Libby Verdict: Guilty! Count 1, Count 2... Not Guilty 3, Guilty on 4, Guilty on 5
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/06/2007 - 13:0111:15 - Verdict reached.
Unfortunately, I'm not at the courtroom, so I've been flipping channels, watching everyone try to fill time as they wait for the verdict to come out.
12:04 - Jury is coming in....
More soon...
VERDICT: 12 NOON
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/06/2007 - 12:34Just in: Verdict has been reached and will be announced at noon.
F2C Day 1 Part 1: More bandwidth please
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 03/06/2007 - 09:33If I were to summarize the most important message from Day 1 of the Freedom to Connect conference down in Washington DC yesterday, it was the need for more bandwidth.
One speaker said that between the number of emails he was receiving and the size of the emails due to attachments, the bandwidth that he was using had increased eight-fold while his bandwidth had only doubled. This is probably compounded by the number of people on home networks growing rapidly as well. It was said that we have dropped from number one in broadband to around 20th, and there is no indication of the slide stopping.
Folks from Speed Matters pointed out that the definition of high speed is too slow. On the chat, one person quoted this article:
“This year, the average broadband speed will increase to 75Mbps per second,” Dr Chin Dae-Je, South Korea’s Information Minister, told a delegation of global policy leaders at a meeting of the OECD earlier this year, before adding: “I have 100Mbps in my home.”
Freedom to Connect
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 03/05/2007 - 09:30If I hadn’t of spent most of last week down in DC live blogging the Libby trial deliberations, I would be down there right now to participate in Freedom to Connect. Fortunately, it will be streaming online with a live chat back channel going on at the same time.
There are many aspects to our freedom to connect. Some of the bigger issues are things like net neutrality, municipal wireless and the digital divide. Yet there are other things that inhibit our ability to connect. How usable are communication tools to use? How well do they interconnect?