Category: Sucky Web

Backyard Recipe’s is Open

Backyard Recipe’s is open for business.  You can register on Backyard Recipe’s by going to http://www.backyardrecipe.com remember, that is backyardrecipe.com, not backyardrecipes.com because there was a squatter on the one with the ’s’.  So what is it?  Backyard Recipe’s is a place for people to organize, keep, and share their favorite recipe’s with the rest of the world.

Backyard Recipe’s also includes the award winning program Recipe Holder.  Recipe Holder is an oldie but a goodie freeware program for organizing your recipe’s without the need of an internet connection.  In the next couple of months; Backyard Recipe’s will be making the entire database downloadable and importable to Recipe Holder on a monthly basis.

Visit it today!

Backyard Mobile is Open

I finally opened Backyard Mobile at http://www.backyardmobile.com for people in Mobile, Alabama from which I hail.  It is a free classified ad service intended to help my fellow Mobilians.  Backyard Mobile features a general classified ad section that allows people to sell their backyard treasures, and it features an area for Mobilians to keep their good treasure out of land fills by giving it away to needy people in the area.

I considered making this nationally, but decided that is what Craigslist is for.  Being a Mobilian almost all my life has also showed me that most Mobilians rather do business with a neighbor than someone on the other side of the continent - hence, the focused niche.

Login and create a free account at http://www.backyardmobile.com

Remember to help keep the site free by visiting it’s sponsers (clicking the ad’s).

Dual Monitor Screenscapes

I decided to browse the web for some desktop wallpaper for my dual monitor Linux Mint box.  Linux Mint…imagine a nice cool refreshing and highly refined Ubuntu with a plethora of intuitive tools and things that work.

Anyhow, I stumbled across several that I thought were nice and I present them here.  I got them from various open websites so I don’t know who did them, but kudo’s to who ever did.

Happy 20th Birthday, Modern Internet!

From the Chronicle of Higher Education:  “The NSFNet Backbone has reached a state where we would like to more officially let operational traffic on.” Twenty years ago, on the evening of June 30th, a politician named Al Gore sent that text in an e-mail message to users of the National Science Foundation’s fledgling NSFNet project. The network’s main lines, or backbone, had been upgraded, he said.

And that, according to Supercomputing Online today, was the birth of the modern Internet. In the early 1980s, NSF put together NSFNet as a network connecting regional computer networks around the country. The Department of Defense had already created the Arpanet network, which gave birth to many of the tools and techniques used on the modern Internet, but Arpanet traffic was limited to Defense-sponsored research. NSFNet was designed to be open to all users.

The design of NSFNet was awarded to a team made of MCI, IBM, and a computer-networking-technology consortium of Michigan universities called Merit Networks. Their main challenge: the network’s backbone ran at 56-kilobits per second. (That’s the old connection speed of a dial-up telephone modem.)

According to Supercomputing Online, George Strawn, who was in charge of the campus network at Iowa State University at the time, says that network users, frustrated by the clogged system, would “bang on my desk, ‘the network is too slow. I can’t use the thing.’”

The NSFNet supervisors upgraded to a 1.5 megabit-per-second capacity in 1988. Strawn said that people stopped banging on his desk.

For a while, at least. Network traffic from universities, commercial companies and individual users skyrocketed. And in 1995, NSFNet was decommissioned, replaced by robust backbones provided by commercial telecom companies. But without its demonstration of open access at high speeds, the modern Internet would not have lured millions of users.

Whats the need?

I’ve been sitting and thinking for the past few months about something that I just don’t have an answer to.  In life, if a person wants to start a business, the first rule is to find a need and the second rule is to fill it.  A successful business will meet the demands of the general public and fill them.  A twist to find the need/fill the need is find a need that is already being filled and then do it better than the people filling the need.

This leads me to my ponderance.  On the internet, what is a need that has yet to be filled?  Is there one?  What need is already being filled, but could be filled better?

I remember when search engines use to come a dime a dozen.  Everywhere you looked there was a search engine scraping the etherworld for data.  In comes Google, and Yahoo, and Ask.  They found a need that was being filled, bought it all up and started filling the needs a whole lot better.  I personally think that web searching is as good as it’s going to get for the simple notion that these search engines are making people dumb.  Ha…  The need is being filled so well that people no longer have to exert mental energy to find anything on the net.  How many times have you told a person to “Google-it?”  Why not, “hey look in an encyclopedia” or “How about getting the dictionary?” And no, I don’t mean dictionary.com.

Needs are being filled extremely well on the internet.  When a need is filled well, that means a person no longer has to exert that extra bit of force to meet that need.  They get dumb and satisfied; add some drugs, and the government would have close to what George Orwell predicted for 1984.

I must be blind and can’t see a need.  I mean, all needs seem to be filled on the internet.  Everything from apple sauce manufactures to Zebu herders can be found in the interworld.  I suppose when they finally come out with direct cerebral implants there will be other needs and desires to be filled, but right now the internet seems to be delivering.  What do you think?