Iowa State Patrol Chief Col. Robert Garrison joined us for the June 28 show.
He says research shows there will be 25% fewer traffic deaths after the new law
takes effect. For a 170-pound male, a blood alcohol concentration of .08
can be attained with four to five drinks in the first hour. You can burn
off about a drink an hour. There is a book and a web site that can help you reduce your risk of being arrested for drunk driving. This site also features a chart that can help you estimate your Blood Alcohol Concentration.
(Chart)
Tuesday, June 17, 2003
.08 Drunk Driving Standard Effective July 1
Peer-to-peer file sharing: Napster vs ITunes
Apples says it's going to release ITunes for Windows by the end of the year.
I've been saying for months that I would not pay $1 per song from Apple's ITunes.
Why? 1) You don't get a disk; 2) it's a propriety format; 3) there isn't
the selection I want. with WinMX, I can get the songs I want and I'm not
out $1 a pop. I have thousands of songs that I wouldn't have if I'd bought
them online. Face it RIAA, they aren't worth thousands of dollars.
I would have bee happy to pay a flat monthly fee (something like $5/month) to
continue using Napster, so that the artists could get something out of the deal.
My tastes are mostly 70s and 80s music, and let's face it, there have been no
big dollars for anyone in the older music genres. But I guarantee that the
minute people can get whatever they want, you'll see a lot more of the older
music being sold and subsequently more licensing dollars being charged.
What does an artist get for every record sold? Probably a few pennies,
but it really depends on the deals they make. Some agree to a small
residual, while others just sell their rights for cash up front, in which case,
they get nothing for an older song when it sells.
In any event, Apple has been negotiating with record labels and pursuing its
Windows port and may well release at Christmas time, which could be huge -- or
flat.
Corporate wireless: freedom and dangers
Mercury News is reporting that Wireless Switch makers are thriving, and gearing up to go public. While that may be a scary scenerio for the consumers of such wireless gear, it means that wireless is soon going to dominate the LANs and WANs in the office working environment.
Security has been the missing link that kept corporations from buying into WLANs, however that same apprehension is creating a store-bought WLAN culture, and that is sure to spill a few company secrets.)
Nokia wants more of the pie
According to Reuters, Nokia's per-user revenues is about $55. Nextel's $70 per user. So, Nokia says
it'll borrow Nextel's walkie-talkie feature and provide faster internet by installing EDGE and 3G technology on its mobile network network. When? Possibly mid 2004. Big deal.
(News)
Microsoft fights spammers
Fifteen lawsuits, two billion spams. Microsoft, Yahoo, EarthLink and
America Online agreed to cooperate to solve some of the technical issues
associated with spam. (News)
802.11g wins 'official' approval
Techweb is reporting the IEEE approved 802.11g, the newest wireless
networking standard.
The Standards Board of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
(IEEE), established the standards for wireless hardware capable of transmitting
data at speeds up to 54Mbps while maintaining backwards compatibility with the
ultra-popular 802.11b gear that runs at a much slower 11 Mbps. Both
specifications use the 2.4GHz band of the radio spectrum.
The report says 802.11g's ability to co-exist on the same network as 802.11b
has been the long-touted key to the standard's acceptance in the corporate
world. Wireless LAN (WLAN) hardware certified under the new specification can
initially be used with an 802.11b infrastructure -- access points, wireless
networking cards, and so on -- and then as a corporation requires fatter
wireless pipes, serve as the foundation for a mixed, or 802.11g-only, WLAN.
This three-year process opened the door for labeling 802.11g-certified
equipment.
You've probably been able to see the 54-G spec on store shelves already, and
much to the shagrin of the steering committees, the products used draft specs
and not the certified specs for the protocols, meaning the products may not have
worked right on Wireless LANs. But Broadcom, a chipset manufacturer with 90% of
the marketshare, says as it happened, the final, ratified standard is the same
standard tey used to make their chipset, so all is well.
Broadcom makes silicon for Linksys, Apple, Dell and Gateway.
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