Three Internet (GPRS) with Sony Ericsson k608i and GNU/Linux

One massive annoyance with last week’s trip to the L2SE conference was the terrible state of WiFi access in London. I’d actually paid a little extra for first class on the home trip because it gives access to Paddington’s Victorian Lounge which says “It also has workstations with access to the Internet”.

What it doesn’t say is that the workstations are desks not computers, there’s no wired ethernet and the wifi is Extortionate ISP The Cloud at the cost of £4.50 an hour. Alternatively, you can pay through Orange at £6/hour or more reasonably through O2 at £7.50/month. I was carrying two mobile phones, but not an O2. Why is Paddington so backwards? Bristol Temple Meads has U2com free wifi access through Dashi sushi bar (note it’s not National Rail or First Great Western) and fon which was about £3/day last time I used it. £4.50/hour seems a really terrible deal to me – I’ve used cheaper internet cafes than that and they have to maintain actual hardware. If that fee really reflects their costs, The Cloud must be a pretty wasteful operator.

So I finally got GPRS working on my phone. Essentially, it was the same as described on Dave Stevens site and davesource, with the exception that the k608i already knows the connection settings, so the AT+CGDCONT line can be removed completely, as mentioned on Of Linux, GPRS Phones, Serial Cable, Irda, Bluetooth and USB, by Mikko Rapeli – otherwise the phone replies ERROR and the connection fails. It also needs the guest * guest line in the pap-secrets file and a matching user guest in the gprs options file.

Another TTLLP member tells me that later phones offer NAP service and that pand is much simpler than pppd/gprs. I’ll find that out when I get a newer phone, I guess. Someone else suggested ip-over-dns to punish The Cloud for their silly fees, but is that legal?

Posted in ThePhoneCoop | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Report on Listening to the Social Entrepreneur

Last Thursday, I was at a conference called Listening to the Social Entrepreneur. Here are some short notes about the plenary session, which were written at the time, along with thoughts on the workshops that I’ve just written up.

HCT Group – credit crunch opportunity – business with ethics – transport – dislike 3rd sector term – difference between social enterprise and charity – optimism.

Haley House – ex-soup kitchen staffed by ex-homeless, bakery, bank donated equipment, financial picture – catering grew 36% cafe grew 21% september, cooking classes; recipe for success: collaborate with experienced partner, secure enough capital or equivalent, align venture with mission; plan for sustainability; future…

Roskilde university – relevance of academic research – why references for things I know – hard to have your feelings discussed. (meeting last Monday?) – don’t care what it’s called – too much jargon – several ways of learning, conceptual doesn’t seem useful but will later. CICs. Four flags of SEs – eship, er, e, econ.

Bikeworks – practitioner and academic. Formation, setup, establishment, sustain. SE changes; viewpoint: academic, researchers, help us. Useless website.

Then came three workshops of varying usefulness: Procurement Versus Marketplace was an interesting idea and reminded me why I avoided public-sector projects for years: I’m better at negotiated than at rules-based selling. I also was told (with a straight face) by a development trust worker that cooperatives are simply profit-sharing schemes, which was very disappointing.

Social verses Business Goals seemed pretty ill-conceived. The reason why many people work in social enterprises is because we don’t believe we should choose between them. It’s an integrated, multi-faceted approach.

Born or Made? was an interesting examination of the people powering social enterprises. Food for thought, but I’m not sure it really produced much. But I’m not that sure whether any of the workshops had much of a productive purpose.

The final plenary session was confusing. I was sat further back, the sound system was intermittent and echoy and the talks seemed truncated and still, but maybe I was just tired. A lot of people had left by this point. I stayed on for the networking reception and met a few interesting people, but left earlyish to meet another TTLLP member on the light railway. The venue was OK (I think the main hall problems were more sound system and operation than the hall itself) and coffee, lunch and reception were well-catered.

In conclusion, it was an interesting conference, but I don’t feel that we got much out of it, apart from some thoughts from a workshop session. I suspect it was more useful for the researchers than for the entrepreneurs. There weren’t many opportunities for professional development or sales or even putting things into consultations or . I’m not sure I’d spend best part of two days work (attending plus travel plus costs) on another similar event.

Posted in Cooperatives | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Listening to the Social Entrepreneur

Today, I shall be mostly at Listening to the Social Entrepreneur. If you’re in the area and have something to say, leave a comment here to contact me. (Comments won’t appear here until this evening, sorry.)

I’ll write a review post after the event.

Aside: Councils are worried about their Landsbanki deposits – thankfully, Kewstoke isn’t one of them, but ow! Yet another way that the banking problems will increase taxes.

Posted in Cooperatives | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Pulling One File From a Plesk Backup

I won’t repeat my frequent anti-Plesk rant, but suffice to say: it’s a pain.

For some reason, we wanted one file back out of a backup. It took me a few minutes to realise it, but Plesk’s backups are essentially MIMEd and gzipped. So, rather than fighting with their mysterious semi-documented backup-unpack tool, just say:-

zcat backupfile | sed -n -e '/name="filename.whatever/,/^--_--/p' >filename.whatever

If you don’t know the filename, zless’ing the head of the file should find it from the XML description blocks pretty quickly. Slight editing of the output file will be necessary, to strip MIME and so on, but it’s easier than installing too much else on a webserver.

Does anyone know why this gzipped-MIME is better than tar.gz or something else common and easy-to-use?

Posted in GNU/Linux | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Nestle Boycott 20th Anniversary

It’s the 20th anniversary of the Nestle Boycott this week. The theme is “Change Nestlé, Change the World”. This is one of few boycotts that I wholeheartedly support and participate in.

While reading a report from the NI cooperative, I learnt of a new outrage by Nestle. Over in Canada, Wellington Water Watchers document a Nestle plant that is (as I understand it), taking drinking water for free, bottling it as “Aqua Fina”, trucking it to cities and selling it. (Thanks to whoever it was gave me the WWW link – I didn’t find the email, so please claim it in a comment if you want it.)

You may remember that when Coca-Cola tried to do the same by selling contaminated Kent tap water as “Dasani”, it was widely ridiculed as Peckham Spring. Finally, “Dasani” was withdrawn from sale. It’s disappointing that Nestle’s Peckham Spring seems to be on sale in Canada, at a lower “manufacturing” cost than Coke’s UK one.

Do we really want multinationals selling us our tap water in an inefficient way? No. Boycott Nestle.

Posted in Cooperatives | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

The Trouble With Big Webmail

So last week, a relative commented to me that a solicitor sent a letter in reply to an email. I suggested that it might be because the email reply address was on one of the major free web email providers. “What’s wrong with my webmail?” So I explained…

First of all, as far as I know, no Big Webmail service supports encrypted email (and there are complications in how you’d provide such a thing on webmail anyway) and it can be fairly easy to trick the webmail service into giving access to other people. My relative was sceptical, but within a day, US vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s Yahoo mail was cracked and splashed across the news. (By the way – gov.palin counted as a personal email address? Huh? Her name isn’t “gov”.)

Even without passwords going astray, there’s no telling that the intended recipient is the only person reading the email. Here’s a fun paragraph from the Google Mail Terms:-

“Google maintains and processes your Gmail account and its contents to provide the Gmail service to you and to improve our services. The Gmail service includes relevant advertising and related links based on the IP address, content of messages and other information related to your use of Gmail.” (emphasis added)

The Electronic Privacy Information Center suggests this includes wiretapping.

There’s finally a growing awareness that free webmails are not safe, built on artificial anti-competitive encouragements like “you need a Yahoo!ID to subscribe to this yahoogroup” (no – the old “stick -subscribe after the group name, before the @” still works, just like it did before they bought it from egroups). Internet Psychologist Graham Jones writes:-

“It’s time to review your online security and think about whether you actually need Google and its like at all. Probably not.” (source)

I agree with that. Both of my phone companies (The Phone Co-op agency and 3) include webmail – although I have some personal domains (for long-term contactability), those webmails are fine for lists and short-term use. The sort of thing most people seem to use Big Webmail for.

The other main point in my argument was that free webmails are unreliable, thanks to tactics like Yahoo’s shoddy anti-spam attacks on other mailservers. There’s no telling whether the email will get through such bad behaviour and delivery-receipts are unreliable. I can quite understand why a solicitor won’t send email to the likes of hotmail, even if I think it’s just as probable that the solicitor doesn’t “get” email.

“Oh” said my relative. I think she’s still using Big Webmail though.

Posted in ThePhoneCoop | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Is Firsht Social Networking’s Godfrey?

A case of a former friend impersonating someone on facebook was decided during the summer: Applause Store Productions Ltd. & Anor v Raphael [2008] EWHC 1781 (QB) (24 July 2008) . The victim was awarded thousands of pounds in damages.

As I write this, there’s still no response on facebook’s news page, but I wonder whether Firsht will be to UK social networking what Godfrey was to UK Usenet. A bit of a wake-up – a reminder that the internet isn’t a consequence-free playpen. I know that more than most – my youthful indiscretions are plastered across the web, if you know where to look. Fortunately, cooperative associates seem to understand that people learn over time and don’t hold decade-old mistakes against me.

Talking of not holding old mistakes against people, LinkedIn is profitting from an influx of bankers since the banks started going bust. That’s going to change the society behind their network – for better or worse?

All of the big name networks seem to be having some growing pains, like the breakdown of the Facebook metaphor and I think the “walled gardens” are ripe for replacement. I’m still listed there at present, but I’m using my account on the cooperativemagazine NoseRub server (now closed) to monitor it and most of the stuff posted to facebook is taken from my websites. I’d like to make NoseRub import and export more things in more formats, but will anyone pay for that work? Otherwise, it keeps falling down my priorities because it’s in PHP and I don’t find that much fun. Maybe I’ll replace it with something more amusing in Scheme or Perl.

Aside: is there a good bot that produces an RSS feed of jabber/XMPP presence messages?

Posted in Web Development | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

How not to be a Popular Politician

So, while everyone was watching the Bush Bank Bail-out plan get rejected by Congress, they also found time to approve more bad copyright law, an RIAA-backed initiative to attack cooperative download tools like BitTorrent. Thankfully, the attempt to empower the Department of Justice to prosecute on behalf of Big Music was lost (DoJ didn’t want the task anyway) and the Bush administration is minded to veto it.

But that’s been the least of my politician annoyances in September. Earlier this year, we were encouraged by Cooperatives-UK to get involved with our Local Strategic Partnership. I went to North Somerset Partnership’s event but I was less than impressed by it. There’s no obvious way that NSP is capable of promoting cooperation. Publishing a thick glossy book about sustainability makes me wonder if it’s capable of doing anything sensible – most people I’ve shown it to have either laughed at it, or got angry about the wasted resources.

They’re not the only LSP we have here. Last week, I went to the West of England Partnership’s Transport Forum which

“horrendously perverted the idea of a “forum” – the event would have been better titled “Joint Transport Lectures” because nearly all our time was spent watching council officers and consultants tell us how wonderful transport is here (they’re meeting 18 out of 21 targets, you know!) and what roads and bus roads they will build next. … The whole event seems like a colossal waste of resources for all involved.”

So, I seem to be having a bad time with politicians recently. If the above wasn’t enough, we got a reply to our petition requesting ODF at the National Archives which amazingly doesn’t mention Open Document Format at all. I’ve written to our MP (John Penrose) asking about that.

And finally, I asked Climate Change Minister Joan Ruddock MP

“If there’s no windfall tax to fund it, how will the government remove the climate-harming services from the market and encourage new suppliers (particularly Third Sector ones who should show concern for their communities and sustainable energy) into the market?”

and got the non-answer of

“The Government is tackling a very wide range of issues that impact on Climate Change through a variety of mechanisms. The energy efficiency programme recently announced is directed at those most in need and where a small expenditure can produce a significant and lasting saving in energy use. Thus saving households money and reducing CO2 emissions.”

What the heck has that to do with removing harmful services and encouraging new suppliers?

If any politicians want to be held in better esteem, try giving some straight answers instead of imitating the above, please. “Yes, Minister” was meant to be a satire!

Posted in SPI | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

International Development Webcast 30 September 2008

At 1900 BST tonight (30 September), you can take part in an international development webcast by one of my cooperatives, with guests from the Cooperative College, the International Cooperative Alliance and the Cooperative and Policy Alternative Center.

Sadly, they’re still clueless about free software, so you may need to put mms://195.10.247.9/a83e447e-68fb-453a-9f0c-8b3fe5b382b9 into a standalone video player if your browser keeps on demanding Microsoft Silverlight like mine does. Drop them an email and suggest that the Bristol Wireless cooperative do better webcasts or something like that.

Posted in Education, Training and Information, SPI, ThePhoneCoop, Web Development | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Demutualised Building Society Survival Hits Rock Bottom

Our webmaster cooperative is just switching from a building society to a cooperative bank because of support for free software and web standards in their online banking – I’ve just given up waiting for it. That’s disappointing, but the building society has given pretty good service over the years and were early accepters of our LLP company type. For comparison, look at this list of building societies which converted to banks late last century, which have been in the news lately:-

  1. National and Provincial Building Society was taken over by Abbey National
  2. Abbey National was itself taken over by Banco Santander
  3. Alliance + Leicester is being bought by Banco Santander
  4. Birmingham Midshires was bought by the Halifax
  5. Halifax was bought by Bank of Scotland to form HBOS, which is now merging into Lloyds TSB
  6. Cheltenham and Gloucester was bought by Lloyds TSB
  7. Bristol and West was bought by the Bank of Ireland
  8. The Woolwich was bought by Barclays plc
  9. Northern Rock, nationalised earlier this year
  10. Bradford and Bingley, nationalisation announced today

So that’s it. All gone. 0% survival rate of demutualised building societies. I’ll be amazed if any more convert in future.

Posted in Cooperatives | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments