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11 May 22:11

Recommended on Medium: Home, James — 10 Quick Thoughts About the Comey Firing

We Thought the Blown Kiss Would Be the Weirdest Exchange Between Trump and Comey

It a move that shocked people on both sides of the aisle, in the Bureau, and (by all accounts) within his own White House, President Trump has fired FBI Director James Comey. Here are ten quick thoughts about a story has that managed to do what seemed impossible during the Trump era: It surprised the hell out of us.

  1. Let’s start with this basic fact: Trump’s Comey firing is exactly what you think it is.
  2. While there’s no doubt there was wrongdoing around him, I’ve never been entirely sure that Trump himself committed a crime … until now. Trump has backed Americans into a corner. Comey was fired because of his handling of the email case? It’s so laughable that even the world’s leading purveyors of lies and falsehoods can’t expect you to believe such hogwash. There’s only one way to read this: Comey was fired because of the Russian investigation. Trump canned the guy who was investigating him. Even if Trump never colluded with Russia, he definitely did this.
  3. When my kids ask me to explain irony, I’ll tell them the story of the guy who finally quit smoking, only to be run over by a cigarette truck a few weeks later. When they ask me to explain obstruction of justice, I’ll tell them about Trump firing Comey.
  4. Let’s ease up on the Nixon comparisons. While it’s true that the obstructionism is Nixonion, the underlying crime is a thousand times worse. And as The New Yorker’s Jeffrey Frank reminds us: “Nixon, for all his misdeeds, understood the Presidency, and the demands of his job. He was fascinated by history, and the geopolitics of his world, and understood both. In foreign policy, if he didn’t always act wisely, he acted consistently; it’s inconceivable that he would have found himself in the incoherent foreign-policy muddle in which Trump has put himself.”
  5. Trump’s words are always what come back to haunt him. And this situation will be no exception. In what historians will come to refer to as The Second Paragraph, Trump wrote: “While I greatly appreciate you informing me, on three separate occasions, that I am not under investigation, I nevertheless concur with the judgment of the Department of Justice that you are not able to effectively lead the Bureau.” First, this is the clearest tell in the history of tells. An eight year-old could surmise from this paragraph that the firing was about the Russia investigation and that the president is trying to cover something up. (I know, because I asked mine). Second, even in his letter, Trump passes the buck to the Justice Department, with whom he merely concurs. Reality Show Trump at least had the guts to fire people to their face. President Trump had a buck-passing letter delivered by his bodyguard to an office 3,000 miles away from where its intended recipient was at the time. Friggin Gary Busey was shown more respect than that.
  6. There have now been several reports that Trump thought the firing would be seen as a win-win by members of both parties and that he was “taken aback” when Chuck Shumer told him the firing was a big mistake. You don’t need a PhD in psychology or a stack of Rorschach cards to make a least one determination: If he really believed this firing would be no big deal, he’s roger-stone-cold nuts.
  7. Nixon updated: “I’m not a crook (compared to Donald Trump).”
  8. Jeff Sessions recused himself from the Russian investigation and then fired the guy leading that investigation. Seriously, you could spend your entire life looking, and you’d never find an honest human who holds Jeff Sessions in higher regard than James Comey.
  9. Remember how incredibly smart, fair, and impressive Sally Yates was during her Senate testimony? Those are the kinds of people Trump likes to fire.
  10. Three days into his tenure, President Trump blew James Comey a kiss and said, “He’s become more famous than me.” Just wait…

Bonus: In one move, Trump went from half the country being after him to almost the whole country being after him. This is your great negotiator.

Dave Pell Writes NextDraft. Get it Here →

11 May 22:11

Recommended on Medium: ​​Cully: We’re building a bot!

​​Frontier Foundry partners with 20 Year Media, building messaging + machine learning engines

​​We’re excited to be announcing that we’re starting work on our first messaging + machine learning product at Frontier Foundry.

We’re partnering with ​​20 Year Media to build a team to tackle a consumer facing messaging bot.

​​Cully will live on multiple messaging platforms and recommend great events

We think of Cully as a cross between a knowledgeable concierge and your cool friend that has the scoop on new things to try out.
Getting recommendations on where to meet friends later

We’ll start by indexing Vancouver for evening events. All of us only have so many evening “slots” during the week or weekend to watch a movie, go to a community meetup, or see a dance performance. Some will be with coworkers, others with family, and of course with your friends. Cully will be exploring the concepts of the best events for you, but also when is best to go see them. That might mean pinging you about something tonight, or making sure you’ve got a good mix of work/family/fun booked in the next couple of weeks.

Make sure to fit in some friend hang out time

Conversational front ends

One of the big challenges with bots is their interface – their “front end” – is very basic and lacks context. Users become frustrated when they ask a question and the bot doesn’t understand, or answers one question and doesn’t understand what seems to be a logical next question.

Human: “What’s the weather in Boston?”
Bot: “It’s raining”.
Human: “Should I bring my umbrella?”
Bot: “I don’t understand what you mean.”

Natural Language Processing (NLP) and great conversational dialogue design are needed. We aren’t claiming we’re going to solve this, but we have some ideas about an opportunity for better design tools, much like front end frameworks led to richer web applications.

Machine learning’s role in bot experiences

​​Many marketers have flooded into bots thinking about it as another push / broadcast channel. But instead we need to be thinking about these interfaces as personal agents that learn relevance, timing, and an individual’s taste over time. This means learning more about the user, remembering their past (and current!) context, all leading to more relevant recommendations.

​​This is where some of the machine learning comes in. We could be saying artificial intelligence (AI) but we very much agree with Katherine Bailey on this point:

​​What is Artificial Intelligence? It’s a meme; an impressively resilient and fecund meme. No sooner does it land in the brain of one unsuspecting human than countless new #ArtificialIntelligence tokens are spawned and sent out into the world. – Hashtag Artificial Intelligence

So we’ll stay away from that hashtag meme from now, and just say that we’ll be working on better learning, feedback loops, and interactions to recommend great events for you, at the right time and place.

Come on, let’s go have some fun!

We’re hiring for three positions for the Cully team now: lead product designer, senior tech lead, and an intermediate developer. You’ll be working with the Frontier Foundry team out of our space in downtown Vancouver, building out messaging, machine learning, and conversational front ends.

An early prototype of Cully with a basic web interface is live now and filled with Vancouver events. Check it out at Cully.io, feed us some event recommendations!


​​Cully: We’re building a bot! was originally published in Frontier Foundry on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

11 May 22:11

Twitter Favorites: [cqwww] While there is no director of the FBI, let's trade/copy some VHS movies/tapes while we have the chance.

Kris Constable @cqwww
While there is no director of the FBI, let's trade/copy some VHS movies/tapes while we have the chance.
11 May 22:10

Twitter Favorites: [frontierfoundry] @sillygwailo well lookee here, we have our first Toronto alpha tester :) Soon! /bm

Frontier Foundry @frontierfoundry
@sillygwailo well lookee here, we have our first Toronto alpha tester :) Soon! /bm
11 May 22:10

The Roadmap

by Richard Millington

During a brief spell in PR, I would collect the forward features lists. These highlight what topics media publications would be working on in the coming year (here’s an example). If a featured covered a client’s turf, I’d write in with relevant suggestions.

We never knew why some topics were chosen and others ignored. The readers had no input into what topics should or shouldn’t be featured. There wasn’t (and still isn’t) an open discussion around editorial choices.

If you work for an organization which produces considerable content, share the calendar with your audience. Ask them what topics they want to see and what should be prioritized above other topics. Better still, ask them for their suggestions and contributions. Ask the audience to share their stories.

This doesn’t just save huge research time, it leads to better research too.

Now go one further, share the entire community roadmap. This isn’t just about content. What features can members expect in the future? What can they look forward to and volunteer to help out with?

11 May 22:09

Ed Catmull, How Pixar Fosters Collective Creativity

11 May 22:09

Taibbi: Free Lunch for Everyone

11 May 20:24

Labour Needs to Do More for People in Crap, Unstable Jobs

11 May 20:21

Trump fires at FBI director James Comey, shoots himself

by Josh Bernoff

Donald Trump fired FBI Director James Comey yesterday, ostensibly for incompetence. With the FBI investigating the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia, the justification is suspect. A ROAM analysis reveals how Trump’s letter firing Comey does the opposite of what Trump intended. Imagine you’re Trump. (Hard to do, I know.) You’re about to fire the director of the agency … Continued

The post Trump fires at FBI director James Comey, shoots himself appeared first on without bullshit.

11 May 20:21

Census director resigns

by Nathan Yau

The U.S. Census director John H. Thompson resigned and will leave June 30. Seems not good. And a horrible time for government data in general.

The news, which surprised census experts, follows an April congressional budget allocation for the census that critics say is woefully inadequate. And it comes less than a week after a prickly hearing at which Thompson told lawmakers that cost estimates for a new electronic data collection system had ballooned by nearly 50 percent.

Isn’t this supposed to be the age of big data or something? I thought data was the new oil. Measure things to improve them. Etc. Census data — not just the decennial stuff — is core in so much policy-making to make sure people are properly represented. The direction government data seems to be headed confuses and frustrates to no end, and to think that just a few years ago I’d think happy thoughts with the prospect of where it was going.

Tags: Census Bureau

11 May 20:20

Self-driving car experiment shows significantly reduced traffic

by Bradly Shankar
Waymo self driving car

The introduction of self-driving cars may lead to significantly reduced traffic flow, according to an experiment conducted by the University of Illinois.

In their testing, faculty researchers programmed a vehicle to autonomously continue to drive in a loop on a track in Tucson, Arizona. Twenty human-operated vehicles were later added to the test area.

By the end of their tests, the team found that fuel consumption and overall traffic went down by 40 percent.

“Our experiments show that with as few as five percent of vehicles being automated and carefully controlled, we can eliminate stop-and-go waves caused by human driving behaviour,” said Daniel Work, a lead researcher in the study, told Phys.org.

The report says that future experiments would need to test human and artificial intelligence drivers in settings where more complex maneuvers like lane changing are required.

“Fully autonomous vehicles in common traffic may be still far away in the future due to many technological, market and policy constraints,” added Benedetto Piccoli, one of the principal investigators in the study. “However, increased communication among vehicles and increased levels of autonomy in human-driven vehicles is in the near future.”

For now though, the research indicates that even current technology such as adaptive cruise control can help to improve traffic.

Many tech companies are currently looking into self-driving vehicles, such as Samsung, Apple and Tesla.

Image credit: Flickr – smoothgroover22

Source: Phys.org

Via: Engadget

The post Self-driving car experiment shows significantly reduced traffic appeared first on MobileSyrup.

11 May 20:20

City Folk

by Michael Thomsen

Geoffrey West, a Stanford-educated theoretical physicist from England, has long sought to explain it all — a way to describe the universe that can account for how everything relates to everything else. Early in his career he investigated the still relatively new study of allometry, which compares the differing growth rates of body parts in different organisms and potential implications for society as whole. Later, he became a vociferous supporter of the Superconducting Super Collider, which, if built, would have given West and his colleagues an edge in the quest for a “Grand Unified Theory,” aligning quantum physics with the Newtonian worldview it had destabilized. When Congress declined to fund the SSC, West turned his pursuit for an all-encompassing theory away from the cosmic and toward something slightly more concrete: the city.

Extrapolating from Kleiber’s Law — a 1932 discovery that found animals’ energy requirements could be accurately predicted based on body weight, regardless of the animal in question — West developed a similar law of energy usage for collective structures like cities and the companies that flourished in them. For close to two decades, he and his colleagues assembled a vast array of information, knitting together census data, corporate earnings reports, government studies, city budgets, and hundreds of other disparate sources — what then passed for big data — hoping to find patterns that could be amalgamated into a unified theory. Of his assistants and associates, West said in 2011, “they’ve done all the work, and I’m the great bullshitter that tries to bring it all together.”

Cities have always seemed on the verge of catastrophe — not because of how they are made but because of what they were made to do

One of the things they found was that the growth rate for infrastructure and social structures was remarkably consistent across seemingly disparate phenomena: GDP, electrical grids, train lines, mice, gas stations, and mitochondria — all these grew at the same exponential rate over time. More alarming, however, was their discovery that some things in cities grew faster than others, and often it was negatives that outpaced the positives: Violent crime rates and AIDS cases, for instance, grew alongside wages and the number of schools to the power of 1.25 of the population, no matter how big or small the city. The application of allometry to civil and financial engineering mainly offers a riddle: Cities have inarguably driven civilization’s progress, but they have also introduced problems that always multiply faster than their solutions. The utopian bubble of the future seemed at the same time a blister on the cusp of bursting and spewing pus. Perhaps proportionality holds them in a dynamic equilibrium, ensuring the bursting point never arrives.

These ideas are laid out in West’s forthcoming pop-science book, Scale, whose subtitle conveys its distinctive air of impatience with conceptual limits, a wish to make something out of everything:The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, and the Pace of Life, in Organisms, Cities, Economies, and Companies.” He thought that he had, in the words of a 2010 Jonah Lehrer profile, “cracked the code” of how cities flourish or fester. His series of mathematical ratios showed how elements of city life scale at predictable but asymmetrical rates relative to population. “What we found are the constants that describe every city,” he told Lehrer. “I can take these laws and make precise predictions about the number of violent crimes and the surface area of roads in a city in Japan with 200,000 people. I don’t know anything about this city or even where it is or its history, but I can tell you all about it. And the reason I can do that is because every city is really the same.”

This discovery seems at once revelatory and obvious. All cities are alike in the same way that all jumbo airliners are. For all their micro-level differences, both remain large complicated mechanisms that address an inherently risky proposition: For planes, it is the problem of flight. For cities, it is how to assemble a large enough body of laborers to produce a surplus from which another group might profit. Just as all airplanes are always a few loose screws away from disaster, so too cities have always seemed on the verge of catastrophe — not because of how they are made but because of what they were made to do.

Yet even catastrophic violence doesn’t seem capable of derailing the momentum of urbanization; it may well be a part of what hastens it. West marvels at how 30 years after the U.S. attempted to destroy Hiroshima with a nuclear attack, the city wound up with a population three times larger than it had been. In the 18th century, Thomas Malthus famously predicted that catastrophe would eventually catch up with the city structure and produce a series of interlocking disasters from which there would be no return, at least for humans. He saw a precarious asymmetry between population growth (which was exponential) and food production (which he believed grew linearly), and believed it would lead to a starvation crisis, pandemics, and wars over dwindling resources. Rather than letting any of these disasters come to pass, he proposed population controls on the poor, whose procreative habits he saw as the main threat to human sustainability.

Though many of Malthus’s dire predictions have come to pass, repeatedly — wars are fought, populations are ravaged by disease, famines persisted in the face of productivity gains — they have had no great effect on slowing or reversing the pace of urbanization. Some experts estimate that more than three-quarters of all people will live in cities by 2050. Urbanization’s dysfunctional structures have channeled more than half the world’s population into cities that occupy only three percent of the planet’s landmass — an ever intensifying concentration of human lives that mirrors the exponential growth and centralization of data collection.

West told Scientific American in 2013 that “‘Big data’ without a ‘big theory’ to go with it loses much of its potency and usefulness, potentially generating new unintended consequences.” This calls to mind those data-hoarding platforms that have been preemptively acquiring enormous volumes of information without declaring any particular theory, any specific purpose beyond ad hoc monetization. But there is always a theory to be invented that can rationalize the data collection, that can make all consequences explainable, and thereby, in a sense, intended. Rather than the “end of theory,” big data (or the concentrations of city life) triggers the birth of theories that assimilate all phenomena approvingly.

Part of the gusty optimism that drives work like West’s and the growing body of “everything theorists” like Stephen Hawking, Robert Oerter, and John H. Miller is the ability to view life from a remove — as patterns taking form without recourse to the limited subjective point of view. This transcendent overview makes it possible to oversee the linear implementation of our egos’ desires — a wish for order, for control, for causality — without having to bother with the painful particularities of where that implementation fails or succeeds at someone else’s expense. One person’s freeway is another person’s farmland or hunting grounds ruined, one population’s pipeline risks contaminating another population’s water source. In instances of conflict, from West’s lofty point of view, scale decided, not politics or power. In theory, more people always benefit from systemic expansion than those who are put out by it. Size beats acuity, and the few who stand to lose the most are given no right to impede those who stand to gain what amounts to a marginal convenience.

The normalization of suffering is a consequence of all systematization, implicit in all data collection. It has the air of a natural law, like entropy, which West describes as guaranteeing that every attempt to produce order and structure also produces disorder, and that progress in any given area must produce regression in another. It frontloads any system-wide view of life with a haunted anxiety about that system being unviable, something that will become self-evident when angry mobs start to form or corpses begin piling up where they weren’t expected. At some point, the two orders of magnitude — the individual and the urban — must collide.

Urbanization’s dysfunctional structures have created an ever intensifying concentration of human lives that mirrors the exponential growth and centralization of data collection

One of the data gatherers that draws West’s attention is transportation engineer Yacov Zahavi, who had his own grand theory: a “Unified Mechanism of Travel Model” based on statistics he had collected while working for the U.S. Department of Transportation and, later, the World Bank. He found that the average amount of time a person spends commuting every day remains constant no matter the city size: about an hour. Whether it’s a mile walk to the office, a three-mile bicycle ride, a seven-mile crosstown drive, or a 15-mile train ride from an exurb, the times all average out to about an hour. (This finding was later elaborated by Italian physicist Cesare Marchetti, for whom this constant was ultimately named.)

West claims this data has been used to help reshape city design, with many downtown areas limiting car traffic to accommodate a larger pedestrian population. But this data also obfuscates how different commuters bear disproportionate burdens, regardless of the time spent. The cost of a monthly train pass from a distant exurb, plus a subway or bus pass to move between day job, night job, or gigs across the city has a much bigger impact on an individual’s overall budget and purchasing power than it would for someone higher on the class curve. They are trapped in a self-perpetuating loop, working harder to afford the commute to the city where the work is. As the city grows, its centripetal pull becomes a source of depletion and destabilization for many of those who become more dependent on it to survive. From their perspective, the city’s efficient symmetries don’t feel like growth; they feel like threats.


In the early 20th century, Vladimir Vernadsky, a Russian geochemist, lamented  — as West would more than 100 years later — the lack of a larger question that unified scientific research. In a letter to his wife, he wrote in frustration: “To collect facts for their own sake, as many now gather facts, without a program, without a question to answer or a purpose, is not interesting.” He too wanted a big theory to go with big data.

Vernadsky pursued a degree in mineralogy, hoping to find evidence of “some general laws of celestial mechanics” in the earth. In 1926, he published The Biosphere, which proposed that life had not spontaneously appeared on Earth from the improbable arrangement of hospitable elements and conditions but had coalesced to support life, the existence of which was not an anomaly but a constant principle of the universe. That is, Earth’s composition and development was made possible by the molecular activity of life. It wasn’t just dead matter waiting for life to happen by accident.

Vernadsky posited “transformers,” basic agents of living matter that could “convert cosmic radiation into active energy in electrical, chemical, mechanical, thermal and other forms.” As energy is absorbed and dissipated across a planet, more complex forms of life begin to develop, driven like a cloud of gas drifting toward pools of free energy, and varying in structure and complexity in relation to how much it finds. The order of the living depends on — even preys on — the disarray of everything that surrounds it. Life requires something to act on, something to prove its presence, making entropy a cyclical by-product of life asserting itself. Vernadsky used the word biosphere to describe the portion of Earth that life had created. In the biosphere, he claimed, “we perceive not simply a planetary or terrestrial phenomenon, but a manifestation of the structure, distribution, and evolution of atoms throughout cosmic history,” he wrote.

From this perspective then, the ghost cities of China signal the presence of life, its essential possibility, rather than its absence. In Ordos, in the northern province of Inner Mongolia, residents eventually began to gather, drawn by the mystery of the structure built in anticipation of its own purpose, a place that has become a destination because it offers its few residents a platform to wait for the future to arrive.

The end of the future, too, is always most visible in cities, which are haunted by an anxiety about the present’s inability to stay put. In Tokyo, William Gibson once wrote, you can see stacks of old futures, “chronological strata … successive layers of Tomorrowlands, older ones showing through when the newer ones start to peel.” New York, which has never stopped growing, has always seemed to be on the verge of catastrophe. E.B. White’s lovelorn 1949 essay “Here Is New York” ends with a premonition that the city might be as vulnerable as its inhabitants. “For the first time in its long history,” he writes, New York “is destructible. A single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions. The intimation of mortality is part of New York now; in the sound of jets overhead, in the black headlines of the latest edition.”

Even before 9/11 made that vision even more prescient, there was a post-lapsarian quality to the grime that would cover New York in the 1970s. This became one of the city’s uncanny charms for those who like to contemplate the present collapsing under its own weight. “I was enthralled by decay and eager for more,” Luc Sante wrote in “Lost City.” He celebrated what he took to be the irreversible decline of the once and future Manhattan: “ailantus trees growing through cracks in the asphalt, ponds and streams forming in leveled blocks and slowly making their way to the shoreline, wild animals returning from centuries of exile.” The “jungle growth” on the many abandoned buildings he would pass walking east on Houston Street from Bowery “gave a foretaste of the impending wilderness, when lianas would engird the skyscrapers and mushrooms would cover Times Square.” Yet even these foreboding signs have been reclaimed by systemic productivity. Urban gardens in Bushwick, Detroit, and Santa Monica have become symbols of the unfailing ubiquity of the city structure, its relentless capacity to adapt to changing conditions and internalize markers of its own demise as proof of the city’s immortality.

Surrounding the accreted leftovers of once-desired futures is a superstitious gloom, a hunch that optimism itself drives all matter toward untenable progress and inevitable implosion. The nervous energy that seeks progress never gives time to its older works to die a natural death. Instead each is overwritten unevenly with a new regime, whose plan always is haphazard and whose ability to remake the landscape is always incomplete. Remnants of those old orders leak into the present, reminding us how mistaken the last attempt to formulate a perfect human social mechanism was. These miscalculations may play out as a series of forgotten failures, off ramps to nowhere or dead malls of empty storefronts. At worst, they are catastrophes, like Pripyat, an futurist dream city built around a faulty nuclear facility. And like Hurricane Katrina, which killed 1,800 in and around New Orleans and displaced more than half of the city’s residents and damaged over 70 percent of the city’s homes. There are also those disasters yet to come, waited on like keynote speakers at an apocalypse conference, the “big one” earthquake that may devastate San Francisco, or the anticipated Cascadia earthquake, what Kathryn Schulz described as “the really big one,” that FEMA estimates could kill 13,000 people and displace over a million in the urban centers from Portland to Seattle. 

The nervous energy that seeks progress never lets older works die a natural death. Instead each is overwritten unevenly with a new regime, whose plan always is haphazard

But as West sees it, these disasters provide “huge impetus and opportunity in stimulating innovation, new ideas, and inventions, whether in science, engineering, finance, politics, or one’s personal life.” The past is legible as the past because someone had to suffer through it, and the future is desirable because it seems to promise we won’t suffer again in the same way. 

In Delirious New York Rem Koolhaas describes Manhattan as a “mountain range of evidence without manifesto.” It is big data ever in search of its big theory. But if a city can be said to have a purpose, it may be to absorb and then discharge the energy of its inhabitants, each of whom orbit and wobble around its organelles in fear of their own personal catastrophes — a cancer diagnosis, a layoff, an unexpected death in the family, a car crash in a crosswalk, a cop with a case to close. To live in a city is to accept being transformed into a something that needs discharge, a peculiar disposition that seems to feed on whatever grand unified theories its residents may have developed for their own lives’ meanings — a better career, a better social life, a bigger paycheck, refuge from social castigation. A theory to house all these smaller ones would ensure the city could accommodate all comers and guarantee that, as West argues, the city is the problem that solves itself simply by persisting.


There is the paradox in the search for new scientific laws: They must describe something that remains constant and is inescapable, yet it must also be something no one ever noticed before — perhaps because it seemed too obvious to bother to articulate. Worse still, a law may become a curse that accelerates its own application once discovered.

Even if there is an overarching law that explains it all — that sets the structure of all living systems in the universe to an incontestable set of ratios — there is still potential conflict in the stories we tell ourselves about this law. Who is responsible for enforcing it? Who gets away with violating it on a local scale? It’s a sequence that begins with scapegoats and ends with administrators, whose neutral dispositions make it seem as if there are meaningful choices still to be made within the logic of cities, and their demand for accelerating the accumulation and discharge of energy. Like Vernadsky’s conception of transformers, living matter driven toward advancing complexity to repeat the same essential task of converting radiation from the sun into energy, a process which goes on regardless of human attempts to master it.

In Changes in the Land, historian William Cronon shows how the 16th century colonial version of the American city depended on incremental claims of space, coming at the expense of other, nonurban ways of life. The colonial settlers’ dense population centers and exhaustive agricultural approach interrupted the no less human-made system of life of many Indian tribes in what we now call Maine and Massachusetts, who migrated with the seasons. “Just as a fox’s summer diet of fruit and insects shifts to rodents and birds during the winter,” Cronon writes, “so too did the New England Indians seek to obtain their food wherever it was seasonally most concentrated in the New England ecosystem.”

Coming from a feudal economy in the midst of a prolonged shortage of firewood caused by heavy deforestation, the colonists saw the bounties of the American landscape as an untapped source of wealth waiting to be commoditized. They assumed the Indians were too undeveloped and ignorant to exploit these resources. But what seemed like serendipity to the colonists — a bountiful land ready to support their expansive plans — was the direct result of work Indians had done to prepare the area so that it could accommodate human life. (During the waning years of the Holocene, 12,000 years earlier, it had been only sparsely populated by humans.) They used brush fires to clear the forest floor so that smaller shrubs and berry bushes could proliferate; these drew the deer, bear, foxes, mice, squirrels, on which the Indians could later rely for food and clothing. For these Indian groups, the land’s bounties stemmed from their precariously balanced system of life built up over generations. It was sustained by carefully and deliberately avoiding commoditization of the land. Pursuing growth as a civilizational aim would have seemed redundant to them.

“Whereas Indian villages moved from habitat to habitat to find maximum abundance through minimal work, and so reduce their impact on the land, the English believed in and required permanent settlements,” Cronon writes. “Once a village was established, its improvements — cleared fields, pastures, buildings, fences, and so on — were regarded as more or less fixed features of the landscape. English fixity sought to replace Indian mobility; here was the central conflict in the ways Indians and colonists interacted with their environments.” Rather than adapt to and become absorbed into the technological imprint of Indian culture, the colonists overwrote it with their own feudal social structure — a way of life they loathed but nonetheless thought could be made tolerable, not by reengineering it but by switching their own subject positions within it. To them, the promise of America was not an escape from feudal relations but a compromise with them, built on the idea of there being enough unclaimed territory to turn every vassal into a lord.

Development and motion are wedded to the mounting probability of collapse. This gives that sensation of freefall in both directions that characterizes the romance of city life

“In New England, most colonists anticipated that they would be able to live much as they had done in England,” Cronon writes, “in an artisanal and farming community with work rhythms, class relations, and a social order similar to the one they had left behind — the only difference being their own improved stature in society.” The claims they made on the land — their fences, farms, permanent settlements — quickly made the social organization of the Indians impossible. The city pattern the settlers brought had a design of life built in and delimited the possible human behavior. The territory in which alternate behaviors were possible were assimilated into the colonists’ matrix, a miniaturized mechanism of human order interrupting what Vernadsky described as “a harmonious cosmic mechanism, in which it is known that fixed laws apply and chance does not exist.” 

The city appears as a simulative extension of Vernadsky’s cosmic harmony, the law of all laws, the system of all human systems, the thing that is visible now even from space as a vascular congregation of lights brightening the dark side of the planet. But it is also an artifact of the human desire to contravene that harmony, to extend the chain of title in all directions, up into the cosmos and down into subatomic quanta.


This is not how West, in his pursuit of universal laws of urban development, sees cities. In Scale, he describes the city as “the ingenious mechanism we have evolved for facilitating and enhancing social interaction and collaboration, two necessary components of successful innovation and wealth creation. Population and urban growth are, of course, very closely interrelated, each feeding on the other, resulting in our extraordinary dominance of the planet.”

It is tempting to see the primacy of one mode of life as progress for all. The slippery math of scale can make it seem like anyone could traipse across the metaphysical tripwire and end up a planetary juggernaut, not by any conscious planning but because everything has the capacity to be drawn into the upper magnitudes, whether it be warm-blooded quadrupeds, lobbying firms, or a city grid, as navigable and car-swarmed in China as in the south of France.

But there is a conundrum to cities, common in all things that scale. In building forms of greater complexity, the lives lived within those forms become stunted, simplified. Nonhuman life is shuttled to the margins to permit a superficial diversity of things and people, locked within a canvas of concrete, power lines, and surveillance cameras. Cities inscribe their people into a relatively fixed and small perimeter, an environment whose legibility depends on the depletion of viable alternatives. As the benefits of living in urban spaces compounds, so do the horrors. Development and motion are wedded to the mounting probability of destruction and collapse. This gives that sensation of freefall in both directions that characterizes the romance of city life.

Progress is always defined as an exclusively human pursuit, something that separates us from other life and isolates us within the one-way corridors of urban planning, which seem like miraculous organisms from above, a poetically functional whole whose individual offerings to each inhabitant start to seem like sacrifices — of free time, of community, of living space, of purchasing power — in order to take part in an effort whose primary benefits are felt by those higher on the food chain, who keep wondering whether they’ll ever reach a ceiling.

If there is a common structure, or at least proportionality to all complex organizations of matter, why should one form of complexity take precedent over any other? Why would a company’s metabolism matter more than an elephant’s? West is transfixed by the vertiginous symmetry in everything, mechanizing the living and giving a touch of the organic to the machinic. He posits a potential balancing point, at which positive growth becomes sustainable, the growth in negative phenomena stays manageable. But he has merely restated the apocalypse with math.

In Scale, West carefully and poetically walks readers through the number of bacterial generations it takes to go from one, to trillions, to all dead again: 1,072. Growth, it seems, is always apocalyptic. Innovations — like vaccines, electricity, flight, the microprocessor — always almost saving us from it, seeming to veer away worst case scenarios at the last second, but this merely masks the way city life remains a series of generational suicide runs. How many more times will collapse be so easily escapable? Is the solution really just a problem of administration and balance? When administrative balance is finally attained, will the city still be a city. Can a city sustain itself without imbalance?

We are always caught in overlapping cycles of growth and decay, migration and settlement, starvation and surplus. The city doesn’t shield us from any of these, but it seems to have frozen the proportions in place, forcing their inhabitants to over-identify, to attach their egos to the artificial excesses that begin to seem like permanent truths we slowly forget how to live without. Cities are where the unsustainable becomes inescapable. The crash is always imminent. As Galileo discovered, everything falls at the same speed, even the future.

11 May 20:20

Dear Wirecutter: Can I Add a CD Player to a Car Stereo?

by Rik Paul

Q: My new Honda does not come with any sort of CD player option, and it isn’t available as an add-on. Is there some sort of accessory that would allow me to play CDs though my car stereo? Perhaps something that draws power from the “cigarette lighter” power outlet and feeds the music output into the aux-in USB-type input. I’d also be interested in adding an HD tuner as well, if possible.

11 May 20:19

Apple launches dedicated ‘Made in Montreal’ Canada 150 App Store section

by Patrick O'Rourke
Made in Montreal App Store

As part of its ongoing Canada 150 App Store initiative, which includes a ‘Made in Toronto-Waterloo‘ section, Apple has launched a new ‘Made in Montreal’ area of the store designed to celebrate iOS app developers from Quebec.

The new section of the app store includes developers like Square Enix Montreal, the studio behind the popular and critically acclaimed ‘Go‘ franchise, Outerminds, Budge Studios, Breather Products and Transit App, an app that’s been prominently featured during a number of Apple keynote presentations.

While Apple has released a number of dedicated App Store sections over the last few weeks, given the overcrowded nature of iOS’ app ecosystem, it’s nice to see the tech giant making an effort to highlight Canada’s homegrown talent.

The ‘Made in Montreal’ App Store section is available both in French and English.

The post Apple launches dedicated ‘Made in Montreal’ Canada 150 App Store section appeared first on MobileSyrup.

11 May 20:19

Windows 10 Fall Creators Update features new design and focus on cross-device performance

by Rose Behar

Following on the spring announcement of the same name, Microsoft will debut the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update in autumn, bringing with it a new ‘Microsoft Fluent Design System’ (previously code named ‘Project Neon’) and features like ‘Timeline,’ which lets users travel back to a certain time and capture everything they were doing on their machine.

During the second day of the Build 2017 developer conference, executive vice president of windows and devices Terry Myerson detailed what consumers can expect from the new iteration of Windows, which the company’s corporate vice president of communications Frank Shaw called a “continuation” of the first Creators Update.

One of the major changes is Microsoft Fluent Design, which not only brings in new visual elements like blur and translucency effects, but is designed to adapt to a multi-platform world where UI must provide a quality, uniform experience across device types, from mobile to desktop.

Pairing with this update, another core element stressed by Myerson is this version of Windows’ enhanced participation in Microsoft Graph, the company’s preferred API to access data and intelligence from Office 365 and the Microsoft cloud. Microsoft Graph essentially pulls together information about a user from a variety of different Microsoft services, generating insights based on their activity.

“[Microsoft Fluent Design] is designed to adapt to a multi-platform world where UI must provide a quality, uniform experience across device types.”

Graph has been generally available since November 2015, but now Microsoft is adding devices to the mix, adding another layer of insight to be gleaned from the user. This integration facilitates many of the Fall Creators Update’s most intriguing new features.

Among them: the aforementioned ‘Timeline’ feature (shown below), which provides a list of apps and workspaces that users were previously using on other devices in the Task View area. The feature can combine with another new feature, ‘Pick Up Where You Left Off,’ that lets users resume sessions and iOS or Android apps on multiple devices.

Additionally, there’s ‘Clipboard,’ which lets users access clips they’ve taken across a variety of devices, and ‘OneDrive Files on Demand,’ which promises users the ability to see and access all files on Windows 10, be more productive offline on their mobile device and quickly share files on iOS.

A much-requested feature, Files on Demand provides access to files in the cloud without the user having to download them and use storage on their device. It also allows users to open files from within the desktop or Windows store apps using the Windows file picker. To do so, they can just pick the file they want  to open in file picker and the file will automatically download and open in the app.

Additionally, Myerson announced new apps coming later this year to the Windows Store in addition to Spotify, which announced the upcoming debut of its Windows Store app during the launch of the Windows app-only operating system Windows 10 S. The apps include iTunes, Ubuntu, AutoDesk Stingray — a game engine and tool for rendering — and business tool SAP Digital Boardroom.

The post Windows 10 Fall Creators Update features new design and focus on cross-device performance appeared first on MobileSyrup.

11 May 20:19

@stoweboyd

@stoweboyd:
11 May 20:19

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11 May 20:18

Toyota is using Nvidia’s car supercomputer for its autonomous vehicles

Toyota is using Nvidia’s car supercomputer for its autonomous vehicles:

More on Nvidia’s transition to AI infrastructure company:

Nvidia CEO Jen-Hsun Huang announced that Toyota will use Nvidia’s Drive PX supercomputers for autonomous vehicles.

Those cars will debut in the market in the next few years, Huang said. The Drive PX uses a new processor dubbed Xavier, which can do 30 trillion operations per second in a deep learning application while burning just 30 watts of power. The Toyota deal is a big one since the Japanese car maker is one of the largest in the world.

Nvidia made the announcement at its GPU Technology Conference in San Jose, California. Huang is confident that everything from commercial airliners (Airbus is designing one) to delivery trucks will be automated with a variety of technologies, including full auto pilot, mapping to assist the driver in a co-pilot function, and something called guardian angel. With guardian angel, the car detects hazards around you and warns you of an emergency, like someone else running a red light as you are about to enter an intersection.

Xavier uses a custom ARM64 central processing unit and a 512 Core Volta graphics processing unit (GPU). The chip is designed to be programmable and low power, and it will be able to run the software for self-driving cars, Huang said. Nvidia is open-sourcing the Xavier deep learning architecture software starting in September.

11 May 20:18

Infoway announces Telus Health as technical solution provider for PrescribeIT

by Dean Daley
Paul Lepage, president of Telus Health

Canada Health Infoway (Infoway) has announced that it has selected Telus Health as the technical solution provider for PrescribeIT, Canada’s electronic prescription service.

According to Michael Green, the president and CEO of Infoway, Telus Health’s innovative approach and its ability to make Infoway’s vision happen, made it the ideal choice for PrescribeIT.

The president of Telus Health, Paul Lepage had some pleasantries about Infoway and its PrescribeIT program as well. “As a longstanding technology provider enabling improved health outcomes for Canadians, we are proud to be working with Infoway to develop and operate PrescribeIT. PrescribeIT will be built on our open, interoperable and vendor agnostic TELUS Health Exchange platform, which is already enabling collaboration and efficiency in the primary care ecosystem.”

Infoway and Telus Health will work together to help all Canadians prescribers, pharmacists and pharmacies by making sure their patients get their choice of prescription drugs, by safeguarding patient information and maintaining privacy and security standards.

PrescribeIT will aid policymakers and health care providers in the fight against opioid misuse. “Through a single, national e-prescribing system, we can reduce fraud and abuse by eliminating handwritten prescriptions, avoid fragmentation of patient health care information, and ensure data integrity for opioid monitoring and surveillance,” said Green.

PrescribeIT trials will run in communities across Alberta and Ontario starting in mid-2017 and plans to fully roll out throughout the country starting in mid-2018.

Source: Canada Health Infoway

The post Infoway announces Telus Health as technical solution provider for PrescribeIT appeared first on MobileSyrup.

11 May 20:16

The Real Problem With Self-Driving Cars: They Actually Follow Traffic Laws

by Laura Northrup
mkalus shared this story from Consumerist.

In the century or so that people have been driving, two different sets of rules have developed: The official laws that we’re supposed to obey, and the unofficial code of the road that bends and often breaks those laws. For example, we all know — whether we like it or not — that many highway drivers are going to exceed the speed limit. But what happens when you introduce self-driving cars that are designed to always follow the rules and don’t understand why other drivers are extending their middle fingers in their direction?

That seems like it would be a good thing, and it would be if all vehicles on the road were autonomous ones that communicated with each other and followed the same rules. The problem is that they will still have to share the road with human drivers.

New York state is about to allow autonomous cars to begin testing on its public highways and roads, adding another area to the territory that the vehicles can cover, and yet another set of unspoken rules of traffic that engineers will have to teach to their vehicles.

Companies testing the vehicles will have to file the routes their cars will travel with the state, but it’s other drivers who pose the real problem.

“There’s an endless list of these cases where we as humans know the context, we know when to bend the rules and when to break the rules,” a Carnegie Mellon University professor in charge of autonomous car research told the Associated Press.

The artificial intelligence systems that run self-driving cars, however, don’t understand these subtleties in the same way most humans can. They would need to not only learn the special traffic quirks of every area they travel through. For instance, your city might have a “no right turn on red” rule; there are no signs indicating this restriction, but everyone knows about it and only 50% of them obey.

“It’s hard to program in human stupidity or someone who really tries to game the technology,” a spokesman for Toyota’s autonomous driving unit told the AP.

When we hear about autonomous vehicles crashing with human-piloted vehicles, the cause is usually a human error that the software didn’t account for, like when a Google-programmed car didn’t recognize that a human driver had run a red light.

We’re already getting a glimpse into what a future traffic system that includes both robot cars and human jerks could look like. As cars in production and for sale to the public gain more autonomous driving features, rule-bending drivers are taking advantage.

In a few documented cases, motorists have intentionally pulled in front of vehicles that are known to have automatic braking, like cars from Tesla Motors.

Limited tests of autonomous cars are happening now, sure, but experts think that we have at least a decade and a half before cars can safely drive themselves among humans. It might take even longer to safely operate the vehicles in cities with especially chaotic traffic, like Beijing.





11 May 20:16

Microsoft’s Story Remix wants to help Windows 10 users easily create videos

by Igor Bonifacic
Microsoft Build

On the second day of Build 2017, Microsoft announced Story Remix, a new Universal Windows 10 app that uses the power of the company’s cloud infrastructure to help users create videos.

Pulling photo and video material from multiple sources — Microsoft wasn’t explicit on this point, but it sounds like the company will release Story Remix on Android and iOS, in addition to on Windows — Story Remix automatically creates a shareable video with the press of its titular ‘Remix’ button. If users aren’t happy with the result, they can hit the remix button several times to see all the different videos the company’s Microsoft Graph technology churns out. Of course, for users that would rather take matters into their own hands, there are a variety of manual controls.

Windows Story Remix

Users can also collaborate on a video, pooling photos and videos from multiple sources. The app is also fully integrated into the company’s Remix 3D community hub, allowing Story Remix users to add 3D objects and backgrounds to their creations. Lastly, users who own a Windows Ink-capable device will be able to draw on top of their videos.

If all of this sounds familiar, it’s because Story Remix is a fresh take on an old idea. Specifically, past versions of Microsoft’s operating system have shipped with Windows Movie Maker, which essentially allowed users to do the exact same thing: create fun family videos without too much video editing knowledge.

After Windows 7, however, Microsoft abandoned the app. We’ve also seen Apple launch a similar offering with Clips. That said, Story Remix appears to be significantly more capable than both its predecessor and Apple’s mobile-only offering. Story Remix is set to arrive alongside Windows 10’s Fall Creators Update.

The post Microsoft’s Story Remix wants to help Windows 10 users easily create videos appeared first on MobileSyrup.

11 May 20:16

Oilist Review: A Painter in Your Phone

by Jake Underwood

If you’ve ever been to a fair or amusement park, you’ve likely stood and watched as a caricature artist drew a goofy picture while the subject sat completely still. As the artist’s hand glides across the page, you begin to see the bigger picture, and watch the artist’s style come to life in the form of a cartoonized version of a stranger. When the drawing is finished, the final product is not only a representation of the subject itself, but also one of the creator’s personality.

Oilist is an artist in your phone, one that you watch sketch, paint, and craft a unique version of a photo you’ve shot. The app uses AI – and your creativity – to turn pictures into works of art. Through creating with its own personality, you’ll get a new take on your old images in a fun and original way.

Getting Started

If you’ve never created art with Oilist before, it’s exceptionally frictionless to get started. First, launch the app and tap on either the Photos icon or “Open Image” along the bottom. After you’ve chosen your photo, you’ll pick a base art style – something like Wavy, Feathered, or Abstract – and select if you’d like to crop or border your photo.

With your style choice and photo picked out, Oilist will now begin recreating your photo in the particular art style. As it works, you’ll watch it form the piece layer by layer, brush stroke by brush stroke. If you leave the AI to its own devices, you’ll likely get a neat filter; spend some time tinkering, though, and you’ll unlock a breadth of new styles.

Customizing Your Art

As Oilist creates your picture, you have a variety of tools to affect the image during the process. For example, you can essentially direct the Oilist painter to make the painting more vivid, dull, or warm by selecting the appropriate mood. Or maybe you’d like to see more thick brush strokes, a larger brush size, or increased density. However you see fit, changing the direction of the art is under your control, without any of the work of actually applying the paint.

The results are gorgeous, especially if you take time to understand how Oilist works and customize it to your liking. By loading up a photo you’re proud of and playing around with different styles, moods, and brush types, you can transform the shot into something you’d want to print out and put on your wall.

Although Oilist encourages you to create beautiful pieces, it also prompts you to mess everything up. With the Chaos, Gravity, and Rotation features, you can slide, flip, and turn your way into an image that hardly resembles its original state. These options are fun experiments in the abstract, but don’t add much to the equation if you’re looking for a recreation of your image.

My favorite feature comes when you’re happy with the image. Instead of having to wait for Oilist to wrap it all together, you can tap the picture frame icon below the image to save the painting. Oilist will continue to paint, allowing you to save multiple pieces of art and compare them. When you’ve picked out one you liked, you can save it to your camera roll, share, or start over with a new image.

Conclusion

Oilist will inevitably draw comparisons to Prisma, and rightfully so – both apps take your photos and turn them into art through filter-like processes. But that’s where the comparison should end; Oilist, in my experience, feels far more robust, customizable, and enjoyable than Prisma. It feels human – an effect that comes from watching it paint, mess up, change course, and bring it all together in the end.

With Oilist, I’m reminded of my first experiences with apps, an eye-opening experience of the capability packed into the little rectangle in my pocket. It’s a one-of-a-kind take on the personal photography market, and one that I can’t wait to see grow in upcoming versions.

You can pick up Oilist in the App Store for $2.99 (Universal).


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11 May 20:15

Spectrum-Sharing: Europe & Asia need something like CBRS

by Dean Bubley
The more I look at enterprise mobile, especially its focus on verticals and IoT, the I'm more convinced there needs to be a change in industry structure, regulation and network ownership/operation.  And that means new spectrum policy, as well.

In particular, private licensed-band wireless networks will be essential - that is, networks (using cellular, WiFi, LPWAN or other technology) that can be directly managed by organisations that are not traditional MNOs (mobile network operators), to provide high-QoS, reliable wireless connections. I'm thinking large companies running their own networks, industrial network specialists, local cooperatives, perhaps new government-sector initiatives, and various other aggregators, outsourcers and intermediaries. These will mostly be in-building / on-campus, but some may need to be genuinely wide-area, or even national, as well.

This is in addition to enterprise-centric initiatives in the MVNO/E space, vertical activities by fixed telcos and MNOs, unlicensed-band WiFi and LPWAN deployments and so on.

 There are three main models for licensing radio spectrum today:
  • Exclusive licenses: Dedicated access to certain bands is very common today, for example for mobile networks, fixed microwave links, broadcasters, satellite access and many government-sector uses, such as military radios and radar. Particular organisations have rights to solo access to particular frequencies, in a given country/region, subject to complying with various rules on power and so forth.
  • Unlicensed: (also license-exempt): Beyond some basic rules on power and antenna siting, some bands are essentially "open to all". The 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands used by technologies such as WiFi, Bluetooth and many other technologies are prime examples, as well as bands used for consumer walkie-talkies and various medical and automotive applications.
  • Shared spectrum: This covers various models for allowing multiple users for certain frequencies. It could involve temporary usage (eg for event broadcast), bands that haven't been "cleared" fully and still have incumbent users that newcomers need to "work around". It might be spectrum assigned in geographic chunks, or at low power levels and mandating "polite" protocols so that multiple users can co-exist. We've seen TV "white spaces" where under-used bands are opened up to others, and so forth.
The latter approach of sharing is becoming much more important - despite continued clamour for exclusive licenses, especially from the mobile industry. Given that the demand for spectrum is rising from all sides - mobile, WiFi, utilities, broadcast, satellite, Internet and many others - and each has a different demand profile (global / national / regional and subscription / private / amenity etc), a one-size-fits-all model cannot work, given limited spectrum resources. More spectrum-sharing will be essential.

More models are now emerging for sharing spectrum bands. Depending on the details, these open up opportunities for a greater number of stakeholders. The US' innovative CBRS model (see link) for 3.5GHz is worth examining, and perhaps replicating elsewhere, especially Europe. It is much more sophisticated - but more complex to implement - than the Licensed Shared Access (LSA) that Europe has leaned towards historically. In Disruptive Analysis' view this extra complexity is worthwhile, as it allows a much broader group of stakeholders to access spectrum, fostering greater innovation
 
The important differentiator for CBRS is that there are three tiers of users:
  • Incumbents, primarily the military, which gets the top level of access rights for radar and other uses in the band
  • Licensed access providers which can get dedicated slices in specific geographic areas. These are "protected" but subject to pre-emption by the top tier. They will also generate revenue for the government in terms of license fees - although awards will be for shorter periods than normal bands (3 years is being discussed).
  • General access - basically this is like unlicensed access, but it has to work around the other tiers, if they are present.
To make all this work, the CBRS system needs databases of who is using what spectrum and where, and sensors to detect any changes in the top tier's usage. (The military, as incumbents, isn't keen on spending any money to actually tell the system what it's doing - it needs to be securely automated).

When all this is up and running, there will be many potential user groups for shared spectrum such as this, using either the priority licenses, or general access tiers:
  • Incumbent mobile operators needing more capacity in specific areas
  • MVNOs wanting to "offload" some traffic from their host MNO networks, onto their own infrastructure, without the expense of full national coverage. This could work either alongside, or as an alternative to, WiFi-based offload or WiFi-primary models.
  • Enterprises wanting to deploy private cellular networks indoors or over large campuses (eg across an airport or oil-refinery for IoT usage)
  • Potentially, large-scale WiFi deployments in new bands, with less subject to interference than mainstream unlicensed bands - although this would require devices/chipsets supporting new frequencies that are currently outside the proper WiFi standards.
  • Various "neutral host" wholesale LTE models, for example run by city authorities for metropolitan users, or cloud-providers for enterprise - or as a way to provide better indoor coverage for existing incumbent "outdoor" operators, without their needing individual infrastructure in each building. This could allow the pooling of back-end / administrative functions and costs across multiple local LTE networks in shared bands. Imagine an Amazon AWS approach to buying cellular capacity, on-demand.
  • Various approaches to roaming or "un-roaming" providers - for example, a theme-park operator or hotel owner could offer its foreign guests "free LTE" while on-site.
  • Potential new classes of cellular operator, such as an Industrial Mobile Operator (imagine GE or ABB integrating cellular access into machinery & plant equipment), various IoT platform providers, and integration opportunities with Internet, healthcare, transport and other systems.

This approach may not work for enterprise wireless users requiring national (or very broad-area) coverage, such as utility companies or transport providers. There are separate arguments for utility and rail companies getting slices of dedicated spectrum, or some other model of national sharing.

Importantly, CBRS means that LTE-U variants like MuLTEfire can be used to create private cellular networks. Coupled with cheap, virtualised (& probably cloud-based) core networks, this means that mobile networks are much more accessible to new entrants. The scale economies of national licenses will no longer apply to lock out alternative providers.

In other words, we will see consolidation of national MNOs, but fragmentation of localised MNOs or (PNOs as some are calling private networks). 

While some MNOs and their industry bodies may be concerned at more competition, privately many of them acknowledge that a lot of the use-cases above cannot realistically be offered by today's industry. 

Even large MNOs can probably only pick 2 or 3 verticals to really get deep expertise in - maybe smart cities, or rail, or utilities, say. But they cannot get enough expertise to effectively build customised, small networks in all the possible contexts - car factories, ports, hospitals, mines, hotels, shopping malls, airports, public safety agencies, universities, oil refineries, power stations and so on. Each will have its own requirements, its own industry standards to observe, its own systems to integrate with, its own insurance/liability issues and so on. They need wireless for all sorts of reasons from robots to visitors - but today's MNOs will not be able to satisfy all those needs, especially indoors.

For many governments' visions of future factories, cities and public services, good quality wireless will be essential. But it will need to be provided by many new types of providers, with business models we can only guess at.

While CBRS is still at an early stage, and will be tricky to implement, we need something similar to it - with multiple tiers including a "permissionless" one - in Europe and the rest of the world. Enterprise and private cellular networks (and other licensed-band options for WiFi and LPWAN) are critical - and policymakers and regulators need to acknowledge and support this.



If you are interested in discussing this topic further, I will be running a workshop day on private cellular on May 30th in Central London, in a joint effort with Caroline Gabriel of Rethink Research. Details and booking are here: (link) or else email information AT disruptive-analysis DOT com.
11 May 20:15

The state of RCS messaging in Canada, explained

by Igor Bonifacic
RCS

To compile this article, MobileSyrup interviewed Amir Surhangi, head of the carrier messaging program at Google, and Upinder Saini, vice-president of wireless product management at Rogers.

What is RCS?

Short for Rich Communication Services (alternatively known as Advanced Messaging), RCS is a next-generation SMS messaging protocol. It allows users to take advantage of a number of features that were previously exclusive to over-the-top messaging apps like WhatsApp and iMessage.

For instance, when messaging a friend or family member, RCS users will see typing indicators and read receipts (it’s possible to turn both these features off in the Android Messages preferences menu). RCS also enables proper group chat, as well as allows users to send high-resolution images and videos.

Moreover, unlike SMS messages, RCS are messages are sent via the user’s data connection or a nearby Wi-Fi link.

Who are the major stakeholders behind RCS?

Within the Canadian context, there two major groups working toward making RCS a success beyond the usual cast of carriers.

First, there’s the GSMA. It’s a trade body that represents the interests of carriers across the globe. Every major Canadian carrier, including Bell, Bell MTS, Eastlink, Freedom Mobile, Rogers, SaskTel, Telus and Videotron, is a full member of the organization. Additionally, the three national carriers have all pledged to support RCS. When Rogers launched support for RCS last December, it became the second carrier in the world to support RCS in its current iteration.

Google is the second major stakeholder in RCS. In some ways, the company helps provide the glue that enables the ecosystem. In 2015, the company acquired Jibe Mobile. Jibe’s product became the basis of Google’s Android Messages platform. Earlier this year, the company announced that several major smartphone OEMs, including HTC, Sony and Motorola, have agreed to install Android Messages on all their future devices.

Missing from the list is Samsung. The world’s biggest Android manufacturer does not plan to ship Android Messages pre-installed on its devices. Instead, it’s working on its own RCS solution. However, the company’s native RCS app will be compatible with all other RCS solutions, including Android Messages, due to the fact it too will built to comply with the GSMA’s Universal Profile.

Cool, how do I use RCS?

In practice, the requirements to take advantage of RCS are straightforward. As the end user, you need:

a) An Android smartphone.

b) A data plan with a carrier that supports the protocol.

c) The Android Messages app (or another app that supports Univeral Profile — more on that in a moment).

Additionally, the person you’re messaging also needs to meet all of the above requirements. When both parties don’t meet all the requirements to take advantage of RCS, apps like Android Messages revert to SMS/MMS. From the user’s perspective, this part of the experience is seamless.

Where things get complicated, at least currently, is that few carriers support RCS. At the time of the writing of this article, only Rogers and Fido support the protocol in Canada.

Does Android Messages work with other RCS apps?

In short, yes.

While the number of RCS-enabled apps may eventually prove confusing to end users, they’ll all be compatible with another. That’s because every modern RCS app, including Android Messages and Samsung’s upcoming native solution, is built on top of the GSMA’s Universal Profile standard.

“Whoever does RCS is working with a standard,” says Surhangi. “In the case of Samsung, they have a native experience on their devices and those devices are tested on our backend and they work just fine. We already work with Samsung in different regions that has a native experience, users can either use that native experience or they can download Android Messages. Both are standards-based and will work out of the box.

How many Canadians are currently using RCS?

According to Rogers, there are currently a 125,000 RCS users on its network. To put that number in perspective, during its most recent earnings call, Rogers announced it had 10,274,000 wireless subscribers across all of its brands.

Google, meanwhile, said it couldn’t provide aggregate data, at least not yet, due to the fact that said data is owned by the carriers. That said, it’s unlikely the aggregate numbers are much higher.

Again, for users to take advantage of the features that come with RCS, not only do they need to be on a carrier that supports the protocol, the same applies to the person they’re messaging. With only two carriers supporting the protocol in North America at the moment, and neither of them in the same country, even the most tech savvy user is unlikely to see a huge benefit from downloading Android Messages.

That said, Surhangi did note that Google has seen strong engagement among those users who are using Android Messages. Moreover, he says RCS will hit critical mass in the not too distant future.

“Sometime in Q1 or Q2 of next year, you’re going to have a very large percentage of users that will have access to RCS. They’ll be able to either buy a new phone or download the app on their existing phone.”

Surhangi did name specific companies, but he did intimate that a number of other major North American carriers, both in Canada and the U.S., will announce support for the protocol before the end of the year.

How secure is RCS?

RCS employs client-to-server encryption, which is the same encryption model Google uses for Gmail. Any message sent via Android Messages is encrypted on device before being sent out to one of the company’s servers. Once the message arrives at said server, it’s decrypted by the company. Google then encrypts the message again before sending it to its intended recipient. While the message is unencrypted, the company can, much like it does with emails sent through Gmail, mine it for data that’s relevant to its business.

Sarhangi says Android Messages cannot employ end-to-end encryption due to local intercept laws. However, he was quick to note that Google treats private information “very carefully.”

One additional privacy wrinkle is that all messages sent through Android Messages are routed through the company’s servers. While the company has data centres in Canada, Google did not provide us with a definitive answer as to whether RCS messages that originate in Canada are routed through in-country servers.

How do RCS and Google Messages fit within Google’s messaging strategy?

As with anything messaging-related, how RCS fits within Google’s overall strategy is complicated. One point Sarhangi is quick to reiterate multiple times throughout our interview is that RCS “is not a Google service.” He repeated that same point four times during our 20-minute phone interview.

On the other hand, when we asked Rogers how messages routed through Android Messages are administered, Saini said, “It’s a Google managed service,” later adding, “Google’s role is very large.”

Based on the contrast between Sarhangi and Saini’s comments, it appears there’s some difference between how Google sees its role within the RCS ecosystem and how a carrier like Rogers sees that relationship. It’s unclear if other carriers that plan to implement RCS share a similar viewpoint. However, what is clear is that Google wants to be very careful about how it manages the optics of Android Messages.

Whether or not Android Messages is a “Google Service” does little to change the fact that if you’re an Android user, you have one more messaging app you now have to download. For better or worse, that’s unlikely to change anytime. Speaking to the existence of Allo, Sarhangi said he doesn’t see overlap between the company’s different messaging offerings.

“We want to serve users in different ways when it comes to messaging. With Android Messages, our roadmap of what we plan to do very much aligns with the needs of the end user but also very closely with the needs of carriers and the GSMA. It’s not Google service, and it’s not a Google roadmap.

“Think of us essentially as being part of the ecosystem and providing technology and capabilities to carriers. At the end of the day, it’s the carrier service and brand that ends up providing that to the end user. With Allo, it’s much more of a Google service and we’re innovating and working directly with users in a slightly different ways.”

What happens next?

The state of RCS in Canada is likely to change dramatically over the coming weeks and months. As such, MobileSyrup plans to update this piece as things change. In the meantime, if you have additional questions, feel free to ask them in the comments section.

Rose Behar contributed research to this story. 

The post The state of RCS messaging in Canada, explained appeared first on MobileSyrup.

11 May 20:15

Truth and Integrity – Is Seeing Believing?

by Gail Mooney

It was a sad day when I read about award winning photographer Souvid Datta infringing on another photographer’s work by using elements of their photographs and claiming that the photos were his. In the age of “fake news” Datta erodes the integrity of the profession of photojournalism and the reputation of dedicated photojournalists who risk their lives taking photographs that create awareness of the travesties in the world.

I was further bothered by Datta’s explanation in an interview he did for Time magazine. Using his lack of knowledge because of his youth and inexperience is no excuse for his actions. There are too many articles online about ethics and copyright to excuse his ignorance, especially for someone who admittedly learned Photoshop techniques on You Tube.

While I’m glad that he eventually told the truth, there’s nothing commendable about doing so after getting caught in a lie. There is no turning back of the clock or enough apologies that will undo the damage this has done to the profession of photojournalism.

It is easy to manipulate images and seeing is believing is no longer true.Arthur County, Nebraska In an age where many if not most images have been greatly altered or composited, we’ve become somewhat jaded by a real image that is straight out of the camera. Manipulation has become the norm but it should never be accepted in journalism.

I’m not a photojournalist and have on occasion altered my images, but I’m most proud of the images that I shot that have not been manipulated.

Marathon swimming, East River, New York City

Nowadays, folks who look at the images contained in this blog will assume that they are composites – but they’re not. It took a lot of skill to produce them along with a bit of luck.

11 May 20:15

Critical Theory for Fun!

It looks like I may be curating a micro-festival at Hypertext ’17 in Prague, July 4-7 2017, on Critical Theory for Fun.

Recent years have seen a remarkable efflorescence of daring yet accessible experiments in nonsequential interactive narrative. In contrast to the famously opaque literature of Critical Theory, much of this work is a lot of fun while demonstrating remarkable theoretical depth. In contrast to the cheery heroic romances that long dominated computer games, this work is notably dark, emotionally complex, and introspective. Our Balkanized technical literature on new media storytelling has grown provincial, and a number of the observations on which it depends are likely mistaken.

In other words, just from worrying whether the wedding is on or off, a person can develop a cough. there’s a ton of good, accessible research into how narrative works, thoughtful work that’s not encrusted with striated and problematized terminological fablulae – and that research is published in, of all places, the tabletop game world. (Computer games will figure in this as well, and of course hyperdrama, print fiction, literary hypertext and interactive fictions.)

More anon. In the mean time, do you have something I should see? Don’t be bashful. Doesn’t matter if its old, or incomplete. Email me..

11 May 20:13

Good-bye

by pricetags

To this:

The two-storey building at 1255 West Pender has stuck around a lot longer than anyone would have guessed, given the development in Triangle West (more typically known as Coal Harbour).  It was a well-known bar and pick-up club back in the day when this area was parking lots and spec office buildings.

Now it will be this, according to Kenneth Chan at the Daily HiveJapanese architect to build world’s tallest hybrid timber building in Coal Harbour,


11 May 20:13

BMW Owners Say Their Parked Cars Are Going Up In Flames

by Ashlee Kieler
mkalus shared this story from Consumerist.

When you park your car, turn the engine off, and walk away, you have a reasonable expectation that when you return the vehicle will be in the same spot and in the same condition as when you left. But some BMW owners say they’ve returned only to find their car in flames. Now, these owners and fire officials from across the country are asking why. 

ABC News on Thursday reported on its investigation into nearly 40 incidents involving BMW vehicles that have unexpectedly caught fire, sometimes resulting in damage to surrounding property, including homes.

While BMW tells ABC News that it has investigated the cases brought to its attention, it has “not seen any pattern related to quality or component failure” in its vehicles.

Yet, owners of the charred vehicles say that can’t be the case. ABC News’ report details a number of incidents involving the fiery BMW, but here are 4 things we learned about the apparent ongoing issue.

1. No Warning Signs, Say Owners

A Maryland man tells ABC News that after spending years as a self-proclaimed BMW ambassador he was completely caught off guard when his 2008 BMW X5 caught fire in his garage in Dec. 2015.

The man’s wife had just returned home from a quick drive when she reported an odd smell from the vehicle. By the time the man reached the garage minutes later, he heard a “snap, crackle, pop” sound from the vehicle before it inexplicably burst into flames.

The fire quickly spread to the garage and then the couple’s home. It was a complete loss.

While the owner says he first thought the fire was related to a new battery in the vehicles, he found others had experienced similar issues with the BMWs.

2. Not An Isolated Incident

ABC News and its affiliates found nearly 40 cases similar to the Maryland car fire.

Each of the incidents involved a variety of BMW vehicles from several model years, ranging from the 2008 X5 to a 2011 BMW 3-series. Additionally, the fires occurred at different times, some owners reported the vehicle had been parked for days before bursting into flames, while others said they had driven the vehicle just hours before the fires started.

One woman says that her vehicle, parked in the garage, caught fire while she slept. When she woke up she ran downstairs and used a garden hose on the flames until fire officials arrived.

3. BMW Downplays Incidents

Just as BMW told ABC News, the car company has also informed consumers they don’t believe the affected vehicles contain a defect.

“You’re at wit’s end, you don’t know what to do,” the Maryland man tells ABC News of his interaction with BMW, including the lack of an apology.

In a statement to ABC News, BMW said that fires in its vehicles are rare and can be caused for a variety of reasons that don’t involve a defect, such as lack of maintenance, improper maintenance by an unauthorized mechanic, or other issues.

While the statement implies that some of the fault for the fires falls on owners, BMW has offered some assistance, ABC News reports. For instance, some customers say they received offers for discounts on replacement vehicles, while others have receive cash settlements.

The company says the offers are its way of providing support to customers.

4. Regulators Investigate

ABC News reports that it has sent its findings to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which says it has not found evidence of a safety defect.

Still, the agency urged consumers to report any issues through its consumer complaint database.

On the other side of the world, however, federal regulators in South Korea are looking into the issues. In that country, BMW issued a recall covering some cars that had caught fire, finding a fuel line defect was present in some diesel vehicles. This was only after the carmaker noted that poor maintenance could be a contributor to fires.

Despite this, a South Korean transport ministry official tells ABC News that the agency is still investigating, as the recall and maintenance issue only answer some questions.





11 May 20:12

10th Avenue Improvements

by Ken Ohrn

A design concept package for the 5-block part of 10th Avenue between Oak and Cambie is coming to Vancouver City Council on May 16 for review and approval.   The area even has a name — the Health Precinct — which will be reflected in the redesign.

This is an area that is currently not working for many of the most vulnerable of its growing user group.  But the area’s complexity means the changes are fittingly complex.  For example, they include the City acquiring new right-of-way agreements for land to be used for sidewalk and utility purposes.

To quote the design concept package:

CONCLUSION  The general sentiment heard through the engagement process was that 10th Avenue through the Health Precinct does not work well for anyone in its current form. This proposed design has been endorsed by the Health Precinct partners and staff believe the changes made to the recommended design over the course of the engagement process address the primary concerns raised by the city advisory committees, including the Seniors’ Advisory Committee, the Persons with Disabilities Advisory Committee, and the Active Transportation Policy Council (see Appendix F and G for specific responses). Staff will be meeting with all three committees in advance of presenting the project to Council. The new design is expected to improve the area for all road users, particularly vulnerable pedestrians, people accessing the health precinct by vehicle, and people biking.

Here’s an example —  an overview of the changes proposed for the block between Laurel and Willow:

As usual, you can have your 5 minutes before council by registering in advance.


11 May 20:12

@davidfcarr

@davidfcarr: