Wireless LANs and Neo-Nomads / Feasibility of Virtual Work

Blogged under Technology, internet, mobile, technomads, web 2.0 by tejot on Wednesday 13 June 2007 at 10:57

While the current 11n protocol may prove quite an obstacle for wide-scale deployment in corporate environments, most notably because of the prohibitive costs associated with purchasing gigabit switches and 10-gigabit uplinks, as well as due to the problems currently present in the 11n protocol, those very same issues can provide a robust environment for a casual, working neo-nomad.

In a home/cafe/neighborhood environment, 11n access points can be a heaven in disguise. Usually strong enough to not have to rely on Power over Ethernet (POE) circuitry (which currently at 15.4 watts is often not strong enough for 11n devices), they also operate in the 5 GHz band, which is vastly preferable in places where the 2.4 GHz band is already crowded with other consumer electronics that contribute to the interference we have all seen in homes where sometimes even in the same room as the wireless A/P, the Signal-to-Noise ratio makes regular WiFi almost unusable. And in most cafes, currently covered by 1-3 11g routers, one 11n A/P will be more than sufficient – thanks to its increased speed and range.

this is the Freddy Krueger of modern problems with writing – TEXTSPEAK!

Blogged under Conversations, Disciplines, Humanities, Illuminations, Musings, World, internet, mobile, politics, textspeak by tejot on Thursday 16 November 2006 at 00:06

A few weeks ago I wrote about the long lost art of writing [part 1] [part 2] – or the problems with grammar kids and adolescents face nowadays. In case you missed it and don’t feel like rereading, my conclusion was that basically the end justifies the means in this case – language is organic and it how it should be used depends on the situation.

That was a few weeks ago, and since then I’ve been (proudly) accused of mild liberalism, which for many of my friends and readers was a bit of a surprise considering that my views on literature at large are rather traditional. However, then I came across this article and my blood almost boiled.

(C)opyright© 2004-2007 Thomas Jankowski