Friday: Cell Portage. Reuters reports that cell service operators want telephone phone portability — but only if it applies to both wireless and landline phone numbers. It’s hard to argue that that’s a bad thing. The cell industry cites a huge cost — $1 billion in this article — at providing full wireless number portability, or allowing their customer to keep their phone numbers when they switch providers. It’s a road to hell, of course, because the cell companies are already engaged in mutually assured destructive commerce in which the discounts they charge pretty much are guaranteed to lose them money. Add the ability to switch and retain numbers, and you’ll see the kinds of migrations that are typically associated with species of birds. It doesn’t have to be this way: the companies have all failed to learn the lesson of the race to the bottom. They’ll all wind up bankrupt or albatrosses around parent companies’ necks or serving their customers horribly. But that’s what happens when the only differentiator they can think of is price and Catherine “expose that flesh” Zeta-Jones versus the “can you hear me guy” guy … [GlennLog]
General
Four Sisters Merlot
I highly recommend it…
Oh Christ!
calling all First Amendment lawyers!. SBC is shaking down websites which have navigation in a separate frame. This is an open-and-shut case! Web sites are· [Aaron Swartz: The Weblog]
Letter from a Birmingham Jail
Interesting that this was today’s New York Times Editorial, as I just re-read Dr. King’s letter today…
The Faithful’s Wayward Path. Dr. King’s famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” was not addressed to civil rights advocates or segregationists, but to church leaders. By Juan Williams. [New York Times: Opinion]
Mitnick’s Interview on Slashdot
I want a TiBook
Using a Sony VAIO PCG-R505JL laptop right now. It’s nice, but there has to be better out there. Too many technical issues with the TIBook and my employer right now to make it a worthwile portable option for me. Guess I’m sticking to a Windows PC for the time being…
S**t or get off the pot. Okay, enough is enough. Jonathon Delacour has been flirting with the idea of getting a Mac, teasing us, coyly, with this will he or won’t he like a 16 year old on a hot date. Time for this man to buy a Mac. As I lay here on my bed, lightweight PowerBook on my lap, I decided to start a list of reasons why Jonathon should either s**t or get off the pot and buy that PBook. Weight: Carrying around a PowerBook doesn’t feel that much different than carrying around my purse or a notepad. Actually, it weighs much less than my purse. My Dell laptop — the infamous mobile desktop — weights 19 pounds. My TiBook weights, what? Five pounds? Six? What would you rather lug around on a trip? A load of bricks or a load of feathers? Ease of Use: I have an older TiBook, which is a 15 inch and plenty big enough for me. The keyboard is very comfortable and the touchpad is very responsive. I like the wide wrist supports. Monitor: My TiBook is great for watching DVD movies in bed. Neat Apple stuff: There isn’t fun stuff for Windows. That’s what I found… [Burningbird]
New Architect Moves On
This sucks. I enjoyed the columns in New Architect.
New Architect Signs Off. New Architect, the magazine where I’ve been privileged to be a columnist the last 2 1/2 years, will publish its final issue next week with the March, 2003 edition. The magazine, and its predecessor Web Techniques, had a devoted readership who valued the publication’s ‘how to’ and ‘best practices’ focus, and, speaking now as a subscriber to the magazine, I’m sorry to see it go. I also really enjoyed writing my legal/policy column for non-lawyers and non-policy wonks. I’ll miss it. I hope I can find a new outlet for the thinking I did in that space each month. Maybe here. [icann.Blog]