Jon Lebkowsky: Steve Jobs on Convergent Multi-Media

Autonomous Internet, Blog Wisdom
Jon Lebkowsky

Apple’s convergent television: “I finally cracked it!”

We’ve been hearing for two decades now about television/computer/Internet convergence. Televisions sets today are advanced digital products, and we connect computers and specialized set-top boxes to ‘em, but they’re still primarily display devices.

In his biography of Steve Jobs, Walter Isaacson writes that Jobs ““very much wanted to do for television sets what he had done for computers, music players, and phones: make them simple and elegant.”

Jobs told Isaacson that “I’d like to create an integrated television set that is completely easy to use It would be seamlessly synced with all of your devices and with iCloud. No longer would users have to fiddle with complex remotes for DVD players and cable channels. It will have the simplest user interface you could imagine. I finally cracked it.”

More on the Jobs/Apple vision of convergence here.

I’m imagining a media device that, like the Internet, swallows all other forms: television set, movie theatre, stereo, juke box, etc. But it would also be interactive, a window on the rest of the world. This isn’t exactly cutting edge – those who think about such things expected it before now.

Phi Beta Iota:  Our own collective epiphany (translation for Democrats:  “aha”) came in connection with the Contact endeavors of Doug Rushkoff, where we realized that connectivity comes first, and that public intelligence will evolve from that, not the other way around.  HOWEVER, apart from Range Networks, we see no one seriously pursuing the OpenBTS “dumb” cell phone for free or $2 a month maximum (subsidized in the Third World), nor have we been successful at breaking through to the Vatican (read letter) or Sir Richard Branson (read one-pager), both of whom could have come together in Assisi to converge connectivity with the eradication of secular corruption.

Jon Lebkowsky: Contact Summit – “Time to take back the net”

Autonomous Internet, Blog Wisdom
Jon Lebkowsky

At the Contact Summit. Photo by Steven Brewer

This week, on October 20, a diverse assortment of forward-thinking, Internet-savvy, solutions-oriented people gathered in New York City for Contact Summit, a project-focused event organized by Doug Rushkoff and Venessa Miemis. I was originally planning to attend, and was plugged into the small team of organizers. I couldn’t make the event, but have been available as a resource for organizers of related global Meetups, and will help sustain the converation following the event.

Doug had created a prologue video for the remote Meetups scheduled to occur synchronous with the main event. Here’s a summary of his comments in that video – this gives a good idea what the gathering was about:

Click on Image to Enlarge

It’s time to take back the net. Currently the Internet is much too concerned with marketing, IPOs, and the next killer app, and too little concerned with helping human beings get where we need to go. We want to use the Internet effectively to promote better ways of living, doing commerce, educating, making art, doing spirituality. To collaborate on ideas about how to use the net well. There are a lot of projects that need our assistance. From Arab Spring to Occupy Wall Street, people are rising up. We need solutions. Contact is about finding the others, and working and playing with them to find solutions to age-old problems.

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Venessa Miemis: #OWS Catalyzing a Cooperatively-Owned Autonomous Internet and Communications Infrastructure

Autonomous Internet
Venessa Miemis

Occupy Wall Street Catalyzing a Cooperatively Owned Communications Infrastructure?

What would a cooperatively owned and operated communications infrastructure look like? One that used peer-to-peer technologies to create a global network which is immune to censorship and resistant to breakdown? It appears The Free Network Foundationis building one.

I noticed a few people bouncing this idea around on the Next Net google group earlier in the year, and now they seem to be moving forward quickly, with Occupy Wall Street a convenient catalyzing event to get things shipped.

Their vision is to create a global communications infrastructure that is owned and operated by participants in the network, rather than by for-profit network operators.

They currently have a prototype FreedomTower up and running at Occupy Austin, with a second one set up in Liberty Park at Occupy Wall Street in NYC. The towers are providing internet access to the occupiers, and will be used to establish an occupation-to-occupation Virtual Private Network.

For the more technically inclined, the foundation has published a bill of materials and how-to. The total cost of a tower comes in at $1500. The tower consists of an uninterruptible power supply, two wimax modems, a nettop computer, a network switch, three 2.4GHz sector antennas, and three 5GHz sector antennas. The computer runs software for routing and terminating VPN tunnelling.

If you’d like to contribute to this effort, visit freenetworkfoundation.org. There you can find a link to donate, and contact information if you wish to participate. The FNF has put the call out for occupiers everywhere to raise funds, read up, and get to work building resilient communications infrastructure for the movement.

Phi Beta Iota:  Communications and money are  the first areas where emergent democracy and capitalism will make their mark–free communications (resistance zero) and social commerce richly endowed with ethics.

See Also:

Autonomous Internet (115)

2007 Open Everything: We Won, Let’s Self-Govern

Review: The Innovator’s Manifesto – Deliberate Disruption for Transformational Growth

Venessa Miemis: Ten Projects to Liberate the Web

Autonomous Internet
Venessa Miemis

In the last nine months of planning the Contact Summit, I’ve come across a range of projects and initiatives building toward the “Next Net.

Though they vary in their stages of development and specific implementations, they fall under the common themes of enabling peer-to-peer communication and exchange, protecting personal freedom and privacy, and giving people more control over their data and identity on the web.

Here’s list of just ten projects, many of which will be demoing at our exhibitor space at Contact on October 20th in New York City.

Read full post with graphics.

 

Mini-Me: Twitter Censors #OccupyWallStreet

Autonomous Internet, Corruption
Who? Mini-Me?

AmpedStatus))) Knowledge is Power

#TwitterCensorship Blocks #OccupyWallStreet from Top Trending Topic Twice

On at least two occasions, Saturday September 17th and again on Thursday night, Twitter blocked #OccupyWallStreet from being featured as a top trending topic on their homepage. On both occasions, #OccupyWallStreet tweets were coming in more frequently than other top trending topics that they were featuring on their homepage.

This is blatant political censorship on the part of a company that has recently received a $400 million investment from JP Morgan Chase.

We demand a statement from Twitter on this act of politically motivated censorship.

Will they block #OccupyWallStreet from trending again tomorrow when actions throughout the country will once again flare up?

We shall see. Will have more on this topic soon…

Phi Beta Iota:  Google is known to have sold out to the dark side, but also to have proven relatively useless.  Facebook and Twitter have obviously made their own accommodation.  This is one reason we support OpenBTS, OpenMoko, and moving as quickly as possible toward non-interruptible wireless mesh service for the public.

See Also:

Autonomous Internet (113)

Berto Jongman: The Emerging Global Mind

11 Society, Advanced Cyber/IO, Autonomous Internet, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence, Earth Intelligence, Gift Intelligence, IO Deeds of Peace, Methods & Process, Peace Intelligence, Strategy
Berto Jongman Recommends...

Featured Article

The Emerging Global Mind

Noetic Now, Issue Fourteen, September 2011

by Tiffany Shlain

Fifteen years ago I founded the Webby Awards. I was fascinated by how the Internet was connecting people all over the world in new and unexpected ways. I have also been struck by the many conversations about the problems of our day that view them as separate challenges—whether the environment, women’s rights, poverty, or social justice. It has become increasingly apparent to me that when you perceive everything as connected, it radically shapes your perspective.

The concept of interdependence isn’t new; it’s been around since the dawn of humanity. For two-hundred-thousand years, we’ve been connecting through networks both natural and technological. Interdependence has long been a tenet of Eastern philosophy and indigenous cosmologies. But the recent addition of the Internet has added a new layer, which connects us in a fresh way, giving the world a new type of central nervous system. Something happens in one place, and we can see it, feel it, and do something about it almost instantaneously.

Safety copy below the line (original URL is inconsistent)

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Koko: Project Kleinrock – Mesh – Autonomous Internet

Autonomous Internet
Koko

Koko Signs: Autonomous Internet good. Project Kleinrock good. Gorillas love liberty and scorn both the security state and the nanny state. Live free or die….

Project Kleinrock

Following are the details of a project to create a completely autonomous “second layer” of the Internet, completely free of the influence of or need for Internet Service Providers, and untouchable by the government. This plan is named after Leonard Kleinrock, inventor of the Internet Packet. It has been enacted after news of a bill entering the United States Senate which would allow a President to disable all Internet connectivity within the United States. (We later heard that this bill doesn't do quite that, but that the President has had the power to shut down any telecommunications network (as defined by the FCC) for over 70 years.)

Read full Wiki page.

Phi Beta Iota:  OmergaSDG is one of many isolated wiki pages spawned by the lack of integrity at Wikipedia, where trolls and editing wars are rife.  While unfortunate that Wikipedia never matured, eventually we envision a reintegration of Wikipedia using the cross-wiki naming conventions and increased access to “lock-downs” that are now abused by Wikipedia mandarins for their own pet rocks, but should be generally available to those who spend days creating content with integrity only to see it lost to a troll in seconds.

See Also:

Autonomous Internet [Open, Free, Distributed]

Tip of the Hat to John Robb for the link.