Silicon Valley generates so much technical greatness, yet for some reason it can't implement greatness for itself. I sat at a red light recently for almost three minutes, wasting gas, generating pollution, staring at an empty intersection. Meanwhile cities and towns outside Silicon Valley have interlinked traffic lights with adaptive prediction systems that allows timing to change as needed based on roadway, radar, optical, and other sensors. The Valley was one of the last places to get rid of A/B cable, and even in 2001 it lagged behind other metro areas in DSL deployment. We know how to make great technology, but we don't know how (or don't have the political will) to tame runaway government bureaucracy which impedes deployment of that technology. The fact that Google Fiber will provide residents of selected cities with free basic (5 Mbps) service - a huge economic opportunity for those cities - seems to not matter. I suspect that we're once again rushing towards mediocrity, and that we're likely to get left behind while Google deploys fiber in cities like San Antonio.
Friday, May 23, 2014
Silicon Valley says "Meh" to Google Fiber
Silicon Valley generates so much technical greatness, yet for some reason it can't implement greatness for itself. I sat at a red light recently for almost three minutes, wasting gas, generating pollution, staring at an empty intersection. Meanwhile cities and towns outside Silicon Valley have interlinked traffic lights with adaptive prediction systems that allows timing to change as needed based on roadway, radar, optical, and other sensors. The Valley was one of the last places to get rid of A/B cable, and even in 2001 it lagged behind other metro areas in DSL deployment. We know how to make great technology, but we don't know how (or don't have the political will) to tame runaway government bureaucracy which impedes deployment of that technology. The fact that Google Fiber will provide residents of selected cities with free basic (5 Mbps) service - a huge economic opportunity for those cities - seems to not matter. I suspect that we're once again rushing towards mediocrity, and that we're likely to get left behind while Google deploys fiber in cities like San Antonio.
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Flying Red Horse
+Darian Drake posted this funny commercial to G+ earlier today. The name of the energy drink "Flying Horse" brought back memories of something that happened when I was working at Verifone in the late 90's.
Verifone does Point Of Sale (POS) terminals. One of their target markets is "Petro" meaning gas stations, pay at the pump, etc. My project assignment was to prototype an RFID-enabled POS terminal for Mobil Oil, with one of the design elements being that the Mobil logo (a red Pegasus) would light up if the transaction was approved. The branded name for this system was "SpeedPass".
The project's execution was problematic. We struggled to design a loop antenna that wouldn't have to be made by hand. The product used ultra-bright LEDs - fairly new at the time - and custom Lucite "light pipes" to illuminate the logos. The technician assigned to construct the prototypes procrastinated and ended up completing the work after the last FedEx pickup of the week. Strapped for time I was preparing to take the shipment box to a FedEx depot when the UPS guy showed up to make a delivery. I quickly filled out a shipping form for overnight delivery and handed the box over. Turns out the story was just beginning.
Monday morning I came in to find several urgent messages on my desk. (1997 - I hadn't yet bought a cell phone.) The shipment had not arrived, and the sales meeting had started. People (including Verifone execs) had traveled to Mobil Oil offices for the meeting - this was supposed to be the deal closure. I quickly called UPS and got no answers. Unlike FedEx, UPS didn't track packages every time they're touched. The box had been put into a shipping container, and after that nobody could tell me anything.
The box didn't show up later that day as the UPS helpdesk suggested it might. It didn't show up the following day, nor in the following week. I called the UPS helpdesk every day, seeking news. UPS wanted to compensate me for the loss, but how do you assign a value to hand-built prototypes? How do you file a claim against the possible loss of a multi-million dollar deal? I wasn't eager to repeat the painful prototype construction process. Sales wanted the prototypes YESTERDAY - literally.
Ten days after my first call to UPS I was on the phone with the helpdesk. I'd been speaking with the same person each day and while he was nice enough we'd made no progress. Somehow I wound up telling him about the custom Lucite light pipes, and the Pegasus logo. "What's a Pegasus?" he asked. "You know, Pegasus. The mythical flying horse?" [typing sounds in background] "I found it! The box is in an overage center, listed under 'flying red horse' - we can have it delivered tomorrow."
That the shipment was listed under "flying red horse" is astounding. The prototypes did indeed have a red Pegasus logo, but they also had the Verifone logo on the model/serial number plate. They were inside individual boxes with the Verifone logo, and those boxes were inside a larger box again with the Verifone logo. Someone had to have opened all the boxes, ignored multiple Verifone logos, and decided to list it by the 1 inch diameter Mobil Oil logo.
I sent an email to the team letting them know that (a) the prototypes would arrive the following day, and (b) the project name henceforth would be "Flying Red Horse".
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Persistence
I made up an adapter cable from the mic processor to my Heil Pro-Set Plus and another to the mic input on my Kenwood TS-2000 and started testing on the air. I quickly discovered that while some bands were OK, others were causing some RFI on the transmitted audio. Depending on which antenna I used, the RFI ranged from barely noticeable to so bad that it blocked my audio completely. A couple of cases were so bad that even keying the radio caused RFI feedback which continued until I unkeyed.
Every few months I would get an idea and try again. Modern HF radios use BALANCED inputs, and so I went through and made sure that nothing was pulling the differential pair to ground. I didn't find anything, but at least I had eliminated that as a possible cause. Maybe I had faulty bought equipment? I tested using some other audio gear and found that the problem shifted around; some bands got better, others got worse. I gave up for about nine months after that.
It's a little embarrassing to admit that it took me so long to figure this one out, but I'm really pleased to have finally resolved this one. I'm looking forward to finally getting some use out of the mic processor I bought!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)