Saturday, November 27, 2010

OK, OK-we get the message.

Borders
1664 West Chipman Road, Lee's Summit

802.11g
SSID: BORDERS

Well, they could have been a bit more subtle about things instead of inexorably shoving laptoppers and other Wi-Fi using patrons towards the Seattle's Best Coffee cafe at the store's south end (despite its address, it actually fronts toward the west) with its dearth of power outlets (I only see two along the south wall, and one of those is next to a chair without a table in front of it, meaning you'll have to actually top your lap with your laptop to use it).



Anyway, it's not all that bad a place to take a respite from all the Black Friday weekend hustle and bustle, as you can see.

Thursday, November 04, 2010

So, Starbucks starts giving away their Wi-Fi on July 1 and...

...well, I'll let the Associated Press tell you.

And any coffeehouse proprietors still running closed or play-for-pay networks have one simple question to answer.  Why?

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Biennial Off-Topic Rant for 2010

So here we are again on the first Tuesday after a Monday in November, and here I am again at my local public library branch/polling place after having sat for heaven knows how long waiting to use the single touch-screen electronic voting machine here.  Well, at least the wait wasn't as long as it was a couple of years ago.

I suppose we're going to have to see another presidential election like 2000 before leaders in both parties get serious about nationwide electoral modernization.  If astronauts can vote from orbit, why is it absolutely necessary for anyone to have to come in to a specific location only between 6 a. m. and 7 p. m. and suffer the twin ordeals of standing in line to have your registration checked, then waiting for the machine to become available?  And if anyone has a good argument as to why Missouri can't set up early voting as has become commonplace across the line in Kansas, I'd like to hear it.

Here's an interim goal towards full online voting-you have to know that's where things are headed-we should perhaps work towards.  Let voters come in and cast their ballots from their laptops or other wireless devices.  No, I mean it-set up a hotspot at the polling place with a secure login page where the voter can self-verify his or her registration, then be presented with an online ballot similar to the one he or she gets on the current voting-machine touchscreen.  Since voters will still have to physically come to the polls the potential some may see for fraud is reduced, and the effect should be the same as unwiring a library-voters without netbooks or Wi-Fi equipped smartphones shouldn't have to wait as long for a machine because those with such wireless devices won't need one.

Sure, it'll take a bit of work, but when has that ever been an excuse for not doing something worthwhile?