Diary

Friday, August 27, 2004

The Godfather of Lomography

Last night I encountered the first program on BBC Four that I was actually interested in watching: The Lomo Camera: Shoot from the hip. As you'd expect it was packed full of fantastic photos taken on the classic Lomo Kompakt Automat and the newer multi-shot cameras produced by the Lomographic Society, but the really interesting stuff was about the history of the Lomo. Way back in the early 90's the Lomographic Society was beginning to take off, and needing a reliable supply of Kompakts, made a deal for its exclusive worldwide distribution. Unfortunately shortly thereafter, the Lomo PLC (now in the world of capitalism) worked out its per-unit production costs and discovered they were higher than the per-unit sale price, thus deciding to cease all production. The Lomo Society tried many tactics to convince them to continue production, in the end involing then Mayor of St. Petersburg, Vladamir Putin. Putin, realising the importance of the Lomo Kompakt to both St. Petersburg & Russian history, as well as to the Lomo Society, managed to convince (pressure ?) the factory to continue production. Truly he is the Godfather of Lomography

Friday, August 13, 2004

Open source streaming media

Its nice to see the BBC taking a stand against the extortionist licensing model of RealMedia (and other commercial media streaming companies) by pushing ahead with development of its own Open Source standard. Its also interesting to note that since the design & implementation can be based on technical merit rather than potential commercial benefits, Dirac could feasibly turn out to be faster than existing codecs.

Borer believes Dirac could turn out to be more efficient than standards based on commercial patents, even though it has to use technology more than 20 years old to avoid breaking patents.

Many of the techniques were published by academics long before they were used commercially, and some are relatively new in being applied to video compression. 'Wavelets [exotic waveforms used to map changes] have been around for 20 years now ...snip...

Efficiency depends on how techniques are used as much as on the techniques themselves. Commercial organisations trying to agree a standard currently fight to get their own intellectual property included, which makes for complexity and does not necessarily lead to the adoption of the best of breed. 'We have tried to make our codec as simple as we can so it is easy to understand and easy to implement efficiently,' said Borer.

Wednesday, August 04, 2004

Most Heinous Government Organization

Its that time of year again when Privacy International hands out the UK Big Brother Awards. Amongst the categories are Worst Public Servant, Most Invasive Company, Most Appalling Project, Most Heinous Government Organization and Lifetime Menace. This being the UK there is strong competition and the winners don't disappoint

Most Appalling Project was awarded to Britain's National Health Service electronic medical records program, which aims to computerize patient records in a way that some have protested is insecure and will compromise patient privacy.

Most Heinous Government Organization was won by The Office of National Statistics for its development of the Citizen Information Project, which will collect, collate and share U.K. citizens' data with other government agencies.

Its all summed up nicely by the quote

"We are seeing a race to the bottom, where government and private sector alike compete to provide the most intrusive services in the most unstable environment for privacy," said Davies. "The proclaimed need for protection of children and the fight against terrorism is often shamelessly used as the pretext for privacy invasion."

http://berrange.com/personal/diary