May
03
2010
Space.com is reporting that Galaxy 15, an Intelsat satellite that stopped communicating with ground control last month, is threatening to interfere with an SES World Skies satellite. That company specializes in providing communications services to Europe and Third World nations.
Intelsat suspects that an intense solar storm in early April caused the unprecedented event. The satellite is alive, fully on and transmitting, but has left its assigned orbit and is not responding to intelligent signals from earth. They are by no means certain the solar storm caused the problem.
There is another possibility, however. In 2005, SatelliteGuys.us reported that the recently-launched then-PamAmSat’s Galaxy 15 would become a relay for Fox News. Starting in first-quarter 2006, Galaxy 15 has been subjected to a steady diet of Fox.
We only have about 40 years of experience with geostationary communications satellites relaying video content, and the toxic content of Fox News has only been sent to satellites since 1996. While solar storms may be the cause, IntelSat should investigate the effects of caustic content on transponders.
Considering the actions of the satellite (in its relationship with its neighbors) bear similarities to the actions of Sarah Palin, and the Arizona legislature, which we know have also been subjected to a constant diet of Fox News, more research is certainly warranted.
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Apr
26
2009
As a self-professed new media expert on Twitter, I’m expected to have at least one “next big thing” social media idea, but I’m so edgy that I’ve got two.
Twitter has now reached its late teens (in social media years) and has begun the process of cleaning up its childish things. It recently announced that it would start cancelling and reassigning moribund accounts.
Somebody who took a valuable username, tweeted one tweet and wandered off in a daze shouldn’t be a dog-in-the-manger for someone who would put that enviable 3-character moniker to good use.
That’s where my new social networks come in: two new sites designed to keep flakes from frittering away the valuable naming resources and web real estate of the big guys.
These are gateway networks, one each for Twitter and Facebook. New users who don’t pass a simple online Web 2.0 proficiency test at Twitter and Facebook are sent to my two networks for their trial runs.
I call them Fritter and Flakebook.
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Apr
02
2009
A letter to the editor received from a young reader:
I am 8 years old.
Some of my friends say there is no Twitter Pro.
Papa says, if you see it on THE INTERNETS it's so.
Please tell me the truth; is there a Twitter Pro?
VIRGINIA O'HANLON
115 West Ninety-Fifth Street
VIRGINIA, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except what Apple and Microsoft tell them.
Yes, VIRGINIA, there is a Twitter Pro. It exists as certainly as user entry form mockups and vaporware and unfunded startups exist, and you know that they abound as dead and moribund webpages on servers this whole world round.
Not believe in Twitter Pro? You might as well not believe in boo.com, or etoys.com or Webvan.
You might get your papa to hire men to watch Source Forge night and day, but even if they didn’t see beta versions coming down the pipe, what would that prove? Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen and unseeable in the world.
No Twitter Pro? Unfathomable. Because VIRGINIA if we tell ourselves that Twitter Pro is nothing but a fairy tale, if we come to believe its just a hoax on the unsuspecting, then we must again ask ourselves that much scarier and vexing question: “How can Twitter monetize itself.”
The Editor
[Snark Rosetta Stone: "Twitter Pro" was an April Fools Joke promulgated by the folks who brought you the Shorty Awards. It was an alleged invitation to participate in the beta program for a rumored paid enhanced service on Twitter that would monetize it. But it really was nothing more than a website that took your twitter avatar and put a "PRO" banner on it, and sent you to your twitter page to replace your avatar with the "enhanced" one. It then let you tweet an invitation to others. A lot of people were fooled, and I was one of them.]
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