Archive for the ‘thoughts’ Category

Technology changing sports

Sunday, September 10th, 2006

A few races back I was debating going to a Formula 1 race to see Michael Schumacher racing. While we were talking about it we figured that you’d probably feel pretty uninformed while watching since there’s no way to know what’s going on in the race – all you see is cars swooshing by. If you’re lucky you can see a big screen with the results or you’re listening to a radio that you can understand (which is hard in Italy). You’d be getting all the excitement of watching it live but you might not even know where or when or why your favorite driver finished the race.

What we finally agreed upon was that Formula 1 organizers should provide a wireless media player that could access video and other data about the race. It would act like a small computer with video capabilites and would make watching a race live a much greater experience. It would have to be cheap to rent and easy to use and the batteries would have to last at least a race and a half.

Well today they anounced such a device. I couldn’t find it on the internet yet but it’s supposed to have access to all cameras (you can switch between them yourself) and a lot of data about the race. I think this is a sign that times are changing and that technology is finally getting into every nook and cranny of our lives.

This is good and bad at the same time. It’s good for a volleyball team when their technologist can tell them where the serves are landing and where the most spikes land. The players are the ones that have to use this data and change their plays accordingly. What I don’t like is traction control, automatic transmission and almost everything else in the racing cars of today. This means that drivers have to do and know much less then they had to in the past. It’s not only more information – it’s less work. Now I’m not saying that racing is easy today, what I am saying is that it’s easier than it used to be.

In any case – Michael Schumacher decided to retire today which means I will never see him race a Formula 1 racing car live. I wasn’t really a big fan of him personally but as a big fan of Ferrari I respected what he and the people he brought (Ross, Jean) did to the red team. Hopefully others will be able to continue…

Slovenia, who represents you?

Saturday, September 9th, 2006

Something this week made me think who the most well known Slovenian is worldwide. For some reason I focused on sports and popular music. In popular music I’d guess it has to be Magnifico:

Original video here.

Siddharta probably isn’t far though:

Original video here.

I don’t want to focus on sports here but I think Janez Brajkovič is probably going up on the list…

We’re all the same on the net

Friday, September 1st, 2006

Before going to London this year to @media 2006 I was quite sure that the local web scene is as bad as it gets and that in other “more developed” countries clients know more about the web and developers are more skilled. I was utterly disappointed when I was told by other attendees from various European countries that I was wrong. It seems that this ignorance towards new web technologies and to the real power of the web is widespread.

I was reminded today when I read Rogers post (you can see him here not drinking). The fact that this is true all over the place makes me think about the future of the web.

In a possible future I see the extinction of competent web developers because everybody will presume that all web developers are phoneys. The sort of destiny that probably happened to psychics, magicians and others now known as “charlatans”. Maybe some actually do see the future and can make an elephant disappear – who knows…

Hopefully this won’t happen before the global cooling. If it does I hope I’ll be laughing about it.

Democratic web?

Sunday, August 27th, 2006

I’ve been neglecting this place for the last month. The problem is of course time, or to be exact, the lacking of it. I’ve been working a lot, resting a lot and working some more. Most of my ‘spare’ time went into a personal project of mine that I’ll be releasing to a public beta soon hopefully.

What got me writing again was a thing that happened to me a few days ago. As a proud owner of a Feed Demon license I also have a synchronized account on NewsGator Online. As I was reading the news at work I saw an interesting post on a certain Slovenian blog whose author is a respected columnist. I thought he made a good point but was missing something – he was ignoring some things that happened recently. I posted a comment. It had two links in it. One of them was Guba, a site offering legal video downloads, the other a local company similar to Netflix. The comment appeared when I posted it but when I came back to the post (Slovenian only) my comment was gone. The good news is that it was obviously noticed by the company and inspired a comment from them.

What I’m questioning here is the democratization that was supposed to happen with blogs. Yes, everyone can express their opinion. The question is will it be deleted by others who don’t share the opinion but have the power to do it. Years ago it was the oppressive government. Then it was the oppressive companies. Is tomorrow filled with oppressive opinion makers?

This also makes me wonder how many of the mainstream blogs are poised by this. It seems logical though – nothing lasts, money corrupts everything and everyone.

Maybe it’s not all bad and it was just a slip of the author. In that case forget this post, you can still belive anything you read on blogs, wikipedia, and other similar media.