Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Monday, March 22, 2010

Smallish Blog Post VI - Go ye therefore, and Teach all Nations

It used to be that the Gospel did not reach an area until the LDS Church sent missionaries there. Now anyone with a telephone, cell phone, or internet connection can access Christ's teachings. These technologies have become so cheap they are even connecting the poorer areas of the world. Africa alone has nearly 300 million cell phone subscribers. The time when the Apostles can truly "teach all nations" (Matt. 28:19) may come sooner than anyone expects.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Smallish Blog Post V - Long Live the Borg Queen

Web 2.0 allows people from all over the world to work together on a massive scale. This concept, which I will call Massively Multi-User Online Collaboration (MMOC), is also reflected in the software Web 2.0 is built on. Many of these sites were developed with PHP and then hosted on the Apache Web Server. Both PHP and Apache were built using the GNU Compiler Collection. All three of these tools are open source projects that utilize MMOC. It seems that Web 2.0 is merely a facet of the many MMOCs that make up the software industry.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Book Inspired Post II - Flattening MUD

Globalization has a huge potential for promoting peace. Historically the benefit countries could derive from war was enormous. Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan built massive empires through war. However the advent of nuclear weapons has made war a very expensive proposition[1]. Since the end of the Cold War globalization has further increased the expense of waging war.

Growing superpowers like China and India are so interconnected[2] with the rest of the world that a war would have devastating consequences on their economies. This economic reliance on other countries could make war an intractable prospect in the coming century.


Notes

[1] Mutually assured destruction
[2] Chapter 16 (15 in my version) of The world is Flat (ISBN: 0-374-29279-5) by Thomas L. Friedman discusses a similar thesis.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Smallish Post IV - Embracing Change

I think that the movie and music industries, as represented by the MPAA and RIAA, have long suffered from short sighted executives. These executives are very similar to the ones at Xerox who refused to enter the personal computer market even though they had the means to dominate it. Instead of embracing technology the MPAA and RIAA have actively sought to suppress it. They have tried to kill everything from VCRs to MP3 players. This shortsighted mindset is changing however as companies like Apply and Hulu prove that embracing technology can be profitable. I think that music and video have nowhere to go but up.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Current Event IV - Being Targeted by Hackers

The recent cyber attacks against Google.cn[1] emphasize how important constant vigilance is when using the Internet. Hackers like the ones that attacked Google spend a lot of time and money targeting a specific group of people, a group that could include you. And in case you are thinking that "this won't happen to me" consider the attempts that have recently been made to distribute malware targeted at World of Warcraft users[2]. It is extremely important to know about the security risks incurred when using Internet applications.

Notes



  1. Google Attack Linked To Asian Hackers

  2. Authenticator Keylogger Source: Fake WoWMatrix Website