Dedicated to my late brave, beautiful and silly mummy, Debra Ross. I love you mumster.

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Category archive for internet

Because archives are so much easier than having just hundreds of posts on the home page. I learned that the hard way.

Google Reader feature requests

So I’ve been using Google Reader again for a week or so now and am enjoying it much more this time around. While virtually nothing has changed from when I used it constantly last year (when I got a response from a Google employee on this post in October 2006), now I’m following and sharing material with some extrodinarily interesting people from around the world, and am learning a lot.

This isn’t to say Google Reader is perfect; in fact if it came down to just the user interfaces I’d still say IAC’s Bloglines has it beat. Comparisons aside, here’s a laundry list of features I’d like to see:

Auto posting of comments
If someone posts a note about one of your posts in their shared items, it’d be nice if Google reader could leave a trackback link on your blog or even post the comment itself on your blog. I understand if such a system would have to be opt-in, and I understand people should have the ability to block their notes from being sent too if they want to remain private. I just feel as though I might be missing out on some good discussion here by people who don’t use Google Reader.
Easier friend adding
It seems a bit counter intuitive and convoluted that I needed to have communicated with someone using their Gmail account before a person gets added to my Google Reader "friends" section. If someone is using Google Reader, they MUST have a Google account… so why can’t I, a fellow Google account holder, just press a "Request Friendship" button on their shared items page? Why must it go through Gmail at all?
A non-Ajax version
I really dislike using pages with lots of Ajax. I don’t agree with the currently held idea that Ajax makes pages more accessible and easier to use… I know I’m in the minority though. Still, couldn’t we have a regular HTML version that works as you would expect?
Less iPhone crashing
The iPhone version of Google Reader is very slick and easy to use, which makes it great for reading feeds even when I’m on the train! What’s irritating though is it’s one of the few web pages that consistently crashes my iPhone and I don’t know why. It’s probably got something to do with downloading too many elements at the same time.
A dark background with light text
A simple little toggle button, for those of us who read our Google Reader feeds first thing in the morning and who’s eyes aren’t ready for the onslaught of "blazing white"?
A Google Reader… Reader
It’d be nice if you could click a button to get a cute person to read your posts for you :)
Battery charging ability, coffee generation
Whether I’m using Google Reader on my mammoth MacBook Pro, my tiny retro but better-than-a-netbook Armada M300 or my iPhone, I should be able to have it charge my device while I use it. And if browsing on a desktop, the extra energy should feed back into the power grid to supplement my bills. As an extra perk (ha!) it’d be great if it could brew coffee too.
Ability to filter huge animated GIFs
It surprises me how many people include huge (filesize and dimensions) animated GIFs in their feeds. It’d be nice to turn them off without turning all images off.
Automatic blog publishing
If you browse my del.icio.us category, you can see all the posts that del.icio.us generated for me automatically each day with the links I saved back in 2006. I stopped using it because having a post with just a bunch of links didn’t seem that useful. If Google Reader though could automagically create a blog post with links to each article you’ve commented on along with said comments each day, that’d be fantastic.
SMS or Twitter alerts
It’d be great if I could tell Google Reader to send me a text message or a Twitter tweet every time a particular phrase or keyword is mentioned. I’d love to be one of the first to see a post about what a moron "Ruben Schade" is.
People recommendations
Google Reader already suggests blogs you may be interested in, why not extend this to people’s shared items you may be interested in?
Simple rating system
If you didn’t have time to write a comment on a shared story, it’d be great if you could just hit a "Thumbs Up!" or "Thumbs Down" button or link. I emulate this to a certain extent with some of my Google Reader tags such as "corruption", "funny" and "wish-I-was-as-cool-as-Jimbob-and-Kelli-and-Atuu-and-…"

If you have any ideas of your own, or if you’ve talked about a Google Reader wishlist on your blog, feel free to leave a comment. Grilled cheese sandwiches.

Australian internet censorship pilot to commence

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

Senator Conroy’s saga continues today with reports that he is ready to initiate a so called "pilot" run of the Great Australian Firewall. I wish I was making this nonsense up. According to the NoCleanFeed.com blog, the trial will begin soon:

The Government has announced its ["clean feed"] filtering pilot is going ahead, and has called for ISPs to participate. The Expression of Interest document requires ISPs to filter the ACMA blacklist, with optional extensions such as dynamic filtering.

What I suspect will happen is that the trial will be a dismal failure; it will slow down internet connections substantially and the blocks put in place will easily be circumvented. I’m looking forward to seeing all the screenshots of sites detailing bomb making on computers involved in the trial, and subsequent screenshots showing blocked pages for breast cancer awareness.

The problem is, such an abysmal result will not deter Senator Conroy or his vocal minority (minority… minority… minority…) of supporters because their belief that such a system is useful and practical isn’t rooted in facts, figures or even common sense, but rather in an unfounded idea that what they’re doing is right and that everyone else is wrong, regardless. As with other adherents to similar ideologies that utilise such reasoning, they’re incredibly hard to talk rationally to because they already have their conclusion before they have their facts.

In the meantime we don’t even have telecommunications infrastructure that works half the time. How much money is Senator Conroy spending rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic?

Senator Conroy
Senator Conroy, the person who wants to censor Australian internet

Now for the obligatory further reading links in case you haven’t read about the issue here before: for more information about the federal government’s plan to filter and censor the internet, check out NoCleanFeed.com where you can also pick up badges to put on your websites; at least before the government decides to block you for such illicit behaviour. You can also find out more at the Electronic Frontiers Australia website. You can email Senator Conroy at his website. Don’t forget to also write to your local federal parliament member in your electorate.

No Clean Feed - Stop Internet Censorship in Australia No Clean Feed - Stop Internet Censorship in Australia

Conroy, fix the Internet before you censor it

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

Another very eventful day with technology. Today for no reason our home ADSL connection refuses to connect at all. It reaffirms my position on two key things: Australian internet sucks, and ADSL sucks. I’ve never had positive experiences with either!

This is why dear Senator Conroy, I ask for you to stop your fruitless crusade to filter and censor the internet which will only end in embarrassing failure for you, and instead work on improving Australia’s aging telecommunications infrastructure like you’re supposed to. Thank you.

Sent from my iPhone.

Google Reader, take three!


Now I just need to get my fabulous dad onto Google Reader…

All right everyone, I’ve finally figured out how to use Google Reader enough to use it properly. I have the little bookmarklet for my toolbar, and I’ve started following some interesting people’s shared items. I’ve also started sharing items of my own, and commenting on each. You can follow my shared items at:

http://www.google.com/reader/shared/09454950261221562208

If it makes it easier, my original redirect link also works too:

http://rubenerd.com/googlereader/

And here’s the Atom XML feed to subscribe to directly to.

Now the only question I still have is how Todd (a fellow Whole Wheat Radio listener) for example sometimes has his own name next to comments, but sometimes the name of someone else too. Do you need to be “friends” with the person to do that? Is it possible to comment live on someone else’s shared items… is that what that is?

ASIDE: I miss hanging out with my dad in Singapore… because he’s not "just" my dad, he’s my best friend.

I must say once you get the hang of it, Google Reader is wildly useful: I’ve even posted a page about the Moleskine notebook I bought this afternoon online! The learning curve though is huge: I haven’t had this much trouble learning how to use a web app (or a regular app for that matter) in a long time. I may even harbour a tiny bit of longing and nostalgia for trusty Bloglines which I dearly loved years ago. I guess it’s all about getting used to something new.

Now I just need the links for Attu and Sparks and I think I’ll be in business. :-D

Someone thinks internet filtering is a good idea?

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

With the glee over the good political news coming out of the US subsiding now, we return to Australia and Senator Conroy’s plan to censor the internet. If you only read the comments people were writing in the newspapers here, or on blogs, or on web forums, or on news websites, or in person with other people, or on television, or on public transport… you may get the impression that nobody wants this.

Fortunately the ABC has been able to actually find someone who does support the plan, and for their benefit they’ve published their defence of it:

Family concerns: Internet filtering has the potential to be a great tool to help parents in their difficult vigil.

There has been much backlash against the Government (and Stephen Conroy, the Communications Minister) for their attempt at making the internet safer for Australians. There has been much necessary talk of technological difficulties and also a large amount of discussion regarding censorship.

The article was written by Anh Nguyen, a "researcher" with the Australian Family Association, a Catholic organisation that opposes gay rights and claims that "safe sex" is a "lie" amongst other golden tidbits. Still, everyone deserves their right to free speech and opinion… wait, he is arguing we don’t, never mind. The crux of his argument is that a national internet filtering system is desirable even though it won’t entirely be effective.

I could argue at great length here over the ethical issues that would arise as as result of mandatory internet filtering. I could argue that if they can’t guarantee that legitimate content won’t be blocked then it’s dangerous. I could discuss the dubious criteria for being blocked, and the slippery slope over what is legal and what isn’t. I could argue that the opt-out system Senator Conroy proposes and Mr Nguyen endorses goes against consumer rights and is completely the opposite to how anything else operates. I could argue that the only other countries that have implemented such systems are ridiculed and condemned for doing so. I could argue that such actions are illegal and unconstitutional, and fly in the face of "innocent until proven guilty" Honestly I could even go as far as to quote each of his paragraphs and write at length the problems with his reasoning, and point out the flaws with his figures.

Senator Conroy
Senator Conroy, the person who wants to censor Australian internet

The simple fact of the matter is though, they are all moot points.

Even if such a system were desirable, it would not work. It would not work for the same reason that DRM (digital restrictions management) doesn’t work. People who want access to the blocked "illegal" material will be able to get it. Anyone with five minutes and Google will easily be able to bypass any restrictions. The only people this will affect, just like DRM, are legitimate users. In this case, law abiding people will have slower internet access and legitimate pages that are blocked by accident, while people who want to access illegal material will continue to do so. That’s all there is to it. Put the book down, grab a coffee.

As my ever wise grandfather on my mothers side has always said: "don’t let the facts get in the way of your argument [Mr Nguyen]". For what it’s worth, there are 101 comments on the article, and all but half a dozen people were appalled. Unfortunately "democracy" entitles us to vote for our government, not on their decisions. They know this of course: there’s no way this idea would pass if put to the people in a referendum. This is what needs to be done though, so we can bury this silly idea once and for all!

For more information about the federal government’s plan to filter and censor the internet, check out NoCleanFeed.com where you can also pick up badges to put on your websites; at least before the government decides to block you for such illicit behaviour. You can also find out more at the Electronic Frontiers Australia website. You email Senator Conroy at his website. Don’t forget to also write to your local federal parliament member in your electorate.

No Clean Feed - Stop Internet Censorship in Australia No Clean Feed - Stop Internet Censorship in Australia

Streaming wheaty audio success!

The gorgeous herrie audio player with Whole Wheaty goodness
The gorgeous herrie audio player with Whole Wheaty goodness

If you had read my previous post on internet streaming (Even more woes with streaming internet audio) you would know that I’ve been having difficulties listening to streaming internet audio. You could even say I’ve been having woes with it.

Here’s the scenario: I could not listen to the Whole Wheat Radio audio streams at home on my MacBook Pro, however if I took said computer to any of the net cafes in the city, I could. As I surmised in the aforementioned post, I figured it must have therefore been an issue with either our router or our ISP.

It turns out that in fact I am capable of listening to Whole Wheat Radio at home by using their high quality audio feed. I had always stuck to the low and medium fidelity feeds in the past because ISPs in Australia have download caps (yuk!), and a 20GiB monthly allowance disappears faster than you can say "Oh Wow, Obama Is President!" I assume this is because of the different software in play (ha!) on this stream compared to the others.

All I had to do was disconnect our router and plug our ADSL modem directly into our cute little ethernet switch, then manually assign IP addresses and DNS servers to our laptops. I assume then that this must have been an issue with this router.

So as you can see in the screenshot above, I can now play Whole Wheat Radio at home again! The software pictured is herrie, a very lightweight and easy to use terminal based audio player that uses a fraction of the system resources of QuickTime or iTunes on Mac; and Exaile or Amarok on Unix-like systems… perfect for tuning into an audio feed. I hope to do a review of it alongside the player it replaced called MOC which replaced Cmus. I’m passionate about finding the right software for the right job, and I’m not a believer in sacrificing a user experience just so you can use two features of one application instead of using two applications.

Look out Jim, another random media player listening to your media again and confusing the What’s Playing page… he doesn’t look too impressed.

Even more woes with streaming internet audio

My attempts to play streaming online audio on this internet connection continue to fail. This afternoon I received an error in herrie (via pkgsrc) though that I hadn’t seen before when I tried playing the low fidelity Whole Wheat Radio audio stream. MOC (via MacPorts) gave a similar error. QuickTime and iTunes blankety refuse to play.

I’m really starting to think this a problem with either our router or even at the ISP end. I’ll go to Internode on Wednesday.

Internet censorship discussed on Aussie breakfast TV

No Filter, No Censorship, No Clean Feed, No Great Firewall of Australia

UPDATE: If you read this blog using an RSS reader you wouldn’t have seen, but Dale actually posted a comment! You can reach him at his aptly-named blog Defending Scoundrels

Browsing the Electronic Frontiers Australia website this afternoon, I noticed that Dale Clapperton appeared on The Morning Show on the 29th of October. I completely missed it, but fortunately they have a video. Sorry about it being in Flash.

EFA’s Chair, Dale Clapperton, was interviewed on Channel 7’s [Morning Show] program on 29th October about the government’s proposed mandatory filtering policy. A phone-in survey on the program revealed that 80% of respondents were opposed to the censorship plan.

Given the severity of the issue, I just wish he could have appeared on the show for longer.