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Tuesday, December 30, 2003
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Tuesday, December 30, 2003
started 12/30/2003; 8:14:48 AM - last post 12/30/2003; 8:14:48 AM
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Doc Searls - Tuesday, December 30, 2003 
12/30/2003; 12:14:48 PM (reads: 5648, responses: 0)
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A first furrow upon the burrow
Roadmap to DRM Peace?
| | Ten years after Digital Media have first been deployed, the Digital Media Revolution isnot happening... |
| | There are no examples of companies who are thriving because of Digital Media, certainly not to the extent other Digital Technology companies have. |
| | Some end users may get benefits sometimes - but only if they flout the rules. |
| | So Leonardo has a plan that's interesting (at least to me) for two reasons: 1) He puts forth concrete steps all interested parties can take; and 2) He insists on conversation as a means to an agreeable end. |
Eve'ning
DishPeeVee
| | Anyway, my bookkeeper is here today, asking questions about bills and stuff. One is about the Dish bill. Is it bigger? Not sure. So I thought I'd check my account on the company's Web site. Adding to my curiousity is a message on the home page that reads "When will cable companies stop raising your rates?" I'm thinking, Did you guys go and raise my rates? |
| | Of course I have to register as customer on the Web site. Appears I never did that before. But every time I try I get back a page titled "Weblogic Bridge Message" that says "Failure of server APACHE bridge," with additional techno arcana. |
| | Already I've spent more time on their Web site today than I'm likely to spend watching their service on TV. |
| | [Later...] Okay, after much trying, I finally got authorized and into the system. I can see what I'm paying, what's due, the last payment date and other necessary but insufficient information. What am I paing for, exactly? ... Okay, I finally found it. |
| | So many ways to pay, and to add programming, and so few just to find out a few basic facts. And by a system that loads sooo slllooowwwlllyy.... |
Living larger
| | I have the new 54G model, and it has significantly less range, for the 802.11b clients that use it, than another 802.11b unit I've had for several years. It's not a huge deal, but it's surprising. One expects new generations of products to be better in some respects and equal in others; but not worse. |
Blophesies
| | Thinking surreally and emotionally about the migration of IT jobs overseas, here's a wacky prediction for 2004: Websites will start sporting "Made in America" logos. |
| | yes, the corporate world is scratching an itch. will it work on a customer facing implementation? well, i think we're gonna find out cuz several big ones are coming in 04.......but here's a hint: there's a major bank (that i'd bet many of you Californians use) that has already used SAML to tie logins at 5 of their website properties together (ie FEDERATION OF ACCOUNTS) -- have you heard of any huge backlash? nope. what's happened? they're sending 2mm individuals per day through identity protocols -- and no one seems to be complaining. |
Still, we're talking about some big moles here
| | First, he does the best job I've seen yet at a nutshell description of how digital identity works, conceptually: |
| | XML provides structure. PKI adds authenticity and trust. Protocols describe how to publish and consume the stuff. Databases on the back-end map it to human interests - blog entries, identity attributes, whatever. GUIs on the front-end let people interact with it - browsers, news aggregators, etc. |
| | Wrap it all up and tie a bow on it. |
| | Then he puts the whole thing in a conversational context (with Cluetrain in the "marketplace" link): |
| | Yes, there is confusion and indecision over feature priority at the start of every innovation curve. |
| | But it's not the Right vs. the Left, or the BigCo's vs. the Everyman. It's just Betamax vs. VHS. And eventually, it will sort itself out. |
| | In the end, it's the app servers, database interfaces, permission expression and consent acquisition schemes, Your Grandma's PKI and ACL Console, and the like which are where the real complexities lie. These problems will likely have the same solution patterns, regardless of the protocol they're implementing. |
| | By contrast, the protocols for "getting in and out", are just the top layer, and a relatively simple one at that. |
| | For me (as a software developer), the diversity and contention of different protocols isn't a war. It's just more work. |
| | Excellent wrapup (pun intended). |
| | Still, my points were more about where the conversations are take place, and among whom, and the differences between the two. |
| | I think it has to do with scratching itches. Here in the blog world, syndication and notification are big deals already. Much rubber is meeting many individual roads. And few of us are feeling the need to widen those roads with digital identity infrastructure. Meanwhile, big companies are feeling keenly the need for that infrastructure. And the fact that they're taking the lead on this thing makes me want more of us who aren't big companies to engage them in the marketplace. |
The endless story
| | Later, if I have time (which I don't right now), I'll respond. Meanwhile, it's good to see the essay continues to provoke discussion. |
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