2007-09-03

Da simma dabei. Mer lääve hück - nit murje, zo schnell verjeiht die Zigg

Habe mich doch gerade durchgerungen und (nur) für den 02. Kölner Halbmarathon während des 11.(!!!) Kölner Marathons angemeldet. Zielzeit? Alles unter 2h ist in Ordnung, ich werd einfach Stadt und Stimmung genießen.

Leider ist der Start schon am 07.10.09 um 8.30Uhr, ich will nicht hoffen das deswegen weniger Zuschauer präsent sind. Wo wir gerade dabei sind, ich möchte alle doch bitten zum Anfeuern an der Strecke zu stehen und mir ab und zu ein Kölsch zu reichen.

Wenn jemand Vorschläge für Laufverkleidungen (11.!) hat, bitte her damit.

2007-08-21

Anfänge


Meine Mutter hat heute einen interessanten Fund gemacht und mir direkt gemailt (ja, sie kann emailen;))
Ich glaube 1991 konnte ich noch nicht mal Marathon ausschreiben, aber zumindest bin ich schon meine ersten 15 Min durchgelaufen (!) hehe. Ich frag mich welche DLV Stufe ich jetzt habe!?

2007-08-08

Web 2.0 die Zukunft und so

Gerade ist ein interessanter Artikel über Web 2.0/3.0 auf Valleywag aufgetaucht. Just wanted to share...

the future does not need us

Web 3.0, the first step towards computer takeover

All your base belong to us.People, have we not learned anything from moving pictures? Skynet, Omni Consumer Products, Cylons -- heck, even the Borg? Do not entrust networks with intelligence. Things end poorly. Cybernetic killing machines aside, the semantic Web, otherwise known as Web 3.0, should still scare the bejeezus out of you. Radar Networks and Spock.com, two startups in the news, show us why we need to unplug Web 2.0 before it upgrades itself and no one can stop it.


Radar Networks, a semantic-Web pioneer, wants to bestow intelligent search and linking upon the Internet. Planning a trip to Vegas? You'll instantly know who in your network lives there, where they work, their favorite casinos and whether they wear boxers or briefs. Radar's client software, masked as a digital life organizer, will be able to ferret out all your engagements and use them to plot out everything from your next doctor's appointment to tomorrow's Happy Hour. Or, one day, in a future version, conspire to kill you if you're not maximizing your life potential.

Search engine Spock is, similarly, just at the beginning of its ultracreepy potential. The newly launched people-finder has already been stirring up concerns over personal privacy. While every tidbit of personal info it gathers was willingly surrendered to various social networks, the information was scattered across multiple sites. Now that it's all in one place, it's easily compiled for various nefarious ends. Standards for metadata, the big kahuna of Web 3.0, just promises to make things easier for Web-scouring sites like Spock.

The problem with Spock and the greater ideal of a semantic Web is the continued need for human input. Intelligent tags for metadata don't magically appear. Humans need to establish the relationships between data points. Even Spock claims to rely on users to ensure personal data is correct. Spock is going to have a hard time keeping tabs of all 6 billion people. How exactly is a semantic Web going to manage a world's worth of data? Wikipedia can barely keep itself straight.

The really scary thing is if they actually manage to do the job. If the Semantic Web becomes real, we're all surely doomed. It's just a matter of time before the computers figure out they don't need us. So thanks a lot, Spock and Radar, for working towards a better, humanity-less tomorrow.

My soup