NZ Broadband Pricing and Network Neutrality

In this Ziff-Davis Australia article, the leaders of Australia’s three largest ISPs declare network neutrality to be an American problem and explain why. It’s an interesting argument, but I think there are some key elements unstated in the article.

In America, largely for historical reasons, residential customers have “all you can eat” plans. Buffet bandwidth is the order of the day, every day. As the number of people online continues to grow, and they do more bandwidth-intensive things (YouTube movies vs all-text web pages), telcos must buy new hardware. “How do they pay for it?” the article asks, and offers up three solutions: charge heavy consumers more (the Australian and New Zealand “metered Internet” solution); charge the people serving lots of data rather than we who consume it (which pisses Google off and starts a “network neutrality” war); or just suck up the costs themselves.

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Memo to Future Nat on Slides

Reading back through my notebook at my jottings from last week’s frantic flurry of meetings, I found this hard-learned lesson:

When preparing slides for others, they MUST read them when you’re done and MUST give a trial presentation with the hardware in place and MUST be the presenter doing these things.

Yes, I made slides for someone, and then discovered that the remote control started the slideshow just fine but didn’t advance; that I’d put the sections in a different order; that the person I’d made slides for wasn’t comfortable with the forward and backward keys; … and on it went.

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NZ Open Source Awards

(reposted from The O’Reilly Radar blog)

Wednesday night in Wellington is a lot more exciting when the New Zealand Open Source Award ceremony is on! The Minister for Communications and Information Technology, David Cunliffe, made a brief speech lauding open source and was around to hand awards to the winners. We gave out prizes for best project, contributor, use in government, use in business, use in education, use in community organization, and use for infrastructure, as well as two special awards.

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Software Freedom Day Notes: ACTA

Mark Harris lead this session. Was at SSC, MORST, now Independent. When Wikileaks in May released ACTA doc, saw NZ mentioned, began digging.

ACTA is the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement. Proposed by Japan and USA, but not limited to them at all. About eight countries, mainly G8 and a few others like us and Morocco. Mainly about IP. Calling it “counterfeit” gets it under the radar.

Also very much about the Internet. While it did talk about physical products, morphed over last four years and now about more. Don’t really know what it is about: unnerving level of secrecy. Can’t find anything official about what it is, other than US trade representatives office official line “it’s about enforcement”, a universal framework of enforcement procedures around the world. All have signed non-disclosure agreements.

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Software Freedom Day

I’ll be in Wellington on Saturday, September 20th, for Software Freedom Day. It’s open source’s open day, a chance for the general public who might have been curious about open source to come along and learn more. There’ll be copies of Linux given out and a WellyLUG installfest to provide any help people need installing Linux on their own machines, a SuperHappyDevHouse hack day, and a Bar Camp (which I’m emceeing). It’s going to be a heap of fun, and a chance to make a positive difference to software in this country. If you’ll be in Wellington on Saturday, swing by for the 12pm kickoff and join the fun!

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Webstock 2009 Lineup Announced

I’m speaking at Webstock 2009 and really looking forward to it. What an amazing lineup of talent they have! I’ve been privileged to meet many of these folks before, and I’m honoured and intimidated to be in their ranks. I can safely say that New Zealand has never had such an incredible collection of technology people in one place before. Off the top of my head, here are three brilliant people on their list:

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NZ’s Business Talent Crisis

Kiwi Foo Camp was my way of finding and support great technical talent in NZ. Last week I realized that NZ’s critical shortage isn’t in technical staff, it’s in business staff. This goes beyond the widely-deplored lack of VC experience—where are our deal-making CEOs, the well-networked bizdev gurus?

I ask because t’s the rare geek who successfully runs a company; even the Google boys needed adult supervision in the form of Eric Schmidt. Building a business takes different skills than building a product: salesmanship, attention to the accounts and to corporate structure, insight into finance and business metrics. These are all things that geeks tend to throw up their hands and put aside in favour of an interesting Javascript bug.

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The Tyranny of Distance

Jenny Morel is raising a $100M NZ VC fund. That’s good news, in that NZ needs smart angels and VCs. I’ve had a number of NZ friends making the rounds of US venture capital firms and angels looking for investors, and the message has always been “not while you’re in NZ”. Of course, it’s rarely stated quite so bluntly (VCs never want to close the door!), but it’s always quite clear that it’s much harder to invest in something that’s on the other side of the world than something you can drop in on regularly.

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Things I Have Learned In My Life So Far

I found this list on the web and loved it. The ones that particularly rang true with me:

  • 5. Being not truthful always works against me.
  • 8. Drugs feel great in the beginning and become a drag later on.
  • 9. Over time I get used to everything and start taking for granted.
  • 15. Worrying solves nothing.
  • 17. Everybody thinks they are right.

And while it’s still a little early, (2) and (4) are now in the lead for 2009 New Year’s Resolutions.

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