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April 2008 Archives

GNC-2008-04-01 #361

Very Important Announcement in the show that you will not want to miss. A content full show as always lots of fun stuff in this one. Also thank you for supporting the sponsors.

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Link to Full Show Notes and Links to all Article Topics

Where the jokes are.

While April fools day is wrapping up here in Australia it is just getting into full swing over in the US. A few people have tried to get the jump by posting their AF jokes early (You know who you are Kevin Rose) which unfortunately according to the rules of AF day (any joke not delivered on April 1 is a backfire) that makes them the fools. Sorry, I don't make the rules.

Since Todd has decided that only 100% accurate stories and announcements can be posted on GNC today I will instead point you to where you can find the best web jokes of the day, and also remember some of the best of the past. There is also a good rundown on National Geographic on the origins of AF day.

Enjoy your day!

Test your password strength

An interesting litttle app that will give a measure of how secure your password is. One extra that others like this have not offered before is the ability to download an offline version so you don't have to enter your prospective passwords into a web site you do not control. It does not yet solve the problem that secure passwords are a pain to remember, but it can least give you an idea of the effect small tweaks to your existing password, like a random capital or susbstituting a letter for a number or symbol.

One trivial criticism I have with their algorithm is that some of their subtraction logic doesn't stand up. If I enter the password "h@3B6)sR?" it gets a score of 100%, but if I add extra characters "h@3B6)sR?xxxx" it drops back to 0% because of the repeated characters. Technically any character combination that is secure cannot be made less secure by adding more characters whatever they are. However this is a very small issue with a very good, very simple app.

Found via lifehacker.

Have you looked at your RSS feed Lately?

Why is it that podcasters will spend hours editing the content of their podcast but fail to spend 30 minutes one time to make sure that their
RSS feed is setup properly. In some cases I blame whole heartedly the service they are on for hijacking the internal data of their RSS
feed and not giving podcasters many choices in configuring them.

But in large part my team at RawVoice is seeing huge numbers of shows that have simply failed to put the time into making sure that their RSS feed is representing their show as well as their content is.

We see massive numbers of shows rss feeds fail validation each and everyday. We see shows that are simply missing important data, many shows have no description, no keywords, no contact information, no titles, no itunes specific tags etc. The list goes on and the issue is growing each day.

Every year I have posted a state of the RSS feeds as a report I do for the annual Peoples Choice Podcast Awards. This year I would like to see
a trend be reveresed and quite honestly it would help us and all of the other sites that are syndicating content.

This Saturday I will be doing a online Tech Podcast Round Table event that will discuss RSS in detail and show you what should be in your rss feed and how taking a few minutes to get it squarred away will pay off big dividends. I hope you will join me.

Todd Cochrane
CEO RawVoice

GNC-2008-04-04 #362

I got some of you hook line and sinker on the last show. Never fear the show goes on for sure and I have a great lineup for you today.

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How to survive disaster

If you haven't seen the Danger Room blog at Wired yet, it mainly focuses on what is new in National security issues. While it does post about some serious topics it also has a fantastic series on how to survive particular disaster situations. By far my favorite so far is the guide to how to survive a zombie apocalypse.

With heaps of useful tips on what tools and weapons will help you the most in different situations. There is also some warnings about problems you might encounter like trying to shoot straight in a stressful situation, and to keep a close eye on the fuel level in the flamethrower. Reading this will prepare you whether it is a demonic 'evil dead' style ("this is my boom stick") or a mysterious spreading plague style a'la Romero living dead style attack.

It is only a matter of time before the zombies rise so best to be prepared.

Do you want to chat in Facebook?

While it is a bit of a slow news week, the addition of chat functionality to facebook seems to be getting a lot of interest. Is this really a functionality that is particularly life changing? There is some good use for this if most of your friends are on FB and this has become your main tool of connection, but I have found that unless you live in San Fransisco that is unlikely to be the case. For most people they already have the friends they want to IM with added into their existing IM client. On top of this a lot of their friends are not on Facebook or use it infrequently.

So for those occasions where you just happen to be on FB at the same time as someone you want to communicate with, and you don't already know they are online from your IM client then ther may bo some limited benefit to this technology. Of course the goal of this is to increase the functionality of Facebook in such a way that it could eventually encroach on that part of your Internet experience. Why do you need a seperate IM client if all of you friends are on Facebook?

I still do not think there is a compelling feature of FB that will keep its market there and attract the laggards in. It is still to easy to go elsewhere.

Is your Wordpress Blog Hacked?

If you have not updated in a while you may want to have a look at your templates and upgrade your installs. If you read the linked article don’t skip the comments.

This is another of many reasons why this site has remained on MovableType.

On a couple of my wordpress installs on other domains I have been negligent in updating the installs and have had issues in the past. It’s to bad that wordpress users continue to suffer from security holes in older versions. [Deep Jive Interests]

GNC-2008-04-08 #363

Some great feedback from the last show, also I talk about a sneak preview of the blubrry podcast publisher link to video is below.

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Geek News Central Podcast Remains in Top 25

Podcast.com Announced today that once again Geek News Central Podcast remained a Top 15 Podcast for March 2008. Moving from Position 6 in February to Position 19 in March.

Once again I would like to thank all of you for being great fans of the show. Press Release

Campfire Team Crying over HuddleChat

One thing I hate is a company that wanks about someone's site design or tool design that looks similar too theirs. Today the folks over 37Signals are crying foul saying the Google HuddleChat application released as an example of what is possible with the Google App Engine is supposedly a dead ringer for the 37Signals Campfire application.

Well guess what folks how complicated is a chat client? Not sure about you, but I have been using Web Based chat clients for years and they all look about the same. It’s not that complicated. Their are only so many ways you can spin something.

The way I look at it is this, if people think stuff they have created is not going to get copied, then they might as well go home. Better bet for the 37Signals Campfire group is to go back to work and add unique features. [ReadWriteWeb]

Ohh and being the Google Application is free is surely to make the 37Signals folks rethink their service offerings. The web is changing and companies have to change with it.

How do those companies determine their values

Yahoo has publicly knocked back the offer by Microsoft. The tone of their rebuttal suggests that they may now be resigned to an eventual MS buyout and are now just looking for the best price, but I still wonder how some of these executives come up with their valuations of their companies worth. The current Microsoft offer rates Yahoo at a P/E ratio of around 60. To put this in context this means that the profit to Microsoft from the Yahoo part of the business would need to grow at a rate of over 50% for 10-15 years to justify the price. In this context it is hard to rationalise why the Yahoo board mught be claiming that the offer undervalues their company.

Even with their currently inflated share price, the Microsoft offer is still greater than their market capatilisation. Technically this means that they are not being underpriced even given the most optimistic valuation of their company. This is a typical thinking that many sellers seem to use when they have an emotional attachement. If you want to get the benefits of a capital market you need to accept the rules, one of which is that your company is worth what someone is willing to pay.

I should have upgraded to Vista Sooner!

Like many others I heard the horror stories of running Vista. One month into using Vista and all I can say is why did I wait so long? I am normally a early adopter but I made the mistake of sitting on the fence this time.

BIG Mistake.

I have been a 100% satisfied with the operating system, and while their are a few things that have changed or act differently, Vista is by far the fastest operating system I have ever run and the most flexible.

This is the first time a Microsoft Operating System simply works no second guessing applications scream its a joy to use. I demand a lot our of operating systems as I run a variety of applications, many at the same time, old and new and they all just work.

To all the nay sayers out their, this OS is absolutely better out of the box than my mac was. I am now converting all of my machines that are capable of running vista. Their is no looking back goodbye XP. [5 Reasons]

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Some days you just want to scream!!!

Have you ever had one of those days where you feel like you are dragging a 25 Ton truck up a hill? Or feel like you are beating your head against the wall.

This morning I kinda feel that way because I continue to be amazed by,,,, how should I word it without insulting someone, I guess I’ll say it this way, the narrow mindness and old school mentality today is a trait companies cannot afford. Nor should the media companies that they employ.

But boy oh boy I am here to tell you, that their are a lot of old guard, old school, old thinking, non progressive people in the todays vibrant online advertising world.

It’s one of those things that will right itself with time, but only progressive companies with forward looking media firms are going to have the upper edge on their competitors. More details on the [RawVoice Blog]

GNC-2008-04-11 #364

Lots to share and great listener feedback at the end. Almost time for a Wikipedia entry on Todd'isms. Just kidding but fun had by all on this show.. New Sponsor are Well I want to welcome Blockbuster to the show

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Blubrry Podcast Publisher Sneak Peak

Link to Full Show Notes

RawVoice Looking to Hire Advertising Sales Agent

Have you just been let go from DoubleClick, or do you have Internet Advertising Sales Experience? We have an immediate position available. Part and or Full Time sales agents needed.

We prefer that candidates be located in Los Angeles, San Francisco or New York City, candidate should be able well versed in the new media space. Compensation package directly tied to sales performance.

This is a great opportunity for someone looking for a part time position. Send your resume to ceo@rawvoice.com 

We Humbly Interupt for this Introduction...

I wanted to take a moment to introduce myself before I posted my first entry to Geek News Central’s blog. I’m a long-time listener and fan of the Geek News Central podcasts, and a sometime caller and commenter, and branching out into writing a few tech blog entries seemed to be a smart step to take.

My name is Susabelle Kelmer. I am employed full time in the IT department of a college in Missouri, where my area of expertise is adaptive technology. Adaptive technology covers all electronic devices, hardware, and software that may be used to assist a person with disabilities. This includes voice-activated software, screen reading software, talking calculators, specialized input devices like head mice or adapted keyboards, software that turns printed text into audio, and much much more. Beyond that work for my campus, I’m also a technology coordinator (along with three others) who help faculty and staff meet their technology requirements in the classroom. I also manage a 35-seat student-use computer lab.

My experience is varied, and I have great interest in technology that can make our lives easier or more efficient. I hope that some of what I post here will be helpful to others working in the wilds of the technology field. And of course, I look forward to your comments!

The Unsecured Secure Computer

Much is said in tech circles about how you must protect your equipment from viruses, spyware, adware, Trojans, you name it. I have recently completed a three-year experiment with an unprotected laptop, that I used every day, and on multiple networks. Here’s what I started with:

- A Gateway M275 convertible laptop running XP Tablet edition in Administrator mode as installed from the factory
- Windows Firewall turned ON, Windows defender not available on Tablet version of XP.
- Standard installations of MS Office 2003, OpenOffice, Thunderbird, Firefox, CoffeeCup FTP, Adobe Photoshop 7, Adobe Acrobat Pro 7, iTunes, Yahoo Instant Messenger, amongst others.
- No installation of any virus program, spyware checker program, ad removal program, etc.
- Machine booting straight into windows without a login required.
- Set Windows Update to notify me of updates but not to auto install. I always installed all updates myself with the exception of updates to I.E. as these tended to botch up other programs on the tablet (this is not true for most laptops and desktops).

I used the onboard Intel wireless network adapter to connect to my home network and to wireless hotspots all over St. Louis and when I traveled, which included Florida, Colorado, Arizona, Indiana, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia. I used the onboard NIC to connect to our public network on the college campus where I work. I used ATT Elite-Class DSL Broadband at home with a router, and ATT wireless when traveling when free wireless wasn’t available (mostly at McDonald’s, Barnes and Noble, and Starbucks).

From this configuration in April of 2005, I used this machine for everything: email, surfing, uploading my photos from my camera, writing web pages, posting in blogs, installation of my WordPress blog, FTPing to my websites, managing my finances, and doing my taxes with TaxCut. I did not use Internet Explorer, only Firefox, and I kept Adobe Acrobat, Flash, Java, and QuickTime updated as needed. I also updated programs as needed, like iTunes, Firefox, Thunderbird, and Open Office. I used this machine at work, I used it at home, I used it in the car, I used it on airplanes and in airports and restaurants. This machine was like a baby, I carried it everywhere. I watched for signs of infection or trouble, but never installed or ran a virus program, spyware check, or anything else to deep clean or assess the machine. I have also never run a defrag or any other program to tighten up the computer. I’ve just let it run and run the way it is.

Yesterday, I downloaded and installed AVG Free, Spybot Search and Destroy, and Adaware from Lavasoft. I had them get their most recent updates and then set them to work on my tablet.

To my huge surprise, Spybot found absolutely nothing to remove. AdAware found two tracking cookies, and nothing else. AVG found one inactive and non-functional Trojan and an email in my deleted bin with an infected attachment.

Three years of running this machine with no protection, and it is not infected. I’m stunned and amazed, considering how much we are told to lock machines down tight. In my experience, it isn’t the machine that is the problem. It is the user of the machine. I’m an experienced techie and watch myself and where I’m surfing and what I’m downloading and what attachments I choose to open. For others, the protections may be absolutely necessary. I know it is for the other machines on my home network that are used by people other than me. My husband’s machine alerts me to possible infections almost every day, and each of my teenagers’ machines alert me several times a week. I keep them all up to date and set a lot of things to auto-update to keep out the bugs.

But on my own machine, I use nothing at all, and do not fear getting infected. I’m fully aware that I was leaving large holes in my system for infection, including running under the administrator account instead of a more locked down user account, not having virus or spyware checking programs installed, and never checking the machine for infection. The only thing I ever did consistently was to let Windows Update download patches, although I refused every patch that was a cumulative update to I.E. because I found it caused issues with other programming on the tablet. I’ve since learned that this is a result of the tablet version of XP and doesn’t affect desktop machines. And yet for three years this machine has run consistently well and without being infected. My only explanation is that it is the care of the user that makes the difference in a machine’s chance of getting infected.

One might ask why I tried such an experiment. It was partially because I didn’t want virus programs and spyware checkers to slow down the performance of my machine, which was not as high end as I wanted it to be. I don’t want a virus program checking all incoming mail and slowing down the program while it does so. The other reason is because I truly didn’t feel it was necessary to lock the machine down, that if I took care with how I was running the machine, visited websites that I trusted using a browser that I trusted, and knowing the difference between a nasty attachment and an okay attachment in an email, that I would be fine.

And for three years, I have been. Go figure!

Non-exploding batteries

Gizmodo is reporting on a new battery under development that while based on Lithium technology does not have the same (admittedly minor) risk of exploding that the current batteries have. At the moment it is a ways off from hitting the street, about 3 years, and doesn't hold the same level of charge as current batteries do.

The alternative option that is being worked on is hydrogen fuel cells which may be starting to be available around the same time this battery hits the streets. While hydrogen hasn't always had a non-explosive reputation fuel cells don't really work by burning, and hydrogen is not as volatile as lithium when it combusts. I remember from science class at school igniting bubbles of hydrogen to demonstrate its combustion. This was then compared with a video of lithium being dropped into water. Slightly different scale of reaction there.

While it looks like the basis of a good idea I don't think people are concerned enough about their laptop burning to sacrifice battery life, and it might be a bit too far off to make a difference.

Japanese tech ads

Other countries culture and humour can be hard to understand. Any of you that have been to Japan or seen any Japanese TV will know that that it can deliver equal measures of genius, bizarre and funny. Network World has put together 10 Japanese ads mostly advertising tech items that each have their own set of weird or funny.

The comments section of the article provides some guidance as to the reasoning behind some of the ads, like #6 which makes more sense when you know Takashi is a boys name, and what a frog and chicken have to do with toilet seats in #8. While my favorites were the toilet seat and Arnie's energy drink ad, I wonder how many more copies of Windows would be sold if they used their Japanese ads everywhere. It would probably be good for Apple.

On a side note the Japanese also have the best game shows bar none!

Human tetris

Treadmill hurdles
And brilliant obstacle course games

GNC-2008-04-15 #365 Tech News and Science

Kind of a weird show tonight.Lots of varied content and of course a healthy dose of tech news and information. Thanks for your support of our new Sponsor Block Buster.

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The End of Typing as We Know It?

Well, not exactly. In fact, not even close. Much discussion circles around audio-to-text conversion, especially in the disability services community. Bill Gates even believes (and has believed for more than 10 years) that we are on the very cusp of making audio into text a reality for everyone. That could mean no more typing!

Unfortunately, the technology really isn’t there yet, despite the best efforts of software developers over the last fifteen years.

The best tool for turning audio into text right now is Dragon Naturally Speaking version 9. This software, once installed on a computer, allows the user to talk into a standard free-standing or headset-style microphone connected to the computer and watch words appear on the screen in a word processor. As of version 9, Dragon works better out of the box than any previous version. That being said, it is not fool-proof, and it still requires that the user “train” it to understand how they pronounce words. This takes several hours, in general, and the program continues to “learn” as you use it over time. Additionally, it must be used in a quiet environment with limited background noise to achieve the best results.

Another product that is readily available is Via Voice, originally from IBM. This comes free on Windows XP Professional and Vista operating systems. In this case, you do get what you pay for, and Via Voice is a very poor substitute for the $99 Dragon system.

Despite what companies like Sony would like you to believe, there is no way you can take a recorded tape/digital recording of a lecture, presentation, or meeting discussion and turn it into text format with just a software program. Even Dragon, as good as it is, is unable to complete this Herculean feat. Audio recordings are full of “noise,” whether it be the person sitting near the recorder shuffling papers, audience members coughing, the air conditioner running in the corner, etc. Even a relatively careful recording has enough noise in it to confuse the text converter.

We are still a long way from the end of typing on a keyboard.

ADM Releasing Standards Documents for Public Comment

Angelo Mandato my CIO at RawVoice will be one of many ADM members presenting today at AdTech in San Francisco. The panel Angelo is slated to participate in will be the culmination of several months of work on the podcast / new media measurement standards document.

Over the past couple of months Angelo has lead the Measurement committee at the Association for Downloadable Media. The committee as a whole has come up with a measurements standards document that is being announced and revealed to ADM members and the general public today.

In talking with Angelo today we both understand that this is a first step in laying lasting groundwork that will help media buyers understand that their are standards they should be looking for when working with podcast and new media companies.

RawVoice has been in the new media measurement space Since 2005 and developed media measurement standards that our media buyers trust. A majority of the standards that we and other companies in the space follow made it into this first measurement document.

A public commenting period will begin for all of the ADM documents released today. My team is looking forward to reviewing all of the other committee reports and commenting on them as well, as most of the documents being released today are being seen by many ADM members for the first time as well.

ADM Releases Guidelines and Standards for Comment

The Association for Downloadable Media has released their Advertisement Unit Standards and Download Measurement Guidelines to the ADM membership and the new media community at Large.

The ADM has setup discussion pages where comments can be made on the guidelines, during a public commenting period. The full announcement can be looked at on the ADM Website.

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Podtrac releases Podcast Ad Effectiveness Study

Being Geek News Central was one of the shows mentioned in the Podcast Advertising study done by Podtrac. I thought it would be a good idea to point Podtrac’s press release out.

This study confirms many of the things we have been seeing at RawVoice and once again validates many of the things I have been telling media buyers for the past three years.

The linked report should give media buyers some fire power to take back to the companies they work with, and hopefully bring them into the podcast advertising space.

Here are a few key points from the press release:

“The study showed embedded advertising in online shows and podcasts to be highly effective for increasing brand awareness, usage intent and positively impacting brand perceptions across four diverse product categories: television programming, automobiles, financial service, and digital imaging. Results included:

Average unaided ad recall of 68%

Average aided ad recall of 89%

73% average increase in likelihood to use/buy vs control group”

You can see Podtrac’s full report here!

 

Internet site passwords

An AP report on a survey conducted by Accenture indicate that the overwhelming majority of Internet users use a single username/password combination for the majority, if not all, of the websites they visit. The problem with this is obvious, if your password gets found out for one website by a bot or by a dodgy site administrator then someone has access to every site you are registered for.

Of course they have to know which sites you are registered for, but they can make a few educated guesses like trying the major bank sites or the more popular internet commerce sites like ebay, paypal, etc. Now I freely admit that I used to do this myself as remembering different passwords for each site is a pain in the neck. The only concession I made to the insecurity of this message was that I had a few different passwords that I would use in different situations, the password I used on my banking site was not the same one that I would use on a forum account.

I did try using a password vault application at one stage, the obvious limitation to this though was that if I wasn't on a system that had the application then I couldn't access my passwords. Some of the smart phones I have seen have these sort of applications on them now. The Blackberry I use has one but I have not tried it in anger yet.

Some time ago I found a great tip on creating varied and still easy to remember passwords from Steve Gibson of Gibson Reaserch. Start with one or more standard passwords, I personally have more than one and all of them are secure passwords to start with. That is they are not regular words or names and contain capitals, numbers and special characters. Each of these base phrases is assigned to a specific segment of sites you might visit. This could be split by use or even just alphabetically A-E, F-M, etc. Whatever the decision criteria you use, once you know which base you will be using you then use an algorithm to change that base phrase depending on some category of the site or site name.

This algorithm can be complex but will be better if it is one you can quickly do in your head but is not too obvious. For example, if the site name has more than 5 vowels increase all the numbers in the base phrase by 1. Or another example, the 3rd, 4th and 8th character in the address are added to specific positions of the base phrase. Both of these are very simple examples, but even at this level of simplicity someone would need to see multiple different passwords to be able to decode the algorithm, and as long as the base phrase is a fairly secure one it will be very hard to determine which characters are base phrase and which are algorithm with ease.

Junkmail for Kids?

Today in the mail my 14 year old daughter received a mailing from National American Miss inviting her to "audition" for their pageant. My daughter is pretty, and I suppose getting a piece of mail like this is flattering.

Except. I wonder how they got her name and address in the first place. My children do not attend traditional school, as we are homeschoolers and have been for five years. So a school could not have sold their mailing address to anyone. My daughter doesn't have bills or bank accounts in her name, is not old enough to register to vote or get a driving permit or anything else that might have her name and address. The only thing I can trace it back to is that she does have a state-issued ID for traveling, and she has her own library card. Which one of these two entities is likely selling information to marketers? I just don't see either one doing that, but maybe I'm misguided.

It also occurs to me that my 18 year old son, now a college student, has been receiving recruiting materials from the armed forces for about three years now. He was also homeschooled for the last five years, so I'm having trouble figuring out where that mail is coming from. He has a state-issued ID, a library card, and a savings account at a local bank. He is also employed. So I have several other ideas about how he got on someone's mailing list.

Getting junk mail at this age does concern me. Junk snail mail for kids is really pretty inappropriate, in my book. The marketing never stops, virtually from birth on. It is on television, radio, peer pressure from their friends, magazines, books, you name it. Even our kids aren't safe from the pervasive attitude of buy buy buy. It's a strange thing.

It makes me wonder when my six year old will see her first piece of junk mail.

GNC-2008-04-18 #366 Biggest Giveaway Ever Soon!

I cant say very much yet but we are going to be having a huge giveaway soon. I am not kidding it will me multi-thousand dollar prize. Details as they unfold! Thanks for supporting the sponsors!

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