Posts from September 2004

Nuance

I use nuance every day to handle important but delicate issues. I believe that nuance is often the key to getting people to agree on issues that divide them.

But understanding of nuance is in short supply these days. As an example, I wrote a post last week saying that the “spam crisis is over“. Matt got what I was saying and he blogged back that the crisis may be waning but the problem was still pretty bad. I blogged back that I agreed. Meanwhile, people were commenting on my blog saying how dare I claim that the spam problem had been solved. They failed to understand the nuance of my post. I was saying that the crisis was over, not the problem itself.

But spam isn’t on my mind this morning. Presidential politics is. I am sick and tired of George Bush’s lack of nuance and I am particularly sick and tired of his tendency to ignore the nuance in John Kerry’s stand on Iraq.

John Kerry voted to give Bush the authorization to go to war. He did not vote to go to war. Only the President can do that. But every time Kerry says he would not have actually gone to war, Bush points to the vote, the respect frankly, that Kerry gave him two years ago. He did it again yesterday in reaction to Kerry’s good and strong speech at NYU. The New York Times says:

Mr. Bush attacked his opponent’s declaration that he would not have started the war, contrasting it with Mr. Kerry’s Aug. 9 statement that he stood by his Senate vote to authorize the use of force.

There is nuance to Kerry’s world. Lot’s of it. And I like that. I am willing to take the time to parse through his positions and understand the nuance. When you are dealing with very divergent views, nuance can be a real asset.

Think about how this would play out in the business world.

Do you want to do the strategic deal with Microsoft? For Bush, its yes or no. For Kerry, its on what terms.

Do you want to buy this stock? For Bush, its yes or no. For Kerry, its at what price.

Do you want to hire that person? For Bush, its yes or no. For Kerry, its for what role?

I’ll take nuance every day over strong and wrong. That’s my new name for our current president and his administration.

#Politics

SIPping from a firehose

SIP stands for session initiation protocol. It is the emerging standard for Voice Over IP. It allows an open framework for the following activities (I got this from the Columbia University website)

call forwarding, including the equivalent of 700-, 800- and 900- type calls;

call-forwarding no answer;

call-forwarding busy;

call-forwarding unconditional;

other address-translation services;

callee and calling “number” delivery, where numbers can be any (preferably unique) naming scheme;

personal mobility, i.e., the ability to reach a called party under a single, location-independent address even when the user changes terminals;

terminal-type negotiation and selection: a caller can be given a choice how to reach the party, e.g., via Internet telephony, mobile phone, an answering service, etc.;

terminal capability negotiation;

caller and callee authentication;

blind and supervised call transfer;

invitations to multicast conferences

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Here is how SIP works

SIP addresses users by an email-like address and re-uses some of the infrastructure of electronic mail delivery such as DNS MX records or using SMTP EXPN for address expansion. SIP addresses (URLs) can also be embedded in web pages. SIP is addressing-neutral, with addresses expressed as URLs of various types such as SIP, H.323 or telephone (E.164).

SIP is independent of the packet layer and only requires an unreliable datagram service, as it provides its own reliability mechanism. While SIP typically is used over UDP or TCP, it could, without technical changes, be run over IPX, or carrier pigeons, frame relay, ATM AAL5 or X.25, in rough order of desireability.

I have never seen SIP run over carrier pigeons, but it works great over most transmission protocols.

Why does this stuff matter? Because Voice Over IP is like the web was in 1995/96. It’s a wide open (and I mean OPEN) playing field where anyone can build and deploy a service without creating a lot of infrastructure to support it.

Some early VOIP players are locked into proprietary systmes and look like AOL and Prodigy did back in 1995/96. See Michael Robertson’s slam on Skype for a great example.

I see Vonage and the other consumer VOIP providers as the Earthlinks and Mindsprings, they are the carriers who are going to get everyone connected. And that’s great.

But who is going to create the real homerun business models like eBay, Yahoo!, Google, Amazon, etc? That’s a completely different issue and one that I am really interested in. If you’ve got the answers, I am all ears.

#VC & Technology

VIOP Insurrection

OM Malik posted a long missive on Voice Over IP from Daniel Berninger. It is a must read if you are interested in this area.

Here is my favorite paragraph.

The competition between VoIP and the PSTN shapes up much like highways versus railroads. The operator of the PSTN and railroad own their transport network. VoIP companies and car companies do not. Railroads and the PSTN support a single type of usage. Highways and the Internet allow all user types to commingle. The emergence of highways empowered people to control many more aspects of their transportation needs rather than depend on the schedules and railroad routes available. The Internet accomplishes the same thing for communications. Automobiles and highways gave rise to an entirely separate industry and provided the basis for new types of commerce. The Internet offers the same promise, and corporate chieftains with traditional telecom assets find themselves in the same position as the railroad barons when Henry Ford got rolling.

#VC & Technology

Issues 2004 - Iraq

Since our campaign is almost devoid of discussion of the issues, Jeff Jarvis has taken it upon himself to start some discussion.

It’s too bad that he is part of the problem spending his time running around to the TV news shows who are obsessed about Rathergate and also avoiding the issues.

That said, I applaud Jeff’s desire to get the issues out front and center. His first piece was on Iraq, as it should be since Iraq is George Bush’s biggest failure as President and one of the main reasons that many Republicans I know are leaning toward Kerry while “holding their noses”.

John Kerry gave a speech yesterday morning about 4 blocks from my home, at NYU, and he said the following:

That means we must have a great honest national debate on Iraq. The president claims it is the centerpiece of his war on terror. In fact, Iraq was a profound diversion from that war and the battle against our greatest enemy, Osama bin Laden and the terrorists. Invading Iraq has created a crisis of historic proportions and, if we do not change course, there is the prospect of a war with no end in sight.

This has always been my central issue with the war in Iraq. I was on the fence in 2002 and early 2003 as many of us were. The accusations about nuclear weapons and the Al Qaeda links were compelling. And I was reading Tom Friedman’s assertions about the need to create a democratic government in the mideast as well. But I also could not get past the fact that Bush’s father and his foriegn policy team, perhaps the most impressive foriegn policy team in my adulthood, were opposed to the war. Baker, Scowcroft, Powell, Bush I himself, these were people who’d gotten it right and had determined that unseating Hussein was destablizing. They believed that invading Iraq was a terrible idea. And it was.

More from Kerry’s speech:

The intelligence estimate totally contradicts what the President is saying to the American people.

So do the facts on the ground.

Security is deteriorating, for us and for the Iraqis.

42 Americans died in Iraq in June — the month before the handover. But 54 died in July…66 in August… and already 54 halfway through September.

And more than 1,100 Americans were wounded in August – more than in any other month since the invasion.

We are fighting a growing insurgency in an ever widening war-zone. In March, insurgents attacked our forces 700 times. In August, they attacked 2,700 times – a 400% increase.

Falluja…Ramadi… Samarra … even parts of Baghdad – are now “no go zones”… breeding grounds for terrorists who are free to plot and launch attacks against our soldiers. The radical Shi’a cleric, Moktada al-Sadr, who’s accused of complicity in the murder of Americans, holds more sway in the suburbs of Baghdad.

Violence against Iraqis… from bombings to kidnappings to intimidation … is on the rise.

Basic living conditions are also deteriorating.
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Most Iraqis have lost faith in our ability to deliver meaningful improvements to their lives. So they’re sitting on the fence… instead of siding with us against the insurgents.

That is the truth. The truth that the Commander in Chief owes to our troops and the American people.

We’ve got a mess on our hands. A big mess. And its a mess that we created by going into Iraq. Americans weren’t getting beheaded there when Hussein was in power. They are now. Terrorists weren’t flocking there to plan their attacks on the US. They are now. We created a rats nest for terrorism when we should have been eliminating one.

And so what is Bush going to do about it? Novack says he’s going to cut and run.

So what would Kerry do about it?

Here’s what his plan is (also from his speech yesterday – go read the whole thing, I am not going to put it all here on this page):

We need to turn the page and make a fresh start in Iraq.

First, the President has to get the promised international support so our men and women in uniform don’t have to go it alone. It is late; the President must respond by moving this week to gain and regain international support.
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Second, the President must get serious about training Iraqi security forces.
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Third, the President must carry out a reconstruction plan that finally brings tangible benefits to the Iraqi people.
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Fourth, the President must take immediate, urgent, essential steps to guarantee the promised elections can be held next year.

If the President would move in this direction … if he would bring in more help from other countries to provide resources and forces … train the Iraqis to provide their own security …develop a reconstruction plan that brings real benefits to the Iraqi people … and take the steps necessary to hold credible elections next year … we could begin to withdraw U.S. forces starting next summer and realistically aim to bring all our troops home within the next four years.

This is what has to be done. This is what I would do as President today. But we cannot afford to wait until January. President Bush owes it to the American people to tell the truth and put Iraq on the right track. Even more, he owes it to our troops and their families, whose sacrifice is a testament to the best of America.

Colin Powell told George W Bush, “you break it, you own it” when Bush told him he was going to war. We broke Iraq, unwisely and mistakenly, and now we own it. Many times in my experience, you can’t expect the person who screwed something up to fix it. They just can’t admit their mistakes and move on. You need someone new to fix it.

When it comes to Iraq, that’s where I am. We’ve got to get someone new in charge if we have any hope of fixing the mess that is Iraq.

#Politics

The Most Clutch Basketball Player in NYC

Hammon_919Who is the most clutch ballplayer in NYC right now?

Stephon Marbury? Nope.

Allan Houston? Nope.

Jason Kidd even though he’s in NJ? Nope.

Right now, its not a guy. It’s a girl. Becky Hammon is the clutchest ballplayer in NYC right now.

Three games in a row, she’s won the game for the hometown team.

Yesterday, we went to see the final game of the year between The Liberty and The Washington Mystics. It was close the entire game. No team went up by more than 5 or 6 the entire game. With about a minute left, she nailed a three from the top of the key and then finished with a bunch of free throws to put the game away.

And what’s even better is that she’s a great role model for my kids. No tatoos. No drug arrests. No bad attitude. And she’s always smiling out there.

If you live in the NY area and you’ve got kids and want to show them how ball should be played, particularly if you’ve got girls, you have to go see the Liberty.

#Random Posts

MP3 of the Week

Considering my newfound obsession with My Morning Jacket, it should be no surprise that my MP3 of the week is from their most recent record, It Still Moves.

But which song? My three favorite tracks are the opener Mahgeetah, Golden, and One Big Holiday.

As I sit here listening, Golden comes out on top. So it’s my MP3 of the Week.

#My Music

Rathergate

I can’t read all the postings about Rathergate. I can deal with the fact that right wing bloggers nailed a left wing big media guy in the middle of a presidential election. I think Rather should have stepped down about 20 years ago. I’ve never watched him and wouldn’t watch him. He’s terrible.

But what I can’t deal with is all the celebration around this david beating goliath. The blog world is full of so much crap that it makes mainstream media look clean by comparison. So anyone who thinks this is “vindication” for the bloggers is wrong.

I’ve wanted to post these feelings for days, but couldn’t come up with a way to do it. The Tom Watson wrote this post and when I read it, I finally felt like posting my own thoughts on the subject.

#Politics

Isabel Engeman (continued)

My grandmother Isabel Engeman (known to us kids as Issy) passed away on February 25th of this year. I blogged her passing that day.

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Today we remebered her by sprinking her ashes in the Hudson river across from West Point.

West Point looms large in my family history. I was born there in 1961. My dad graduated from there in 1950. His dad graduated from there too.

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West Point is on both sides of my family tree. Issy moved to West Point when she was 6 months old in 1907 and lived in this big red brick house overlooking the place we sprinkled her ashes today.

It was a really nice ceremony. We had my mom and her three siblings, all four of Issy’s kids. And lots of grandchildren. We all got to sprinkle a few of her ashes into the river. No speeches, no pomp and circumstance. Just the way she would have wanted it.Hpim04551

But it was a spectacular day. And West Point is a spectacular place. In addition to being born there, I spent my entire teenage years there. I haven’t been back much recently, but the view from across the river brought back a ton of memories, including some great ones of Issy.

#Blogging On The Road#Photo of the Day#Random Posts

Blustery Bridge Ride

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My friend Jimmy and I went for a bike ride today up the west side and across the George Washington Bridge into New Jersey. It’s a great ride.

Today it was really windy. We were into a 20mph wind the whole way up the west side. It was great when we got to the bridge.

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The views of the city on this windy but bright and sunny morning were fantastic.

The wind was so strong on the bridge that we had to ride leaning hard to one side just to stay balanced.

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When we headed back down the ramp off the bridge to head home, we found out that taking all of these pictures isn’t kosher anymore. I guess we have Bin Laden to thank for that.

The ride back downtown was a blast with the wind at our backs. After Jimmy peeled off around the boathouse on 79th, I put on My Morning Jacket and raced home.

I wish I could do that ride everyday. It feels great.

#Blogging On The Road#Photo of the Day#Random Posts

VOIP Blog

Weblogs Inc. has launched a VOIP blog. I’ve added it to my feedreader and look for some linking to it from this blog.

I already subscribe to their spam and RSS blogs. Jason’s building some interesting properties at Weblogs Inc.

I found this post on VOIP numbers really interesting in light of my post on the same topic last week.

#VC & Technology