What is Internet anyway?

Via The Atlantic: What a Leaked ‘Today Show’ Clip Taught Us About Mankind’s Progress

Last week, a fascinating video was leaked from The Today Show archives circa 1994. It featured off-air footage of Katie Couric and Bryant Gumbel struggling to comprehend what the “Internet” was and how it worked.

“What is Internet anyway?” Gumbel pondered. “You don’t need a phone line to operate Internet?” asked a puzzled Couric. The video was taken down quickly but not before others duplicated it and distributed it widely.

http://videos.mediaite.com/embed/player/?layout=&playlist_cid=&media_type=video&content=23843F11YMX85FLN&read_more=1&widget_type_cid=svp

Honestly Dot Com

Kelly Abbott pointed out a review of me at Honestly.com.

Honestly.com Review

In case you’re new to Honestly.com:

"Honestly.com is an online resource for building, managing, and researching professional reputation, using community-contributed, professional reviews."

Kelly had to show me the review because I don’t have access to this service. Early on—when it was still called unvarnished.com—I provided reviews of people I know in industry along with tongue-in-cheek quips like: "he smells like unicorn farts…at least, what I imagine they would smell like, which is to say delicious".  All my reviews were overwhelmingly positive. Alas, the founder and CEO of Honestly.com, Peter Kazanjy, banned me as a result.

This was our email correspondence:

On Aug 27, 2010, at 11:33 PM, Peter Kazanjy <pete@getunvarnished.com> wrote:

Hey Aaron,

Saw your experiments on the site ; )  Testing the countermeasures, eh?

So, I banned your account, and marked all your reviews as abusive (they’re gone off the site), but am happy to unban if you’re cool with adhering to Community Guidelines.  I assume that you were doing this from a standpoint of critical inquiry rather than actual abuse. 

Let me know how you’d prefer to proceed!

Best wishes,

Pete


Peter Kazanjy

My responses:

From: Aaron Fulkerson Date: Sat, Aug 28, 2010 at 6:48 AM
Subject: Re: Hi from Unvarnished
To: Peter Kazanjy

 

Abuse? How do you figure? Those were my actual opinions.

 

Then I realized he deleted my posts and banned me. Incredulously:

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Aaron Fulkerson
Date: Sat, Aug 28, 2010 at 6:52 AM
Subject: Re: Hi from Unvarnished
To: Peter Kazanjy

I’m shocked you deleted my reviews and banned me. What was abusive about my reviews? How do you justify this?

Again, all my reviews were 100% positive. Me being banned for expressing myself honestly I think this is an interesting service. Yelp for people? I think it’s a great idea. Also, integrating with Facebook is a smart move. I will however advise that you refrain from injecting your reviews with personality lest you be banned by Pete Kazanjy. Autocrat that he is. LOL

By the way, my overall rating is 4/5 with only one negative rating (shown above), which I presume is from the Founder and CEO of Honestly.com, Pete Kazanjy. Pete, I think you’ve got a fine service there, but you should be less autocratic.

Today



, originally uploaded by Roebot.

A couple lessons:
* Beware People who incessantly obsess about not “being screwed”. There’s a reason why they’re concerned about this and it’s likely they’re projecting their own thoughts.
* Management is a lot like parenting. Consistency, structure, and love are critical; so are boundaries.

My visit to the White House



Aaron Fulkerson, originally uploaded by Roebot.

I was recently honored with an invitation to participate in a summit on education at the White House.

Aaron Fulkerson and Bill Green

Aaron Fulkerson and Joe Biden

I wrote about it at the MindTouch blog here: http://www.mindtouch.com/blog/2010/10/05/mr-fulkerson-goes-to-washington/ And I’ll have a summit wrap up out later this week.

Here’s my photo set from the visit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/roebot/sets/72157624999431897/with/5063560455/

2,341 Feet Underground



Soudan_Mine (13), originally uploaded by Roebot.

I recently mentioned to someone I’ve been about as far underground as the Chilean miners that were recently rescued. Twice I’ve been about half way down Soudan Mine outside Tower Minnesota. The experience is genuinely otherworldly. It was here I experienced absolute darkness. Soudan, once the deepest deep shaft mines in the world (iron mine) is now a state park and is also a physics lab for many interesting physics experiments that benefit from significant shielding from the sun’s rays; such as anti-matter experiments.

More information about this mine turned state park can be found here: http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/state_parks/soudan_underground_mine/index.html

Another podcast and my first RWW article

I was recently honored to speak with Alan Shimmel of NetworkWorld, which was recorded as a brief podcast. Alan writes here:

MindTouch is one open source company that has established itself as a leader in its market (enterprise collaboration), open source or not. They are also a great example of how to do open core right. Their MindTouch Core, free and open source edition has literally millions of people using it daily. Their commercially licensed versions likewise have millions of additional users as well. Now with their Technical Communications Suite (TCS), MindTouch wants to make it "mindless" to create web based technical documentation and technical communities.

The TCS is a great example of a company listening to its customers in how they are using and what they want to do with their product. MindTouch customers were using MindTouch to create online technical documentation and support communities. 

I encourage you to listen to the short podcast. We discuss technical communication, documentation, content strategy, open source and even briefly about software patents. Alan is a great guy to speak with and it’s been great seeing him quickly becoming one of the most relevant people covering open source.

http://ashimmy.podomatic.com/swf/joeplayer_v10.swf

Also, I had my first article published in ReadWriteWeb (RWW). I’m proud to be published in Forbes, Fortune and many other fine publications, but RWW is something I’m especially pleased by because it is has long been my favorite technology publication. My article is titled “What Do Online Documentation and Museums Have in Common?” I hope you’ll read it, tweet it, Facebook it, and comment on it.

Freedom, Glorious Freedom

I flew in from San Jose this evening to San Diego. Home. The moon was a massive orange crescent over the Pacific Ocean. It was one of those uncanny and other-worldly celestial bodies that makes you think there is a higher power. A supernatural force signaling you. For me this deity—of natural sorts—was commanding me to take a dip in the frigid Pacific Ocean. I headed this call. I had the freedom to do so. God bless freedom. Freedom is a duty that few realize and we all pursue, but we all contain.

Skydiving

I jumped out of a plane at 13,000 feet last Sunday. It was amazing. Tara and the kids watched from the ground as I landed. We swooped in and landed 10 feet in front of them. They were all really excited to see me.

Sentient Machines

A senior astronomer has said that the hunt for alien life should take into account alien “sentient machines”.

via BBC News – Alien hunters ‘should look for artificial intelligence’.

Coincidentally, just last week at work I quoted Terry Bisson’s 1990 short story: “They’re Made Out Of Meat“.

It’s very short and starts like this:

“They’re made out of meat.”

“Meat?”

“Meat. They’re made out of meat.”

“Meat?”

“There’s no doubt about it. We picked up several from different parts of the planet, took them aboard our recon vessels, and probed them all the way through. They’re completely meat.”

“That’s impossible. What about the radio signals? The messages to the stars?”

“They use the radio waves to talk, but the signals don’t come from them. The signals come from machines.”

“So who made the machines? That’s who we want to contact.”

Read the whole thing, it’s great.

“Thinking meat! You’re asking me to believe in thinking meat!”