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April 7, 2006

Museum of Modern Betas

The Museum of Modern Betas is a frequently-updated list of betas. You can see them listed in order of popularity as measured by the number of bookmarks at Delicious.com, or in a tag cloud, etc. The reliance on Delicious means that it’s not a scrubbed list on which you’ll only find beta-ish betas — for example, Flickr is a beta in name only, and the web2.0 list is not actually a beta at all — but if you want perfect precision, you’re probably not all that interested in ragtag betas anyway [Tags: betas museum_or_modern_betas software]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: April 7th, 2006 dw

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April 1, 2006

Susan Crawford on ICANN

That Susan is on the board of ICANN should give us hope. Read her post about the latest meeting… [Tags: susan_crawford icann]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: April 1st, 2006 dw

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March 28, 2006

Craiglist-y KiJiJi

KiJiJi is like CraigsList with sites in various cities in the northern hemisphere (+ Australia and New Zealnad), but, conspicuously, none in the US. (“Kijiji means “village” in Swahili. Plus, it has five dotted letters in a row.)

Competition is almost always a good thing. But CraigsList is so good, and so good-hearted, that I’m not filled with joy at the thought of the fragmentation competition brings. My feelings, they are mixed. (One of the threads at the Toronto site asks if anyone has actually made a sale on it yet. Not a lot of yes responses yet. But give it time.)

[Tags: craigslist kijiji]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: March 28th, 2006 dw

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March 20, 2006

Let your digits do the walking through the Yellowikis

Yellowikis is a wiki-based, open yellow pages. On the main page of a business, you do the Wikipedia-ish thing of all agreeing on the neutral-point-of-view facts. On the discussion page you can do the ranting and raving you crave.

The pickings are pretty slim at the moment, but founder Paul Youlten hopes that college students (and others) will want to earn some extra cash by making YW pages for local businesses, including making videos for them; the students keep all the money. Paul has some other ideas up his sleeve as well.

It would be great if YW gained critical mass in some localities. Alternatively, maybe one of the yellow page services — e.g., local.yahoo.com (disclosure) — would like to integrate YW. In any case, it’s a project that could be tremendously useful not only as a service but as a Web resource. [Tags: yellowikis yellow+pages directories local+business business paul+youlten ]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: March 20th, 2006 dw

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March 8, 2006

Wiki Wednesday in Boston

The international Wikipedian SJ Klein is hosting the first Wiki Wednesday tonight at 6pm. It’s a time to talk about wiki development and implementation. Check SJ’s blog for details… [Tags: wikipedia sj_klein]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: March 8th, 2006 dw

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February 15, 2006

Dan Bricklin on RocketBoom

Steve Garfield RocketBooms an interview with Dan Bricklin on the alpha release of WikiCalc, which is, well, you can figure it out. [Tags: dan_bricklin wikicalc rocketboom steve_garfield wiki]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: February 15th, 2006 dw

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February 12, 2006

Best designs of the year

Once again, Joho has been ignored by those who choose the Netdiver Best of the Year design awards.

I am forced to conclude that Netdiver has a bias against orange. [Tags: netdiver awards design orange]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: February 12th, 2006 dw

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February 5, 2006

Google and Skype team on wifi

Martin Varsavsky has just blogged about what I think is an amazing feat: Google and Skype have both invested in a company he started three months ago that aims at enabling a global wifi network bottom up.

Disclosure: I’m on the US board of advisors. And I have to say, the past few months have been quite a ride. Martin has been out doing deals with the energy of eight Jolt-chugging entrepreneurs. It’s coming together beyond anyone’s expectations, though. I would never ever have thought Martin and his tiny team could have pulled this off.

It’s been brought together incredibly quickly so there are still some loose ends and rough edges. Nevertheless, here’s the idea.

Fon does not want to wait for top-down wifi solutions. Instead, it provides a couple of incentives for people to get a wifi router and begin sharing access.

If you’re a “Linus,” you let any other fonero use your hotspot for free. In addition to savoring the joy of altruism, you’re allowed to use any other fonero’ss hotspot for free, anywhere in the world.

If you’re a “Bill,” you get a cut (I think it’s 50%) of the money foneros pay to use your hotspot. You cannot roam the Fon network for free.

If you’re an “Alien,” you register with Fon (for free) and then can use Fon hotspots wherever you find them for a rate far lower than you’re paying T-Mobile or Starbucks, etc. Fees have not been finalized, but it’s going to be way under the $6/hour typical in the US.

The aim is to provide enough incentives, and make it easy enough technically, that thousands of people will start providing Fon hotspots. Bottom up we can have a global network, usable for free by those who choose to share access for free and for an affordable fee by others.

If you know anything about Martin, you know that, having made a bunch of money as an entrepreneur, his heart and hands are all about making the world better. That’s the motivation behind Fon. Fon is especially interested in helping to grow wifi in poorer parts of the world.

But Fon has dreams even beyond this. It can be a platform for innovative community development. There are some really really interesting ideas in the works. Say no more.

There are, however, a couple of hitches.

First, to become a Linus or Bill, you have to have a wifi router with Fon software. The Fon software isn’t yet ready for end-user installation. It’s based on open source code by Sebastian Gostchall (Brainslayer) at www.dd-wrt.org. You can play around with it if you’re techinical enough, but only if you’re prepared for the possibility that you’ll trash your router. The right way to become a Fonero at this point is to buy a wifi router with the Fon software already installed. The Fon site will be selling such routers well below cost to the first 3,000 users. In a few weeks or so, the Fon site will also be offering an open source version of the dd-wrt software that can be installed by non-techie users.

Second, if you have an open hotspot now, you won’t once you’ve flashed it with Fon software. Fon isn’t aimed at people who (like me) already maintain an open hotspot. It’s aimed at the 99.9% of the world who doesn’t know WEP from an analog hole in the ground. By the way, Fon will include open hotspots in the maps of Fon access it’s preparing.

Third, before you become a Fonero, you should read the terms and conditions of your contract with your ISP. Fon is talking with some of them to make sure they’ll allow subscribers to become Foneros. This can be a source of revenue for the ISPs (see Ejovi’s post) and we’re hopeful that some will be enlightened enough.

Fourth, have I mentioned that this thing is moving at lightning speed? The Web site is a draft. But if Fon gets to critical mass — which is smaller than one might think — it could be more significant than perhaps even Martin has dreamed.

And with Skype and Google behind Fon, the impossible is already happening.

[Tags: fon martin_varsavsky google skype wifi]


Additional blog posts on Fon:

Ethan Zuckerman
Wendy Seltzer
David Isenberg
Juantomas Garcia (in Spanish)
Rebecca MacKinnon
Dan Gillmor
Anmtoin O Lachtnain
Doc, Lord of Searls
Antoin O Lachtnain


Follow up to the disclosure statement above: The US advisory board for Fon has been working unusually closely with Martin and Fon’s tiny staff. Martin has been unusually transparent about the process. The advisors are working on this because we believe in the power of wifi and the importance of getting it to places that purely economically motivated players will put last. The advisors are being financially compensated, but we haven’t discussed the terms; that’s not our primary motivation. Since I sometimes write about Google and Skype, you should know that they’ve invested in a company that I apparently have some financial stake in.

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: February 5th, 2006 dw

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January 29, 2006

CDC preparing for pandemic?

David Stephenson has noted some small changes at the Center for Disease Control site that would be useful if the site were to become a center for information during a pandemic such as we may well be facing with bird flu. They’re small changes that will be useful in any case because they make it easier to find fresh information. [Tags: cdc avian flu david stephenson]

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: politics • web Date: January 29th, 2006 dw

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January 25, 2006

StopBadware

The Berkman Center, along with the Oxford Internet Institute, Consumer Reports Webwatch, and a bunch of corporate sponsors, have launched StopBadware.org, an attempt to organize volunteers to create a database of purveyors of malware.

Sounds good! And it’s got a great set of people/organizations behind it. [Tags: adware malware berkman]

(Disclosure, I’m on the board of advisors of SiteAdvisor, a company using a different technique to compile a similar database. The initiatives seem to me to be complementary.)

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Categories: Uncategorized Tagged with: web Date: January 25th, 2006 dw

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