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September 8, 2005

Being Poor

Now that Katrina has surfaced the poor that have dropped from the national conversation — Didn’t the Clinton welfare bill take care of that problem? — John Scalzi lists some of what it means to be poor. And then there are lots and lots of comments and stories. (Thanks to Kevin for the link.) [Technorati tags: HurricaneKatrina]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: September 8th, 2005 dw

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A morning insight

I discovered this morning that, when it comes to coffee’s power to wake us up and make us alert, it is even more effective when applied topically. [Tags: humor]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: humor Date: September 8th, 2005 dw

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Skype and Tellme: Voice recognition for Skype

Tellme provides speech-recognition services to large apps like AT&T’s 411 service. While riding down to a conference with Don Jackson, Tellme’s VP of Advanced Telephony, yesterday, I asked him about today’s joint Skype-Tellme announcement. (Of course, the current rumor that eBay is buying Skype — presumably for its customer base since it could get VOIP technology for $1.50 at this point — is over-shadowing the Skype-Tellme announcement.)

Q: What’s the deal?

A: Today we’re announcing a deal with Skype where independent software developers will be able to publish their speech applications onto the Skype network, either free to end users or for pay.

Q: The free calls will be free to whom?

A: Free to the caller. The developers will pay for the free-to-the-caller calls themselves. In the for-pay apps, the developer will split the revenues with Skype and Tellme.

Q: So, if a developer wants to write an app that uses voice recognition, she can use your stuff…

A: Tellme Studio, is a free developer resource for developing Voice XML applications. It’s been up and running for about 5 years. With the Skype deal, you can call it from Skype now (callto:tellme-studio , Skype ID: tellme-studio or 800 555 VXML via a regular phone). It’s a version of the Tellme platform where developers can get an account and have their applications executed over the telephone. They get debugging information, syntax checks, grammar-checkers, and so on. The typical use scenario: You’re a developer in front of your computer, your using your favorite XML editor to create your voice XML app, you have your browser open to Studio Tellme, and you’re picking up the telephone to actually test your application. Now, with the Skype deal, instead of picking up your phone, you can click the button on your Skype softphone.

Q: If I’ve developed an app using your service, my users now can communicate with my application via voice over Skype. How does that work?

A: When your app is deployed on the Skype network, it will be assigned what looks like a phone number, although it doesn’t correspond to a phone number in the real world — They’re taking a country code; they’re basically making up a Skype country. This announcement is leveraging the Skype-Out mechanism [that lets users pay Skype to make phone calls to regular old phones]. The Skype-Out gateways send that phone call over to Tellme servers. If you’re a developer who’s elected Tellme to be your voice app, you’ll have configured with us what URL to fetch to get your voice application. We’ll fetch that application from any web server on the Internet, and it will beging to render the voice XML application to the caller.

Q: So, as a developer, it’s relatively easy for me to integrate voice recognition.

A: Yes.

Q: What sorts of apps do you envision being the most obvious to arise?

A: Part of the motivation of this program is that Tellme and Skype do not have to create the applications that get deployed on the network. We want third party developers to come up with their own ideas. I’m a great believer in Bill Joy’s law that not all smart people work at your company. We’re building an open platform…

Q: But which apps do you think are the most obvious?

A: Voice XML is very well suited to creating speech and telephone interfaces to any information on the web, so information access via speech is the most obvious. We’ve had a number of entertainment-oriented applications developed. We’ve had an application called Graffiti, a non-real-time chat room; when you go into the chat room, you hear the last 20 msgs that were left, and you can add your own to the queue. We deployed that on the Tellme network back in 2000 and it was so popular that it swamped our systems and we had to turn it off. We’ll see applications like that generated.

Q; What data does voice XML encode?

A: A voice XML app is XML data that describes the user interaction state diagram of your application. Typically, the first state is a greeting and launching pad. That part of the application will list the WAV files to play to the caller. Then there will be a reference to a speech recognition grammar that describes what the user can say and what the application recognizes.

Q: Currently, either the user or the developer pays for your service. Tellme has actual costs per call?

A: Yes.

Q: There are applications imaginable where even small costs might get in the way of a socially desirable use. For example, developing world cellphone-to-Internet, or emergency response systems such as were developed rapidly on the Internet. Any chance Tellme would consider making its service free all the way through in some instances?

A: Like every American, we’re very concerned about the Katrina crisis and we’ve be very interested in finding ways to use our platform and technology to aid its victims. Tellme runs the toll-free directory assistance application for AT&T, 1800.555.1212, and in the early hours of the crisis , we were able to make very rapid changes to help people get emergency numbers for FEMA and other resources. Because all of this is based on Internet technology, we were able to make those changes in a very small number of hours and get people access they needed as fast as possible. So, I’d encourage people who have proposals for aid-related speech applications to contact me and we’ll see if we can make that happen.

Q: Tell me about DialTone 2.0.

A: Tellme was created with the mission to revolutionize how people interact with the telephone. We think telephone interactions should be far more powerful and more personalized. For example when you go off hook [i.e., pick up the phone], why do you get that dumb dialtone sound? Tellme has this vision called DialTone 2.0. When you go off hook it’s “Hi, Don. You have three new voice messages. Who do you want to call?” The dial tone becomes your gateway to voice services that you’re accessing over the telephone.

Q: Any takers?

A: A number of carriers are excited about the vision. The business model is still getting worked out. The upstarts are a lot more excited about not creating another me-too phone service. So, hopefully over the next couple of years we’ll see an initial deployment of this vision. [Technorati tags: tellme skype]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: tech Date: September 8th, 2005 dw

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September 7, 2005

Blocking emergency radio

A group has been trying to set up a low-power radio station in the Astrodome to broadcast emergency information, job offerings, lost children, etc. Every obstacle has been put in their way. They were required to hand out 10,000 radios. They did. They were told there wasn’t enough electricity. They brought in their own batteries. FEMA still won’t allow them to broadcast. Sounds ridiculous to me. [Technorati tags: hurricanekatrina]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: September 7th, 2005 dw

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A suggestion

Let’s repeal the Law of Unintended Consequences to see what happens.

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Categories: misc Tagged with: misc Date: September 7th, 2005 dw

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Map of the Net

CAIDA has a map of two weeks of Internet traffic, explained here.

The graph reflects 926,201 IP addresses and 2,000,796 IP links (immediately adjacent addresses in a traceroute-like path) of topology data gathered from 22 monitors probing approximately 865,000 destinations spread across 77,678 (50% of the total) globally routable network prefixes.

We then aggregate this view of the network into a topology of Autonomous Systems (ASes), each of which approximately maps to an Internet Service Provider (ISP).

I don’t really understand it, but it sure is purty. [Technorati tags: internet]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: tech Date: September 7th, 2005 dw

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Web of Ideas: Sept. 14: David Isenberg

I’m starting up this year’s Web of Ideas discussion series at the Berkman Center, and our first guest will be David Isenberg. I’ll interview him about the current telco situation and how to keep the Internet open and free, something David has been thinking about for a long time. There’ll be open discussion, the event is open to everyone, and I think there will be pizza. It’ll be sometime in the early evening on September 14 at the Berkman Center at Harvard, in Cambridge, MA. Details to follow… [Tags: WebOfIdeas]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: September 7th, 2005 dw

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September 6, 2005

Stop the presses! Raise your anticipatory adrenalin level! Big big news! Big, I tell you!

I just got an email headlined “CNN Breaking News” to let me know that washed-up, marginally talented, possibly nice guy Bob Denver of Gilligan’s Isle is dead.

Excuse me, but in the current world, that counts as breaking news? Can you imagine what the conversation around the editorial table must have been? And why didn’t it result in anyone resigning? A long time ago? [Tags: media]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: media Date: September 6th, 2005 dw

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My first $50 tank of gas

I’m just so proud that I had to hang on my blogwall:

$50 gas receipt

Yes, yes, I know this is hardly news to people outside of America or to those so deeply into America that they drive a Hummer or other armored civilian transport vehicle. But for our Volvo (“The Car that Cluetrain Bought”), it’s just a special moment.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: September 6th, 2005 dw

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Katrina images

Salon recommends this slide-show-with-music, although I actually found the Icelandic dirge sound-track offputting. But you’ll find the usual collection of amazements at Flickr, under the “hurricanekatrina” tag. It’s hard to pick just a couple, but here’s a view of the storm from on top and a view I hadn’t seen of the inside of a Hercules aircraft. My own preference is to view the tag as a slideshow, clicking through at my own speed. [Tag: hurricanekatrina]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: uncat Date: September 6th, 2005 dw

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