Archive for the ‘Katrina’ Category

Hits and Misses for 2005

Sunday, January 1st, 2006

Misses

VOiP – Vonage lost a big lead by spending for advertising instead of service improvement and endorsing as a company to a very unethical set of core values. See vonageproblem.htm.

The Government – Both Executive and Administrative branches rolled over and died. They, like Vonage, were driven by unethical values and money. Congress votes 223 million to build a bridge to nowhere in Alaska. (Read the full article. Congress didn’t vote to build the bridge, but rather voted to give them the money to do it. The Washington Post title is misleading. That doesn’t save anyone’s political neck.) At the same time, Congress can’t build extra lanes for congested Interstates in Oregon. Both of my senators and my representative voted for the bridge to nowhere. Maybe they should move to Alaska. And Bush has a long, long, long list of misses. The Republican party has died.

The Search Engines – CNN advertising, which is driven from Yahoo, leads their advertising with ads for a company that has poor ethics. So they make lots of money for the advertisement; but who wants to advertise with Yahoo when you can’t trust their advertisements? We are pulling our own ads with them.

e-Commerce – currently protects the seller but not the consumer.

Spam - Our spam load continues to increase, even with filters on the host and our own system. The latest is some joker with a site selling watches with a whole colledtion of different domain names making it difficult to block him. The FTC, of course isn’t doing anything with the blokes. In Germany they find them $65,000 a spam. Who will you vote for next fall?

My Motorola cell phone went dead three times this year. I’m on my third phone. The last time it failed all I had to do was reboot (does Microsoft own Motorola?), but the cell phone didn’t tell me that. After it didn’t ring for a few days, a support store showed me how to reboot and find the 12 lost messages that had been left.

Broadband is overpriced. New Orleans is leading the way with free WiFi, but other cities are afraid of the broadband companies and not offering any free WiFI – including my own city of Portland, Oregon.

HDTV - Most of the HDTVs sold now are not really high resolution. The display is tricked down to the lower resolution, more like a DVD quality. It still looks great, but you aren’t getting all the pixels.

Hits

VOiP – If you avoid Vonage, you can save about 30% on your telephone by going to VOiP. There are almost no surcharges and long distance is often free.

With the Government non-functioning, thanks to someone that imported Venezuela gas and was selling it in New Orleans at about 33% of the current retail price. What does this tell you about the oil companies and President Bush? And thanks to many, many people, organizations, and corporations that did take responsibility in helping the people on the Gulf Coast during the Katrina disaster.

Search Engines - In the search engine war between Google, Yahoo, and MSN – the consumer will win. Most people trust the organic (free) listings. Why pay for advertising and compete with unethical companies?

e-Commerce passed the 30 billion mark in sales over the Christmas holidays. That’s a 30% increase from last year.

Stopping SPAM - We load the spamming domains and IPs to an online and uncopyrighted database on one of our web sites at http://www.creatingnewworlds.org/stopspam.cfm. We invite hackers to lanuch viruses, trojans, and DoS at the IPs and domains, destroying them. This has gotten to be a very popular page (PageRank=4) and gets lots of hits. One guy threated to sue, but we sent copies of his email (which violated the CAN-SPAM) to his state attorney general. We haven’t heard from him any more.

My blogs have doubled the traffic on my web sites that last month. There are over 19 million blogs out there now.

HDTV - Some of the newer HDTV sets and a few of the leading HDTV manufacturers (Toshiba is one) use a new and special chip in their televisions that gets the promised HDTV resolution. Be wise if you are purchasing HDTV. Find out who is using the chip and then make your purchase as a wise buyer.

Katrina: Bringing Survivors Together

Thursday, September 15th, 2005

The Internet is serving a very important role in the hurrican recovery. One of these is connecting survivors together that are scattered all over the nation. Go into a database and search for family members - or add your own name and where you are.

The problem, however, is that serveral people have set up the databases and you end up having to enter your name and contact address to several or, if you are searching, searching several.

Enter a new web site that can search all the leading survivor databases for you. It exists at:
http://katrinalist.net/

This brings up legal issues when taken beyond Katrina. There are already web sites that search eBay and other databases for the lowest price on a specific item. These same people have started lawsuits, saying it is illegal for other sites to use their information that way.

In most cases, the courts have ruled that people have a right to protect their information. Is this fair, however? What if people networking these Katrina databases had to secure rights to each database they are using? In some cases you wouldn’t be able to locate the database webmaster. Internet databases should be open by default unless secured otherwise.

For our spammer blacklist at
http://www.creatingnewworlds.org/stopspam.cfm
, we consider it an open database and any hacker canuse it to kill IPs. These are illegal IPs.