Smart People in the News: Rheingold, Gosling 146
Roland Piquepaille writes "In "How Will "Smart Mobs" Play Out?," BusinessWeek asked questions to Howard Rheingold, who published the "Smart Mobs" book at the end of 2002. Rheingold talks about the emergence of the picturephone, especially outside the U.S. He adds that future business applications for smart mobs might start anywhere in the world, like "finding out about the spot labor market in [an] African village." For his part, James Gosling, the leading guy behind the Java programming language, is interviewed by Red Herring, in Social smarts. He talks about the social implications of the Internet by looking at the Brazilian National Medical System. Gosling also talks about the entertainment industry which deeply hates Internet, and about the open source movement, of which he is a big fan. And of course, that leads him to talk about Microsoft. This summary contains some excerpts of both interviews."
Smart mob in an African Village? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Smart mob in an African Village? (Score:2, Funny)
i helped this nigerian guy out and i made a bundle! with the money, i bought a great house with a fantastic mortgage. then i married a beautiful russian bride, and i pleasure her with my surgically enlarged, viagra driven member.
Re:Smart mob in an African Village? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Slashdot Racists (Score:1)
Read about Ethiopia.
Re:Smart mob in an African Village? (Score:1)
Today's Special
Beef Stew
Re:Smart mob in an African Village? (Score:1)
Conquest is not helping.
Wise guy, eh? (Score:5, Interesting)
Then he took Q/A from the audience. He fielded the usual comments about how the Java API was so bloated. His reply to that was just not to use the bloated parts. He, for instance, doesn't use JDBC for anything, but he doesn't advocate removing it.
The previous day, the inventor of Pascal, who now works at Microsoft, did his entire keynote from Notepad because he was forbidden from running Visual Studio at Borcon (too much competition with Borland's IDEs).
Still, for a smart guy, he is easily provoked [java.net].
Inventor of Pascal? (Score:4, Informative)
I can find no reference about him ever doing work for Microsoft. I also doubt that he would - he has always been a very strong apponent of bloatware.
Is the parent post a troll, or just badly mistaken?
Re:Inventor of Pascal? (Score:2)
Re:Inventor of Pascal? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Inventor of Pascal? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Inventor of Pascal? (Score:2)
Nope, wrong. the post about Anders Heijelsbeg [everything2.com] was correct. Kahn and Co just put an IDE on A.H's compiler then and marketed it very well, to thier mutual benefit.
Re:Inventor of Pascal? (Score:2)
It was one of the first compilers where it was quicker to compile the code and have the compiler tell you where your typos were, instead of having a separate parser to do a pre-flight check, or examining by hand.
Truly a wonderful tool. (I used to work in an office across the hall from him - he's a cool guy... although he did have a rather worrying ever-growing stack of empty Coke cans in his office... b
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:2)
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:1)
He, for instance, doesn't use JDBC for anything...
The previous day, the inventor of Pascal, who now works at Microsoft, did his entire keynote from Notepad
I think maybe you're making this stuff up.
- If Gosling doesn't use JDBC for "anything" (whatever that means) then how does he interact with databases from within Java?
- If Gosling gave the keynote, then how could anyone else give a keynote the previous day?
- I doubt the inventor
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:2)
- No, Gosling doesn't use JDBC. He says it all the time [sun.com]. He doesn't interact with databases, I guess. Not everyone has to.
- Gosling isn't as important to Borcon goers. Most of them are Delphi coders.
- I was wrong. The other keynote speaker didn't invent Pascal, he invented Turbo Pascal, then Delphi, then C#, for which he would want to use Visual Studio for, but couldn't.
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:1)
In your original comment you implied that he doesn't use it because it's bloated, when in fact he simply doesn't happen to use it. An important difference, and one that makes your original post disingenuous.
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:2)
My original comment simply pointed out that Gosling's advice for people is to just ignore the API you don't use. If my repeating what he said implied anything, he implied it not me.
Gosling was trying to illistrate that the API is the way it is because a large percentage of people use a particular part that a smaller percentage think is bloat. I don't believe Gosling thought that JDBC was bloat. He knows a lot of people rely on it, but he wan
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:2)
Show me an intelligent professor that doesn't rise to being baited like that. Don't think it has to do with being smart, it has to do with proving your smart to people who don't take 'he's smart' at face value
Re:Wise guy, eh? (Score:1)
I don't think that is such an honor. This is what RMS has to say about Gosling.
IF mobs are smarter... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
By subtituting "Aryan" for "mestizo" you prove nothing, you only label the "bronze people" as Nazis. What about switching context to 1948 and subtituting "Zionist" for "mestizo" and "jewish" for "bronze"? Makes this Jews Nazis or Indians?
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
Yes, but does the quote state there will be discrimination based on skin color, or does it state there should be less immigration to protect the indiginous culture. The latter is common political practice, and this is what I meant by that fine line in my original post.
If Mexicans can have a racially pure culture, so can the KKK. You can't have it both ways.
Yes I can, because t
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
This seems to me to be a case where "reverse" racism is good. In other words, if it's done by a rich white man, it's bad. If it's done by one of the victims of rich white men, (ie. anyone else) it's good. Insert the KKK, or Israel, and ask yourself how you'd view this.
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
Again, this is not the case. One party says "no new foreigners in", the other says "all blacks out, even if they've got citizenship". Can't you see the difference?
This seems to me to be a case where "reverse" racism is good. In other words, if it's done by a rich white man, it's bad. If it's done by one of the victims
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
If it was simply limited the number of immigrants that'd be one thing, but it's to protect their culture. That's a code word for "people who do things like us". Not "speak the language", not "won't go on welfare".
But sure, you go with your idea. It works for you.
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
So what exactly is wrong with protecting your culture? Why is it wrong to say you're proud of your cultural heritage, like the language you speak (language is an important part of a culture), and that it is valueable enough to you to protect it? In your opinion, can a US citizen claim he's proud
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
My opinion on "protect
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
Yes it makes a difference, and I think it is somewhat surreal to claim there is no difference because it's just physical. Subjectively speaking, your own culture, race and religion often do seem better; but objectively speaking you can't pass moral judgements like this, because the morals will always
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
You can be proud of the accomplishments of others that are somehow related to you also. As a parent, you can be proud of your children without at the same time being proud of your involvement in their upbinging, and as a child you can be proud of your parents and gandpa
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
I don't know where pride in a country fits, or pride in a sports team. I think Canada is pretty cool but I don't feel pride in it, but then I don't feel guilty about the crimes of Canada or dead white men, or anyone who isn't me.
So yeah, I guess people can be proud of their race in the same way. "A
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
I don't it's fitting either, but very often it's just the way it is; I think it has to do with mass psychology and with tribal behavioural patterns anchored in the unconcious parts of our minds in particular. These behavioural patterns themselves are beyond morality (they're neither good nor bad), but rationalizing them can be dangerous because it can lead to racism and discrimination when the rationalizing is done from a moralistic sta
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
And yeah, it was nice to have a long discussion about racism that didn't end in tears and threats.
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:2)
Plus, even Dan Rather isn't so retina-bleachingly white that has a heart attack over the idea that back in the 60s when random Mexicans got beaten up by cops and drunken sailors every other day, s
Re:"the son of a Nazi party member" (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:1)
Quote from interview:
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Arnold's taller.
The right man for the times is whichever one can be fashioned into a crude explosive device powerful enough to sink California into the Pacific. If Arnold's power supply can pull it off, more power to him, until he overloads and takes the lot of you with him.
Re:IF mobs are smarter... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Arnold is simply the right man for the times.
Ah, moderation as punishment for a viewpoint with which you don't agree. Very intellectually honest..
But how private is it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Now imagine an insurance company somehow get access to this database. Fail an eye test and 2 weeks late your car insurance increases....
But this is a good thing as long as the database is secure and can only be accessed for medical reasons.
Re:But how private is it? (Score:1)
Re:But how private is it? (Score:2)
Fail an eye test and 2 weeks late your car insurance increases...
>
And the trouble with this would be...?
Re:But how private is it? (Score:2)
Re:But how private is it? (Score:1)
it's a reasonable start. But too cautious. You're not thinking big enough.
It would be far far better if on failing an eye test, your driving license was instantly put on hold and the authorities informed, and only reinstated once a correction (spectacles, contact lenses, laser surgery) was in place. So many places do while-you-wait lens grinding now, this needn't cause major inconvenience, but would hopefully reduce the number of people
Re:But how private is it? (Score:1)
This is from the company whose CEO said "you have no privacy, get over it". It would be silly to entrust such critical functions to such stoopid people. Technology enables us to get more privacy, not less, you just have to be more creative. Ironically, one example of this public key encryption. As someone said, there is always a simple and wrong solution for every complicated problem.
Smart Mobs concept is more overblown... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Smart Mobs concept is more overblown... (Score:2)
I'm a little tired of hearing how "smart" video phones are. I want a phone to talk to people. I think I'm more than intelligent enough to use such an item, but generally the q
Re:Typical Rheingold (Score:3, Interesting)
So, who's next? Razorfish? TheGlobe? The Pets.com sock puppet?
Technology vs. sociology (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, you can get a couple hundred artists to mob a shoestore. Once, maybe twice. But try getting most people to think beyond the five minute/five day horizon of their lives? Good luck!
It's not a matter of technology. People just don't, for the most part, have the excess energy for things like instant parties.
Besides, what's the "African village" business? I wish people who wrote such comments would actually go to an African village and take a look. As a model of economical, ecological, and sociological stability and harmony, it's hard to do better. What... the... heck do you want to go adding "smart mobs" to this for?
Re:Technology vs. sociology (Score:2)
Re:Technology vs. sociology (Score:3, Insightful)
If you think about how use the internet, you can create a 'flash mob' particularly if a website offers a particularly good deal. For example, if I find cheap flights to Europe on a site like Ryanair I will email my friends to book the flights and come with me. This may not be a 're
Re:Technology vs. sociology (Score:2)
I like to give this example of a smart mob. An antiwar demonstration in DC, the war was close to starting so tension was pretty high, the cops were not in a good mood. A detachment of motorcycle cops were riding *through* a dense crowd of marchers, it was very dangerous and impossible for people to get out of the way.
Anyway some guy gets in a cops way and the cop
Before folks get too excited about wireless cams (Score:5, Insightful)
Way back when at the time 56K modems were just coming on, I installed a modem based video conferencing system for a small rural school. Everybody was so excited about the potential and the quality of the signal wasn't a big issue because it was so exciting and isn't technology great. All in all, it was not too different from what you're hearing right now in the latest frothy bubble of video conferencing hype.
But, despite all the good intentions and hopeful exuberance and pats on the back for a job well done and gosh isn't technology great type of wide-eyed speculation at the time, the system was pulled for entirely non-technical reasons.
In the process of testing the system, we hooked into the, then cutting edge, CU-See-Me network to test it out and right away it was chicks flashing tits, guys holding their dicks and all this fun stuff that might be real groovy for adult users looking for a cheap thrill, but a major problem in an elementary school setting.
Ever since then, I've seen the same old hype just continue over and over. I laughed out loud when I read an article a few months ago with the CEO of AT&T suggesting video conferencing was just about to take off and save his company along with on-line music sales. I have to speculate that there is a bit of willful ignorance going on here.
Most of the older people I know tend to be quite camera shy and then a lot of the younger people are depending on the older people to pay for their toys. I think the combo, along with the fact that almost everyone has a web cam and nobody uses them is quite suggestive of some fundamental problems with the marketing of camera enabled wireless devices.
That's not to say they're not cool and everybody should grow up and stop worrying about kids getting some cheap thrills. I agree one thousand percent. But, if everybody agreed with me, the world would be a very nice place and nobody would watch prime time TV. But obviously that's not the world we live in.
Re:Before folks get too excited about wireless cam (Score:4, Insightful)
Just because you've been into the "CU-See-Me" network and seen people showing their willies does not mean that video conferencing or picture phones or whatever will never take off, or that the CEO of AT&T is being ignorant.
It sounds to me like you should have done a bit more thinking and testing before you did your school installation. The failure of your one project does not write off a whole new up and coming area of technology.
Re:Before folks get too excited about wireless cam (Score:2)
But I have three web cameras sitting around that don't get used and my point was that this stuff has been hyped before. The only difference this time is that the emphasis is on freedom. Well, if you're an adult that kinda flies right by ya because you already have freedom and cameras and it's just an extension of that in a slightly more co
Picture phones (Score:2)
Just like digital cameras but with significantly less quality and a much less cumbersome method of sharing the photos far and wide.
Personally, I'm going back to carrier pigeon.
Re:Picture phones (Score:3, Interesting)
Thats the whole point of the damn things. Its easy and convenient so you so it thus providing an additional revenue stream to the telcoms in situations where normally your phone would be sitting idle in your pocket.
Rheingold is an E-commerce leader ? ;-) (Score:2, Insightful)
Smart Mobs WILL change the world (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Smart Mobs WILL change the world (Score:2, Funny)
And then I hit the puree button...
EEEWWWWWW!
price pressure (Score:3, Interesting)
Sex (Score:5, Interesting)
In order to work out the full potential of new technologies, it is important to consider the sex uses first. I'm not joking - the sexual uses of new technologies will always outnumber, and incorporate, all other uses.
There is (apparently) an interesting new sexual practice in the UK called "dogging". This involves using the web to locate people anonymously, and then meeting up in public places (in a park for instance) to have anonymous sex. Other people go along to watch. This is I guess a type of smart mob (although "not very smart mob" might be more a appropriate name when you take sexual diseases into account).
I don't need to mention that the emergence of the picturephone will bring about whole new areas of creative uses of technology...
political organizing (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree that the internet has made it much easier to organize people, for example, the international coordination of protests against the war on Iraq was phenomenal, but has it really enhanced the effectiveness and power of grassroots groups? I think the jury is still out on this one.
I'd love to see technology used to create more genuine opportunities for participation, but as Frederick Douglas said:
Legions of bloggers writing about copyright law or the PATRIOT Act won't make a difference unless we find a way to apply real political pressure through action.Demands of Power (Score:1)
What interested me about Gosling's interview, was the claim that the technology exists today for everyone to vote online. I think this is disingenious, personally, to say that the only things standing in the way
Re:Demands of Power (Score:2)
The second service provides an anonymizing proxy to the third service, hiding your originating IP address.
The third system accepts the voting ticket via the anonymizing proxy (verifying it was signed by the first service a la Kerberos) and allows you to vote with it. Encryption must happen end-to-end between the voter and
Re:Demands of Power (Score:1)
1. The classic PKI problem - How do you _guarantee_ that the e-vote cast was actually submitted by the person to whom it belongs? Can you prevent the sale/trade of e-votes from occuring? Can you prevent a hacker from subsuming the identities of thousands of people and voting for them? In theory, if the anonymizing proxy does its job, those votes should not be traceable.
2. I think that we have to design with the idea that, given
Austin Flash Mob (Score:2)
Is this a smart mob?
Maybe he's right... (Score:1)
So anyway that's just one example of a desire by a single person for some sort of 'smart mob' (dumb name, imho). Maybe it's a trend, who knows.
Smart Mobs (Score:2)
Re:Smart Mobs (Score:2)
Whoops! Not really on the subject of smart mobs after all. I got smart mobs confused with flash mobs. Classic case of not RTFA. Apologies.
What a fan!! (Score:1, Interesting)
Sure, he even caused the GPL into existence.
What a fan!!!
read the emacs bit for a bit of interesting history.
http://www.free-soft.org/gpl_history/
Hey! Howard! Your 15 minutes are up! (Score:2)
Mob Recording (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure, the fidelity from any one phone sucks, but some filtering (combined with knowledge of the seat placement) would be able to eliminate much of the ambient noise, and produce multipoint surround sound. Probably the same could be done with videophones to create 3D video, if enough source were integrated.
I don't even have the math to try this, but if we can dream it, we can do it, right?
Re:Mob Recording (Score:1)
Re: Mob Recording (Score:2)
Smart mobs could change our view of public figures (Score:3, Interesting)
This could have a few outcomes - public figures couldn't get reclusive enough to avoid this problem. One possibility is that with more people being caught in the act that the public will care less about such things (just because they can't handle the load of making a big deal about all of them). Another is that the people who are squeaky clean would float to the top more easily.
Re:Smart mobs could change our view of public figu (Score:2)
Re:Smart mobs could change our view of public figu (Score:2)
Wanna bet?
It's "Brett," God Dammit! (Score:1)
It's BRETT [imdb.com], you deaf sons of bitches!
"Look at the big brain on Brett." [imdb.com]
Sheesh!
"Cell phones and Internet allowed 9/11 to happen" (Score:5, Insightful)
WTF? Try as I might, I can't follow his reasoning on this one. It might have been considerably harder to communicate with your operatives without modern tech, but certainly not impossible.
Re:"Cell phones and Internet allowed 9/11 to happe (Score:1)
But, frankly, I think he's just back-defining a term that sounds provacative.
Re:"Cell phones and Internet allowed 9/11 to happe (Score:2)
Sounds like he just came up with the term "smart mobs" and then tried to figure out what it meant.
You know, the people in NYC who were doing the mobs stopped doing them. I wonder if it has anything to do with the pretentious bullshit they were immediately associated with. Obviously, these mobs in NY were a joke, a dumb but fun stunt. Suddenly, some jerk like Rheingold decides he understands the "text" and it's a semiotics class circa 1995 all over again. So he gets interviewed because th
What about smart mob on flight 93 (Score:1, Insightful)
What does this guy know? (Score:1)
Wow -- didn't all those clowns call that one wrong.
ph
what does Little Gothic Boy think? (Score:2)
what do I think?
Of course it's silly, of course it's fun
but it whiffs to me of fad
if you go back 5, 10, 15, and more years pop culture is absolutely littered with "the next big thing"
really smart people, god bless their souls, are often prone to getting too excited and reading too much meaning into what is essentially meaningless and temporary inanity
hey, by all means, keep thinking big thoughts folks, but watch out for self-reinforcing over-int
$600 for Word? (Score:2)
This is total crap right? The you get the whole office suite for $600 or much less in an OEM bundle, also you can get Word by itself for much less I think.
Re:$600 for Word? (Score:1)
BTW, Amazon lists Office XP Pro for $380.
Re:$600 for Word? (Score:2)
Re:$600 for Word? (Score:2)
From the context, he meant $600 for 6 systems, at $100 a system. And even the $100/system was probably just a toss-off number.
One legal way around that would be Remote Desktop - install on one system, run from any system. With shared root directories, you can edit stuff on the system you're doing the access from.
Re:$600 for Word? (Score:2)
Maybe this is the retail price for office, but when the alternative is free I don't see the need to over state one's case.
Do as I say, not as I do... (Score:1)
Stupid ideas from a 'smart' person (Score:2, Interesting)
He adds that future business applications for smart mobs might start anywhere in the world, like "finding out about the spot labor market in [an] African village."
These Africans, who are trying to find a day's worth of work here, there, and anywhere they can, who desperately need that day's worth of bread, can afford a Palm or PocketPC or cell phone?
What kind of idiot says stuff like this?
This is what's wrong with tech today: stupid apps for stupid reasons. We're just fortunate t