Arlo, John, Andrea, Whoever:

I have witnessed several cultural transformations in my life time. I saw
stereo replace mono and VHS triumph over Beta. I was on the sidelines as CPM
lost to DOS and DOS to GUI. I saw Netscape eaten by a monopoly. 

Two moments stand out for me in that time. The first was when I connected a
300 baud AppleCat modem to an outlaw Franklin Ace 1000 computer. I dialed
into a BBS system in Atlanta and was able to transfer a file from one
computer to another.

This was 10 years before anyone talked about an internet. But I understood
in that moment that this was something completely different. Computers
talking directly to other computers... There was no way I could imagine what
could come of that but I knew it would be important. 

I saw something that important three days ago and I want to share it with
you. This is perhaps not as earth shaking as the growth of the internet but
certainly more significant than when I realized, with the invention of the
Bluetooth headset, that talking to yourself in public was no longer a
reliable sign of psychosis.

Ok, this might seem a little complicated but remember it is going to change
the world. The first part of this revolution is a tiny bit of software that
can turn a cell phone into a wireless router.

Ok, if you know what that means, I shouldn't need to explain further but for
those who don't, this means that you can always carry with you, your own
personnel internet hot spot. You can access the internet in your car or on a
plane or while camping in Utah. Until recently this meant that you could
access the internet on a little tiny mobile screen that you could barely
read.

But if your phone has wifi capability, you can now share your connection
with any and all computers in range. Now this would just be of interesting
to Geeks like me until part two of the revelation kicks in. Netbooks. 

Several netbooks have come on the market recently that offer up to 9.5 hours
of battery life. This means you are no longer tethered to the wall. The
computers are so small that you are no longer even tethered to a desk. You
can hold them in one hand and type with the other. They are big enough to
actually use but small enough to fit in a woman's purse.

What is interesting about this from an MoQ point of view is, first of all
the injection of dynamic quality involved in having that many people, that
interconnected all of the time. But of equal interest is the static latch
involved. All of this technology is actually at step backwards.

The netbook processors are very very small and use very little electricity.
In terms of power they are several generations backwards. If desktop
computing is using quad-core 3 Ghz then netbooks are using single core 1.6
Ghz.

In fact most of them are sold with a Windows XP downgrade. So in order to
get the most out of the machine you downgrade all of your software and
hardware. Not only that but the internet connection through your wireless
cell phone router is going to be a whole lot slower than through your cable
modem. It is much faster then dial-up but still slower than you are used to.

But even having a static latched downgraded computer has enormous potential.
I souped mine up a bit. For example I put a 500 gig harddrive in a 10"
netbook. On it I have about 65,000 books and articles, The screen size is
about that of a Kindle so reading any of those is now about like holding a
regular sized book in your hand. I also have several thousand songs, and
hundreds of lectures on everything from "Making Love the Bruce Campbell
Way," to a 25 lectures from UC Berkley on psychpharmacology. 

If all you wanted was an iPod. This is an iPod that can hold every song you
have ever heard and you can download more while you are listening. You can
stream episodes of "Lost" to the palm of your hand while waiting at a bus
stop.

I am still in the testing phase here but I can tell that this has
possibilities that are impossible to foresee. Here is a simple example. My
civil union partner and I both have netbooks with webcams in them. We can
now take a walk around our neighborhood and both of us Skype our grandkid in
Boston while we walk.

Oh yeah and this message is the first thing I have actually tried to type on
this little beast. While it will take some getting used to it is not too
bad. This little static latch is now my main computer. This is the first
time in more than 30 years that I have actually looked forward to
downgrading my computing horsepower. That alone is revolutionary...

Krimel


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