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 Monday, March 19, 2001 Permanent link to archive for 3/19/01.

Jock bites boss

Marekj points to evidence that The Matrix was about The Media.

Dog bites chain

Pigdog Journal, no friend of producers, chews out Arby's.

Yellow snowjob

Seems a certain map threatened to expose the Bush administration's plans to explore caribou as a renewable resource.

Trojan Storm

The storm has arrived, and the peerage is weighing in with its reactions.

When I first read about Hailstorm, it scared the shit out of me. (As it also did to Joel Spolsky, who gives us a fine tech-level explanation of exactly why.)

But at a deeper level — the social level where the Net connects us — I have complete faith in forces more powerful than any monopoly's wet dream. And that's the Net.

The Net is ours. Not Microsoft's. Hailstorm is heavy weather, but the Net is geology. Our geology. It's us, not just me (pun intended).

Computing isn't personal any more. It's social. Microsoft understands that, but it's not where they come from. Where they come from is the desktop. Always have, always will. It's not for nothing they're called Microsoft.

With Hailstorm, Microsoft is doing a beautiful job of being itself. As always, they're draping users in bountiful benefits, whether those users want them or not). That's just what Microsoft does. They can't help it. They come from the desktop, just like Apple comes from art and Nordstrom comes from shoes.

And they sound very convincing, because they're busy advocating the user. You can't go wrong there, can you?

O yeah. You always go wrong when you characterize competent human beings as weak and helpless — and then tell them your stuff is their only hope. That's exactly what Microsoft does in the very first line of Building the User-centric Experience:

    Users are definitely not in control of the technology that surrounds them.  Asked to adapt to the differences between the way they interact with local programs and sites on the web, asked to cope with doing things completely differently on their cell phone, their PC, and any other device they have, users are generally frustrated and confused.

Like moths in a lampshade. How sad. And whose fault is that?

    If you want to enter a friend’s new phone number into your PC, you use a keyboard and a piece of software like Microsoft Outlook to do it using a particular sequence of keystrokes and mouse clicks.  But to enter that same information into your Palm Pilot, you need to learn a completely new interface – right down to relearning how to draw the letters of the alphabet!

Oh! It's Palm's fault! That OS is so hard to use. Not easy like Outlook, which is so encrusted with options that few users ever figure the damn thing out. (To say the least of it.) The insults continue:

    This environment, in which users are forced to adapt to technology instead of technology adapting to users, creates significant restrictions on how effective any application or Web site can be, and ultimately hinders the acceptance and adoption of not only the technologies themselves, but also the real-world products and services that might be best offered to a user in the context of the things they do online.

The environment we're talking about here is called a market. Yes, it's messy. Yes, it's full of choices that don't agree with each other. But it's the natural habitat for business. It's also networked to the gills. That network is where users live. Not just Windows. Not just .Net, whatever it becomes.

The Trojan Storm here isn't Windows or even .Net. It's Internet Explorer.

The Net is ours, indeed. But most of us interact with it through a Microsoft browser. That browser is about to get a lot fatter. That's the only way to interpret this:

    HailStorm services are oriented around people, instead of around a specific device, application, service, or network.  They put the user in control of their own data and information, protecting personal information and making user consent the basis for who can access it, what they can do with it, and for how long they have that permission.

It's time for us to stop acting like an audience and start acting like a market. For that we need to do three things:

  1. Work with the hackers to make Mozilla the best possible alternative to Internet Explorer — and fast.
  2. Start paying more attention and respect to other developers who are working together to make the Net something that works better for all of us (and that includes interested developers inside Microsoft — it's a big company).
  3. Expose Hailstorm for what it is: yet another attempt by Microsoft to collapse the Net into its own service framework. And to say this won't work because the Net's context is bigger than any vendor, no matter how privileged they are with "critical mass."

It's important to remember that this is not just about Microsoft's napoleonic corporate personality, which is equally real and beside the point, making it the biggest red herring in business history.

It's about building out the Net's infrastructure. .Net doesn't do it. Hailstorm doesn't do it. Java doesn't do it. No "solution" controlled by one vendor will do it.

You can't privatize what only works because it's public. Microsoft hasn't learned that lesson yet. Let's help them.

Feat of Clay

I know it's from last week, but I've been busy, and the antiquty of Slashdot's interview with Clay Shirky fails to diminish its authoritative veracity. The man knows his shit. He's not too sloppy with metaphors, either. Witness Email is the gateway drug of the internet. Good stuff. Dig it.

We pulled out of Woodside, headed down the western seaboard

Packed the car by 9:30 last night, showered, got to bed by 10, got up at 3, put the coffee in the thermos and Jeffrey in the back seat by 3:20 and hit the road at 3:30. At the finish line was Jeffrey's preschool in Montecito, 330 miles away. We had to be there by 9, no exceptions or excuses.

Under our butts, Joyce's '92 Infiniti Q45a, a Road Machine whose authority only grows with age. The odometer shows 173,000 miles. The body looks new. The leather still smells fresh. Whatever it takes to get wherever you're going, the Q makes it seem half as long, even if it's going half it's top speed, which is twice any posted speed limit.

Joyce drove to King City. Jeffrey woke to remark on the perfect sunrise at Atascadero, then fell asleep again. I grooved to oldies and NPR while we powered through valleys as green and dewy as any in Ireland. We cleared the San Marcos pass at 8:00, pulled up to the apartment at 8:17 (with a brief pit stop for Jeffrey), had the car unpacked by 8:30, Jeffrey out of his PJs and into his school clothes by 8:50 and at the door of his preschool, on the nose, at 9:00.

I got here at 9:30 and had to fire up Six Days on the Road, by Dave Dudley. It was in my head all the way down here...

    Well I pulled out of Pittsburg rollin down that Eastern seaboard
    I got my diesel wound up and she's a runnin like a-never before
    There's a speed zone a head that I'll run
    I don't see a cop in sight
    Six days on the road and I'm a gonna make it home tonight.

    I got me ten forward gears and a Georgia Overdrive
    I'm takin' little white pills and my eyes are open wide
    I just passed a Jimmy and a White
    I been a-passing everything in sight
    Six days on the road and I'm gonna make it home tonight

Then I got one of the crippled Macs running well enough to start playing KPIG's 128kbps MP3 stream. What a fine radio station: one of the last commercial stations in the U.S. where the jocks still pick the music. It's radio the way it used to be, and will be again, once the peer2peerage gets through with it.

Now I gotta finish getting everything sorted out...

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