DVD Burners, Going Even Cheaper

By | November 24, 2011

Further to my column last week about how DVD burners may be worth investing in, Slashdotters are debating their rapidly falling prices — in some cases to below $100. The discussion is here; the original article reviewing sub-$100 burners is here.

Having just spent more of my weekend than is healthy backing up my MP3 collection (20+ gigabytes) I have no doubt about their appeal for storing large quantities of data. That collection went onto six DVD discs. If I’d done the same thing to CD-ROM it would have taken, er, a lot more.

The Anti Anti iPod Backlash

By | November 24, 2011
 More on the Neistat Brothers and their complaint about an iPod battery. Seems there’s something of a backlash brewing by folk who feel they didn’t have much of a case. (beautiful website, that one, by the way).
 
Note to subscribers to the blog. For now I’m sending these updates directly to you since there appears to be a problem with the Bloglet email handler. Please reply to me directly if you don’t want to receive the updates. I’ll let you know when things are back to normal.

Yahoo Proposes A Way Out Of Spam

By | November 24, 2011
 At last, someone is doing something about spam. Part of the problem behind spam is that email allows sleazier folk to fake where the email is coming from (the ‘From’ part of the email’s address fields, or header.) But if email didn’t allow that, and authenticated a sender before passing it on to the recipient, you might kill off spam in a second.
 
The problem has been implementing something like this. How do you get everyone to agree on the new system? Yahoo, Reuters reports, reckons it has the answer: architecture where sending an e-mail message would embed a secure, private key in a message header. The receiving system would check that against the sending domain’s public key. If the public key is able to decrypt the private key embedded in the message, then the e-mail is considered authentic and can be delivered. If not, then the message is assumed not to be an authentic one from the sender and is blocked.
 
Yahoo says it can make the system work even if only a few major email providers adopt it. Given Yahoo’s size in the email world that may not be so hard. Yahoo is making the technology available for free, so that while it may cost money to implement, it doesn’t leave any one player with a proprietary technology dominating the industry. (I guess spam costs Yahoo so much money it has figured it’s cheaper to give away a new system if it gets rid of spam.)
 
It’ll be interesting to see how far this goes before another big player, say Microsoft, tries to stomp on it.

Wi-fi For Truckers

By | November 24, 2011
 Interesting piece from the New York Times about Wi-fi for truckers. Turns out they like Wi-fi because it’s spreading to truckstops and their “cabs are not only workplaces but often sleeping quarters as well”.
 
Truck stops have offered various Internet options for years, but the connections have often been slow and expensive, and required drivers to go inside. In turn the connections, available by subscription for terms from 15 minutes to a year, provide a new source of revenue for the truck stops.
 
What I like about this idea is that it expands the technology beyond its traditional white-collar borders. Plus it would help make a really good sequel to ‘Convoy’.
 
 

More RIAA Suits A-flying, More Lawyers A-leaping

By | November 24, 2011
 The Recording Industry Association of America Inc is not letting up. IDG News reports that the RIAA is firing off a new wave of lawsuits and lawsuit-notification letters to users alleged to have illegally distributed significant amounts of copyright-protected music files online.
 
The group is filing 41 new lawsuits and sending 90 lawsuit-notification letters this week, adding to the 341 lawsuits filed and 308 notification letters sent since September. The RIAA has settled with 220 file-sharers as a result of lawsuits, lawsuit-notification letters and subpoenas. In addition, 1,054 users have submitted affidavits as part of the RIAA’s amnesty program.
 
The party is definitely over. But while clearly the RIAA doesn’t worry too much about the negative publicity from all this, I suspect they may be winning the battle but not the war. Buying music online will not properly take off until users know that the music they buy will be nor more restricted than the CDs they buy in shops, as to where they can play, how long they play it, where they can copy it to, and whether it’s theirs to sell on to someone else. Until that happens everything between now and then is an experiment.