Taipei City’s Experiment: The Wireless City – 2007

Ron Brownlow in the Taipei Times writes about the challenges facing Taipei City’s WiFi company, Wifly. Taipei Times also covered this on January 19th.

Taipei City government may have rolled out plenty of WiFi stations, but the take-up rate has been less than enthusiastic…. So why aren’t people using Wifly?

The article attempts to answer the question:

  1. it’s quite expensive for Taipei,
  2. outdoor usage in summer and winter is not comfortable,
  3. there are multiple ways now to access the Internet via mobile phone service, in-home Internet and cable television accounts.
  4. WiMax isn’t available yet here.
  5. there’s no Ipod/MP3/PDA device that could stimulate such interest
  6. there are competitive local alternatives: Free-Up, Coffee shops offer free access to clients, etc.

However, despite the problems that face WiFly in Taiwan, I do see a wonderful future as wireless connections will replace a lot of fixed connections, it offers additional mobility advantages, and will allow easy connections for a variety of devices, not just pcs and mobile phones, provided stimulus comes from a must have device of some sort. Right now, it’s a hotchpotch of devices, with nothing really compelling – (Iphone?)

But for people who work on the ‘go’ such as John Chow, wireless internet should prove a tremendous boon because it will liberate you from much of the drudgery of traditional office work. I do think the challenge in that case will be simply to create and have access to your data on the go, instead of it all being stored in a hard disk at home or office.

Some form of online storage will be necessary, at least for important work files. I can’t imagine the form taking WebDAV as a standard, but I don’t see how Google Office will help either, since much of our data will need to be available in a variety of formats, not just the typical Office formats. Formats such as databases, picture formats, video formats, audio formats, presentations, emails, addresses, etc..

Wonder when, though?

BlogDesk Saves the Day!

Why I didn’t post anything on January 26th? I spent too long trying to sort out a carelessly deleted post. 

I recently lost a sponsored post in the files here by carelessly clicking a comment delete button. Boom! Post gone! I had no archived posts, nothing on a cache, nothing in a cached feed, nothing on Google (too new!).

So, in desperation, I checked BlogDesk and opened it’s saved folder. Tada! A pristine copy! Thanks, BlogDesk! I’m now recommending it for that fact alone.

So, in future, everyone please practice SAFE blogging!

This post is done by one happy BlogDesk Camper.

M$: Digitally Real Mugging: DRM rips off customers…

I was reading the list of 10 reasons not to buy Vista, I guess there was one for XP, too! I am most concerned about the problems caused by the DRM that Vista installs for videos. It’s odd that in the rebuttal this is one of the few points NOT specifically rebutted. It goes onto to state:

10. The draconian license — somehow, Microsoft has forgotten that it built its business from products that empowered its customers, not hampered them. … Aside from the backward thinking that is licensing, and not actually owning, your software new terms with Vista include being able to transfer the license only once; half the limit compared to XP for Home Basic and Premium on how many machines can connect to yours for sharing, printing and accessing the Internet; limits on the number of devices that can use Vista’s Media Center features; activation and validation governing your ability to upgrade hardware and use Windows itself; and outlawing the use of Home Basic and Premium with virtualisation software, and Ultimate only if DRM enabled content and applications aren’t used…

For more on this M$, have a look at my other blog!