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Gary Secondino's Weblog



Friday, June 28, 2002 

How small?

Molecule-size "cylinders" that retain data when power is removed.

To put things in perspective, one nanometer is about 10 times the diameter of a hydrogen atom. The sub-molecular technology centers on the precise structuring and control of matter on a molecular level.

For example, a PC Card module could hold up to 64GB (billion bytes) of data. A larger USB memory module would be capable of storing up to 5TB (trillion bytes) of data in the same space as a standard 3.5-inch hard disk. So with a 64GB PC Card, you could carry 20 hours of CD-quality music, 10,000 high-resolution photos or even 10 full-length DVD movies.
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This Frontline report documents the path from the Oslo accords two years ago to the Mideast War of today. Watch it on PBS and visit the web site.

I was left with a deep sadness after seeing the report. The religious and political radicals on both sides are destroying their own people. Watching the report I was struck by the faces of happy, dancing people when peace was at hand vs the angry, sad, frightened faces of people attacking and attacked. The happiness of hope and the despair of conflict, is not another chapter that can be discussed while sitting in a resort smoking a cigar.

There is no doubt in my mind that new leadership is needed on both sides. But will it be "meet the new boss, same as the old boss"

Perhaps both sides can have what they want. Palestine wants land back and Israel wants security and freedom from terrorism. I like the idea of giving the Palistinans the land. But with one caveat, for each terrorist attack in Israel the Palestinians give up some of their land to Israel. Could it work?
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The head of a government-based venture capital firm pleaded to the information technology industry: Be like James Bond.

The fictional British spy used technology to his advantage when tracking down criminal masterminds. But in the real-world fight against terrorism, the situation shouldn't be different, Gilman Louie, chief executive of In-Q-Tel, said during a keynote speech at the TechXNY trade show here.

"I am asking all of you in this room to do one thing: to think about how we can employ these technologies to give ourselves a competitive edge," Louie said. His speech, called "James Bond Saves the USA," stressed that the government's ability to analyze and distribute information quickly is the greatest weapon it has in diffusing terrorist threats.

Which, stirred or shaken?
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Thursday, June 27, 2002 

Read: Searching for solutions and Google and Weblogs: best hope for KM

Two analyses of how the correct choice of a search engine can open new opportunities and dramatically increase productivity
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I'm not a thief. I'm a customer. When you treat me like a thief, I won't be your customer.
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categories: Culture, Biz

I watched Charlie Rose interview Jim Collins last night. It was one of the most enjoyable educational hours in my recent experience. C.R. continues to escalate in my quality of service world. Jim Collins is new to me but I found that I was leaning forward attentively listening to his every word. He has a lively and thoughtful delivery style. What he say's about business excellence, level 5 leaders, and technology, etc. all resonated within me as deep truths. I found myself nodding in agreement as he spoke. His latest book Good To Great is my next read. Jim Collins is a man searching for questions to answer. A noble search, I'd say.
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A really good band. Performing Country, Swing, and Blues music. There is a new web address on the way www.austintorpedoes.us. Watch for it!
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Wednesday, June 26, 2002 

i See -
Fnord Software today announced the release of a new plug-in for Adobe Photoshop and After Effects. Called j2k, the new plug-in enables those applications to support the JPEG 2000 file format. What's more, it's free. JPEG 2000 is a new, updated version of the popular JPEG image compression format that uses newer compression techniques to store images in smaller files with higher quality than the older JPEG format allows. JPEG 2000 sports features like alpha channel transparency, optional lossless compression and support for 16 bit-per-channel images.

Fnord Software has also released SuperPNG, another free plug-in that supports enhanced reading and writing of PNG-format images. SuperPNG supports 16 bit-per-channel PNG files, variable compression, and more.


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Step by step instructions, analog to digital tools and techniques.
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Sunday, June 23, 2002 

Linda and I went to see this fine movie on opening day. Review - Complex, well made, need to see it again. Recommended.
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I'm starting to wonder if something very bad is happening at or around Apple. First I see that Verizon DSL has no plans to support Mac OS X. Then Microsoft and Verizon announce a DSL joint venture, and now I see that Adobe and Macromedia will not exhibit at MacWorld NYC in July 2002. Hmmm?
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Saturday, June 22, 2002 

NY companies look to the future as they write off rest of rough year

iSay - The smart executives are making their strategic moves now. Sure, it may be a little early but it's easy pickin's in the labor market. After September the squeeze for good help turns full on.
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Friday, June 21, 2002 

Arts & Farces Michael Fraase has produced an excellent analysis and several suggestions about music distribution and the Internet.
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Adam Curry writes about his discovery of EMusic.

What's even slicker is their affiliate program. Download, Play, Burn MP3s!!

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A concise article framing the current debate about Internet music services.
Control of the Internet is not simply about protecting against theft, then; it's about securing the same exclusionary distribution monopoly that the labels have in the real world.
Many major-label artists, the successful ones at least, have threatened court action if their music is offered online, claiming that labels are cheating them of royalties by paying them at the same rate as if they had sold a single. (Since the royalty rate for a single is determined by the label's need for marketing, distribution and packaging, all of which are different for Internet use, this is a skewed proposal.)

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The Doctor, Hunter S. Thompson"The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side."
Hunter S. Thompson
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Saturday, June 15, 2002 

The research Paul Ewald does fascinates me. He believes and sets out to prove his theory that many big diseases like heart disease, cancer, and mental illness, are in many cases actually caused by infections. His work is framed by the Darwin legacy of survival of the fittest. Hence today's microbes are evolving new defenses and different survival methods for tomorrow.


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Thursday, June 13, 2002 

Musical instruments have attributes that when taken together serve to make up their character. The better instruments are hand made by craftsmen. Only a few instruments are themselves works of art made by artists who go beyond the craft. Oh, what a difference the fine art instruments have. Just as thoroughbred horses are born to run these instruments are made for music and to be played. In the hands of a skilled musician the music is effortless and filled with emotional nuance. A fine instrument is capable of unlocking a struggling musicians creativity in new profound ways. Stealing a musical instrument is unconscionable.
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Scholars chime in on the Un-democratic US election. More so about the scolarly reaction than the election theft. Interesting exercise.

To listen to the nation's preeminent constitutional theorists tell it, Bush v. Gore was an obvious outrage--nothing less than a politically driven repudiation of democracy and the rule of law.

  • Vanderbilt University law professor Suzanna Sherry maintained in the New York Times that "there is really very little way to reconcile this opinion other than that they wanted Bush to win."
  • Harvard University law professor Randall Kennedy proclaimed in the American Prospect that Bush v. Gore was a "hypocritical mishmash of ideas," and that "the Court majority acted in bad faith and with partisan prejudice."
  • University of Texas law professor Sanford Levinson asserted in the Nation that "Bush v. Gore is all too easily explainable as the decision by five conservative Republicans--at least two of whom are eager to retire and be replaced by Republicans nominated by a Republican president--to assure the triumph of a fellow Republican who might not become president if Florida were left to its own legal process."
  • American University law professor Jamin Raskin opened an article in the Washington Monthly by describing the case as "quite demonstrably the worst Supreme Court decision in history," and proceeded to compare it unfavorably with the notorious Dred Scott decision.
  • A total of 554 law professors from 120 American law schools placed a full-page ad in the New York Times on January 13, 2001, declaring that the justices had acted as "political proponents for candidate Bush, not as judges. . . . By taking power from the voters, the Supreme Court has tarnished its own legitimacy."
  • Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz asserted in Supreme Injustice: How the High Court Hijacked Election 2000 that "the decision in the Florida election case may be ranked as the single most corrupt decision in Supreme Court history, because it is the only one that I know of where the majority justices decided as they did because of the personal identity and political affiliation of the litigants. This was cheating, and a violation of the judicial oath."


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I have passion for music. I've been a player and professional performer on and off for about 40 years and I can attest to the costs associated with feeding this passion. The amount of my lifetime spent 'doing music' is incalculable. You know what though? I don't begrudge a single moment or penny spent. This is my conscious decision and I wouldn't change a thing.
  11:11:46 AM  Google It!  comment



Tuesday, June 11, 2002 

Where IBM Storage is Headed

This series of articles proves to me 'the handwriting is on the wall'. The big Co's don't make a move like this unless there is a strategic plan in place. This also confirms the prevailing notion that miniaturization keeps adding more value and lowering costs. You'll be seeing this nano-tech storage in 3 to 5 years at the consumer level.

This from April 2002:

IBM Sells Hard Drive Business

4/17/2002

Sells Assets to Hitachi

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that IBM is selling 70% of its hard drive business to Hitachi for a rumored $1 Billion.

IBM pioneered the technology back in the 50s and has continued to make interesting innovations over the last few years, such as the IBM Microdrive (a kcgeek crowd favorite). Sadly, during the last couple of years IBM's HDD quality has gone down at a ridiculous rate, with countless numbers of IBM DeskStars succumbing to critical failures, causing many to redub them 'DeathStars'.

It is unknown at this time what has spurred the decision, although it is no secret that Big Blue is moving away from the component business. It is also possible that the poor quality is a factor, as well, as IBM is known for vigorously protecting their brand name's image of quality.

'Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM' sounds a lot less reassuring when you append 'but their data might be gone forever' to it.

This from May, 2002:

IBM Details Possible Silicon Successor

May 20, 2002

IBM Researchers say they have passed another milestone regarding research into carbon-based transistors that could pave the way for their replacement of silicon transistors in computers.

In an article to appear in the May 20 issue of the scientific journal Applied Physics Letters, the IBM research team detail their work with carbon nanotubes (CNTs) -- tube-shaped molecules made of carbon atoms that are 50,000 times thinner than a human hair. They write that the carbon-based prototypes outperformed the leading silicon transistor prototypes available today.

The researchers said the nanotube transistors they created produce more than twice the speed of electrical currents compared to top-performing silicon transistor prototypes.

The research is detailed in an article entitled "Vertical Scaling of Carbon Nanotube Field-Effect Transistors Using Top Gate Electrodes" by Shalom Wind, Joerg Appenzeller, Richard Martel, Vincent Derycke and Phaedon Avouris of IBM's T.J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y.

Although commercial prototypes of the carbon nanotubes could be as many as 10 years away, the research suggests that the nanotubes could be forerunners of new transistors to replace silicon, as the clock on Moore's Law ticks off. When Gordon Moore, one of the co-counders of Intel, predicted that the amount of data that could be stored on silicon would double every every 18 months, Microchip experts also accepted that the law's days would be numbered.

"Carbon nanotubes are already the top candidate to replace silicon when current chip features just can't be made any smaller, a physical barrier expected to occur in about 10 to 15 years," said Dr. Phaedon Avouris, manager of nanoscale science, IBM Research.

"Proving that carbon nanotubes outperform silicon transistors opens the door for more research related to the commercial viability of nanotubes."

This from June, 2002:

IBM Sells Hard Disk Drive Biz; Cuts Staff

June 4, 2002

Following the $2.05 billion agreement to sell the money-losing hard disk drive (HDD) operations to Hitachi (NYSE:HIT), Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM (NYSE:IBM) on Tuesday announced it would lay off 1,500 employees from its Microelectronics Division, a move aimed at increasing operational efficiencies.

The layoffs, which accounts for about 7.5 percent of the unit's work force, follows an earlier announcement that Hitachi would shell out $2.05 billion for the bulk of IBM's HDD-related assets. Initially, the Japanese electronics behemoth would own 70 percent of the new company and make a series of fixed payments to IBM before taking full ownership after three years.

As a result of all of the staff cuts, Big Blue said it would take a pre-tax charge of approximately $2 billion to $2.5 billion, primarily in the second quarter. "These include charges associated with the company's exit from the hard disk drive business, write-offs of assets in the Microelectronics business, and charges related to productivity initiatives, principally workforce reduction," IBM said in a statement.

IBM and Hitachi had earlier confirmed the fleshing out of an earlier agreement to merge the hard disk drive (HDD) operations into a new standalone joint venture.

The merged company, to be managed by an independent team of executives from Hitachi and IBM's existing HDD operations, would be based in San Jose, Calif.

Corporate managing director of Hitachi Dr. Jun Naruse has been tapped as CEO for the new company with IBM's Douglas Grose to serve as chief operating officer. Grose is currently general manager of IBM's Storage Technology Division.

Hitachi gets to select the new company's board of directors, and IBM will not be involved in its operations.

The companies said the new organization would employ about 24,000 -- 18,000 from IBM and 6,000 from Hitachi -- with major manufacturing operations at 11 locations around the world.

Hitachi estimates the new company would account for approximately $5 billion in sales in fiscal year 2003, and will target annual sales of $7 billion by fiscal year 2006. "IBM and Hitachi have each agreed to multi-year HDD supply commitments from the new company," it added.

In addition to the consummation of the HDD deal, IBM and Hitachi are proceeding with separate negotiations related to a planned multi-year alliance to research and develop new open standards-based technologies specific to next-generation storage networks and systems. IBM and Hitachi trail market leader EMC (NYSE:EMC) in the storage networking space.

"The companies have created a process to review joint projects designed to improve interoperability, reduce complexity and improve cost of ownership for storage systems customers. Additional information on this alliance will be announced when negotiations are finalized," IBM said.

Separately, IBM announced a new business unit to provide a wide range of design services for manufacturers of information systems, networking gear and consumer electronic products.

The company said the new unit will target OEM customers looking to reduce cost, time-to-market and complexity from designing systems internally. It also will help them take advantate of the the latest technologies and integrate hardware and software from existing IBM organizations.

"We estimate the opportunity for providing these enhanced services could grow to nearly $6 billion within the next five years," said Patrick Toole, general manager of the new services unit.

The unit would be set up within IBM's Technology Group and would offer services including design, test, certification, prototyping and manufacturing for chips, cards, boards and systems. IBM said OEM customers could use the services to facilitate and expedite everything from chip design, to component fabrication, to card and board assembly, to complete outsourcing of all aspects of design and manufacturing for subsystems and systems.

"IBM initially will concentrate its design services on the communications and consumer sectors of the IT industry. Its goal is to expand into other areas such as storage systems, server, automotive, medical, defense and aerospace," the company said.

This from June, 2002:

IBM Ties Nanotechology to Storage

June 11, 2002

IBM (NYSE:IBM) Tuesday revealed another experiment from one of its many laboratories this year. Using aspects of an increasingly popular trend in the high-tech sector called nanotechnology , the Armonk, N.Y. concern has demonstrated a data storage density of a trillion bits per square inch, which is some 20 times higher than the densest magnetic storage currently offered.

The achievement was made under the aegis of a research project called "Millipede." To get an idea of just how encompassing the storage achievement is, Big Blue estimated that Millipede is dense enough to house 25 million printed textbook pages on a surface the size of a postage stamp. This is significant because the technology may boost the storage capacity of handheld devices -- personal digital assistants (PDAs) and cell phones -- often criticized for their low storage capabilities.

How is it possible for Millipede to be so dense? Millipede uses thousands of nano-sharp tips to punch indentations representing individual bits into a thin plastic film. The result is akin to a nanotech version of the data processing 'punch card', but with key differences. First, Millipede is re-writeable, meaning it may be used over and over. Second, it may be able to store more than 3 billion bits of data in the space occupied by just one hole in a standard punch card.

And IBM is concentrating on making Millipede even more dense. The terabit demonstration employed a single "nano-tip "making indentations only 10 nanometers (millionth of a millimeter) in diameter. IBM's research team is now building a prototype that deploys more than 4,000 tips working simultaneously over a 7 mm-square field. This would enable a high-capacity data storage system to be packed into the smallest format used now for flash memory.

"The Millipede project could bring tremendous data capacity to mobile devices such as personal digital assistants, cellular phones, and multifunctional watches," says Peter Vettiger, Millipede project leader. "In addition, we are also exploring the use of this concept in a variety of other applications, such as large-area microscopic imaging, nanoscale lithography or atomic and molecular manipulation."

For those interested in the technical specifications, read on.

Millipede consists of a two-dimensional array of v-shaped silicon cantilevers that are 0.5 micrometers thick and 70 micrometers long. At the end of each cantilever is a tip less than 2 micrometers long. The current experimental setup contains a 3 mm by 3 mm array of 1,024 cantilevers, which are created by silicon surface micromachining. Time-multiplexed electronics, similar to that used in DRAM chips, address each tip individually for parallel operation. Electromagnetic actuation moves the storage medium beneath the array in both the x- and y-directions, enabling each tip to read and write within its own storage field of 100 micrometers on a side.

How does the device function? To ensure the tips writes or erases, etc., they are brought into contact with a thin polymer film coating a silicon substrate only a few nanometers thick. Bits are written by heating a resistor built into the cantilever to a temperature of typically 400 degrees Celsius. The hot tip softens the polymer and sinks into it, generating an indentation. For reading, the resistor is operated at lower temperature, such as 300 degrees Celsius, which does not soften the polymer. When the tip drops into an indentation, the resistor is cooled by the resulting better heat transport, and a measurable change in resistance occurs.

In IBM's ongoing interest in cutting power consumption in the industry, how much power is used depends on the data rate at which the device is operated. When operated at data rates of a few megabits per second, Millipede is expected to consume about 100 milliwatts, which is in the range of flash memory technology and considerably below magnetic or electronic recording, which are the more traditional means of storage.
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Monday, June 10, 2002 

2 Tinkerers Say They've Found a Cheap Way to Broadband. Etherlinx uses an inexpensive wireless standard to transmit Internet data. Their ambitious plan threatens to shake the near-monopoly that the cable and phone companies hold on high-speed access.
By John Markoff. [New York Times: Business]
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Sunday, June 9, 2002 

A discussion about Mac OS X, DSL, ISP's and Wireless on Mobile Tech News.

"My local DSL provider (Verizon) was unable to provide information on connecting using Mac OS X. They recommended that I call Apple"

A discussion about Mac OS X, DSL, and ISP's on The Mac Observer.

"if DirecTV DSL is available in your area, GO FOR IT! It is much better than the competition"


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Friday, June 7, 2002 
categories: Culture

Tell me how you drive and I'll tell you what kind of an idiot you are. Requires Flash

The only thing missing from the movie is the New England No See'em Game. That's where drivers when approaching a merge, a yield, or intersection scan the other drivers faces for acknowledgment (minimum, eye contact to maximum, head nod and hand gestures). If no acknowledgement is given the other driver is declared a goofy, space-shot asshole and is given the right-of way. The fun starts when multiple New England Goofy Space-Shot Asshole drivers converge in one spot. One excellent location for seeing what I'm writing about is the Nahant rotary at Lynn Shore Drive. It's right on the ocean and there are plenty of open space viewing areas with nearby restaurants. You could spend the whole day if you wanted. But the best time for finding multiple New England Goofy Space-Shot Asshole drivers is morning and afternoon commuter drive time.

Don't get me started on the suicidal New England pedestrians who saunter across four lanes of traffic. Or the drivers who direct traffic from behind the wheel. Boston must be where the term "Drive Defensively" originated.

If you liked this you'll like Masshole Drivers too.
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© Copyright 2003 Gary Secondino.
Last update: 2/6/03; 5:28:57 PM.