March 25, 2008: AppleTV is Hooked Back Up

March seems to have blown by in a blur. Somehow we have arrived at the end of the month already.

This week I am really on the early morning shift unlike last week when I just thought that I must be. Oops. So the plan was to sleep until the very last second this morning and then start working. But twenty minutes before I was going to get up Oreo got out of bed and had a little emergency. He needed me to walk him, and not just his short walk around the building but his long walk around the block. He had a bit of a tummy ache. So I got him home and fed him his breakfast. But no sooner had he eaten than he needed to go for another emergency walk. It is going to be a long morning for me, I can tell.

One of my jobs today was getting the AppleTV hooked back up in our bedroom now that we have wireless working in the apartment again. I did some cleaning on the top of our bedroom bookshelf and found a good spot for the AppleTV, hooked it up and got it updated to the latest 2.0 software package. Then I worked to get a few h.264 videos that I have been testing transferred over to see how they would work on it. The first few videos worked extremely well. Handbrake successfully took 1.2GB MPEG2 files and turned them into 330MB h.264 files for the AppleTV that look better than normal SDTV. We are going to be very happy using the AppleTV for watching our own collection. And Dominica is going to be very excited to be able to watch YouTube from bed again.

One channel that we discovered that we really like on YouTube is Howcast. You can watch them on their own site or through HowCast YouTube.

It was a fairly busy day. I wasn’t hurting for things to do. I tried to do some cleaning in the apartment when the opportunity arose but there wasn’t much chance for that. All I really managed to do was to clean up some shelves that have been inaccessible while we were storing all of the stuff that we just shipped to dad’s house this past weekend. The shelves were pretty prominent in the living room and were driving me crazy so I am much happier having gotten them mostly cleaned up. It looks much better now.

I did manage to do two loads of dishes and made a big dent on the recently acquired mess in the kitchen. And I got the cardboard trash out that has piled up over the last few days and I took out the old office chair and switched over to my new one. The new chair is tiny compared to the old one and is more attractive as well.  Just by switching to it we have tons more space in our tiny office spot.  Now it is much easier for Dominica and I to work at the same time since before our chairs were always touching.

Dominica was really hankering for a vegetable stir-fry which, for some odd psychosomatic reason always gives me a headache so she ate that and I just ran over to Food for Life to grab some dinner for myself.

We discovered the ultimate “meal bar” food today: Fiber One Chewy Bars by General Mills.  Dominica bought the oats & caramel flavour the other day and I had my first one today.  Wow are they ever good and loaded with fiber too!

I did about an hour of homework tonight and Dominica did as well.  We have so much to do that there isn’t much chance to avoid it.

Utilities Are Localized Monopolies

As a technology worker I suppose that I am exposed to the issues of utilities and localized monopolies much more often than the average person is. I am always surprised when I come across someone who is not aware that their utilities and infrastructure services are, by their very definition, monopolies within their local area. Utilities of this nature include services such as roads, water, sewer, electric, gas, broadcast television, radio, traditional telephone and cable services. Each of these service, by its nature, can only be provided once to each normal residential address. There are physical limitation making it impossible or impractical to provision competing services and in each case doing so would cause major disruptions, increase cost, etc.

Roads are possibly the easiest to visualize since we see them every day. For most people there is only one road that passes near enough to their property, assuming that they own or rent property, to allow direct access. Even if another road exists nearby it is often not accessible without crossing other people’s property lines to reach it. For the average person having a “backup” access road to their home is simply not possible.

More importantly than the theoretical ability to access a second road (since we could mandate that all houses be built with a road on either side – at massive additional cost financially and environmentally) is the improbability that we could manage a system where one company would own and manage one set of roads and another would own and manage the second set of roads so that every resident would have the choice of whose roads to drive on. At best the road directly at your driveway would be clear but as soon as you reached an intersection there would be a dispute as to whose responsibility the intersection was. Each family would need to choose which road system they were going to access and pay road maintenance fees for repairs, snow removal, insurance, etc. just for the one that they use. That company would then need to pay access fees to the alternate road company so that you would have the right to visit friends across town who opted to use the primary road carrier – the one that you didn’t choose. At some point you will need to switch onto their roads to get into your friend’s driveway. Remember that the choice is to which road system you can access. Just because the road is next to your house doesn’t mean that you are allowed onto it – it is simply the competitor’s product.

The same situation would be true of water. What if you want a company to compete with your town’s water supply. Perhaps they will offer cleaner water at a premium price or cheaper water but that is only good enough for washing the car. Sounds like a great deal. But now a new set of water mains has to be dug under your entire city. That isn’t going to make people happy. And a second water treatment facility will have to be built somewhere in town. And every yard, yes even yours, will have to be dug up to allow the water hookup to be brought to your house. And if you think that the price of water will go down because of competition keep in mind that all of this infrastructure cost money and now each water treatment facility only processes half as much water meaning it takes more people and more equipment to process the same amount of water. Prices have to go up. Inconvenient and more expensive.

It is because of these factors that you have never heard of a village offering competitive road or water services – imagine the disaster with competing sewage systems! Villages, towns and cities almost ubiquitously oversee all key utilities of this nature because it is in everyone’s interest that everyone have clean, safe water, efficient sewers and safe roads. It keeps the population healthy and allows everyone to go to work. These utilities are so obvious and have been around for so long that every village knows exactly how to perform these services and how to do them very efficiently.

We begin to see problems arise when we start looking at core infrastructure services that have only existed for the last century or so. Principally this means electrical, gas, telephone and cable. These services, because they required additional capital investments, connect to additional infrastructure outside of the village or town and require greater technical knowledge have almost purely been left to the purview of private industry generally operating under strict regulations.

Electrical power supply is the oldest of the “new” infrastructure services and, as such, has the most potential to be taken over and managed by the municipality itself. It is not uncommon to find small towns and jurisdictions that have decided to take their power needs “in house” and run their own power plants and maintain their own infrastructure. In many cases this proves to be very beneficial to the local residents as overall costs are often lower and service is local and friendly instead of being handled by some far away corporation. It can also generate local jobs that are stable and reliable. Local power plants are generally not able to take advantage of hydroelectric or nuclear power, however, so they are not always the best option. But the potential is there and with new wind and solar technologies today there could be more potential for this in the future. We must be aware, though, that one of the cost saving measures in small town power management often comes from having no research and development whatsoever which will produce short term gains at long term expense. Large electric companies spend a lot of money making sure that they power is safe, cheap and reliable for a long time to come.

As we move towards newer and more “technology” focused services we move farther and farther away from a general understanding from the overall populace and we also move farther away from municipalities feeling that they should bring these services “in house.” This feeling, I believe, comes from three primary issues. The first is that telephone and cable are massively more complex than even electric generation which causes municipalities to need more extensively trained, and therefore paid, staff for a rather small-scale deployment. The second is that these services are newer and have a greater sense of being “optional” rather than “required” services like water, sewer or electric. The third is that these system inherently must connect to the outside world or they have no meaning. Other key services can, under ideal circumstances, exist completely within the borders of the jurisdiction and operate quite satisfactorily.

Telephone and cable services fall prey to the same issues affecting our other infrastructure components. Even though it is feasible to bring two sets of telephones lines and two sets of cable lines through a town this results in a conflict for right-of-way access which is a complex issue, it creates an unsightly mess in many areas and it decreases revenue potential for all businesses involved which is fine in urban areas but would result in a complete loss of service in rural areas.

The current telephony monopoly situation originated when AT&T was given an almost total monopoly but was required to provide the same service at approximately the same cost to its urban and rural customers. Urban customers in areas with high telephone termination density would pay slightly more than the service would be expected to cost and rural customers would pay the same. But AT&T took a loss on rural telephone terminations under this system making up the cost in their guaranteed urban profit centers. If telephone providers were forced to compete in the urban areas they would be under no obligation to provide service to “profit loss” centers and would not choose to do so.

Some municipalities have decided to compete with the incumbent local carriers and have provided their own telephone and cable services. These services generally are technological dinosaurs, however, and roll out at very high cost with very few features. Few local regions have the capability to supply these services at a level competitive with large technology companies that service the major markets. This situation is likely to change over time as the technologies involved become increasingly commonplace and as convergence removes the need for as many overlapping services.

In today’s Internet dominated communications world we actually have arrived at a situation with far more choice than we have had for the past several generations. Because both the traditional telephone infrastructure as well as the cable television infrastructures and even to some degree the cellular phone infrastructure can carry Internet access to our homes we have, for the first time, have the ability to choose between competitors for a core infrastructure service. These competition is simply the result of redundant legacy technologies being replaced with a converged modern technology. If the Internet had come first there would never have been two separate telephone and cable television systems and all of those services would have been delivered over a single Internet access line and people today would be furious at the thought of stringing another entire set of cables up in the sky overhead. But those decisions were made long ago in a different era.

This competition of services has proved to be very good for us today and not only gives us the opportunity to choose and change Internet access suppliers but also to purchase duplicate services providing ourselves with a degree of reliability that did not exist for either service individually. In some rare areas Internet access is even available or has been proposed to be made available through the electrical power distribution system providing a third vector for access to our homes. Multi-service Internet access is now commonplace enough that major vendors such as Netgear now sell home router/firewall units that are designed to aggregate service across dual connections to provide better speed and reliability simply and automatically.

So the unfortunate situation that we find ourselves in is that there is no good answer for infrastructure services.  We must either submit to socialized control of these services by municipalities and regional authorities which leaves us with generally lower prices as the cost of development, advancement and options or we can allow private corporations to run these utilities where we are “forced” to hand over monopolistic controls in the hopes that regulations will keep prices and services in line.  The risk of either approach, of course, is that our access to critical services and, in some cases, information and our view of the outside world is controlled by agencies and companies for whom there is no true competition.

As technology service become more commonplace I believe that we have a great opportunity for convergence and socialization again.  As some rare regions have done, telephone and cable infrastructure can be brought “in house” through heavy investment in fiber optic networking allowing all services of this nature to be delivered with higher service levels, greater safety and at lower long-term cost through a single, small cable.  Municipalities that choose to go this integrated services route will find that they can leverage scale for cost effective Internet access through a few competitive long-haul carriers, allow residents to choose “telephone” services from Internet VoIP carriers that must compete on price and service, lower the power requirements providing additional cost savings and safety and greatly reduce the number of cables that must be strung through their regions.

For a relatively small investment a village, for example, could make Gigabit speed fiber optic connections available to every single resident of the village for a fixed fee and allow competing “cable television” companies to house their distribution systems within the village’s cabling hub giving residents the right to choose which television provider to choose or to choose none at all.  Telephone service could be purchased from a large number of carriers or residents could build their own telephony systems and even bypass those competitive carriers.  Only the core Internet access service – the base on which all else is derived – would be “owned” and management by the community providing a minimum amount of infrastructure for a maximum amount of services.

March 24, 2008: Surprise Trip to Warren

When I got up this morning I thought that I was going into Wall Street to work but after being awake and realizing that today was my only day all week to go into Warren and that one of my colleague whom I have not yet met was down from Toronto working in Warren all week I decided that I needed to head out into rural New Jersey.  So I got ready as quickly as I could and walked up to the Broad Street NJ Transit train station and road out to Summit to catch the company shuttle.

I finished reading “The Art of Project Management” this morning which I thought that I would never get through.  That is a really long book.  I started reading “Interface Oriented Design” which is much shorter and I made appreciable progress through just while riding the train and shuttle today.

Work was really slow today as it is Easter Monday which is a bank holiday in both the United Kingdom and Switzerland so the foreign exchange was closed leaving me without much work.  Some of us went out to Bombay for lunch which was nice as living in Newark makes it difficult to get good Indian food.  We just haven’t managed to find any restaurants around here.  Very frustrating.

I grabbed the five o’clock shuttle back to Summit and the Hoboken train back to Newark.  Dominica went grocery shopping after work and was a long way behind me getting home.  Ramona txt’d me while I was on the train as she was getting dinner at Food for Life.  Ryan tried to get a hold of us for dinner as well but Ramona beat him by just four minutes.  We are popular tonight.  Dominica wasn’t feeling very hungry and wasn’t going to make it home for a while so I walked down to Food for Life and met Ramona there for dinner.

Dominica got home tonight but was feeling pretty tired.  We had a pretty short evening.  She read her new “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” graphic novel and went to bed.  I had to take Oreo out and then got caught working for the office for several hours until almost midnight.  I am on the early shift tomorrow so I am going to be pretty tired.

March 23, 2008: Baking Bluetooth

Dexter didn’t sleep with us last night. We just couldn’t handle another night of his anxiety. It is sad because he is so excited that Dominica and I come to visit and all that he wants is to be with us like in the old days when he used to come stay with us for days at a time. But he has such awful anxiety that he spends the entire night panting and panicking which, in turn, keeps us from being able to sleep and doesn’t help Oreo out much either. So last night he had to sleep upstairs and just Dominica, Oreo and I slept in the living room. Dexter came and joined us early in the morning after his and Oreo’s early walk outside.

Baked Bluetooth

We just hung around the house until two in the afternoon when we went over to Dominica’s grandpa Tocco’s house for Easter dinner. Dominica spent a bit of the morning working on homework for Empire State while I added the new memory to her parents’ computer and watched Joe play Call of Duty 4 on the PlayStation 3. I did a little bit of reading for my class today as well but not very much.

We had dinner at two and stayed there until around four when we went back to Min’s parents’ house, packed the car and got on to the road headed for Newark. It was probably around five when we finally got out the door. We stopped at Ramapo, in southern New York along the Thruway, and grabbed dinner at the McDonald’s at the rest stop there. It was quick and easy. We ran into fairly little traffic and were home to Newark just after nine.

Dominica and I spent our short evening working on homework. It isn’t much fun having all of this homework due all of the time. I wrapped up around ten thirty. Dominica went much later. I decided to go to bed with Oreo and to read while Dominica wrapped up her homework. Her plan was to work until she was exhausted.

My video of the sunrising over Manhattan was added to the NYC HiDef channel on Vimeo.

I made a mistake last week and I am actually on the early morning shift this coming week. That was pretty dumb. I am not on it tomorrow (Monday) for the same reason that I thought that I was not on it last Monday. But Tuesday through Friday I will be doing the early morning.

March 22, 2008: Dad Visits Frankfort

Congratulations to Josh and JoAnne Relyea who just had their first baby, Lilly Allison Relyea, on Wednesday night!

Dominica and I slept in quite a bit this morning. We got very little sleep last night because of Oreo and Dexter and their competitive drinking, eating, peeing, pooping activities. They will just drink and eat every bit of water and food made available to them and then will get me up every two hours all night long to take them out for walks. So I almost never got a chance to sleep at all.

Joe and I spent a bit of the morning working on the Netgear router and the Sony Playstation 3 trying to get his Playstation and Bennie’s Playstation 3 in Houston to talk to each other.  We are not having very much luck, though.  We put in a few hours working on it last night as well and didn’t really get anywhere.  There is some issue with their machines connecting and we have tried everything including default port forwarding for both machines (Netgear calls this a DMZ) but that did not work either.  So we are stumped.

Dad left Peoria this morning around nine thirty and arrived in Frankfort just a little bit before one in the afternoon. He said that he had a pretty good drive. We are really fortunate that the weather has worked out so well this weekend with Dominica and I driving so much and dad driving almost as much as well. It was bright and clear today. Probably the first really good weekend that we have had since Christmas!

We went out to Herkimer for lunch at the Albany Street Cafe & Pub. Neither Min nor I had been there before but we had eaten next door at the Empire Diner when we had come out to Herkimer so that I could play trombone in Dan Waltermire’s wedding on October 12, 2002. I drove the Toccos’ new 2008 Chevy Impala SS to lunch to test it out. They just got it recently and this is the first time that we have seen it. They got rid of the Oldmobile Bravada that they had been using as their second car and not just have the Impala and the Chrysler 300M.

Lunch was good although it took a really long time. Dominica and I both got crab cake sandwiches which were really amazing. We will be wanting to eat there again sometime.

After lunch dad hung out in Frankfort until just after five when he hit the road back to Peoria. He took our rather large load of stuff to transfer back with him. We are very glad to have some extra space reclaimed in our tiny little apartment. Now we can move around again. Although we will almost instantly discover more stuff that needs to be put into storage.

Dad also brought out three months worth of mail including some Model Railroad magazines that I have been having sent to his house and some Amazon and eBay shipments that went there on accident including “Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight” the graphic novel that I got for Dominica for Christmas that she has not had a chance to get yet. So she is excited to finally have that. I have a set of books that went there as well that I have totally forgot that I owned which include “What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Literacy and Learning”, “Rome’s Greatest Defeat: Massacre in the Teutoburg Forest”, “The Day of the Barbarians: The Battle That Led to the Fall of the Roman Empire”, “The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians” and “Dreaming in Code”. So now I have a lot of reading to work on. I need to get busy with that.

After dad left, Dominica, her father and I went out to Best Buy and Circuit City to do some quick shopping.  We picked up a 1GB stick of PC2700 (a.k.a. DDR333) memory for the Toccos’ Dell Optiplex 170L desktop which has been suffering from being too low on memory.  It had only 256MB before so the additional 1GB will have an enormous impact taking it from .25GB to 1.25GB total memory.  Quite a nice upgrade.

I spent the evening working on my Systems Analysis and Design homework. I have two assignments due by midnight tonight and then discussion work that I need to get to tomorrow at some point. I am behind on my reading for that class (I know that this sounds incredible but I have been putting a lot of effort into getting the book that I am in the middle of out of the way before putting too much effort into reading my textbook and this has been proving to be a challenge.) So I read three chapters in the textbook today which took a really long time and I re-read “No Silver Bullet” by Fred Brooks and wrote my essay on that. Then I had to do some small UML diagrams. It was about eleven thirty when I wrapped up. Dominica had already gone to sleep by the time that I was done.

We are having Easter Dinner with the family tomorrow afternoon around two o’clock.  We are having dinner early so that Dominica and I can get onto the road as early as possible.  We are anticipating really bad traffic on the drive back down to Newark.  Also, tomorrow evening two of my colleagues from the Toronto office are flying into the NY Metro area.  One is coming to Newark and so we are hoping to get together for drinks before he drives out to find his hotel.  But we will see.  He is scheduled to arrive at seven which is too early for me to be able to make it but with Newark’s infamous delays and the time needed for him to find luggage and rent a car it might be feasible if we get out early and make really good time down to Newark.