Technology

Entries related to technology.

CSI: SL - Down the Rabbit Hole, BNT back up

Wednesday 10 PM ET/PT/SLT, “A woman's murder sends Mac into "Second Life," the internet-based virtual world to track down the killer in both the real and cyber world. TV14-V.”

This is expected to bring a whole new wave of people to Second Life. To prepare for this wave, the Electric Sheep Company is expected to release a new client for Second Life, the OnRez viewer, which people are already arguing the pros and cons of.

Over on the Second Life Educators mailing list, people are wringing their hands. “What's going to happen on Oct 24th … and shortly thereafter when the 100s of new sims come online? Is that a good day NOT to be teaching or building in SL?”

Prokofy Neva in The Future of Content: Watching the Detectives wonders what all the new residents will do to Second Life. They “may or may not contribute to the existing inworld economy as consumers or even producers. I'm betting they won't, and that the inworld economy will take a severe hit.“

Well, if they don’t consume or produce, how are they going to deal the inworld economy a severe hit? How will such a severe hit compare with the closing of gambling, the decline in real estate prices, the runs on the Second Life banks, or the turmoil in the Second Life capital markets? How will such a severe hit compare with people becoming more involved with alternative grids?

Maybe some people will stick around, rent or buy some land, invest in some stocks, or put some money in banks. Some might be simply feed the next fraud du jour, others might make some good investments.

How much of an impact will CSI: SL really make anyway? Depending on how close a game it is, a lot of people may still be busy watch the Rockies and the Red Sox fight it out.

A different person commented, “Terrific. This will get the vast TV audience an opportunity to get a taste of "stepping inside" the TV. Should be mind-changing.”

I’m the eternal optimist. I don’t think Second Life will take a serious hit, either in the grid or in the economy, and somewhere, someone will have a mind-changing experience, and we will all be better off for it.

Also relating to Second Life finances, AnCapEx is now up and running. This is IntLibber Brautigan’s new stock exchange. In terms of functionality, it appears to be using the same software as the Second Life Capital Exchange (SlCapEx). I’ve always liked the SlCapEx interface, and I especially like their webservices providing an easily processed feed of stock prices. It would be great to see other exchanges pick up this format.

Currently, the only stock available on SlCapEx is Brautigan & Tuck Holdings, (BNT). This includes the merged in Countless Galaxies (CGI) shares. It will be interesting to watch the initial trading. On top of that, AnCapEx is talking about adding options. This will be a nice feature, although I’m curious about how exercising options will work. Ideally, they will list options on other exchanges which will require the exchanges to adapt and facilitate transfers of stock, such as through the exercise of options, as stock lending or stock gifts, and so on. This will move the capital markets in Second Life forward in ways greater than any influx of CSI views is likely to damage.

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Watching and Listening to Podcasts on a Motorola Razr

Recently, Kim and I upgraded our cellphones to Motorola Razrs and I’ve been kicking around different ways to take advantage of the increased functionality. My latest project was to set up my cellphone as a podcast client.

Why would I want to do that? Perhaps the prime reason is that there are various shows on the radio that I would normally miss. By using my cellphone as a podcast client, I can store those shows on my cellphone and listen to them wherever and whenever I want. Details below the fold.

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Random Stuff

Back in February, I wrote a blog post entitled Pursuing the elusive micropayment. I talked briefly about the different systems for making payments from your cellphone. One company I mentioned was Obopay. Earlier this month, I mentioned that Obopay was setting up an agreement with the Second Life Capital Exchange (SLCapEx) so that people could withdraw Linden dollars as U.S. dollars via Obopay. I noted that the transaction costs seemed particularly high for micropayments and wondered where things would go.

The other day, I received an email from another company I had written about, Textpayme. Their email starts off with “TextPayMe service is now powered by Amazon Payments!” It will be interesting to see where that goes.

Today, I received an email about a great new application for Facebook, the Second Life Link. So far, only about a half dozen of my friends that are in both Second Life and Facebook have signed up. However, it is great to be able to check the page to remember the association between real life names and Second Life names. If you’re in Second Life, please consider adding this app.

Second Life was having some currency exchange problems that have been fixed and now their having a rolling restart of their servers.

InWorld Studios is continuing its Virtually Speaking series this evening with Jimbo Hoyer interviewing John Dean. Should be good.

Cracked Ice is having a CD Release party in Fairfield. More information can be found here.

Harnessing the power of engaging Internet technology in the classroom

In Tuesday’s Hartford Courant, there was an Op-Ed by Melinda French Gates entitled Students Leaving School Unprepared For College, Work. It recited the standard litany of problems. “Students are sitting in classrooms, bored and unchallenged, and are being left unprepared for the future.” Over a million students dropped out of high school last year. Even students with 4.0 GPAs get off to college and find themselves unprepared.

The article suggested that we need to ask many more questions at the presidential debates about education. That might help, but the rubber meets the road in the local communities and we need to add some focus there.

Do you know who is on your school board? Have you spoken with them about educational priorities in your community and how we can achieve them? Have you spoken to the principal at your local high school or the superintendent of your local school district?

Somehow, I’ve ended up on the mailing list of the National School Boards Association (NSBA). This coming Wednesday, they will hold an online forum entitled, “What are the Educational Benefits of Social Networking for Students and Teachers?” The email I received about this said,

New research by NSBA and Grunwald Associates shows that teens are doing more than hanging out in social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook. In fact, 70 percent of online students report discussing education-related topics such as college or college planning, learning outside of school, and careers; and 50 percent of online students say they talk specifically about schoolwork. But how can schools harness this engaging technology tool in the classroom to increase learning for students?

Not only are they discussing education-related topics, but sometimes they even use derogatory terms to criticize school administrations, and that is where you get a true view of how willing a school is to harness the engaging technologies of the internet to increase students’ learning.

The Avery Doninger case in Burlington, CT is a perfect example of this. When Avery used derogatory terms to criticize school administrators, those administrators sought to discourage discourse instead of encourage it. They prohibited students from wearing T-shirts showing support of Avery. They disregarded the voice of the student body who wrote in Avery’s name for the class election the school administration had barred her from running in.

Other schools have recognized the value of this teachable moment and I will be speaking at at least one other high school in Connecticut about Avery’s case and about how the students can use internet technologies to become better advocates of their own positions and along the way, learn better writing and computer skills.

Perhaps school board members in Connecticut will participate in the NSBA’s online forum this week. Perhaps, even more importantly, the voters in Connecticut will take Melissa French Gate’s suggestion to ask more questions about education, and take those questions not only to presidential candidates but also to candidates running for local school boards.

Is your school district harnessing the power of Internet technology to engage students and increase their learning? Or, is your school district attempting to curtail students’ efforts to grapple with technology, advocacy and all the complicated issues of being a teenager in the twenty first century?

Get out and ask those questions before you vote in your next school board election.

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Starting to explore Zude!

We finally have a crisp clear autumnal day, and Fiona and I are both sick. If it weren’t so, perhaps she and I would be running around outside. Instead, she is watching some mindless television and I’m doing very simple tasks online.

Really, I should be working on job opportunities. I desperately need to get some cash coming in the door. I should also probably be writing a lot more. There is plenty going on in politics right now, most of it eclipsed by Gore’s Noble Peace Prize. There is plenty going on in Second Life, particularly in the financial services sector, as well as with the Streambase deal with Linden Labs. I also really need to promote the Poets and Writers for Avery event this coming Sunday.

But I have no energy. My mind is befuddled with a headache. I need something fun and simple to do. Last night, I spent a little time configuring my new phone for uploading text, pictures and videos to appropriate places online. I set up special new cellphone email and IM accounts. It kept me busy for a little bit.

This morning, I did something a bit more fun. I spent time tweaking my Zude! page. People are suggesting that Zude! could be the gold standard for next generation Social Network pages, the site that knocks off MySpace. MySpace has incredible inertia. Everyone is on it and it isn’t going anywhere. That is a plus on why it won’t go away anytime soon, but it is also a negative in why their time is ending.

MySpace is ugly. It is a pain to customize. Facebook is moving in the right direction with the Facebook Apps. Yahoo! Mash looks interesting, but hasn’t drawn me in the way Zude! has.

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