Cyrus Farivar
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The Wanderlust Geek Podcast #2 : December 2, 2005
Head over to Wanderlustgeek.com for the skinny, or download it directly here.
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Cyrus Email System
Michael Rice (a buddy of mine from J-School) points to the fact that Columbia has renamed their email system: I’m flattered. 😉
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Taiwan notebook makers skeptical of MIT budget laptop production schedule
DigiTimes (via Lee Thorn of the Jhai Foundation) : Quanta Computer, Compal Electronics, and Inventec, which are reportedly bidding to manufacture the world’s cheapest notebook distributed to schools directly through large government initiatives, consider that meeting the volume shipment schedule for the US$100 notebook would be “unlikely†given the current technical hurdles that need to be overcome.
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Fuel Up with Banana Peels
Wired News by Cyrus Farivar 02:00 AM Dec. 02, 2005 PT Mad scientist Doc Brown powers his time machine by feeding coffee grounds and other biowaste into the DeLorean in Back to the Future. While time travel is still in the realm of science-fiction, carbon-based fuel cells are about to become science fact — rendering a similar scenario all the more possible. SRI announced in November that it has developed direct carbon fuel-cell technology. The process is 70 percent efficient,…
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Wireless Internet in Berkeley, Pt. II
Today I got a response from Councilwoman Maio: Dear Cyrus, I felt as you did until I heard the program. Since you haven’t, as you said, maybe it would be helpful to you to track down the Tuesday “Our Healh and Fitness” program and get a sense of what was presented. You might even be able to get a transcript. Linda After spending some time online, I responded with the following: Dear Linda, I’ve found and listened to the program…
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Wireless Internet in Berkeley
Dear Councilwoman Maio, My name is Cyrus Farivar and I am a technology journalist who learned my trade while a student at UC Berkeley. I wrote for The Daily Californian and watched the City Council take stands against various issues. Sometimes those decisions are made with conviction and well-thought out reasoning, and sometimes those decisions are made with half-baked ideas that come from somewhere else. When I found out that the Berkeley City Council was considering building a citywide WiFi…
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WiFi in Macedonia
Over the weekend, I did an interview with Cyrus Irani (who is of Parsi/Indian origin, not Iranian, despite his name) of Strix Systems. They’re building WiFi in Macedonia. It “aired” today on The World’s Technology Podcast: Download it here. I’ll have a piece on The World (broadcast locally here on KQED every weekday at 2 pm) coming up in the next couple weeks. Thanks to Clark Boyd for making this possible.
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Macworld Podcast #16: Game Hall of Fame
Macworld: Whether you’re a hardcore gamer or just someone with few reliable games you play to blow off steam, this is the week for you at Macworld.com. We’re concentrating on Mac games, as we induct 10 new titles into Macworld’s Game Hall of Fame, located in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. (Why Pittsfield? Because way back when, the original author of the Hall of Fame feature, Steven Levy, decided the fictional Hall of Fame should be located in his hometown, where it’s remained…
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Books in my Life: “It’s not the end of wondering why.”
I just finished this book two days ago. I bought it right before I went to Istanbul, breaking my own book-buying moratorium. (I have 10+ books that I’ve bought or have been given to me that I haven’t read yet.) It was very interesting, and in a lot of ways was an impressionist painting of the city of Istanbul. My main problem with it? It doesn’t have much of a narrative or momentum. It’s a series of varying length mini-essays…
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Waiting for That $100 Laptop?
Slate: By Cyrus Farivar Posted Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005, at 3:31 PM ET At the World Summit on the Information Society two weeks ago, MIT’s Nicholas Negroponte unveiled the laptop he believes will digitize the developing world. The cute green computer sports a WiFi card, a 500 MHz processor, a 1 gigabyte flash drive, and a novel power source—a 6-inch hand crank that juts out from the side. It will run free, open-source software, most likely some derivation of Linux.…