Supporting Blackout Ireland

March 4th, 2009

The last time I wrote about recent developments in the Irish internet scene, I asked what could be done. This comes in some way of an answer.

Today marks the start of a week of protest by Irish internet users following the announcements of an agreement between Eircom and IRMA to institute a “three-strikes” policy, IRMA’s intention to seek court orders against internet service providers blocking a list of sites that they supply, and Eircom’s spineless statement of compliance before the fact has even occured. We also learned yesterday during a Meteor launch event that they would also be implementing the “three strikes” policy (this shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, Meteor are an Eircom subsidary).

Inspired by the recent activity against similar actions in New Zealand, and the level of local and international support that garnered, this action has been dubbed Blackout Ireland. This, in my mind, is a great idea because it works both as an act of protest and also as a way to raise awareness to something that a lot of people don’t know about or, worse, don’t care about. Its not going to win the battle outright, but its a good first step.

What can you do today and this week to show your disapproval of these events? There are a couple of ways that you are encouraged to show your support.

Change your online profiles to show your support for Blackout Ireland. Use the official avatar on your Facebook, Bebo, Twitter, instant messaging client and other sites that support them.

Join the Facebook group, and look out for other supporters on Twitter using the #blackoutirl tag.

You are also encouraged to contact your local TD, the Minister for Communications and your own ISP to voice your concerns.

Personally, I would also encourage people to consider donating to Digital Rights Ireland, a group set up to work to prevent this kind of activity being allowed.

No group should be allowed to dictate by law what can or cannot be seen by paying customers of another groups service, especially not where there is little burdon of proof or where the incentive is nothing more than greed. I can only hope that people will come to see that this is what is happening here.

On IRMA and Eircom and everyone else

February 23rd, 2009

The Sunday Business Post yesterday published an article claiming that the Irish Recorded Music Association are to start looking for court orders for Irish ISPs to start blocking their customers ability to view or download from websites that they specify. The first site on the list is of course the infamous Pirate Bay. And, on the back of their recent agreement with the music industry Eircom, who run adverts with the proclamation “download movies faster”, have announced that they will roll over and play nice, refusing to challenge any request.

Of course, the response has been uproar. Personally, I also hate it. The idea of not being able to go online without someone peering over my shoulder to see where I am doesn’t sit well with me.

But what can be done about it? Or who can do anything about it?

Is it simply enough for customers to walk away from Eircom? If this was an issue with a single provider I would say yes, but this would be a legally binding order placed against all ISPs unless (until?) challenged or overturned.

Can we expect any of the other ISPs to challenge the proposals? This one is a wait and see, but I won’t be holding my breath.

I am almost certain it is not reasonable to expect the Irish Court system to look for any kind of proof or reasoning behind a request for any particular site to be blocked. I’d expect to see Hell nominated as a location for the Winter Olympics before that happened.

But mores the point, is it legal? Since IRMA need to work through the courts, would it not be the courts ordering the ISPs to block access? And if so, is not not very similar to a case overturned in September of last year in Italy, also involving The Pirate Bay?

No answers here, I’m afraid. Which leaves one last question – will someone need to step up to the plate to find out, or will we wait, sit back and see how it plays?


On Bloglines

April 20th, 2008

I have been becoming increasingly annoyed with Google Reader of late, primarily because of one issue. I have on multiple occasions noticed a glitch in the software where Reader will report a number new articles are available, only to throw up “has no unread items” when you click to read. I have verified the issue on two separate computers on two separate networks, so I’m pretty confident that the issue is backend related.

It finally reached peak point one evening last week when Reader took the better part of 20 minutes to deliver the feed after advertising it. Enough, said I to myself, is enough. Its time to go look for an alternative. I had seen Bloglines pop up quite a bit, so I decided to give that a try first.

Bloglines

Bloglines logo

Easily, easily my biggest gripe with the original version of Bloglines is the exceptionally annoying “function” of automatically marking all items in a selected feed or folder as read as soon as you select it. Why? Why would you do this? What sense could this make? Some of the feeds I subscribe to can get quite large, especially as I tend to ignore feeds like Digg, Slashdot and Reddit at the weekend. And should Scoble go on a link rampage, God help us all. And a folder could contain several large feeds. So if I click on any of those, they’re all “read” now. Heaven forbid the browser should lock up, the page refreshes or I somehow click into something else – everything is gone.

I spent a bit of time pouring over the Bloglines options to switch this off. This alone was enough to make me want to forgive Google Reader it’s sins and go running back. But going back to try it one more time, I noticed a small link on the Bloglines frontpage. “Bloglines Beta – Give it a spin today!”

Bloglines Beta

Bloglines Beta logo

Going from Bloglines to Bloglines Beta is quite like meeting someone, dating for a short bit, and walking her home only to meet her younger, more attractive sister with whom you happen to have much more in common standing at the door.

There is much to admire about the new version of the service. The feed list on the left of the screen is nicely laid out. Javascript fades out folders and feeds that have been emptied, rolling the next feed down the list over it. Favicons are shown where available.

The river of news section is nice and big and gives just enough extra information such as when the post was originally posted and when it was last updated. Quick look mode gives you just the header information. And then there is the 3-pane mode.

The 3-pane mode is a wonderful creation. The top pane is the Quick header information, the bottom pane gives you two further viewing options, the default Full view from the feed, or the option to load the site page the feed was generated from without having to leave the reader page. The bottom pane can fold right over the top, giving you all the space you need to be able to read from the site page. Nice.

You can save feeds to the Saved list, and append a little note to remind you why you decided to save it in the first going down. You can also pin feeds to the river, marking them as read but keeping them listed as interesting (similar to Google Reader’s star functionality).

They also support login by OpenID. However, this seems a little bit half-baked as you have to create an account first and bind an OpenID to it, rather than being able to create an account using an id. Hopefully this will be fixed in future.

But its not all good yet
That said, Bloglines Beta is still showing some of the bat-shit crazy characteristics of her older sister.

I’m on a Mac primarily both at work and at home these days, and that means Safari. Bloglines Beta is heavily AJAX, and some of that Javascript doesn’t appear to be Safari friendly. In particular, saving options almost never works. I like to have my feeds ordered starting with the oldest post, and while Bloglines beta offers this option, it never saves it. I make the change, it sorts them, I click the feed again, old option loads. A little annoying. Its also not possible for me to change my account information, always throwing a “Communication with Server” error.

Thinking that it might just have been an issue with Safari, I downloaded Firefox 3 Beta 5, as well as the Firefox 2 based Prism. I experienced the same issues with each of these browsers as well, suggesting the problem might be with Bloglines itself.

Bloglines indexing is also quite something. I opened it one evening there to find that it had pulled in several months worth of several feeds. This, in spite of the fact that I had just opened my account and imported my OPML feed a couple of days before hand.

Guys, I had an OPML feed. Doesn’t that suggest to you that I have spent some time reading blogs before? If you’re going to pull down feeds, pull them down to within a week or two of my account creation or OPML upload. I don’t want to have to be looking at threads from November 2006 just because they happen to exist.

One final gripe. What do the developers of Bloglines have against native widgets? Every button is an image, and in my experience the entire button doesn’t seem to respond to a click event. There are “hotspots” that have to be hit just right, not that anything actually happens when you do mind.

Conclusion
Bloglines has the potential to be great. I could see myself using it. But there is still some work to be done. I have no idea how far along the Beta process the live version is, though new features seem to be being added on a monthly basis. There appears to be some very fundamental work to be done. But what does work works great, and for that alone I have been continuing to work with it, though not at the same “open all day” regularity that I was with Google Reader. Maybe thats no bad thing.

Maybe some day Bloglines, maybe some day.

Online Shopping – A Good News Story

March 31st, 2008

I do a lot of my shopping online these days. Like anyone I have spoken to who shops online regularly I have been hit now and then by occasional problems, delays and disasters that aren’t always unavoidable but usually annoying.

However this isn’t one of those stories. Today I want to tell you a good news story about someone I recently purchased from through the Amazon Marketplace.

Shortly after the passing of the late Arthur C. Clarke I decided that it was probably about time that I got around to reading some of his stuff. Going on the recommendation of someone whose word usually stands for something (IMO), I decided upon starting with Profiles of the Future. So about a week ago while on my local Amazon site, I searched for the name and, since Amazon were out of stock themselves, decided upon one of the Marketplace merchants by the name of Unbeatable Books. They had a pretty impressive rep, and the price was very reasonable. So I clicked and ordered.

Unfortunately, just last night two emails sat in my inbox, both through Amazon. The first was a refund receipt, the other an explanation.

Hi Aidan,

I am just processing your order for the above mentioned book.
Sadly,on close final inspection,i have found my last copy,to be faulty.
The pages have been misaligned during the guillotining process,resulting in the lower 6 or 7 lines of the last 30 pages being absent.
This has effectively rendered the book unreadable.
The condition is way below the standard we would be happy to dispatch or you receive no doubt.
I scoured my warehouse yesterday and have rung around my retail outlets this morning but unfortunately have been unable to locate a replacement copy.
In all likelihood,I will have the book back in stock next week,but I don’t wish to cause you any further delay.
I have therefore refunded your account fully some moments ago.
Please accept my sincere apologies for the inconvenience.
Best wishes,Darren.
Unbeatable Books.

Damn. By this time it was pretty late in the evening, so I decided against going back and finding another merchant to try to get it through. Still, I was pretty happy to see that Darren had appeared to go to some effort to find another copy, and the reasoning was sound.

Cut to late this morning, and another mail drops in the inbox from Amazon.

Hi Aidan,

Dont know if you have repurchased yet , but just to let you know , i have located another copy this morning and have listed on Amazon , if you still need it.

Thanks,Darren.

Now thats good service. With no guarantee of resale, or even any communication from me regarding the original transaction, here was a replacement copy up for sale and a tip off from the seller. And whats more, its even a little cheaper than the book was originally. Needless to say I went over and snapped it up while I could.

Thanks Darren. I’ll be keeping an eye out for Unbeatable Books whenever I’m in the Amazon Marketplace in future.

On IE8 Domain Highlighting

March 14th, 2008

Flipping through Google Reader the other day, I happened upon an article by the Internet Explorer team regarding a new feature they had debuted in the recently released IE8 Beta 1 called “domain highlighting”. Put simply, the address bar in IE8 will now colour all text of the URL bar the top level domain grey, the “highlighted” text remaining black. The highlighting is always on, and cannot be switched off by either the user or a loaded website.

Not having a copy of Windows to download IE8 onto, I have not yet had a chance to play with this new feature. However, in its current form my initial impression of it is not favourable.

The official line at Microsoft is that this is something that needs to be done as a start to highlighting potential phishing sites. While a laudable idea, I get something of a sense of cutting the nose off to spite the face.

First of all, it starts by assuming that all URLs are potential phishing sites. Does this include local URLs inside an intranet? What about addresses I have typed in myself?

As was noted in the user comments of the article, there are several well adopted URL structures that this feature does not work well with. Sub-domained sites, or sites using sub domain structured URLs as their main URL (such as del.icio.us) will be shown either incorrectly or incompletely. The only way the user will be able to see the entire domain is to move the mouse cursor over the Address Bar.

But the big bug bear for me is why do you have to obfuscate the rest of the URL information by default? No part of a URL is irrelevant, and information contained in URLs is becoming more and more relevant as time goes on (logically structured URLs, URL based identity management, etc). Why do I need to hold my mouse over the address bar to be able to see this? Surely there are better ways to emphasise the domain block of the URL? Embolden it. Change the colour of the domain, not the rest of the URL. Hypertext blue makes for good contrast against the black and white, why not use a scheme like that?

The idea is a good one, but the implementation could be better.

Twitter’d

March 5th, 2008

Long have people cried to me that I need to get on the social networking bandwagon. Long have I resisted. No said I to their Bebos, their Facebooks and their MySpaces.

But tonight out of boredom, a desire to try something new, and too much time waiting for a bus to be able to leave work – I joined Twitter. To be fair to it, its an idea that has interested me for a short while. Somewhere between blogging and SMS, Twitter has been used by thousands to spread news, promote themselves and their wares, or just tell us what they are doing. And yes, like 99% of the other stuff on the internet, 99% of it is of no interest to you or me. The art comes in getting your point across in 140 characters or less.

So from now on you will be able to follow me at twitter.com/aidan_walsh.

Staler than last year’s bread

March 4th, 2008

Long time no update, huh?

For one thing, there just hasn’t been much to write about. A couple of things came up from time to time, but I never really gave myself the time to write up my thoughts about it properly. I also want to avoid turning this into a “what I had for lunch today” type of thing which would be of no interest to anyone (myself included).

Well, here goes.

Since moving to Cork back in August, I’m still in the process of settling into the house. For the most part I’m relatively comfortable, though there are a few bits and pieces to sort out, holes to patch (damn coat hanger coming off the wall) and annoyances to resolve.

Also, I’m pretty happy that in my time there I have yet to lose a sock to the dryer! :)

I have been in the process of building myself a proper place to get some work done. After years of being restricted to a tiny desk barely big enough to hold the tower and the monitor, I am after paying out for a good, decent slab of work station real estate. I also invested in a proper, supportive chair. Once the desk gets delivered I can get up of the floor.

I bought an iMac. I was nearly put off the whole Apple scene for life a couple of years back, but I realise now that that was down to a really crumby OS 8 installation we had to use during a Multimedia section of my college course. Honestly, opening a video editor would bring that system down.

My trusty laptop has been given a new lease on life after getting rid of Windows and installing Ubuntu Desktop Edition. If you have read my blog before, you may know that for some time I ran Ubuntu Server on my personal file server, so the transition was pretty painless. The installation experience was also much nicer than the last time I tried as well, as the installer now correctly detected my graphics adapter and ran at a resolution higher than 800×600 – last time I tried to install Ubuntu this was all I could muster, and the installation options window didn’t (doesn’t?) function correctly at that low resolution.

While startup times are still kinda slow, performance while working is a multiple fold increase. It helps not having to run a couple of dozen extra real time applications watching every interaction to make sure that I’m staying clean and safe. There are still some things I have to sort out, like getting my Wifi card to get detected automatically rather than manually calling ndiswrapper into work whenever I need to get online, but that should all be a matter of reading and a couple of hours hackery.

Now I also need to build myself a nice Windows machine for gaming and work, and a proper Linux based server for storage, development and testing. Each of these will also being used for Folding@Home number crunching, as my current machines are.

Finally, I also have a project that I want to work on. More on that at a later date, but its based around a concept and a technology that has interested me for some time now, and its exciting to finally have an idea that I think could add some real value for people. It could be a while before I get anything out on it, as I have some protocol research and testing to do.

There are a couple of other ideas floating around in various stages of development, but as this one kinda fell into place quickly and seems to make a good dose of sense, its getting priority.

Well, that was pretty much what I wanted to avoid, wasn’t it? Well, now I am what I hate.

62% More Awesome

September 5th, 2007

If you don’t read Sheldon, why? Maybe you haven’t heard of it. That’s fine, I hadn’t before last year. But if you have and don’t, why? How can you not love the characters? The geek humour?

Sheldon

“62% More Awesome” is the recently released third volume of comics. Last week I was lucky enough to take delivery of my third successive personalised copy. I got my first when I met creator Dave Kellett at the 2006 Comic Con convention in San Diego at the Blank Label booth. After that I have been reading the daily strip, well, daily and snapping up the books on release with the ferver of most dedicated Bill Watterson fan.

The new book compiles most of last years strips, including the first Saturday Only storyline featuring Flaco’s adventures in space, as well as the Coffee Cup Lid Challenge – a week string strip of comics based around that most mundane of items. I can only hope that Dave takes up something similar again before the next book, those strips were easily amongst the most creative.

Buy the book. Read the comic. End of.

What a few weeks…

September 5th, 2007

How quickly things can change.

Since I last wrote, I have gotten a job and moved home. It was all a bit of a whirlwind, really.

Shortly after I submitted my last piece, I got a call from a college friend telling me that he would like to refer me for a job. He had gone for an interview for first level support for a technology company a couple of weeks before and just been offered a place, but since he had already accepted a position in another organisation, he would have to decline. Asking me if I would like to take a chance at the place (offers to me had been few and far between), I accepted and an email was sent to the relevant HR people.

The following Monday I got the call. One quick telephone interview later, I was asked to travel to the company in Cork City. Two more interviews (HR and line managers) and an offer is made.

“The next training session starts next Thursday, do you think you can make it?” her in HR says to me.
“As in day after tomorrow Thursday?”
“Yes.”
“Ah.”

Cue a phone call home to let them know whats going on, and by the time I have gotten off the bus back in Killarney the Cork local papers have been scavenged for “To Let” notices and notes made in blue ballpoint beside the promising looking ones. Calls were made, and reasonably priced accommodation was sourced in a pretty nice part of the city. Not bad for a few hours work.

So Wednesday is spent packing, moving and unpacking, before an early night for an early start the Thursday morning to partake in that great little tradition that it seems all American companies now ask you to enjoy – the medical.

Its not development, but its a step in the door. And its a good company to have on the CV at any rate. I’m not naming names as of yet just in case things don’t really work out, though I might revise that in time.

Also, now that I work for this company I have to legally throw aside one of my planned projects, as this probably would have found me in competition with them. Had it been successful, that is. Well, back to the drawing board…

The Store is Closed – Tell Everyone You Know

August 17th, 2007

Earlier this week, tech blogs and rumour mills all over the internet exploded. Why? Because this appeared again:

Apple Store Down

This time it appears there was something gone amiss, and the store wasn’t down for long. However, for the most part, its all a hype building exercise. I can’t for the life of me imagine why there would be any technical reason Apple would need to take their store off-line every time they added a new product. Yes, there are some stuctural differences to the front page, but that alone hardly warrents removing the ability to buy from the company online for a number of hours. But yet every time the image above appears, the news sites and blogs take off with reports of possible new products or upgrades, even if none have been announced in the last few months. Every time.

Nor can I imagine any other companies customers being so forgiving or even so positively excitable over the store falling over, whatever the reason behind it. I guess the reality distortion field extends far beyond the immediate area Steve Jobs is standing in.

Apple knows exactly what they are doing. For what they lose in potential online sales (remember, physical Apple stores and the telephone store remains open the whole time so nothing is really lost), they gain an awful lot in free media from the people talking directly to those they want to sell to.

[tags]Apple, store, down, marketing[/tags]