Blog

Running since 2003. Posts about software, travel, and whatever else.

The unreliability of Internet

Google can answer almost anything in two clicks. So why is it that when you ask for a number, you find ten different answers and no way to tell which one is right? PageRank rewards popularity, not accuracy. What might a search engine that hunted facts instead of pages actually look like?

Seinfeld on a telephone

Yesterday Douwe got his new Nokia to play an episode of Seinfeld. 176x120, ten frames a second, tinny sound — and somehow still the holy grail. The phone has 500 times the memory of his first computer and runs movies on it. A small marvel, with Moore's law doing the heavy lifting.

Big Brother for President

Actors, porn stars, and assorted lunatics are running for governor of California. The world is laughing — but the world tends to copy California once it's done laughing. So here is a modest proposal: combine Big Brother (a Dutch invention, naturally) with the political circus. Lock the candidates in a house with cameras. Media training only holds for so long.

There's something rotten in Brussels

There should be a national uproar. There isn't. The EU is quietly finalising its IP Enforcement Directive — the DMCA, but worse. Refilling your printer cartridge? Illegal. Playing a DVD from the wrong region? Illegal. The parliament votes on September 11th. There is still time, but only barely.

How to save the Wizard World

Half the planet has read the new Harry Potter, and Douwe is worried — for the wizards. A thousand years ago the gap between magic and muggle was unbelievable. Today, planes outrun broomsticks and email beats owls. The wizard world is run like the Soviet Union. If they don't reform soon, the muggles win.

Not all deeds are selfish

An old argument with a friend: is there such a thing as an unselfish deed? The hero who throws himself on the grenade felt good doing it, so really he did it for himself, no? The reasoning sounds airtight — and it is exactly the kind of airtight reasoning that should make you suspicious.

The invention of the Nation.

Germany and Austria have been bickering over whether Mozart was theirs. Both, in a way — and neither, because in 1756 the nation state hadn't been invented yet. Once upon a time a passport was a letter of recommendation, borders were soft, and the Roma went where they pleased. What did we lose when we drew the lines?

Why Linux is mostly good for big companies

Tim O'Reilly says the real killer app of open source isn't OpenOffice or KDE — it's the LAMP stack that powers Google, Amazon and Yahoo!. Agreed. But that points at something awkward: Linux is mostly good for big companies. Free as in beer is cheap. Free as in speech only counts if you can actually read and write.

Euler, Laplace and Archean

A friendly email arrives suggesting Archean is really an Euler-method integrator for the Laplace equation with six coupled potentials. Flattering, except Douwe isn't entirely sure what that means. He can see the parallel with disease-spread models, but the rest is a hint at deeper waters — and a request for pointers to more local operators.

Third World Aid

Only about 5% of development aid reaches its intended target, and a big reason is that we ship western experts at western wages to places where they're less productive than at home. Douwe wonders if the answer is to stop sending westerners altogether — and instead send Indian engineers to solve African problems, while the west picks up the bill.

Rightin Corectli

The International Phonetic Association already worked out how to write any language consistently. So why does every language community keep agonising over spelling reform, weighing tradition against reason? Douwe makes the case that our current spelling rules quietly exclude a huge fraction of the population — and that learning foreign languages would suddenly get a lot easier. juw jork rools.

RIAA: winning battles, losing wars

The RIAA is suing individual Kazaa users, and legally, fair enough — Douwe admits he's one of them. But while they're winning the lawsuits, they're alienating the people who love music most and missing an obvious opportunity. Imagine a flat monthly fee, anyone can run a radio station, a million music bloggers spring up overnight. That's the business they're not building.

Worldsizer

A new project: Worldsizer, a Flash applet that lets you resize the continents according to their share of wealth, population, or military spending. The graphics, Douwe admits, are kind of crude — but watching a familiar map warp into an unfamiliar one is its own kind of cool.

The four stadia of Internet Enlightenment

Diamond Way Buddhism teaches five paths to enlightenment. The Internet, Douwe proposes, has four. From the novice frantically printing webpages, to the bookmarker, to the search-engine zen of typing in the right keywords. The fourth stage? He hasn't reached it yet — and is openly soliciting reports from anyone who has.

A legal way to do Napster

Bob Cringely has a baroque scheme for legal Napster involving shared CD ownership across millions of people. Douwe thinks it leans too hard on fair use. He has his own idea: a storage facility that physically holds your CDs and lets you stream them — and lets you swap ownership with other members when you want to hear something new. IANAL, but it might just work.

The power of the Internet

A beer with friends produces more new ideas than a week of television. And every one of those ideas, when Douwe goes looking, has already been built by some crazy person on the Internet. TV broadcasts what people already know; the web is full of the genuinely new. A trivial observation, perhaps — except for what it implies about why we still pick Seinfeld reruns.

Killing an elephant

A hundred years ago, Topsy the elephant was electrocuted on purpose. She'd killed three keepers — the last one tried to feed her a lit cigarette — but the strangest part of the story is who arranged it. Thomas Edison, losing his current war with Westinghouse, was electrocuting animals to prove AC was dangerous. He lost the AC battle. But he did convince America of something else.

What's with Scandinavia?

Richest country? Norway. Least corrupt? Finland. Most women-friendly? Sweden. Whatever the metric, the Scandinavians keep winning. They're tall, handsome, peaceful, wired, and speak excellent English. Even Al Qaeda once called for attacks on Norway and nobody could figure out why. Douwe thinks the Scandinavian model deserves more study. Only the weather lets it down.

Why America is losing the peace in Iraq

Everyone reaches for the same comparison: rebuilding Japan and Germany worked, so why isn't it working in Iraq? Maybe it's still early — the Marshall Plan didn't kick in until 1948. But there's another, less comfortable difference between the two situations, one that has nothing to do with timing and everything to do with how a conquered people see themselves.

Color scheme project

The color scheme experiment now lives as a proper project — and it's evolving. You can also point it at any page on the site and watch a different hue and saturation take over in real time. Click the button and see what happens to this one.