it's a great site -
how about quantum computing
?
Borders, periphery, frontiers:
Life and cognizance exists on the edge of quantum and
classical physics.
The very small ( nano ) works by most extraordinary rules -
objects have properties that allow them to move from here to there without
going through the intermediate space. Time is not linear and space bends.
Objects themselves appear, take on properties, and then change their character
and reappears in a different form. At the atomic and molecular level the
connections can be open and creative rather than mechanical and determined.
Uncertainty is a fundamental prerequisite of creativity and life itself. A
really clever computer working with uncertainly could work at this level and have
some sort of consciousness. This would be an interesting invention of this
century.
http://www.foresight.org/cgi-bin/aglimpse?query=quantum&relpath=&errors=0&age=&maxfiles=50&maxlines=30
quantum dots (or single-electron transistors), quantum wells, quantum wires,
spin transistors or arrays of all these devices. low power quantum electronics,
and high bandwidth photonics are of special interest, as are the demonstrations
of space subsystems based on these technologies.
Candidate technologies receiving attention
include various quantum functional devices, quantum computing, DNA computing,
and molecular electronics explained for molecular diode switches, molecular
transistors, and molecular logic gates. This talk would provide an overview on
one such candidate technology based on carbon and other nanotubes. the novel
Quantum Cascade Laser (QCL), which differs in design from traditional laser
diodes. This treatment burned out the protein shell and yielded two dimensional
arrays of inorganic iron oxide dots on the Si wafer.
The size and repeat distance of the dots were 6 and 12 nm,
respectively, as measure by FE-SEM and AFM. As the diameter of the iron oxide
dots is only 6 nm, this two imensional array of inorganic iron oxide dots has a
potential to be used as quantum dots. Feasibility study of the application of
this dot array to the structure of semiconductor memory is now in progress.

Key word "infrastructure"
What will happen tomorrow that effects your life today. News
about what's happening and for updates use GlobalVillage Excite NewsSearch ????
Fiber Optics to the Home
Fiber optics has helped push the telecommunications system
into hyperdrive. But only when fiber connections reach all the way into the
home will the technology’s promise be fully
realized.

Futures, forecasts, and fantasy :
re: ORCL, HP team with Utilities in Consortium to Fiber the
Last Mile
"...taking advantage of the deregulated telecom
industry, the small, tightly knit consortium will initially offer digital
voice, TV, and Web hosting over fiber, under the name SpectraDyne Services. It
includes Sierra Pacific Power Company, Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, and
TelecommUnity Systems."
The following image need to be firmly in mind to understand
the AOL/ Time Warner deal - and the frenzy going on in telecommunications and
computer industries.
The time frame is about 10 years - the impact comes first in
Northern Europe - Singapore - parts of the states - parts of Hong Kong and
China - Japan - Taiwan - South East Asia - Australia ( already with system
under construction )
There is optic to the door provided by the utility company.
It is a common carrier providing:
TV programs on demand on a big flat screen digital high
definition system - programs are recorded and played as you desire, when you
desire on any of the screens around the wired house you desire.
There is no need for program schedules - movies and other
video content are downloaded on demand from world wide services. Some charge
fees some are free with or without ads. You can watch the BBC news or CNN or
C-span type programs any time.
There is no need for movie or music channels since you can
order anything you want anytime.
The same with music, either rented for a limited number of
replays, or purchased and transferred to CD or DVD -
The same with interactive media - games and educational
services for the wired " smart" house - When you leave the security
system goes on - with complete radar monitoring of any motion with recording of
motion, the heat or AC is turned down, when you click from your cell phone that
you are returning home - the lights and heat or AC is reset, the music turned
on and the doors unsecured.
The cell phone - palm pilot - personal digital assistant
works at 400 kbs to 1 Mbs with GPS, e-mail and other web content, fold up or
screen keyboards, long life batteries, high gain reception of dense multiplex
time division wideband GS3 codes.
The home terminal - NEXUM - provides wireless ( bluetooth )
connection to the mobile elements, TV, music, games, information systems with
voice commands. You say " Write a note" and dictate as it appears on
the big screen. You correct with the portable keyboard that is used for
interactive TV.
The master computer works within a network "master
server in the sky" to provide services you need or enjoy. Shopping,
banking, tele-communities, video conferences, design and research, games and
social activities, travel and adventure, and tuned to your interests and
desires.
The master server bills for usage in micro pennies for
"extras" but charges a flat fee for "basic services".
Several master server companies compete for services on the common carrier -
The services are not tied to the wire - optic cable - so
there are two bills - one for connection services - the wireless and wired (
optic ) and another from the service company that passes along charges for
rentals, fee for service charges, software licenses, communications on and off
net, as we do today with local and long distance phone services and premium
cable services.
Where is the money made ? Optic fiber hardware - mobile
hardware, utility company right-of-way and network services, the "general
utility service company" maybe AOL, Microsoft, NOISE group ( Netscape,
Oracle, IBM, Sun Microsystems and everyone else ) Amazon, or others which
provides the interface between the user and service providers - banks,
insurance, finance and markets, shopping, software and music and games and
movies and communications, and entertainment, security, smart home management,
and on and on...
The super on-line service using optic fiber to the door.
Technological search:
nano computers quantum optical network switching electronics
high bandwidth photonics diode switches molecular transistors molecular logic
gates Quantum Cascade Laser
A short introduction to quantum computation
Max PLANCK and Heisenberg, and Erwin SCHRÖDINGER's wave
mechanics, and Born, are the people of the 20th century who will most influence
the 21 st. We will see the application of quantum computer fairly soon. It could
( so will ) have some level of self awareness we call consciousness
Being in two places at the same time - or going from here to
there without passing through the space between.
The nature of matter at this level is little energy spots
rather than matter as we experience it, energy that change quantum states -
transform from one state to another instantly.
"
The history of computer technology has involved a sequence
of changes from one type of physical realization to another --- from gears to
relays to valves to transistors to integrated circuits and so on ...
On the atomic scale matter obeys the rules of quantum
mechanics, which are quite different from the classical rules that determine
the properties of conventional logic gates. So if computers are to become
smaller in the future, new, quantum technology must replace or supplement what
we have now.
The point is, however, that quantum technology can offer
much more than cramming more and more bits to silicon and multiplying the
clock-speed of microprocessors. It can support entirely new kind of computation
with qualitatively new algorithms based on quantum principles!
suggestions: FIRST:
The list of companies in tele-communications
In short why John McCain issues will become central in the
election - the spirit moves in mysterious ways.
We have bodies, ( Blue ) which include a mind ( Yellow ).
Being aware and thinking we have ideas about who we are ( brown ) and feeling
about how others treat us ( red ). We think and feel as we learn about our
physical ( brown ) and social environment - reacting with passions of the
body-mind ( thoughts, chemistry and electrical energy fields which define our
mood ) ( Red ) - We are aware of something outside ourselves that causes
thoughts on the inside. Feeling, passions within us ( white) as love and hate (
black ). We dream of things that never were ( Green ) and imagine a golden
place.
The history of human development and civilization and
organizations of all kinds from the church, state and business follow patters
in these primary colors.
The physical body come first ( blue ) when people find they
can be better off within a group, they need society for survival or want to
gain power, wealth, position, control, comfort, and use their minds to ( yellow
) get organized. This is the habits of the mind vs. body, feeling vs. reason -
the church and state, the divine and secular. But it is only the beginning.
When groups are organized the iron law of bureaucracy takes
over.
"Robert Michels"
The Iron Law of Oligarchy
Michels believed that the people in this group would become
enthralled with their elite positions and more and more inclined to make
decisions that protect their power rather than represent the will of the group
they are supposed to serve. http://www.au.spunk.anarki.net/texts/places/germany/sp000711.txt
"Michels (1911) came to the conclusion that the formal
organization of bureaucracies inevitably leads to oligarchy, under which
organizations originally idealistic and democratic eventually come to be
dominated by a small, self-serving group of people who achieved positions of
power and responsibility. This can occur in large organizations because it
becomes physically impossible for everyone to get together every time a
decision has to be made. Consequently, a small group is given the
responsibility of making decisions.
Those in command do not share - there is a failure of
synergy. Those that do but are not rewarded get angry ( red ).
The early church was a synergy group but became a
bureaucracy with conflicts between the clergy, the state and the people. When
people get mad enough they became Protestants. When citizens became angry
enough at the divine rights of kings they formed parliaments.
They claimed the victory of mind OVER body. But that doesn't
work.
The church or state or company then claimed a greater good
based on interests. That sort of works.
Then they appealed to the mystery ( green ) and called on
the spirits ( white ).
They promised the golden kingdom in the sky.
They turned love into hate and hate into love.
They discovered the art of commercials and the skills of
marketing.
Now we are drifting between synergy ( shared rewards ) and
the iron law of bureaucracy.
Why has the National Education and Teachers Unions fail to
promote education and teaching ? Why does the congress fail to reflect the
simple needs of the majority of the people. Why does talk, media and art
disconnect from passion, truth or reason ? Why does it all seem so false and
thin - a ghost in a machine. Where is the spirit that connects people,
institutions, fostering enlightenment and responsibility ? Has religion
captured or confused our souls but failed to organize our being ? Has civic culture
become a captive of marketing ?
In short why John McCain issues will become central in the
election - the spirit moves in mysterious ways.
Wiredbrain Future new news and private research service by
GlobalVillages provides research on and the future ???
Don't be blind to what others are doing and what they know about what you are
up to AT FROM:
pflaupflaupflaupflaump@cfl.rr.com:p>

Wiredbrain Synergy Group message board

Who will keep you informed on the events just around the
next bend. In the past it was OK to let others forge the way. You could wait to
see how it turned out then buy your way in after the bugs had been removed.
Pioneers got arrows in their backs. BUT now we are all on the frontier and
can't wait until the dust settles. For example:
Dr. Pflaum ( for a fee ) will research the events and
technologies that will effect your future and give you reports and advice.
FOR EXAMPLE:
People who purchase a PC with the belief that computer
literacy is not necessary are kidding themselves. Still, millions of people,
including my grandparents, are buying PCs with the mistaken notion that they're
no more difficult to operate than VCRs. Many PC owners don't know how to do the
basic tasks, such as installing software and hardware and defragmenting a disk
drive. And God help them if they ever have to reinstall the operating system.
Making the PC easier to maintain would require the companies that produce the
operating systems, software and hardware to work together in harmony. This will
never happen.
It's a problem crying out for a solution. And it's not hard
to imagine one: What if I told you that I could provide you with a solid-state
device a quarter of the size of a PC that had no moving parts to break? You
could run 50 software titles such as Word, WordPerfect, Lotus SmartSuite,
Quattro Pro and Quicken, as well as games. You would never have to upgrade
those applications because they would be upgraded for you. With this device,
you could watch more than 175 cable channels and select from thousands of movie
titles that you could watch either on the machine or on the TV in your living
room.
This device would have a hard drive so large that you could
never fill it up. And you never would have to back up files again because they
would be backed up for you every night. If lightning hit this device while you
were using it out by the pool, you might lose some hair and skin, but you
wouldn't lose data—and I could
overnight you another machine.
There would be no problems with an operating system,
hardware drivers or other software. You would simply plug it into your cable
box, and you're ready to go.
Services for the masses
In the near future, services such as these will replace the
PC for millions of people who were never cut out to be PC administrators.
Thin-client operating systems, such as Citrix MetaFrame running on MS Terminal
Server, combined with ISDN, ADSL or cable modem Internet access, will
inevitably be the basis of a virtual PC service that will revolutionize the
industry.
Instead of buying a PC, you would pay the company a monthly
fee, and the company would send you a Winterm device that plugs into your new
high-bandwidth Internet connection, which links to its service. After powering
it on, you would simply hit "connect" and your personalized GUI
desktop would pop up on the screen. You could instantly run hundreds of
applications without installing anything. Any time you saved files, they'd
actually be saved to a server's hard drives, which would be backed up every
night. Combine these services with an e-mail account, and watch PC sales
plummet. After all, who would want to buy a PC with software that had to be
upgraded every year, if you could hire a service to take care of the mess? Many
corporations, tired of the cost and IS staff required to manage hundreds of
PCs, would jump on it.
The technology to build a virtual PC service is here today.
Other technologies, such as movies on demand, are probably a few years out.
The advent of virtual computing will shift the entire PC
infrastructure with such momentum that the PC as we know it today will be used
only by a group of oddballs: "computer" people.
Brett Arquette is chief technology officer for the 9th
Judicial Circuit Court, Orange and Osceola counties, in Florida. He can be
reached at barq@iag.net.
What could an relevant on-line school be like.
·
Color is better than black and white.
·
Three dimensions is better than two.
·
Round is better than flat.
·
Fast is more successful than slow.
Civilization progresses with greater literacy, greater
attention to the laws of man and nature, and greater freedom of participation.
Current instruction is gray and flat - it needs to be
colorful and round. Instruction is slow, knowledge is cut into fragments and
reassembled, creative participation is discouraged at all levels.
The iron law of bureaucracy operates freely in almost all
schools.
Students in rows reviewing text books under the control of
an instructor is clearly colorless and flat. Every once in awhile there is a
little burst of color or a dark pit but the surface is mostly two dimensional
and the colors are black and white.
There are several clear themes as we move from two
dimensions to many:
1. ) Knowledge is not only transferred but invented a lot of
learning takes place in the process of invention
2.)
The organizing themes are tasks not subjects , Knowledge is
organized around functions not disciplines
3.) there is creative interaction between teachers and
learners and less distinctions between actors and classes.
The word is convergence - Technology,
communications, human organization, marketing, finance, and further
explorations of the future rushing in upon us.
The NEXUM project:
The design of the general communications and computing
device.
Design teams of teachers ( from around the world ) and
students from anywhere working on the interface of communications technology,
processing capacity, storage and data transfer compression, marketing, finance,
human machine interface ( ergonomics http://www.wiredbrain.net/ergonomics.htm
) because the specialist now has to consider bandwidth, chip capacities,
applications, service systems, distribution systems, content and market demand
factors all in one organized package.
Management, information technology, marketing, human
resources and production need to work together. Traditional products such as
automobiles and space rockets and atomic ships has advanced some in design
integration but computers still have a way to go - the
must leap frog current compartment thinking into new
dimensions of systems analysis.
How is systems analysis different
from what has been used in the last 40 years. It is more
colorful and has more dimensions.
It becomes much more complex where there are many clients,
with many applications, using different languages and protocols. A great server
should ask and how do we establish an interface, what language do you use, what
program do you want, what operating system does it use, and can I remember all
this the next time we make contact ?
Amazon.com has shown the way within one set of protocols of
how to be client centric. Every store both e and non-e, should be able to track
several open ended data bases - inventory, catalog, store, client, sales
person, so as to show what exists and who is buying it. Wal-mart and Builders
Square, Office supply and Sears should have a the catalog and inventory on line
at the cash registrar and on-line for the buyers with items, pictures, prices
as well as complete lists of any clients or sales person’s
recorded sales. It world make it a lot easier for contractors or anyone buying
many different items.
A friendly server would connect such data bases to user
applications such as financial records and market research. Can any client using
different tools access open records for different purposes, in different
languages ? Can suppliers or comparative shoppers or programs that search for
best buys ? How would the Nexum, a simple communications device, use server
software to find the best buy ? Who do you compare features ? Models, grades,
standards, ? All kinds of applications not invented need to glide easily into
existing systems.
The invention of credit, degrees, payment systems is easy
Color is better than black and white. Three dimensions is
better than two. Round in better than flat. Current instruction is gray and
flat - it needs to be colorful and round. Students in rows reviewing text books
under the control of an instructor is clearly colorless and flat. Every once in
awhile there is a little burst of color or a dark pit but the surface is mostly
two dimensional and the colors are black and white.
As I understand IT , a new type of technology using Time
Synchronization Systems Through DCF77 or GPS signal and using a 10,000 MHTZ
chip can transmit MEGA-BITS the last mile. In synergy with solid state atomic
level MEMORY TECHNOLOGY data moves from FROM MEGA-BIT TO GIGA-BIT per second.
High Speed processors adapted from TERCOM - terrain contour matching
10,000 MHz chip used in the cruise missile terrain following "smart
bombs" or using guided radio waves or laser beam targeting based on rapid
image recognition.
According to CMR (
http://www.cmruk.com/cmrinventions.html ), Professor Ted Williams and his
team are able to store 86 gigabytes per square centimeter, and to read and
write this data at 100 megabits/second. While few details are available while
their patents are pending, CMR does indicate that the process, funded in part
by the UK Department of Trade and Industry, exploits a new family of metal
alloys to create, "...a magneto-optical system not dissimilar to that of
CD-ROM, except that the system is fixed, solid state, and has a different
operating approach."
PLUS:


Symbian
joint venture between Psion, Nokia, Ericsson, Matsushita and Motorola will
be a connection between smart mobile phones and Internet-ready games such as
the consoless Sony’s PlayStation 2
For Example: Dialpad.com is the world's first free
Java-based web-to-phone service. With Dialpad.com,
you can make unlimited free phone calls to anybody in the US as long as
the other party has a valid phone number. Dialpad.com works just like your own
telephone. You can make phone calls to any phone number in the US.
Furthermore, you don't need to manually download and install any software. You
can make any call while your are browsing the Internet and it is FREE!
weirdbrain ' (wîrd) adj., weird·er, weird·est. Of, relating
to, or suggestive of the preternatural or supernatural. Of a strikingly odd or
unusual character; strange. Archaic. Of or relating to fate or the Fates. n.
Fate; destiny. One's assigned lot or fortune, especially
when evil. Often Weird. Greek Mythology. Roman Mythology. One of the Fates.
weird'ly adv. weird'ness n. SYNONYMS: weird, eerie, uncanny, unearthly.
These adjectives refer to what is of a mysteriously strange,
usually frightening nature. Weird may suggest the operation of supernatural
influences, but it may also be applied to what is merely odd or unusual: “
The person of the house gave a weird little laugh” (Charles
Dickens). “
There is a weird power in a spoken word” (Joseph Conrad).
Something eerie inspires inexplicable fear or uneasiness that seems to result
from a sinister influence: “At nightfall on the marshes, the thing was eerie
and fantastic to behold” (Robert Louis Stevenson). Uncanny refers to what is
unnatural and peculiarly unsettling: “
The queer stumps . . . had uncanny shapes, as of monstrous
creatures, whose eyes seemed to peer out at you” (John Galsworthy). Something
unearthly seems so strange and unnatural as to come from or belong to another
world: “He could hear the unearthly scream of some curlew piercing the din”
(Henry Kingsley).
* Another Broadband Alternative -- More acronyms: LMDS and
MMDS.
These are technologies for deploying high speed Internet
access using broadcast radio waves -- think of it as wireless cable or wireless
DSL. A few areas, such as New York City and Silicon Valley, already have some
limited implementations. But according to the Oct. 26 New York Times
(http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/biztech/ http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/yr/mo/biztech/
articles/26internet-wireless.html), a new big-name
consortium led by Cisco plans to give cable and DSL companies a run for their
broadband money -- and they point out that their terrestrial radio-based MMDS
(Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service) solution doesn't require digging
up any streets or placing equipment in the difficult-to-enter telephone company
offices. (A tutorial on MMDS and related technologies is at http://www.webproforum.com/wire_broad/topic10.html
).
AND YOU GET:
Imagine a fat monitor or a hand held device or using i-Burst
broadband Internet protocol technology a card which is a personal linking
device that plugs into the electrical energy fields system and a USB (
universal serial Bus ) modem ( or digital connection to replace the analog )
that creates the connection to the life force.
The device can carry talk, pictures, e-mail, white board
functions.
The device can charge expenses, such as parking, travel,
meals, and pay by use applications.
Third-generation services are coming soon to a mobile phone
near you --
but first the platforms and standards have to be resolved.
Electricity made mass production, telephones, photographs,
radio, TV, and computers possible, and now powers the internet. Packets replace
circuits, self fixing double encoded packets travel fast and faster.
The Personal Communications Utility or Appliance PCU, PCA,
or PAD ( personal access device ) or PDA Personal digital assistant or NC
( network computer ) plugs into a pipeline that connects you to the backbone of
the internet.
The comprehensive, omnibus, all-embracing, all-encompassing,
across-the-board, INCLUSIVE, EXTENSIVE widespread, epidemic, GENERAL
international, world-wide, global, cosmic, UNIVERSAL, UBIQUITOUS appliance
device, mechanical contraption, gadget, gismo, CONTRIVANCE doodad, doohickey,
thingy, thingamabob, thingamajig, that we all will carry around. At the counter
in Wal-Mat it connects quickly by infra-red link to the charge ( debit )
machine.
The true paper-less banking. What do we have ? What did we
buy ? How much did it cost on record.
We talk to it. Call home. Get personal mail. Look up a
record. Check on the price of dry wall. What is the quote on 20 year fixed term
money ? Where do I go next ? How do I get there ? Call ahead and confirm I will
be 10 minutes late. What's on the menu, reserve the table by the window and
order ahead. Who has the best price on or for or going - on anything ? Who
wants to buy or sell ? How is the car running, how am I doing ? Can I fly to
Jerusalem in the morning and rent a car and get a hotel and make appointments ?
When connected to a terminal I can type or see better - out
of the digital airwaves or on cable or on optic fiber in Africa to China
down-links and up links with nodes and storage and services at my command
charges by the micro-penny. It's always on with a flat connection fee.
How our packets travel is the trillion dollar question;
digital cell phones, broadband, on the electric wires, cable, optic
fiber, DSL or all of the above ?
Since the late 1880s, when wireless communications were
first demonstrated, all practical uses of radio have relied on the transmission
of continuous sine waves.
The modulation of those sine waves allows the transmission
and reception of information in either amplitude (AM radio) or frequency (FM
radio). From 1890 to the present, industry has searched relentlessly for ways
to send more information more reliably. Radio researchers have evolved
techniques such as CDMA, TDMA, etc. Introduction to CDMA
http://www.time-domain.com/technology.htmlNow,
the entire wireless landscape has changed. Larry Fullerton discovered that
single RF monocycles could be transmitted through an antenna, and by precisely
positioning these monocycles in time and then using a matched receiver to
recover the transmissions, a whole new wireless medium was created, 'Digital
Pulse Wireless' - a medium that does not rely on sine waves, does not require
an assigned frequency, does not need a power amplifier, and is so random and
low powered that it is indistinguishable from noise.
The medium does require precise pulse placement in time
(pulses are positioned with an accuracy of trillionths of a second), and it
also requires a coherent correlating receiver - a Fullerton correlator. Larry
Fullerton developed and patented the technology over the last decade.
The technology based on pulse-echo radar, discovered around
the turn of the century. Such radar leverages the speed of light as an integral
component of its operation, measuring the echo that results when a pulse
strikes an object to determine that object's distance from the pulse source.
Conventional radar systems transmit several thousand such
pulses per second. MIR, by contrast, sends out over 1 million.
"In the past, people used radio waves, but nobody cared
how fast they were going," McEwan said. "Now the consumer can use
devices that actually clock the speed of light in the form of microwave
propagation, allowing them to do things that they could never do before." http://www.eet.com/news/97/937news/sensorapps.html
The Star Office 5.1 is a good example. It runs on open
platforms and can be updated, reconfigured to include sound and video
telephones, and doesn't need to be completely installed on every terminal but
can run off the system network.
In doing web pages, Netscape Composer, MS FrontPage, and
Star Office use different forms of code, HTTP ( hypertext ) different Java
scripts, and can mess each other and the author up. Now since they (
Netscape ( AOL ) and Sun - part of the NOISE group, Netscape, Oracle, IBM, Sun
and everyone else - ) are enemies they may intend to screw each other with the
author in the middle.
and too many other changes that work here but not there -
audio plug-ins, ActiveX, virtual machines, XML, etc. Etc..
This is why the complex stuff has to be up-stream on the
server if the communications systems can communicate with each other.
The system knows where you are (GPS), who you are ( IP) and
what you are ( kind of device you are using ) and what you want - voice,
e-mail, conference, word processor, accounts, pay a bill, collect a bill etc.
The standards have to be set by SOMEONE - it can’t be done by a voluntary committee as in the good old
non commercial days when the DOD and NSF controlled the net. It can’t be done by government ( too slow ) IT has to be
global - the EU and Asia are involved - sometimes well ahead.
The WWW system standard was set at CERN - and the UN or a
global trade or international postal telecommunications agreement could set up
a fast working body the approve PROTOCALS. Now MS does the global job but is
clearly not neutral or trustworthy, since it is worth a good share of the
almost trillion dollars in systems sales.
Tomorrow's story today: Wiredbrain's Reports from the future:
StarOffice 5 is a free download from Sun microsystems at
StarOffice has a fully integrated set of powerful
applications that provides Microsoft Office compatible word processing,
spreadsheet, graphic design, presentations, HTML editor, mail/news reader,
scheduler, and database functions. With the release of the new 5.1 version for
worldwide distribution, StarOffice provides significant performance and feature
upgrades that improve user experience and productivity.
StarOffice 5.1 includes:
StarOffice Writer for document editing,
§
StarOffice Calc for creating spreadsheets,
§
StarOffice Impress for creating presentations,
§
StarOffice Draw and StarImage for creating vector and
bit-mapped graphics,
§
StarOffice Schedule for managing calendars and to-do lists,
§
StarOffice Mail for handling e-mail,
§
StarOffice Base for creating interfaces to databases,
§
StarOffice Discussion for reading Internet news, and
§
StarOffice Math for creating complex formulas,
StarOffice Workplace for creating a desktop environment
It's really good !
The integration of text, http editor, spreadsheets,
presentations, drawing, mail, frames, work folders, database, global documents,
diagrams, images, formula, is really MUCH better than Office and word.
And it's free
As important as the transistor ?
Imagine 3.4 terabytes in a device the size of a credit card.
Imagine it costing about $48!!
FROM
Videos would be on a rechargeable card, so would banking,
purchases, all using personal communication systems and very smart cards -
every transaction can be online, from parking meters, gas, soda machines,
ticket-less travel, using a smart card with memory and a small web connection.
Add the GPS and the map is the territory; anywhere and anytime all is in a cell
phone type device. You can not only know where you are all the time but
"the system" can know where you or your kids are or where your car
is.
The connection of GPS, tiny web servers, vast memory
capacity, even without great bandwidth can produce a money machine for
consumption - paper-less banking, travel, purchases, but also instant
communications with other data such as market prices, scores, news, menus, et
al. Plug into the PAD Personal Access Device, and do all the sound and fury
signifying what ever you want - chat, do business, news, markets, movies, games
including day trading, security systems, ( little transponders at each window
and door ), or recording that recharge themselves.
Fast transportable records means a whole new world of record
keeping and economic transactions. Indeed the time for Global Money as well as
communications
The concept of a virtual organization - of a transitory
network of individuals coupled together by advanced communications technologies
- continues to grow in prominence. However, a lack of detailed, real-world
cases poses a significant problem when attempting to analyze the business
potential of linking remote workers in patterns of virtual organization . Such a lack of examples
is particularly acute within the small business sector. A case study of a
UK-based SME - Cavendish Management Resources - is presented. Both practical
and theoretical insights into new flexible patterns of
organization in the small business sector are presented
FROM
While it's far too early to tell how this might play out,
RCFoC readers Michael Mayer and others have brought our attention to a report
from Britain's Keele University, and from Cavendish Management Resources (CMR),
of a "3-D Memory System" that promises this magic. And they expect
that this could be on the market in two years!
According to CMR (
http://www.cmruk.com/cmrinventions.html ), Professor Ted Williams and his
team are able to store 86 gigabytes per square centimeter, and to read and
write this data at 100 megabits/second. While few details are available while
their patents are pending, CMR does indicate that the process, funded in part
by the UK Department of Trade and Industry, exploits a new family of metal
alloys to create, "...a magneto-optical system not dissimilar to that of
CD-ROM, except that the system is fixed, solid state, and has a different
operating approach."
And to top that off, they point out that this
no-moving-parts, very low power storage solution "...can be put onto
virtually every surface," essentially providing massive data storage for
almost anything.
Indeed, CMR's managing director Mike Downey suggests
that, "
The technology is scalable, either up or down, so that even
wristwatches will be capable of handling a memory capacity of more than 100
gigabytes."
It also occurs to me that with a data transfer rate of 100
megabits/second, could this also replace conventional semiconductor memory for
some applications?
Of course, this might seem to be in the "too good to be
true" category, and healthy skepticism is called for. On the other hand,
the Aug. 10 London Daily Mail does point out that this is the same Ted Williams
who "...led the team that built the ground-breaking nuclear magnetic
resonance bodyscanner for EMI," and so it should hardly be discounted out
of hand.
IF this does turn out as the new development company,
"Keele High Density" hopes, imagine the implications: storage could
become so inexpensive and so pervasive that we'd never again have to think
about deleting old data; digital video might become as common as text is today;
and the multi-billion dollar rotating disk drive industry could, er, grind to a
halt, redistributing significant wealth.
Note that I'm not saying that any of these things will
necessarily come to pass based on this announcement from CMR -- I'm only
suggesting that such innovations, this one or another one from some other
source, do have the potential to "change all the rules" in the blink
of an eye.
In the Knowledge Age, complacency is NEVER a good idea...
Ah, how quickly things change. This past February we caught
a glimpse of an amazingly small complete Web server at Stanford's
"Wearables" lab (
http://www.digital.com/rcfoc/19990201.htm#Default_7 )
[Image - Stanford Univ. matchbox Web server -
http://www.digital.com/rcfoc/19990201_images/Matchbox.jpg ]
It was the size of a matchbox.
Now, but a half-year later and on the other side of the
continent, we see a complete Web server that's but the size of the HEAD of one
of the matches in that box!
Brought to our attention by RCFoC reader Christian Miller,
this tiny Web server was built at the University of Massachusetts and contains
the CPU, memory, serial port, and file system -- literally everything needed,
and connects to an Internet router via a serial connection. Indeed, you can
directly surf this match head Web server through a link on the page that describes
this accomplishment in more detail - http://www-ccs.cs.umass.edu/~shri/iPic.html
. And this tiny Web server costs less than one dollar.
Of course this little Web server is, er, no match for the
huge servers that power Internet portals and the like or even for typical
smaller Web servers, so what good is it? Think "Internet Appliance."
Think "Internet-enabling" just about anything, like light switches,
and even light bulbs! Think Internet-enabled cell phones. Think a Web server
just about everywhere you look.
In fact, think like this, and you'll be thinking about a
future that is clearly not all that far away...
A long time ago - maybe five years as we started on the web
it was clear that the system was NOT user-friendly. We did some experiments
with on-line instruction, the synergy group was a way for people to help
each-other. AOL did so well ( despite my prediction that they were no longer
useful ) because they were easy to use. http://www.wiredbrain.net/synergy.htm
Internet Guides, Tutorials, and Training Information
Unless otherwise noted, the sites listed in this directory
are provided by organizations outside the Library of Congress.
These links are offered as a convenience and for
informational purposes.
Their inclusion here does not constitute an endorsement or
an approval by the Library of Congress of any of the products, services, or
opinions of the external provider. *
The Library of Congress bears no responsibility for the
accuracy or the content of external sites. Please contact the external site's
administrator for answers to questions regarding any of these sites.
Go to: Collections of Guides and Courses | Individual Guides
and Courses | Internet Glossaries | Resources for Internet Trainers
We worked on the newbie page -
which is very dated. We collected resources such as w95links.htm
, and lots of guides to search engines.
The idea as always been to learn how to learn - be a
fisherman and catch your own fish. Now I don’t know what people
know or care to know.
The web has become a huge commercial market place doing
mostly mundane things - group building and actual synergy is rare. Maybe after
all the hype and special effects some people will return to the promise of new
communities -
was designed to be an experimental community of the future
and ending up as an amusement park. Don’t we have enough
phony experience, virtual reality is everywhere.
http://www.oise.utoronto.ca/~skarsten/community5.html Rheingold's
Brainstorms: Virtual Worlds Linklist
There is a lot of chat - in many forms -
The
Excite search Soon the Post-PC will flip on without a shell and complex
set-up. Rather than load Windows it will go without Windows, the shell being an
option.
The OS system will be built into the chip and uniform as a
USB
History of the synergy site:
Date: Late 1980’s Computer AT 8088 640 K RAM modem ( or
digital connection to replace the analog ) 300 bps
360 K floppies then 20 MB hard drive Cost about
$1500.00 1.2 Mb 3 ¼ " floppy USE: Word processor DOS 2 to 5 Library
Catalog via FIRN ( Florida education network ) e-mail newsletters, newsgroups,
Eudora, freenet at FSU, gophers, FTP, Chat, IRC, BBS.
Early 1993 386 to 1994 486 1 Mb RAM external 1200 modem ( or
digital connection to replace the analog ) to 14.4 internal Winsock on Netscape
1.0 to 3.0 with ISP first in area with ISPN line - BBS - synergy site at
trivista WordPerfect Lotus 123 200 Mb Hard drive Cost about $1200.00 hand made
up grades DOS 4 to 6.2 1994 Beta Windows 95 without the winsock, 8 Mb RAM to 32
Mb RAM, 850 MB Hard drive 33 to 56 modem ( or digital connection to replace the
analog ) but few connections at that speed Tried ATT ( lowered price if ISP
from $100 to $ 20 per month ) MSN, AOL, prodigy - MS office DAY
TRADING


Windows 1998 and Pentium II
History of human progress has direction which can be
represented by color codes -
Perhaps the assassination of John F. Kennedy is the defining
event of the American experience in the last half of the 20th century.
It is the stuff of myths and myths are very true and
powerful.
The American Civilization is still unformed, vague,
confused, complex, defused and largely based on myth and fiction, Television
and romance - a collection of dreams and false impressions. We are NOT a
Christian country as so often and loudly proclaimed. We are NOT a popular
democracy, but a republic with all kinds of barriers to the general will.
We are not the most free and the home of the most brave, but
a diverse, half educated, confused, commercial, misinformed, friendly,
competitive, arrogant, in other wordsWe have a national Character like the
Kennedy clan -
We weep for ourselves - lost hope - and sometimes reckless
disregard for the safety and welfare of others.
There are three or four ways American Culture is different
from most other modern societies. We have a money driven political system, not
only a capitalist economy but a commercial system of government - follows the
golden rule -
Those with the gold rule
The Illusion of choice:
At the heart of advertising and marketing is the process of
making connections between human nature and the product. Political consultants
and campaigns are NO different. Since people make thousands of unimportant and
a few important choices - the trick is to connect to the patterns or habits
people use to make choices.
At the first level ( blue ) we need to survive - heath and
safety sell. If you use this product you won’t die.
The baby in the tire and the mushroom cloud are classic
example of images of survival, safety and good product placement in a critical
component of the brain stem.
At the second level ( red ) needs and desires include the
desire for action - thrills - or the passion for security, value and comfort.
Type one is more excited, type two more passive. In politics this is call
conservative or radical. Bud and coke drinkers go for fast cars and women (
Clinton ) , mineral water for the heath conscious ( Bush ), wine for the middle
of the road.
At the third level ( yellow - orange ) social needs and
desires - white teeth and fresh breath say " I’m worth it".
. Second, we lack national standards of education - a years
progress for a year in school, the
Florida Plan . Third, we lack a national health plan or system.
The first condition creates the second and third, we can not
become a fully functional modern society without election reform.
The there are GUNS..

240,000 more people every day 1.75 Million born and 1.4
million die
Since 1927, in less than a lifetime, population has
tripled from 2 billion to 6 billion - the last billion in five years An
estimated 114 million acts of sexual intercourse take place in the world every
day:
The birth of the world's six billionth person, due some time
this year, will probably not be in happy circumstances: If you think of
the earth as a Noah's Ark, a life-friendly speck floating through space, you
will appreciate its passenger capacity is limited
older habits and systems are upgraded or replaced by new and
improved systems.
History has been the struggle of the new replacing the old:
racism by integration, local or provincial by national and
international -
superstition and magic by science and engineering -
privilege by opportunity and competition -
authority by power and the facts with reason -
closed systems and minds by open system and tolerance -
the application of science and technology to advance human
understanding, civil society,
democracy and liberal economic systems,
what is really important are;
the end of traditional needs based politics,
replace emotional content ( romance ) by professional
performance
global communications systems*
because they all work better.