblog post and link to this letter. We’ll comb through the responses and post some answers to the common questions in another letter later this week.

What’s next?

The main Radio website will undergo minor changes over time also. We’ll work hard to enhance the content there with more help, more examples and more success stories from users. We’ll beef up the developer documentation and consolidate older documents to prevent conflicting answers. Finally, we’ll incorporate some of the feedback we’ve received from you–in fact, we’ve already added the XML icon link to the RSS feed and added a shortcut at the top of the page to edit a new post.

I’ve started to publish my Radio-related posts in a category at steve.userland.com. I’ll post development notes there, but big news and milestone annoucements will always be in the Radio discussion group or via the Radio product RSS feed.

Steve Kirks

[Radio UserLand Messages]

SMC Bests Airport Express: SMCWRK-G

I suspect one of these is going to find a home in my backpack fairly soon.

SMC Bests Airport Express: SMCWRK-G.

http://www.mcgeesmusings.net/images/SMCWTK.jpg imageSMC has announced a new portable wireless access point a la the Airport Express. They’re calling it the “EZ Connect g 2.4GHz 802.11g Wireless Traveler s Kit SMCWTK-G,” but we’ll probably just call it the SMCWRK-G or Dance Panda Mandy, as it suits us. For what it lacks in good looks it makes up in features, as the SMCWRK-G can do everything the Airport Express can do and more (save the iTunes streaming), including act as an Ethernet bridge. It might not be attractive, but it’s $30 cheaper, ringing in at just $100.

Perennial Wi-Fi smart guy Glenn Fleishmann weighs in with a little more detail at Wi-Fi Networking News.

Read – SMC Offers Multifunction Traveling Gateway [WiFiNetNews]
Read – Press Release [SMC]

Related
AirPort Express Reviewed [Gizmodo]
Why Apple’s Airport Express May Unofficially Extend Non-Airport Networks [Gizmodo]

[Gizmodo]