Wifi for all

Now this is a brilliant idea.

Sell wireless routers for $5 in return for a 12 month agreement from the user to keep the router open to access by other users of the same phone network. (Non-FON users can get a 24-hour pass for €3) That way (they hope) you can build a decent wireless “hotspot” network, street by street, user by user.

“Wi-fi is universal in cities, but access isn’t,” said Juergen Urbanski.

Mr Urbanski said Fon was aiming to have 50,000 working hotspots worldwide by September, 150,000 by year-end and one million hotspots by the end of 2007.

To date, 54,000 people worldwide have signed up to become “foneros,” up from 3,000 in February, according to the company.

Brilliance.


Web Development

(via Daisy)

Welcome to my world – the perfect breakdown of my web development skills.

Well, except that “swearing” should make up a much bigger section…


Diaries

Next Wednesday I’ve got an appointment at the gym with a nutritionist. Kind of weird – I’ve been planning it for a long time now, but finally got round to making the appointment this week.

So of course, as part of that, I have to make a list of everything I eat or drink between yesterday and next Wednesday. OK, that could be interesting – in a kind of depressing “how much diet coke?” way.

But now comes the sad part. Rather than doing a diary where I write it all down, then forget stuff, then lose the bits of paper etc. (Hey, at least I acknowledge my own inefficiency) I’ve gone and written a tiny little web app that lets me add in items, keeps them in a database, and provides a printable record of them anytime I want. I can even access it through my phone.

I really need to get out more, don’t I?


*Sigh* pt. II

I’m so tired of the current workplace. We’ve recently taken on two people, one a project manager, and one a designer.

So far, well, neither of them is proving to be up to standard. I had to look at the first page the designer had churned out yesterday, and frankly it was fucking awful. Yeah sure, the design was OK, and that is primarily what he’s supposed to be doing. But then he’s also writing the HTML to go behind the page, and doing it epically badly. Considering he was supposed to be comfortable with XHTML etc., the code he’s written is fucking abysmal.

As for the project manager, all I can charitably say is “more feet than clues”. I despair.


Collision

Oh, knew there was something I’d forgotten from @Media…

The first person I met in the entire event? Bloody Stinky, that’s who.

*sob*

Still, in fairness he did appear to have cleaned himself up, and wasn’t anywhere near as offensive as usual. Maybe he took a hint at some point in the last eighteen months…


@Media – thoughts

So yes, as I said earlier this week, I spent Thursday and Friday at the @Media conference in London. And yes, I did enjoy most of it – and some of it has proved to be useful, or given me ideas, so in that context it was pretty successful, I’d say.

On the first day, the initial signs weren’t that great, in honesty. The registration took forever – apparently most techies names start with A-D. Who knew? So while all the people whose initials started J-Z were constantly getting called out of the queue, because those “registration stations” were empty, all the people from A-I were stuck in one big queue, and then the A-Ds were still stuck in a queue once they’d got past the first one. In all it took nearly 45 minutes to get registered – quite impressive, considering they’d initially only allocated from 8-8:45 to register everyone. Still, all part of the learning curve, I suppose. After all, it’s only the second @Media conference at all.

The only other real complaint would be about the provisions. Yeah, they were great if you drank tea or coffee, but there didn’t seem to be anything for people who wanted water, or any other soft drinks at all. Even tea was a bit of a struggle – but water was a nightmare. And the food provided at lunchtimes, while of a pretty good quality (and having been sourced to Leiths) was – to be blunt – small. A selection of sandwiches, and a tiny bowl of Thai Curry or Singapore noodles? Not really a lot, considering each person there had paid at least £400 for the privilege.

However, when the complaints are done with, the rest of the conference went really smoothly, was well organised, and had plenty of interesting stuff.

For me, the highlights are probably Jeff Veen‘s section on Thursday, which was absolutely fantastic, and gave me a lot of food for thought, and Friday’s one would most probably be Dan Cederholm‘s presentation on “Bulletproof Web Design”, which made for some interesting points – some of which were about stating the obvious, but it was still a good presentation.

There was a lot of other stuff that was good, and some that kind of didn’t hit the mark – for example, the presentation about designing websites and content for mobile use didn’t hit the mark (for me, anyway), and nor did the one about WCAG2.0 (Web Accessibility Guidelines) which was interesting enough, but to me could’ve gone so much further.

All told though, I’d say it was well worth the money, and the getting up at 5.45 in order to be on the train for 7am.

Now, when’s the booking start for the 2007 one?


Delayed

Well, the travel.wasn’t so bad. Mind you, getting up at 5.45 was that bad. And then some.

And the train was OK. Delayed, but not by much, because of some whacking great signal failure, and a diversion via Weybridge and all sorts.

But I got here fine. And all’s good.

Thank God for wireless networks…