Hi Everyone,
Just came across this hint on macosxhints.com. Pretty neat.
Use iChat to chat with Facebook friends
Enjoy!
Sean
Hi Everyone,
Just came across this hint on macosxhints.com. Pretty neat.
Use iChat to chat with Facebook friends
Enjoy!
Sean
If you haven’t heard, Google has announced they are CONSIDERING running fiber to the homes of selected communities with populations of 50,000 to 500,000. This would give those homes download speeds of 1 THOUSAND Megabits per second. That’s 1 Gigabit-per-second.
This represents a great opportunity for communities. However, I’ve noticed some people talking about how it would be great to have this as long as it doesn’t cost the community anything. I think this is the wrong approach to take. Read more to find out why.
Somewhere in the past, I recall a speaker on negotiation talking about 2 different investors building 2 different malls. One firm decided where they wanted their mall and announced their decision, then began trying to make all the deals needed. With huge amounts of will-power and effort, they managed to build most of their original plan, but way past deadline and way over-budget. The second firm selected several locations and said to the community leaders “we’re THINKING about building a mall here. Are you interested?” When leaders who saw it as an opportunity for their community worked to HELP the mall-builders, this firm was able to build on-time and on-budget, and the community gained many new jobs for its people.
With that in mind, communities who see this fiber-network as a huge value-add SHOULD SPEND and COMPETE for it. In the end, Google might pay to build it, but there is a LOT more to it than buying miles of fiber lines and connecting them to the internet. They will need, I’m sure, to obtain office space, buy real estate, relocate existing Google employees, hire new Google employees, obtain many types of permits, obtain licenses, perhaps re-zone some places, corporate equipment, obtain corporate vehicles and more.
What will a chosen community GET for this? PLEASE comment below with your ideas of the benefits. I’m sure I will fall short. But plain and simple: when people can get more work done in the same number of hours per day, that makes them more EFFECTIVE and more EFFICIENT. It also gives them more work satisfaction and the company more PROFIT.
By coincidence I recently listened to an I.T. Conversations podcast interview with attorney Jim Baller, founder of the US Broadband Coalition. They discussed the Coalition’s report on US Broadband Strategy. Among items they discussed were reasons behind successes and failures of municipal broadband efforts. If I recall correctly, they also discussed the benefits those communities gained.
And excerpt from the report:
A rapidly growing segment of the US economy is tied directly or indirectly to information and communications technologies. This includes industries that develop, deploy, finance, operate, and maintain communications networks and the equipment that runs them; industries that focus on devices that interconnect with the communications networks, including computers, Netbooks and PDAs; industries that develop, operate, and service the applications that run over the networks, including Google, Amazon, Flickr, Facebook or eBay, etc.; industries that conduct business of all kinds over the Internet, and so on.
With so MUCH to be gained from such a network, we have to realize there is a lot to LOSE by not spending to ensure we get it.
Links
An article in BusinessWeek talks about possible hints of Apple’s future plans. A job posting on Apple’s own website gave the hint.
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2010/tc20100225_313033.htm?campaign_id=yhoo
From Scientific American, Google maps are being used to help developers of wind, solar, geo-thermal or other alternate energy find good locations which do not conflict with other interests, such as park lands and endangered-species habitat.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=google-guides-solar-sites-2009-04-07
From MakeUseOf.com, a free manual on Snow Leopard.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/the-incredible-free-manual-for-every-mac-user-pdf/
(This is kind of off-topic for FLMUG, but I know that some of our members are interested.)
The Planet Green channel (162 on BrightHouse) is carrying the Sony Pictures film “Who Killed the Electric Car”.
Air Times:
Links:
Walt Sellers, Gary Ensmenger, Mark Spain, Jim Sander, Phil Robertson, and Jef Walker trade news, tips, tricks, and news about the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad.
Among items discussed:
- reports have been made that Apple has closed the App Store accounts of some developers; possibly for involvement with jail-breaking efforts.
- several local businesses are in efforts to produce new iPhone apps.
- reports of iPod touches interfering with Wi-Fi on other devices.
- Jef showed us a cover for your thumbdrive that makes it look like a thumb.
- Phil demonstrated software to publish ePub files for iPhone readers and the iPhone reader apps.
- Jim showed us SubEthaEdit (http://SubEthaEdit.net) a desktop application for getting many people to work on documents together across the Internet.
- short-term and long-term effects on publishing
- lots of cool new apps were shown off
Meetings are on the 3rd Thursdays of each month at Panera Bread at 11472 University Blvd, Orlando, FL.
Great article at Macworld: http://www.macworld.com/article/146323/2010/02/tooltips.html?lsrc=rss_main
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