The minister has been preaching for ten minutes and is just getting to the main point of the sermon. The actors have woven a captivating story that is just now coming to a resolution. The violinist is just getting to the most beautiful passage of the entire symphony. BEEP…BEEP…Ta…Da! A cell phone peals out of the silence.
How many times has this happened to you? A very special moment corrupted by the modern Siren’s Song of technology. More and more the desire for continuous connectivity is running up against our peace and quiet and just plain good manners.
It is almost de rigueur at business meetings and conferences to have half of the participants texting or surfing the net on their Blackberries while someone else is speaking. Some call it multitasking. Others think that their importance is magnified by their obvious need to be in constant connection. Who knows when the President of the United States might want their advice?
Not long ago doctors and public safety personnel were the only ones with pagers, and even then, many checked them at the door. Today, there are more phones in the Sunday morning church services than exist in many Third World countries.
Even outside of the church or concert hall, many fail to abide by the most basic tenants of common courtesy. While at the local Kroger store shopping at the deli counter do we really need to discuss our latest treatment for hemorrhoids with our best telephonic friend? The most intimate of details of loves lost play out in the stores and on our streets.
There are those who think that Bluetooth® technology requires them to never be out of touch. Not long ago if you were walking along a city street and passed a single pedestrian carrying on an animated conversation with themselves you may have thought that they were a “few fries short of a happy meal.” Today it is common place to see people walking along, a Borg-like earpiece protruding from one ear. The conversations can be about what to cook for dinner or some details of what they did last night on that hot date. Neither of these topics should be forced on those who just happen to be passing by.
I am a jogger and many of my running routes take me though downtown Cincinnati during the noon hour. Crossing streets, even in cross walks and with the light, can be deadly if the driver at the light is carrying on a conversation on his cell phone. I have lost count of how many times I have narrowly missed being run over by a driver with on hand on the cell phone and the other on the steering wheel. Their eyes just look right though you while they are in rapt conversation.
I am a big fan of modern technology and I think the cell phone and laptops are nothing short of marvelous. But there is a time and place for these and other technologies. Sometimes you should just turn it all off.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
WiFi on Steroids
Last year I mentioned in one of my weekly columns that I was following the development of a new technology that could have significant impact on how and where we connect to the Internet. That technology is called WIMAX and earlier this month the first major installation began operation in parts of Baltimore, MD.
Most of us know about WiFi, a related technology for wirelessly hooking up to an Internet connection without the use of wires. Most offices and many private homes have installed WiFi connections as have many coffee shops, restaurants, hotels and libraries. You can even sit on a park bench in Garfield Park in downtown Cincinnati and answer email and surf the web wirelessly with the free WiFi connection offered there.
One big limitation of WiFi is that the “signal” can only be transmitted over very short distances, often less than a few hundred feet. So, while this technology is great if you are sitting at a table drinking coffee, it does not work while on the move in car, bus or train. Also, unlike cell phones, the WiFi cells or “spots” are very limited in coverage.
You can think of WIMAX as WiFi on steroids. The coverage area of one WIMAX cell can be measured in square miles rather than in square feet. As a result, an entire city or county can be covered by a few high powered WIMAX transmitters.
A combination of advances in technology and the recently freed up radio spectrum have made WIMAX, a technology long confined to the laboratory, a viable commercial product that should help feed our insatiable appetite for mobile computer access and advanced communication.
Now I am sure that you would agree that the prospect of commuters on I-74 answering email on their laptop while driving 70 mph on the way to work is hardly a benefit to society, if we look a bit deeper we will find several other more valuable applications.
Cars with WIMAX capability could transform the way we listen to the radio. Since most major radio stations in the US provide their programming on the Internet, these stations can now be listened to anywhere. If you want to hear Marty lament another Reds loss, you could listen to WLW 700 while driving on a Los Angeles freeway.
As more and more cars are controlled by computers, software updates could be downloaded to your car’s innards without a stop at the dealer service shop. While some of this happens now using the mobile phone network, the WIMAX bandwidth is exponentially greater than what is possible via cell phone.
For public service personnel there are some tremendously exciting possibilities. The transfer of medical information to first responders could save lives. The ability for firefighters to access databases of information about a specific building or neighborhood while en route to an emergency situation has long been a dream. It may soon be common place.
WIMAX is only one of several technologies that are coming to market that will continue to allow us to “cut the cord” and wirelessly connect to our world regardless of place and time. This is a good thing as long as we remember that we can and should periodically turn it off .
Most of us know about WiFi, a related technology for wirelessly hooking up to an Internet connection without the use of wires. Most offices and many private homes have installed WiFi connections as have many coffee shops, restaurants, hotels and libraries. You can even sit on a park bench in Garfield Park in downtown Cincinnati and answer email and surf the web wirelessly with the free WiFi connection offered there.
One big limitation of WiFi is that the “signal” can only be transmitted over very short distances, often less than a few hundred feet. So, while this technology is great if you are sitting at a table drinking coffee, it does not work while on the move in car, bus or train. Also, unlike cell phones, the WiFi cells or “spots” are very limited in coverage.
You can think of WIMAX as WiFi on steroids. The coverage area of one WIMAX cell can be measured in square miles rather than in square feet. As a result, an entire city or county can be covered by a few high powered WIMAX transmitters.
A combination of advances in technology and the recently freed up radio spectrum have made WIMAX, a technology long confined to the laboratory, a viable commercial product that should help feed our insatiable appetite for mobile computer access and advanced communication.
Now I am sure that you would agree that the prospect of commuters on I-74 answering email on their laptop while driving 70 mph on the way to work is hardly a benefit to society, if we look a bit deeper we will find several other more valuable applications.
Cars with WIMAX capability could transform the way we listen to the radio. Since most major radio stations in the US provide their programming on the Internet, these stations can now be listened to anywhere. If you want to hear Marty lament another Reds loss, you could listen to WLW 700 while driving on a Los Angeles freeway.
As more and more cars are controlled by computers, software updates could be downloaded to your car’s innards without a stop at the dealer service shop. While some of this happens now using the mobile phone network, the WIMAX bandwidth is exponentially greater than what is possible via cell phone.
For public service personnel there are some tremendously exciting possibilities. The transfer of medical information to first responders could save lives. The ability for firefighters to access databases of information about a specific building or neighborhood while en route to an emergency situation has long been a dream. It may soon be common place.
WIMAX is only one of several technologies that are coming to market that will continue to allow us to “cut the cord” and wirelessly connect to our world regardless of place and time. This is a good thing as long as we remember that we can and should periodically turn it off .
Monday, October 13, 2008
Digital Nosiness On The Rise
We have discussed often in this column the increased capacity on the part of retailers for gathering data about our individual behavior. Not only can our preferences for a certain brand of automobile and the fuel we put in it be tracked and saved, but many more personal aspects of our lives can be gathered and examined. Often we may think that this type of digital “sleuthiness” is the province of the CIA or KGB when in essence it may be just as prevalent at Ikea or IGA.
The increased use of credit cards, and more recently the various affinity cards from companies like Kroger, make the gathering of this data increasingly common. Up until recently the capacity to gather this data has outpaced the ability to analyze it and develop useful information for retailers and marketers. The explosion in computing power, the reduced cost of data storage and retrieval and the myriad of ways to collect data has ushered in a new industry of data mining. The miners don’t don hard hats and lights, rather they use advanced mathematic formulas and algorithms.
Stephen Baker in his recent book “The Numerati,” examines what a recent book reviewer calls “digital nosiness.” Baker predicts an almost exponential growth in this industry and for some, myself included, some truly scary implications.
We have all known for years that a donation or contribution to some worthy cause often prompts a deluge of other requests for financial help on the part of all stripes of non-profits. While some major non-profits do not share or sell data or lists, other do. This sort of profiling is tame compared to what is now possible and what will be possible in the very near future
For example, instead of those pesky vinyl bags dangling from your mailbox delivering the weekly specials and coupons from biggs or Kroger, you may soon have customized coupons displayed on an LCD screen mounted on the shopping cart. As you enter the store you may swipe your credit or affinity card and the system will recognize you. The system will instantaneously call up information from your purchasing history at that store and perhaps other stores. Using that data it can “suggest” items that you may be interested in purchasing.
A store can also use this information in a variety of ways. Juxtaposing your shopping data with its inventory control system the store can offer you a “great deal” on some specific items it has that it has to move. Let’s say the store knows that it has an overabundance of fresh tuna steaks that will need to be thrown away at the end of the day. It can discount that item deeply right on your cart screen and suggest a recipe for tuna steaks.
There are some more intrusive possibilities. You may be familiar with the technology that allows your car to speed through toll booths. This technology used in many major cities uses RFI cards - small cards that can transmit information to a nearby sensor. When you want to get to work during rush hour, not having to stop at the toll booth is great. That same technology can be used for other more intrusive purposes. What if your credit card or affinity card came with an RFI chip embedded? A scanner at the entrance of a store, theatre, any location could sense your entrance. “Big Brother” is watching and, now with networked computers, “Big Brother” can remember where you were and what you bought the last time you were on vacation. Don’t believe that what happens in Vegas will always stay in Vegas.
The increased use of credit cards, and more recently the various affinity cards from companies like Kroger, make the gathering of this data increasingly common. Up until recently the capacity to gather this data has outpaced the ability to analyze it and develop useful information for retailers and marketers. The explosion in computing power, the reduced cost of data storage and retrieval and the myriad of ways to collect data has ushered in a new industry of data mining. The miners don’t don hard hats and lights, rather they use advanced mathematic formulas and algorithms.
Stephen Baker in his recent book “The Numerati,” examines what a recent book reviewer calls “digital nosiness.” Baker predicts an almost exponential growth in this industry and for some, myself included, some truly scary implications.
We have all known for years that a donation or contribution to some worthy cause often prompts a deluge of other requests for financial help on the part of all stripes of non-profits. While some major non-profits do not share or sell data or lists, other do. This sort of profiling is tame compared to what is now possible and what will be possible in the very near future
For example, instead of those pesky vinyl bags dangling from your mailbox delivering the weekly specials and coupons from biggs or Kroger, you may soon have customized coupons displayed on an LCD screen mounted on the shopping cart. As you enter the store you may swipe your credit or affinity card and the system will recognize you. The system will instantaneously call up information from your purchasing history at that store and perhaps other stores. Using that data it can “suggest” items that you may be interested in purchasing.
A store can also use this information in a variety of ways. Juxtaposing your shopping data with its inventory control system the store can offer you a “great deal” on some specific items it has that it has to move. Let’s say the store knows that it has an overabundance of fresh tuna steaks that will need to be thrown away at the end of the day. It can discount that item deeply right on your cart screen and suggest a recipe for tuna steaks.
There are some more intrusive possibilities. You may be familiar with the technology that allows your car to speed through toll booths. This technology used in many major cities uses RFI cards - small cards that can transmit information to a nearby sensor. When you want to get to work during rush hour, not having to stop at the toll booth is great. That same technology can be used for other more intrusive purposes. What if your credit card or affinity card came with an RFI chip embedded? A scanner at the entrance of a store, theatre, any location could sense your entrance. “Big Brother” is watching and, now with networked computers, “Big Brother” can remember where you were and what you bought the last time you were on vacation. Don’t believe that what happens in Vegas will always stay in Vegas.
Monday, October 6, 2008
All Phone Services Can Fail
Well, it didn’t take Cincinnati Bell long to call attention to the fact that Time Warner’s Digital Phone service was more prone to failure than good old Ma Bell’s hard wired service. While both services require some sort of wire either on poles or underground, digital phone service provided by a cable company like Time Warner requires each household to have electric power in order for the system to work. While Cincinnati Bell’s service also requires electric power, the power is provided by the phone company.
What the Cincinnati Bell advertisement didn’t mention is that during the recent wind storm both services had problems with downed lines. It makes little difference if you don’t have electricity if the wire connecting you to the phone system goes down. Standard “Ma Bell” phone systems or cable delivered services can be put out of service by a big tree falling across the wires or wind felling utility poles.
Many people found out the hard way that even if they had a regular Cincinnati Bell line their phone did not work. Many of the new phones used in homes have tons of features like caller ID, call holding, integrated answering machines and more. Many of these new phones require electric power in order to work. Many of us also have cordless phones. These too need electricity to work.
If you maintain Cincinnati Bell service, it is a good idea to have at least one “old fashion” phone that has a cord which plugs into the telephone jack and requires no other source of power. You can get one for about 15 bucks at most discount stores. Sometimes simpler is better.
I heard from some readers that they lost cell service during the recent wind storm. I did not have any problem with my Verizon service but it understandable how there could have been some interruptions. Cell towers can be buffeted by the wind, and while most have back up power, these back up systems can fail. Also many of the cell towers are interconnected with line-of-sight microwave radio systems. High winds can cause the dishes to go out of alignment thus making connection to the telephone network difficult or impossible. Some cell towers use the same hard wired circuits that you use in your home. Again, if the lines are down they don’t work.
Those with cell phones found that they had no way to charge the battery. Remember, you can use your car to charge up the battery and since the chargers take so little current, you won’t harm a good car battery even if the car is not running.
Internet access is another casualty of power failures and downed wires. Even if you use Cincinnati Bells DSL service, you need to have a DSL modem in your house and that requires electricity. Same for Time Warner’s Road Runner. About the only Internet service that can work with power out is a lap top running one of the Internet services provided by the cell phone companies.
The good news is that the recent storm was a once in a 100 year phenomenon. We are fortunate that our phones, internet and TV really do work most of the time no matter if they are delivered by Ma Bell, Time Warner or though the air.
What the Cincinnati Bell advertisement didn’t mention is that during the recent wind storm both services had problems with downed lines. It makes little difference if you don’t have electricity if the wire connecting you to the phone system goes down. Standard “Ma Bell” phone systems or cable delivered services can be put out of service by a big tree falling across the wires or wind felling utility poles.
Many people found out the hard way that even if they had a regular Cincinnati Bell line their phone did not work. Many of the new phones used in homes have tons of features like caller ID, call holding, integrated answering machines and more. Many of these new phones require electric power in order to work. Many of us also have cordless phones. These too need electricity to work.
If you maintain Cincinnati Bell service, it is a good idea to have at least one “old fashion” phone that has a cord which plugs into the telephone jack and requires no other source of power. You can get one for about 15 bucks at most discount stores. Sometimes simpler is better.
I heard from some readers that they lost cell service during the recent wind storm. I did not have any problem with my Verizon service but it understandable how there could have been some interruptions. Cell towers can be buffeted by the wind, and while most have back up power, these back up systems can fail. Also many of the cell towers are interconnected with line-of-sight microwave radio systems. High winds can cause the dishes to go out of alignment thus making connection to the telephone network difficult or impossible. Some cell towers use the same hard wired circuits that you use in your home. Again, if the lines are down they don’t work.
Those with cell phones found that they had no way to charge the battery. Remember, you can use your car to charge up the battery and since the chargers take so little current, you won’t harm a good car battery even if the car is not running.
Internet access is another casualty of power failures and downed wires. Even if you use Cincinnati Bells DSL service, you need to have a DSL modem in your house and that requires electricity. Same for Time Warner’s Road Runner. About the only Internet service that can work with power out is a lap top running one of the Internet services provided by the cell phone companies.
The good news is that the recent storm was a once in a 100 year phenomenon. We are fortunate that our phones, internet and TV really do work most of the time no matter if they are delivered by Ma Bell, Time Warner or though the air.
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