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by Sheila Lennon
'
Bottom-up' journalism from the pros

May 3, 2002 • Last week's weblog

Friday afternoon, and I'm about out of words for the week. Time to go sit under the lilacs with a cold one. Some loose links before it's a wrap:

Too big to hide: U.K. artist David Mach's latest creation -- a 50-ton sculpture made from four abandoned cars and 150,000 copies of The (Glasgow, Scotland) Herald newspaper -- is something any ink-stained wretch would want to see. But I can't find it. I can read about it, I can see many other Mach works (such as a full-size train made of red brick, sculptures made of match heads, others made from coathangers). But I can't find a photo of Bangers and Mash, the newsprint behemoth. If you can, please email me.

Botanical Eve: World's 'oldest flower' found in China: It's the 125-million-year-old ancestor of a water lily.

Listen: Leo Kottke audio samples and video clips at guitarmusic.org, no longer updated but still floating in webspace.

Weekends, we cook: Index to the cooperatively created Mastercook archive of recipes. Fast way to browse through food categories -- the recipes are text if you don't have the Mastercook program, importable if you do.

Temporary pass: SpamhOle.com: "Two hour email addresses. No logins required. Spam dies here."

Improv: Part of (ex-Recording Academy President/CEO) Michael Greene's address at the 44th Annual Grammy Awards set to music

May 2, 2002

My space mistake: For Earth Day, April 22, I wanted to publish a photo of Earth right now.


NASA photo
Earth Day
When I was small, no photos like this existed; humans had never gotten far enough off the earth to photograph the whole planet. The Apollo 17 crew shot this photo on December 7, 1972.
Larger image

Not the first television image of earth from space shot by Tiros I on April 1, 1960; not the Christmas, 1968 "Earthrise" photo by Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders that graced The Whole Earth Catalog and "saved" 1968, nor the famous 1972 version by the Apollo XVII crew. It wasn't easy, but I thought I'd found one on NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day site when I saw the date Jan. 31, 1999 leading the page, and hastily linked to it. This date turned out to be the date NASA made this the image of the day, and several readers wrote to tell me that this was indeed the Apollo XVII crew's shot of Dec. 7, 1972. (at right)

I kept looking for a current one, and found that it doesn't exist. It was supposed to exist, but it doesn't. And why it doesn't exist involves Al Gore, layoffs at Kennedy Space Center and the 2000 election.

The next generation of whole-earth photos were to have come from Triana, a satellite that would photograph a full-color, continuous view of the entire sunlit face of the rotating Earth every 15 minutes for display on the Web, but it's sitting in storage in an aluminum box in the corner of Building 7 at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

Here's a simulation of what the camera is to send back to the Internet from a million miles away, a distance called L1 orbit. "A spacecraft at the Earth-Sun L1 point, like Triana, will experience a gravitational attraction from the sun that is the same strength as that felt at Earth. Since the strength of the attraction determines the orbital period, Triana will orbit the sun at the same rate as the Earth, one year."

In March, 1998, then vice-president Al Gore proposed "that NASA scientists and engineers design, build and operate a satellite that will make available a live image of earth 24 hours a day on the Internet." The Washington Post reported on March 13 of that year that "Gore almost literally dreamed up the idea in his sleep about a month ago, waking at 3 a.m. one night, according to a White House official." According to the Post, Gore had the Apollo XVII shot at right on the wall of his White House office.

Triana was named after Rodrigo de Triana, the lookout on the Pinta who first sighted land on Columbus's first voyage in 1492, but it was quickly dubbed Goresat or Gore-cam by wags.

The idea (and the cost) grew as scientific projects were added to Triana's mission, among them a study of global warming by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California at San Diego.

With some Republicans dismissing Triana as a $75 million screensaver, the House Science Committee killed the project on May 13, 1999, with a 21-18 party line vote on an amendment proposed by Rep. Dave Weldon, (R-Fla.) in retaliation for job cuts at Kennedy Space Center in his congressional district. (N.Y. Times: Politics Keep an Earth-Viewing Satellite Earthbound; Orlando Sentinel: Politics puts $100 million satellite on ice)

House Majority Leader Dick Armey said, "This idea supposedly came from a dream. Well, I once dreamed I caught a 10-foot bass. But I didn't call up the Fish and Wildlife service and ask them to spend $30 million to make sure it happened."

The bill directed NASA to suspend all development work on Triana until the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) completed a thorough evaluation of Triana's true scientific merit and value. If Triana received an unfavorable review from NAS the program would be terminated.

A National Academies of Science Task Group on the Review of Scientific Aspects led by James Duderstadt, president emeritus of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, agreed to evaluate the mission's objectives and to review Triana's contributions to the nation's science priorities for climate and environmental studies. The report, issued in March, 2000, concluded that Triana could make contributions to Earth and solar science at a relatively reasonable cost. (N.Y. Times: Science Panel Supports Gore Satellite Plan)

The animation at right is the Triana project site's substitute for the live images expected someday from the Scripps Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera.

In November, 2001, Congress earmarked $1 million of the $14.8 billion for NASA in Bush's 2002 budget for Triana's science team. Triana is ready to fly.

A NASA page on the Triana project now projects a launch in 2004. In February of this year, Space News (subscription required) reported that NASA was considering foreign options for launching the satellite: "One proposal would launch Triana as a secondary payload on an Ariane 5; such a launch would be paid by a European national space agency in exchange in a scientific role on the mission. A second possibility is to launch it on a Ukrainian Tsiklon launch vehicle, arranged by an unnamed company trying to market the Tsiklon commercially."

So for Earth Day 2004 (2005? 2006?), we all might be able to see on the Web a live photo of Earth right now.

Link to this item

May 1, 2002

Browsers revisited: personal recollections: Robert Maxwell Case writes,

"Enjoyed your 'browser history' ... you're mostly 'on the money.' The only fine tuning I might offer is this:

"I was a Mosaic user prior to Netscape's debut in November 1994. Marc Andreesen had 'shopped' his next-generation Mosaic during the prior 18 months to all the big PC players including Apple & Microsoft, but nobody would bite save Jim Clark (Silicon Graphics) who responded to an email.

"By Netscape's debut, Mosaic had become a runaway success and Bill Gates belatedly wanted in. The programmers left behind by Andreesen also kept working and NCSA licensed the technology to a Chicago company called Spyglass. Microsoft sublicensed the technology from Spyglass and hired a number of the programmers left from the inital development team.

"But Netscape had the jump with a superior product. They charged $39 for 'stable' versions but allowed 'betas' to be downloaded free. I never paid for a version of Netscape, but I could see a clear business model and fully expected to pay eventually.

"Then, one day in late 1997 Microsoft announced that their version of Mosaic, Internet Explorer, would henceforth be free and, in fact, be bundled with Windows 98. I was angry because this move neglected the reimbursement of the sizeable development costs Microsoft had incurred and completely demolished Netscape's business model. Netscape had no choice but to offer their clearly superior product for free, too.

"The subsequent sale of Netscape to AOL has really yet to play out ... Mozilla is really a return to the 'open source' model that NCSA's
Mosaic was a part of. While IE now may be the superior product, Mozilla/Netscape is close enough so that AOL's forecasted dropping of IE could change the internet landscape."

Here's my own recollection of that time, originally sent as an email to Mr. Case:

I pretty much had the same experience you had -- I remember downloading everything that came along back in those days. I was using the net on a local Free-Net, via Lynx, running a computer bulletin board as a Fidonet sysop, and freely distributing the Fidonet mail and file feed off a dish on my roof to any other BBS that would also agree to pass it along for free.

Every new browser came on the filebone, and I tried them all. I also never paid for Netscape -- it was a joke that the browser was free but the box was $39. Because everybody was using slow modems, software was a lot smaller, then, too!

Day of Silence: "Hundreds of Internet radio stations and channels across America are shutting off their music streams today, in a "Day of Silence" to highlight their concern over the upcoming U.S. Copyright Office ruling on royalty rates that may shut down or bankrupt the vast majority of the nascent Internet radio industry. Details here." They aren't going truly silent, though. Like a "teach-in" of old, participating stations will carry a 24-hour talk show/live interview program. Here are some links to the stream (these open Windows Media Player on my system): MayDay 20k MayDay 124k
More Links: SaveInternetRadio.org (includes form to contact Congress with your views), RAIN (Radio and Internet Newsletter).

The upside of all this is that many who haven't yet discovered Net radio may now find this audio equivalent of weblogs.

Klez worm: Cultural chaos in Outlook inboxes. "Klez: Don't Believe 'From' Line" at Wired: 'The (Klez) virus e-mails itself from infected machines using a bogus "From" address randomly plucked from all e-mail addresses stored on an infected computer's hard drive or network. ...Klez e-mails' subject lines are randomly chosen from a pre-programmed list of about 120 possibilities, including "Let's be friends," "Japanese lass' sexy pictures," "Meeting Notice," "Hi Honey" and "SOS." ' I've seen all of these in my Netscape inbox, but that same Netscape protects me from the chaos: As usual, "The virus can launch automatically when users click to preview or read e-mails bearing Klez on systems that have not been patched for a year-old vulnerability in Internet Explorer, Outlook and Outlook Express. Klez only affects PCs running Microsoft's Windows operating system."

Online books sorted as they would be in library stacks: From Robot Wisdom (probably the first weblog I bookmarked), a link to the Online Books Page. "This page lets you look up online books by their Library of Congress call number category. It can serve as a crude listing by subject." Robot Wisdom's caretaker, Jorn Barger (1999 interview), has proposed the Open Web Content License as a way to quote and link without running afoul of copyright.

April 30, 2002

The day the music died (that's tomorrow): Proposed royalty payments to record labels -- represented by (you guessed it!) those same lovable folks at RIAA who sued Napster -- would shut down most Net radio, and many stations on the Web will go silent tomorrow to protest: "Net radio will pull plug this week to protest fees." Ironically, writes Jefferson Graham of USA TODAY, "Traditional radio stations pay no performance royalties because of radio's proven role in promoting new music; in the proposed copyright fee structure, they would pay half of the Net-only broadcast fee when simulcasting on the Internet." Worthwhile sidebar ("All that jazz, and everything else, on Net radio") has links to stations and directories of stations. (Mike Goldfein reports via streaming video.)

Now that Linda Lovelace is dead... : John Dean plans to unmask Deep Throat: "I think that thirty years of hiding is enough. So I'm going to surface him for the 30th anniversary of Watergate on June 17, 2002. " (avi movie clip of Dean testifying about telling Richard Nixon there was a "cancer on the presidency" 30 years ago at the Watergate hearings). Speculation: Who Was Deep Throat?

Heroine of the rumpled: Last week, the Lemelson-MIT program presented its lifetime achievement award to Ruth Rogan Benerito, inventor of the processed that made wrinkle-free cotton, leading to "wash and wear" clothing.

Decades before "extreme ironing" became a macho competitive sport, I'd come home from elementary school and head to the kitchen, where mom was always ironing. Sheets, handkerchiefs, blouses, skirts, shirts that weren't sent out to be starched -- there was an endless stream of wrinkled cotton to be dampened with a giant salt shaker full of water.

I hated ironing. I was always burning myself, struggling with the temperature of the iron, making new wrinkles on the left as I smoothed out those on the right, and I promised myself that when I grew up I would never iron again. (Fortunately, there's a long tradition of rumpled journalists). And I have Ruth Rogan Benerito to thank for helping me fulfill that promise. You went, girl!

Penalty phase: Dave Winer (Scripting News) clicked on the Publish your own item link above, and wrote: "There was another error in the lead paragraph of that Time article (The Browser That Roared). 'When Microsoft won the browser wars, by hook or by crook (the jury is still out on that), life got simple again.' Actually the jury is not out. Microsoft was convicted."

Coverage of Gates' testimony has emphasized his improved persona (BBC: "Bill Gates appears to have upgraded his legal abilities. Maybe it's a new project at Microsoft -- Witness XP with a cooler, more soothing interface. On Monday, Mr Gates avoided many of the missteps he made in videotaped testimony four years ago.") as though this were his second chance. Microsoft has been convicted; it's too late to promise they won't do it again (that horse is already out of the barn).

What's at stake, from an advance story last month by the L.A. Times: (Microsoft Case Enters Crucial Penalty Phase) "In this punishment phase of the case, they (the nine states that refused to go along with the [Bush] Justice Department's surprise decision in November to settle its dispute with Microsoft) are seeking to prevent Microsoft from quashing its competitors not only in the old world of personal computers but also in the emerging markets of advanced cell phones, hand-held computers, television set-top boxes and countless devices yet to be invented."

Here's a day-by-day trial archive from PC Magazine.

Later, dudes: I promised an item on my own recent error today, but it's grown into a miniseries involving space, Al Gore, and more. I'll have to write it while you're sleeping.

April 29, 2002

Errors in Time: Browser history
Last week, I pointed to a Time story by Lev Grossman headlined The Browser That Roared, about the nearly-released Mozilla browser. It troubled me that the lead sentences contained errors, but I needed time to gather links for an accurate chronology. (I'm not Grossman's editor, so I'm a little uncomfortable about correcting his work, but I can't let this hang out there. I was there, and it didn't go down that way. Tomorrow, I'll correct an error of my own in as much detail.)

Here's the problem: Grossman wrote, "In the beginning there was one Web browser. It was called Mosaic, and if you didn't like it you could go back to watching Murphy Brown, or whatever it was we did before we had the Web. Then Microsoft started giving away Internet Explorer, Mosaic turned into Netscape, and suddenly life was complicated."

This wasn't the way it happened at all. Here's some early history:

  • From A Short History of Web Browsers by Selena Sol at Web Developer's Virtual Library: "In terms of the use of a web browser by the mass public, the history of web browsers begins with LYNX. LYNX is a simple text-based web browser primarily accessed via UNIX shell accounts (i.e. Lynx resides on the server) that displays formatted HTML text (but not images)... LYNX's text-based interface is actually quite clumsy (unless you are a blind user, in which case LYNX rocks for its speed and text-based simplicity where other browsers tend to be useless). In fact, soon after the development of LYNX, as the concept of web browsing took off, web browsers would quickly evolve into the graphical web browser species beginning with Mosaic, Mozilla, and finally browsers such as Navigator and Explorer..."

  • A short history of web browsers, dated May 8, 1995, part of a project at the University of California, San Diego: "While the WWW was useful with simple browsers which simply loaded and displayed documents, the great explosion in the use of the WWW was a result of the development of attractive graphical interface browsers such as Mosaic, the browser developed by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois. Mosaic was developed to run on Unix X11 workstations, Macintoshes and Microsoft Windows personal computers. Web pages had essentially the same appearance on all computers, and the browser operated in very much the same way on all computers. This meant that WWW applications became independent of the computing platform used. Another thing which contributed to the popularity of Mosaic was that anyone could download it from the NCSA server at no cost.

    The programmers who created Mosaic were undergraduates at the University of Illinois. They graduated and formed their own companies where browser development continued. Meanwhile, new undergraduates continued to develop the NCSA free version of Mosaic. This has kept competition fierce and prices low. The most successful of the commercial ventures was Netscape; they are particularly popular in the education market because they do not charge for their browser if you do not require support."

  • From Index DOT Html: In mid-1994, Silicon Graphics founder Jim Clark collaborated with Marc Andreessen to found Mosaic Communications (later renamed to Netscape Communications.) Andreessen had just graduated from the University of Illinois, where he had been the leader of a certain software project known as "Mosaic". ...With the launch of Windows 95 and a web browser of its own (Internet Explorer) in August 1995, Microsoft began an effort to challenge Netscape. ..In January 1998, Netscape made an announcement that their browser would thereafter be free, and also that the development of the browser would move to an open-source process. (That's Mozilla)

  • From LivingInternet.com (About: "The mission of this web site is to make comprehensive, in-depth information about the Internet available around the world."), comes "Browser History: A chronological listing of early web browsers ... each of which influenced subsequent browsers and advanced the state of the art."

  • Also: Hobbes' Internet Timeline v5.6 by Robert H'obbes' Zakon, Internet Evangelist

  • Newest Browser: Mozilla at a glance. Mozilla.org speaks for itself.

Access to tools: An Indian physicist puts a PC with a high speed internet connection in a wall in the slums and watches what happens. Read all about it.

Happy sites: Webby Award nominees were announced today. NPR's All Songs Considered tops the music site nominees. Awards are June 18, and you can still vote for the "People's Voice" awards.

Heroes in their own right: Reporters watched history unfold by Bill Cotterell, "Capital Curmudgeon" of the Tallahassee Democrat newspaper: "I went to Montgomery (Ala.) last weekend for a reunion of United Press International reporters, photographers and editors who covered the civil rights movement."

Lemons: What's the Worst Car of the Millennium? A top-10 list from the Car Talk guys.

Grows on you: Kitten jazz band The music (a latino mix of John B's We like the music) is great. The cats are silly.

Doing life backwards? Bill Clinton to replace Bryant Gumbel on CBS's The Early Show? It worked for Providence mayor Buddy Cianci, who used his four-year stint as a WHJJ radio talk-show host as a platform for his political comeback in 1989. (A 1984 assault conviction after he attacked his former wife's lover had forced him from office.)

Back issues: Week one
Back issues: Week two
Back issues: Week three
Back issues: Weeks four and five
Back issues: Week six

Subterranean Homepage News
by Sheila Lennon
features & interactive producer of projo.com

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