Internet in China: Force for change?

The fol­low­ing post is an unedited essay I pre­pared for a sub­ject on glob­al­i­sa­tion and China last semes­ter, and inves­ti­gates the role of the Inter­net par­tic­u­larly as an instru­ment of social change. Per­haps sur­pris­ingly, I argue that it is a reflec­tive, rather than dis­rup­tive, util­ity in this par­tic­u­lar social context.


The new tech­nolo­gies will bring “every indi­vid­ual … into imme­di­ate and effort­less com­mu­ni­ca­tion with every other,” “prac­ti­cally oblit­er­ate” polit­i­cal geog­ra­phy, and make free trade uni­ver­sal. Thanks to tech­no­log­i­cal advance, “there [are] no longer any for­eign­ers,” and we can look for­ward to “the grad­ual adop­tion of a com­mon language”.

—1893 arti­cle

Com­mu­ni­ca­tion tech­nolo­gies have long been per­ceived as har­bin­gers of sig­nif­i­cant trans­for­ma­tion in soci­ety, from the tumult of 15th C. Europe in the wake of reli­gious and polit­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion enabled by Gutenberg’s inven­tion to the domes­tic tele­graphic and tele­phonic inno­va­tions of the 1800s. As bound­aries between coun­tries have, with increased access to Infor­ma­tion and Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Tech­nol­ogy (ICT) beyond the elite, begun to blur, pro­le­tar­ian access to such tech­nolo­gies has com­men­su­rately grown apace. Despite com­mon access to such tech­nolo­gies, how­ever, their util­ity for grass­roots activism, the devo­lu­tion of state bound­aries, devel­op­ing global com­merce, and advanc­ing polit­i­cal auton­omy remains in ques­tion. Con­sid­er­ing China, par­tic­u­larly, with over one-fifth of its pop­u­la­tion hav­ing access to such tech­nolo­gies based on offi­cial esti­mates, the ques­tion of the util­ity of these tech­nolo­gies, par­tic­u­larly in the realm of their impact upon the social and polit­i­cal psy­che of China, is an impor­tant one.

Most com­monly lev­elled cri­tiques against the Chi­nese Gov­ern­ment in the field of Inter­net pol­i­tics grav­i­tate around the issue of Inter­net cen­sor­ship. In a global con­text, this has ram­i­fi­ca­tions for a vari­ety of organ­i­sa­tions, both TNC/MNCs and gov­ern­ments. The Golden Shield Project (金盾工程), it is often argued, is both facil­i­tated by the com­plic­ity of and pro­vides ben­e­fit to a vari­ety of ICT ven­dors in west­ern democ­ra­cies. In the United States par­tic­u­larly, ven­dors includ­ing Cisco Net­works, Microsoft and ser­vice providers Google and Yahoo! have all been dragged before var­i­ous inquiries into the for­eign prac­tices of the global sub­sidiaries and branches of such busi­nesses. Although var­i­ous US export restric­tions on some secu­rity prod­ucts (high grade encryp­tion being fore­most amongst these) remain, export con­straints apply prin­ci­pally to coun­tries with which the US does not have diplo­matic rela­tions or where it is presently engaged in mil­i­tary con­flict. China fits nei­ther cri­te­ria, and her inter­net prac­tices, although con­sid­ered oppres­sive by some, do not even depend par­tic­u­larly upon any advanced encryp­tion tech­nolo­gies: indeed, such tech­nolo­gies are often used for the cir­cum­ven­tion of controls.

For all its faults, con­trol of the Chi­nese inter­net is an impre­cise sci­ence, exem­pli­fied in former-US Pres­i­dent Clinton’s descrip­tion of such attempts as like “try­ing to nail Jello to a wall”. Other media, lim­ited by a raft of con­trols imposed by the State Admin­is­tra­tion of Radio, Film, and Tele­vi­sion (SARFT) and the Gen­eral Admin­is­tra­tion of Press and Pub­li­ca­tion (GAPP), are par­tic­u­larly con­trol­lable in a man­ner the Inter­net is not. While both SARFT and GAPP have attempted to assert con­trol over the Inter­net in a vari­ety of forms, GAPP’s online author­ity is lim­ited in scope com­pared to the tight con­trol it retains over peri­od­i­cals and book pub­lish­ing through ISSN/ISBN issuance, while SARFT’s March 30 notice, “广电总局关于加强互联网视听节目内容管理的通知”, is con­cerned only with ‘audio-visual pro­grams’ pub­lished through Chi­nese video shar­ing web­sites. While the SARFT notice sin­gles out videos pub­lished by 拍客 (‘vod­caster’, or video neti­zen reporter), it does not tar­get blog­gers or any non-visual report­ing. Par­tic­u­larly the per­mit sys­tem in part 4 of the notice, essen­tially an exten­sion of exist­ing SARFT reg­u­la­tions over film/TV seri­alised con­tent, raised the ire of a num­ber of video-on-demand web­sites. For the aver­age user, how­ever, this appears to have had lit­tle impact. While var­i­ous admin­is­tra­tions may attempt to chal­lenge or even change the nature of Inter­net inter­ac­tions, the Inter­net shows equal resilience and, indeed, presents an inverse chal­lenge to such estab­lished bod­ies. Despite this, how­ever, the pro­longed cen­sor­ship of the inter­net under the direc­tion of the Min­istry of Pub­lic Security’s Golden Shield Project, par­tic­u­larly in con­junc­tion with var­i­ous MIIT direc­tives to ser­vice providers, has resulted in what is effec­tively a cul­ture of self-censorship of the Chi­nese Internet.

How­ever, there are many issues, often neglected in the wake of clam­orous dis­cus­sion sur­round­ing the cen­sor­ship issue, besides that of access. Par­tic­u­larly, when con­sid­er­ing the Inter­net as an instru­ment for dis­rupt­ing the offi­cial dis­course and chal­leng­ing or trans­form­ing soci­etal con­ven­tions, it is impor­tant to con­sider usage pat­terns in online activ­i­ties. China is pre­dom­i­nantly inter­ested in very dif­fer­ent activ­i­ties to a wider sam­ple of the online com­mu­nity. While con­sid­er­ing the issue of util­ity, it is worth not­ing that the top Inter­net appli­ca­tions in China, namely Music, News and Instant Mes­sag­ing (IM) activ­i­ties, con­sti­tute enter­tain­ment related pur­suits, as opposed to more com­mer­cially moti­vated Inter­net activ­i­ties of much of the rest of the world.

This usage dis­par­ity is reflec­tive of other con­sumer atti­tudes within China. It does not shape them. The depen­dence of global online com­merce upon a consumer-credit based sys­tems, specif­i­cally, third party bro­kers with broad net­works and the capac­ity to instan­ta­neously autho­rise and/or decline trans­ac­tions based on ver­i­fi­ca­tion of avail­able credit (in Main­land PRC, the only domes­tic inter­bank net­work facil­i­tat­ing this is China Union­Pay (中国銀联), though affil­i­a­tions with global VISA and Mas­ter­Card net­works of course per­sist), is obvi­ously prob­lem­atic in a coun­try that has only begun to embrace credit sys­tems, with high sav­ing rates. Accord­ingly, ser­vices such as Ali­Pay have emerged, with agree­ments span­ning exist­ing bank­ing insti­tu­tions as well as larger exist­ing credit net­works, Union­Pay and the global VISA/MC net­works amongst these, in order to facil­i­tate trust-based inter­net transactions.

The emer­gence of such insti­tu­tions is a recent devel­op­ment in Chi­nese soci­ety. As Nie Jin observes in a 2007 paper con­cern­ing cur­rent e-payment solu­tions in China, one of the virtues of a cen­trally planned econ­omy pro­hibit­ing indi­vid­ual and pri­vate trans­ac­tions is that there is no need for any trust/credibility sys­tem to enable such trans­ac­tions. As these have emerged in the wake of eco­nomic reform, so too has demand for escrow and trust-based trans­ac­tion ser­vices devel­oped. The paper con­tin­ues to note that, out­side of China and planned econ­omy states, accrued data sug­gests as much as 90% of busi­ness trans­ac­tions are set­tled on the basis of integrity (i.e. with­out resort­ing to third party escrow ser­vices, etc., though pos­si­bly involv­ing a pay­ment net­work medi­a­tor with­out a trust layer).

In this, the Inter­net func­tions not as an instru­ment act­ing upon China to change it, but merely another man­i­fes­ta­tion of an already-changing eco­nomic real­ity. As pri­vate enter­prise grows, it is log­i­cal to pur­sue the Inter­net as yet another sales and/or mar­ket­ing chan­nel, and, in doing so, the same issues already iden­ti­fied will be faced regard­ing trust online as in per­son. There are of course par­tic­u­lar chal­lenges to online busi­ness (fraud/verification of iden­tity, logistics/delivery, etc.), but at the level of chang­ing social land­scapes it is clear the most press­ing issue, that of integrity, is derived not from the emer­gence of a dis­trib­uted, glob­ally inter-connected net­work of prospec­tive clients and ven­dors, but rather as a result of eco­nomic reforms imple­mented over the course of thirty years.

What, then, of trans­ac­tions that tran­scend national bor­ders and geo­graphic bound­aries? Tra­di­tion­ally China’s largest trad­ing part­ners have con­sisted of Asian neigh­bours whose socio-cultural and per­sonal ties com­mend them as such. In an era of global trade facil­i­tated by buyer/seller pro­tect­ing trust net­works, is there any rea­son for this priv­i­leged trad­ing sta­tus to con­tinue? Of course there is. Guanxi can only account for so much: there are log­i­cal, prac­ti­cal rea­sons beyond this for bar­ri­ers the Inter­net can­not (yet) alle­vi­ate. The so-called ‘dig­i­tal divide’ is often spo­ken of in terms of access to tech­nol­ogy. It is clear, how­ever, that phys­i­cal access to tech­nol­ogy is not suf­fi­cient. Edu­ca­tion is often addressed as an issue affect­ing access, but it is gen­er­ally raised only at the level of com­puter lit­er­acy. With China rapidly embrac­ing the Inter­net through both PC and mobile tech­nolo­gies, and par­tic­u­larly with the recent approval of licenses for TD-SCDMA/TD-LTE net­works (3G/4G net­work tech­nolo­gies that will dra­mat­i­cally improve net­work access speeds), the issue of phys­i­cal access is decreas­ingly rel­e­vant. Addi­tion­ally, as mobile access improves and touch-capable hand­sets increase in preva­lence, bar­ri­ers to usabil­ity also decrease.

What, then, is the prob­lem? The net­works are in place, users can access them, and yet trade bar­ri­ers per­sist. There are sev­eral issues at play here. Firstly, the dom­i­nance of the Anglo­phone Inter­net com­pared to Eng­lish lit­er­acy in China. While China is one of the largest English-speaking coun­tries, as a pro­por­tion of its own pop­u­la­tion this is not a dom­i­nant lan­guage, and access to much Inter­net media and tech­nol­ogy requires Eng­lish lit­er­acy in order to com­pre­hend or use ser­vices. This is a con­tribut­ing fac­tor behind the adop­tion of social net­work­ing ser­vices such as Kaixin and Xiaonei over their antecedent equiv­a­lents in the wider Inter­net: Face­book par­tic­u­larly has offered for some time now an Chi­nese lan­guage ver­sion, but its fail­ure to suf­fi­ciently localise con­tent from the begin­ning (it is, by default, served in Eng­lish) granted Chi­nese clones advan­tage required to cap­ture the main­land mar­ket first.

Sec­ondly, there are cul­tural bar­ri­ers. China has an envi­able adop­tion of blog­ging and ‘inde­pen­dent’ pub­lish­ing tech­nol­ogy. On CNNIC sta­tis­tics, there are over 162 mil­lion blogs in China: rep­re­sent­ing half of China’s Inter­net pop­u­la­tion, on the assump­tion of only one blog per user. Yet, despite such dra­matic adop­tion of this medium, expres­sion is tem­pered by var­i­ous reg­u­la­tions imposed upon pub­lish­ers by ser­vice providers. Ser­vice providers who fail to con­form to such reg­u­la­tions face unpre­dictable ser­vice denials facil­i­tated by Golden Shield Project prox­ies and fire­walls: Blog­ger and WordPress.com rep­re­sent two promi­nent exam­ples of such providers. Tech­ni­cal con­sid­er­a­tions aside, the effect of this con­for­mity is a homogeni­sa­tion of blog con­tent that is pro­hib­ited from fea­tur­ing con­tro­ver­sial mate­r­ial. The video neti­zen reporters tar­geted under the March 30 SARFT direc­tive are par­tic­u­larly addressed on account of the dif­fi­culty of auto­mat­i­cally pro­tect­ing against video con­tent: scan­ning blog posts for banned key­words is much more achiev­able. Thus, this (imposed) self-censorship stymies the devel­op­ment of an inde­pen­dent Chi­nese blog­ging com­mu­nity within eth­nic media: iron­i­cally, the depen­dence of dis­si­dent blog­gers upon non-conformist ser­vice providers reduces the effects of their dis­si­dence and, com­men­su­rately, their rel­e­vance and impact upon the wider Inter­net. The entertainment-oriented activ­i­ties of Chi­nese Inter­net users are pri­mar­ily con­sump­tive in nature, and the gen­er­a­tive activ­ity of con­tent cre­ation is accord­ingly mar­gin­alised while so much atten­tion con­tin­ues to be paid to offi­cially reg­u­lated media. One hun­dred and sixty two mil­lion blog­gers can’t be silenced, but they can be (mostly) irrelevant.

Thirdly, the eco­nomic bar­ri­ers to global par­tic­i­pa­tion are sig­nif­i­cant. In a pos­i­tive reflec­tion upon China’s inter­net pen­e­tra­tion, for the past sev­eral years CNNIC’s annual reports have iden­ti­fied approx­i­mately one quar­ter of inter­net users as hav­ing monthly income of less than 500 RMB.

Chart: Chinese Internet users by Income

This has an obvi­ous impact upon the will­ing­ness of neti­zens to engage in financially-related online activ­i­ties, as dis­pos­able income is neg­li­gi­ble for many of them. This is borne out in another CNNIC report par­tic­u­larly con­cerned with adop­tion of secu­rity soft­ware (安全软件) in per­sonal com­put­ing, par­tic­u­larly a sec­tion iden­ti­fy­ing indi­vid­u­als’ great­est con­cerns where com­puter secu­rity prob­lems are encoun­tered. The great­est con­cern is loss of com­puter files and any virus that will affect the oper­a­tion of the com­puter: these two com­prise over 50% of respon­dents’ great­est con­cern. Nei­ther sit­u­a­tion involves the theft of files, only the dis­abling of the user’s com­puter.  This reflects rel­a­tively lethar­gic adop­tion of e-commerce and inter­net bank­ing in China, and is not a cause of it. Gen­eral con­sumer atti­tudes beyond Internet-specific secu­rity con­cerns rep­re­sent the great­est threat to Internet-based finan­cial ser­vices growth.

The Inter­net has not, here, changed China. Indeed the ques­tion of income equal­ity is in need of res­o­lu­tion before the Inter­net can be used to any great eco­nomic effect: it cer­tainly does not presently ful­fil that role for many users. Despite these qual­i­fi­ca­tions, it is unde­ni­able that China is of advanced global stand­ing in pur­chase of cer­tain dig­i­tal goods con­nected to dig­i­tal social con­texts. QQ/Tencent is one promi­nent exam­ple of an effec­tive dig­i­tal goods busi­ness model not really repli­cated with great suc­cess in the west. Sim­i­lar to this in a game envi­ron­ment are mas­sively mul­ti­player games that allow con­ver­sion of cash to in-game cur­rency. This form of dig­i­tal econ­omy is unessen­tial and recre­ational in nature. Inter­net devel­op­ment prac­tice here is unique and at the fore­front of global indus­try, yet it con­tin­ues to reflect real-world par­a­digms: Nike shoes, Gucci bags, and other lux­ury brand items func­tion as signs of sta­tus in the same way web­page dec­o­ra­tions or vir­tual dec­o­ra­tive armour does. Thus here, too, the Inter­net ful­fils an emu­la­tive, rather than trans­for­ma­tive, social role.

The Inter­net has been lauded and demonised as a chal­lenger to the estab­lish­ment. This is evi­dently the party view of the mat­ter: its Golden Shield Project report­edly accrued 6.4BN RMB in costs in its pre­lim­i­nary phases, and count­less more since. How­ever, as a result of reg­u­la­tion and con­trol, the Inter­net in China rep­re­sents not a threat, but a mech­a­nism for the effec­tive con­sol­i­da­tion of party power. Far from func­tion­ing as a broadly trans­for­ma­tive social mech­a­nism, the Inter­net chiefly embod­ies the atti­tudes and val­ues of the com­mu­nity in which it is set. Addi­tion­ally, the bound­aries imposed by lin­guis­tic, cul­tural, hyper­tex­tual, polit­i­cal and tech­no­log­i­cal mech­a­nisms func­tion in effect to pro­duce a ‘localised’ form of the Inter­net. As Gold­smith and Wu note in their book Who Con­trols the Inter­net, one of the virtues of a ‘bor­dered Inter­net’ is that domes­ti­cally held val­ues and stan­dards can be pre­served in a form that per­mits peace­ful co-existence in online con­texts —cer­tainly there must be many within the Chi­nese admin­is­tra­tion who have wished this to be true as issues of inter­na­tional diplo­macy have spilt over in nation­al­is­tic fer­vour on BBS and forums across the Chi­nese Internet.

All these bound­aries are, of course, fluid. This is one of the great virtues of the Inter­net, and one of the enabling forces that will per­haps one day enable sig­nif­i­cant change, offer­ing more than a reflec­tion of soci­ety. For now, how­ever, China is cap­tive to broader soci­etal forces that impact upon its Inter­net usage. The decline of cen­sor­ship does not appear immi­nent: media reforms in recent years have been dri­ven largely by eco­nom­ics rather than social dis­con­tent. If the ben­e­fits of open infor­ma­tion exchange even­tu­ally out­weigh the CCP’s desire for con­trol, it is likely that the frame­work of con­trol estab­lished over the Inter­net over the past 13 years since pub­lic BBS access was first offered will per­sist: if ensur­ing a sta­ble and ‘har­mo­nious soci­ety’ is the goal, what­ever crit­ics may say of oppres­sive Inter­net regimes, the pro­mo­tion of a cul­ture of con­sump­tion and self‑censorship promises, at least in the short term, to reduce imme­di­ate chal­lenges to the admin­is­tra­tion. The Chi­nese Inter­net has changed China’s atti­tude to the Inter­net, cer­tainly, but the spec­u­la­tions made over 100 years ago con­cern­ing uni­ver­sal free trade and com­mon lan­guage are as close to ful­fil­ment by the Inter­net as by the tele­graph. A glob­alised cul­ture, enabled more by force of adver­tis­ing and mass media than by the Inter­net, is dri­ving these fac­tors. Tech­nol­ogy, whilst pro­vid­ing a chan­nel for the expres­sion of such cul­ture, remains sto­ically neu­tral in impart­ing val­ues and attitudes.

Foot­notes

Hawthorne, J., “June 1993,” The Cos­mopoli­tan, Feb­ru­ary 1893, 456 – 57, in Gold­smith, J. & Wu, T., Who Con­trols the Inter­net?, 2006, Oxford Uni­ver­sity Press
CNNIC, “Inter­net Time­line of China (2008)”, http://www.cnnic.cn/html/Dir/2009/05/18/5600.htm Pub­lished 18 May 2009. Accessed 4 June 2009. Pro­por­tion derived from CIA World Fact­book pop­u­la­tion pro­jec­tions from 2000 cen­sus at 1.34BN
Drake, W.J., “Dic­ta­tor­ships in the Dig­i­tal Age”, iMP, Octo­ber 2000, in Hughes, C.R., “Con­trol­ling the Inter­net Archi­tec­ture”, April 2002, in ASNS3619 reader.
国家广播电影电视总局, 《广电总局关于加强互联网视听节目内容管理的通知》, http://www.sarft.gov.cn/articles/2009/03/30/20090330171107690049.html Pub­lished 30 March 2009. Accessed 5 June 2009.
CNNIC/Pew Research Cen­tre in Angelova, K., “Chart of the Day”, The Busi­ness Insider, http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-the-chinese-get-more-entertainment-online-the-americans-shop-2009 – 5 Pub­lished 22 May 2009. Accessed 5 June 2009.
Nie Jin, “Analy­sis of Cur­rent E-Payment Solu­tion in China-Third Party Pay­ment Plat­form”, First Inter­na­tional Sym­po­sium on Data, Pri­vacy and E‐Commerce, 1 – 3 Novem­ber 2007. IEEE Xplore 10.1109/ISDPE.2007.22
Lü Yao-Huai, “Glob­al­iza­tion and Infor­ma­tion Ethics”, Local­iz­ing the Inter­net: Eth­i­cal Aspects in inter­cul­tural per­spec­tive, 2007, Paderborn.
Includ­ing in this not only state-controlled sources, but state-monitored/filtered ser­vices, such as BBS/forum ser­vices and, under the new SARFT reg­u­la­tions, licensed video-on-demand websites.
CNNIC 2008 report
CNNIC, “2008年中国网民信息网络安全状况研究报告”, http://www.cnnic.cn/uploadfiles/pdf/2009/3/27/142455.pdf Pub­lished 27 March 2009. Accessed 4 June 2009. pp. 16
CCTV News, 3 Sep­tem­ber 2002, recorded at http://www.epochtimes.com/gb/3/10/22/n397830p.htm Pub­lished 22 Octo­ber 2003. Accessed 7 June 2009.
Op. Cit. p. 149

Bib­li­og­ra­phy

Angelova, K., “Chart of the Day”, Busi­ness Insider, http://www.businessinsider.com/chart-of-the-day-the-chinese-get-more-entertainment-online-the-americans-shop-2009 – 5 Pub­lished 22 May 2009. Accessed 5 June 2009.

CCTV News, 3 Sep­tem­ber 2002, recorded at http://www.epochtimes.com/gb/3/10/22/n397830p.htm Pub­lished 22 Octo­ber 2003. Accessed 7 June 2009.

ChinaInternetWatch.com, “China Inter­net Sta­tis­tics 2009 Whitepa­per”, ChinaInternetWatch.com, 13 April 2009. Accessed 4 June 2009.

CNNIC, “2008年中国网民信息网络安全状况研究报告”, http://www.cnnic.cn/uploadfiles/pdf/2009/3/27/142455.pdf Pub­lished 27 March 2009. Accessed 4 June 2009.

CNNIC, “Inter­net Time­line of China (2008)”, http://www.cnnic.cn/html/Dir/2009/05/18/5600.htm Pub­lished 18 May 2009. Accessed 4 June 2009.

Drake, W.J., “Dic­ta­tor­ships in the Dig­i­tal Age”, iMP, Octo­ber 2000, in Hughes, C.R., “Con­trol­ling the Inter­net Archi­tec­ture”, April 2002, in ASNS3619 reader, Dr David Bray, 2009.

Gold­smith, J. & Wu, T., Who Con­trols the Inter­net?, 2006, Oxford Uni­ver­sity Press

Lü Yao-Huai, “Glob­al­iza­tion and Infor­ma­tion Ethics”, Local­iz­ing the Inter­net: Eth­i­cal Aspects in inter­cul­tural per­spec­tive, 2007, Paderborn.

Nie Jin, “Analy­sis of Cur­rent E-Payment Solu­tion in China-Third Party Pay­ment Plat­form”, First Inter­na­tional Sym­po­sium on Data, Pri­vacy and E‐Commerce, 1 – 3 Novem­ber 2007. IEEE Xplore 10.1109/ISDPE.2007.22

国家广播电影电视总局, 《广电总局关于加强互联网视听节目内容管理的通知》, http://www.sarft.gov.cn/articles/2009/03/30/20090330171107690049.html Pub­lished 30 March 2009. Accessed 5 June 2009.

data: URIs

I stum­bled across this post — from about three years ago — today, and thought it was incred­i­bly cool. Note that the back­ground on the sec­ond layer in is sim­i­larly encoded… nifty beyond.

Via Anne’s weblog in a round­about kind of way.

Absolutely no idea if any of that works in Inter­net Explorer… if you’re an IE per­son and it works/doesn’t work, it’d be great to see a comment…

On an unre­lated note, lack of post­ing over this last week has been due to a Cru­saders–run study camp at… some­where with­out Inter­net access… Galston-ish. If noth­ing else, it was good for the habit/schedule of study and talks through­out the week!

Reg­u­lar pro­gram­ming shall return shortly… although pos­si­bly not until after Trial exams in a month or so.

# by Josh on July 8th, 2005 Tags: ,
| 2 Comments »

Going away

This after­noon I’ll be drop­ping off the map for a while due to a hol­i­day to Vic­to­ria (although regret­tably not with, because that would be rather nice), and no Inter­net access is anticipated.

I’ll prob­a­bly be back by Fri­day the 22nd, but depend­ing on… what peo­ple want to do… it could be as late as Sun­day the 24th. Apolo­gies if com­ment mod­er­a­tion takes stu­pid amounts of time — users who have already been able to post com­ments shouldn’t expe­ri­ence any prob­lems, though. As always, the con­tact form works (I just won’t be read­ing it for a week), and I’ll have my mobile with me (although recep­tion is open to debate).

See every­one in a week or so!

# by Josh on April 14th, 2005 Tags: ,
| No Comments »

Returned.

Yarrr. I’m back from my unan­nounced hol­i­day, to a mass of email, an over­flow­ing RSS reader, and a com­puter which is boot­ing inter­mit­tently. I want to go back on holidays.

Yes, I did have Inter­net access where I was stay­ing. I enjoy know­ing I can blog from any­where in the world, nearly as much as I enjoy know­ing that I can choose not to. And so I didn’t — I realised that I hadn’t announced my depar­ture a few days back, but decided it wasn’t worth writ­ing home about. This was a hol­i­day from blog­ging as much as any­thing else; not that blog­ging is some­thing to be escaped, nec­es­sar­ily, but it is good to get away from on occasion.

And whilst I was escap­ing, I immersed myself in books, and cam­eras, amongst other things. Of books, more shall be said later, if at all. Of cam­eras, more details are com­ing, I promise — along with pic­tures, so I hope. “Other things” encom­pass more toys, includ­ing the pend­ing arrival of some semi-vintage (read: old, but rel­a­tively intact and refur­bished) speak­ers; for those who care, and/or are famil­iar with such things, I’ve got a pair of Acoustic Research AR14 2-way speak­ers in stor­age, which I’m hop­ing to put to good use once this damn house is sold, or at least taken off the mar­ket. They sound decid­edly warm, although the HF is quite dis­tinc­tive. Mid-range is a tad lack­ing, but cer­tainly no worse that what I’m cur­rently using.

So, I’m look­ing for­wards to that. As I am look­ing for­wards to play­ing with this cam­era (an SLR) over the next few days. I haven’t time to upload pic­tures of the cam­era itself right now, but it’s an old Pen­tax Asahi SP500 model — if you care that much, Google’s num­ber one match for “Pen­tax Asahi” at the time of writ­ing returns a web­site which bran­dishes a few decent pic­tures of the cam­era. As far as I can tell, the cam­era itself is about 30 years old, and is in pretty decent nick… I’ve got two lenses for it, details of which will be posted later, and a UV fil­ter for one of those lenses.

It’s a 35mm cam­era, and was appar­ently last used in the early ‘90s… Because I couldn’t bring myself just to waste the mostly-unused film which remained in the cam­era, I fear that some rather good shots have gone to waste on the aged film which I’ve used for the last two days. We shall see.

Aside from all of that, I’m back in Syd­ney. Excit­ing things are hap­pen­ing in the realm of web devel­op­ment, away from this web­site, which shall be unveiled in the weeks to come. Until later, I’m going to sleep…

EDIT: Looks as though some­one was screw­ing with Google’s index­ing sys­tem as I searched for “Pen­tax Asahi” — the afore­men­tioned page dis­ap­peared into the void. For ref­er­ence, the page was http://www.talboys.fsnet.co.uk/roderickt/pentaxcdfiles.htm.

# by Josh on October 4th, 2004 Tags: , , , ,
| 9 Comments »

Wireless broadband on the cheap

Whirlpool have just announced (last night) the release of new broad­band plans from Veri­tel, with insane dis­counts and ben­e­fits for Whirlpool vis­i­tors. Read the rest of this entry »

Wireless wow factor

http://whirlpool.net.au/article.cfm?id=1304&show=replies

Oh. My. Good­ness.  That’s cheaper than my cur­rent plan, and bet­ter geared towards my band­width usage patterns!

And, at only $3 a GB if I go over, it doesn’t mat­ter either way (well, not much).

Ahhh!!  Dilema!!!  iiNet are just on the brink of announc­ing more DSLAM roll­outs, with semi-unlimited upload speeds… I guess I’ll wait for that list to be unveiled before try­ing to make any fur­ther deci­sions on this one.

What exists in Syd­ney in the way of con­sumer (i.e. not busi­ness) VoIP gate­way ser­vices?  And can you use fax over VoIP?  I’m so ready to ditch the phone line and go over this entirely:  cur­rently, we’re pay­ing $25 for line rental, and $60 for ADSL a month.  I don’t know what we’re pay­ing in calls, but it’d be enough.

This would be $0 in line rental, $45 for inter­net access, and some amount of tele­phony costs — if noth­ing else, we’d save mas­sively interstate/long dis­tance and inter­na­tional.  Even if voice usage con­sumed large-ish amounts of band­width, I can’t see it using more than a GB per month (so, add $3 to tele­phony costs) — that’s based on the fact that if I stream a 192kbps stream for 8 and a half hours, it only uses about 900MB — and it’s safe to pre­sume that VoIP won’t be any­where near that sort of quality!

Meh, can’t think about it now… still got this stu­pid assess­ment unfin­ished, must keep work­ing.  More to post, but that actu­ally requires thought, not just techno-babble, so it will come in a while…

EDIT: More has been posted, and back­dated to when it actu­ally SHOULD have appeared.  See arti­cle 106, “A feast for sore eyes” for more!