If someone has the link from this morning IETF MMUSIC WG meeting, let me know where it is.
Archive for the ‘Junk’ Category
So wired magazine has some charity contest thing – One of the top items is pretty cool and valued at $102,000
However they seem to have an item that is worth even more.
So webster has priceless defined as
Main Entry: priceless
- a : having a value beyond any price : Invaluable b : costly because of rarity or quality : precious
- : having worth in terms of other than market value
- : delightfully amusing, odd, or absurd
So I guess it could mean any one of these three. But it did get me thinking, if lunch with Brad is priceless, what about lunch with me? Any takers at 50 cents? What if I buy? And what really should lunch with the head system administrator at Cisco be worth?
Bike

Sign above garage thanks to my kind friends EKR and JF who rub this in every chance they get

do get it… Well before you decide you are, make sure you know the answer to a
very trivial probability problem that I have posted before at http://www.dial911anddie.com/blog/C132084747/E757052080/index.html.
Anyways, I don’t understand why people are surprised by things
like:
It
is partially a function of we publish “interesting” results, even if they are
only expect to be right 19/20 times while we don’t publish “un interesting”
results.
security based on Crunchy on the outside, Chewy in the middle security model.
However, I just saw a web site about
what the captain of all crunch is now up to and I love it. What else but the
Crunch Box which
they describes as “a virtually un-crackable
firewall”
In case anyone is missing
where the Crunchy/Chewy analogy comes from,

(Read more to see where this photo came from
)
And my ever popular SIP ALG
picture….
Continue reading ‘Crunchy on the outside, Chewy in the middle’ »
notebook computers are getting smaller. I recently went to a meeting where I a
think my 17 inch powerbook was the smallest of the twelve notebook computers in
the room.
in a fairly stuffy business setting about the great things that enterprise voip
and collaborations systems are bringing to customers. One of the slides had this
great graphic in
it.

will loose this business to others. The problem is that most people have less
than 2000 songs that they actively listen to. This numberr is not growing, or if
it is growing, it is not growing rapidly. On the other hand the cost of flash is
dropping rapidly. Imagine you could buy a 8G flash card for $50. The only thing
your average cell phone is missing from being a nice MP3 player is the storage.
They have the CPU, battery, and audio circuitry to do it. Every cell phone
provider will just include the storage or will provide a slot where you stuff in
a storage card that you purchase separately. Now Apple could stay in the iTunes
business – it’s a nice program to manage you music. However, they will not see
how they can monazite this in any strong way so instead of making it work for
all mp3 players, they will use it to try and promote their own iPod hardware.
Other manufactures will make iPod clones that are just as nice and cell phones
and other devices will erode the market. Eventually apple will exit the iPod
market.
Rohan leans thedifference between add_all_algorithm and add_ssl_algorithms
expensive beer I have ever purchased. It was a Cisco beer.

