Thunderbirds meets the Thorn Birds.
Finally finished this series recently, highly recommended...
1 min read
Thunderbirds meets the Thorn Birds.
Finally finished this series recently, highly recommended...
1 min read
Listening to this new Information Society release while upgrading all iOS devices to 7.0.6. Hack, hack, hack.
Originally shared by Information Society
Baked fresh today! Get your full-quality music here: http://informationsociety.bandcamp.com/album/engage-classic-remixes-vol-2
1 min read
Listening to some UK Garage today. Altavista reference made me smile.
You won't find us on Alta Vista
Cult classic not bestseller, you're gonna need more power
Plug in the free phase and the generator, crank it up to gigawatts
1 min read

I'm hopeful that the San Jose deployment has a halo effect throughout the Bay Area. Your move Comcast.
Originally shared by Google
Today we’ve invited 34 cities in nine metro areas around the U.S. to work with us to explore what it would take to bring them Google Fiber. In the coming months, we'll work with each city's leaders on a joint planning process to map out a Google Fiber network in detail and assess potential challenges to bringing 100x faster Internet to these communities. We aim to provide updates about which of these cities will be getting Google Fiber at the end of the year. Learn more: http://goo.gl/tMg6F9
1 min read
Are any of our politicians even trying to get inward investment of this type? Twitter moved into a neighborhood (SF mid-market) that's worse than most areas of Oakland. It would only take a few companies to change hearts and minds...
1 min read
Can we learn from the last Comcast Merger? I hope we can. This recent NPR interview with Susan Crawford goes into the details.
The big risk here is a larger Comcast can leverage Content to keep new entrants out of the market.
That new entrant has to enter on two levels. It has to build communications infrastructure. But it also has to get access to programming, because 91 percent of Americans have paid TV prescriptions, as well as high-speed Internet access subscriptions. They want both. So Comcast pays much less for programming - because it has so many subscribers, and because it owns one of the big players - than any new entrant would. This is yet another cudgel, another sledgehammer that Comcast can use to keep any potential alternative network competition at bay.