11/30/2012

Truly inclusive technology...

There is a need to make technology more inclusive, not only to be used, but also in its creation, development and adaptation for different needs. If people can't have ample access to technology to do all of these things, no matter how useful or innovative at the beginning, it'll soon be obsolete or irrelevant.

If any technology is made so as much people can do more than just work with it, chances are the technology will reach its full potential. And it's more than likely than that potential is far beyond anyone can foresee. To take technology there, it needs to let everyone in and let them modify it or add to it openly. Closing it to the general public is the best way to ensure a short life for it.

Inclusive technology is the best way to make out present, while at the same time ensuring our future. Technology gives us the best tools to do both, and the best way to do so is to have technology that is work on and developed in an open and transparent manner.

People have a way of making all the technology they need, or use, their own one way or another. So, it's in the best interest of everyone involved to make sure that people can do so from the very moment a technology is available for them to make the best use of it, even if it means its modification. Any limitation, or guidelines, should be ethical at most.

Technology needs people, as much as people needs technology.

11/28/2012

FLOSS is the option to follow...

Another of the reasons that I love FLOSS is the way it works, and the culture that surrounds it, is the fact it allows people work and form communities around it as they would normally do. The best software that come out from FLOSS is one where people can claim as their own, and work on it as they can.

In many ways, FLOSS represents people working together in order to produce what they need in they way that best suits them. It really it's the software of the people, for the people and by the people. This is the way software needs to be made, and worked on in order to make it the best possible for use it's intended.

People should be able to come together to work on the software they need, to develop it and share it with others freely. Others should also be able to take the source code of any software to be used and modified to suit their needs, with the only condition that they give credit to the original developers and share those modifications back to the community so they can be used by other in the same way they used the original code.

We need to make FLOSS the norm, so that people can truly benefit from the full potential that software can have to benefit people's lives.

People have the need to share what they find and do with others, and FLOSS gives people the best option to do in the most beneficial way to everyone involved. It's a model where developers and users stand to receive the benefits from their work in a more equal fashion.

The model that FLOSS brings to the table is one that makes people and their needs the focal point, not the originator of the software. That's the way it needs to be, since technology needs to be at our service.

11/25/2012

Free and open technology...

All and every technology should be open sourced, free to be modified by users to better suit their needs and redistributed. What's more, those new modifications need to be easily redistributed to others that find it appealing to their needs.

The need to have technology behave this way, is because we need to have the benefits of it to be as widespread as possible. There are far too many cases where the technology to save lives, or communities, existed but couldn't be used to do so because it was to expensive or there was no way to put it to work because it wasn't in the interest of who owned the technology.

Technology can't be captive by the interests of the few, and it's more powerful to improve people lives when it's freely available to be worked and redistributed without barriers that impede users to do so in an artificial way do to vested interest in avoiding it.

We could be progressing a lot faster if all technology was open to all to study and work on it, thus coming with improvements or specialized versions to be applied a lot faster where there are needed. And those versions could be made by those who need it, without having to depend on the original creator of a certain technology to take an interest to do so.

Those improvements should be allowed to be shared with any other person, or group, that needs it. Most importantly, it needs to be made available back to the originator.

What can be closed to other, are the processes on how a product is made. The technology is to be open, yet the process can have the option not be shared as long is not vital for society at large. It's important to make the distinction between the technology used to create something, and the processes used.

People naturally want to do things together, making all technology open to all to work on and share it means that it can advance even faster in ways that'll benefit more people. What we are set to win is offsets the possible downfalls of making technology open.

11/24/2012

FLOSS and open standards are not a luxury...

As with the Internet, software running on your computer should be made in a transparent way and its source code should be available to studied and modified as needed. Not only that, the author of the modifications made to the source code should be able to distribute those modifications freely, along with the source code for it.

Also, you should have the freedom to redistribute the software you have freely or share it with others. Just as we share books, and other media, with our friends and family, we should be able to share the software we have with others that might find it useful. And if you find that the software you have needs to be modified to better suit your needs, you should be able to do so independently and be able to share those modifications.

FLOSS offers everyone these things, along with communities that share the same goals that you have.

Not only that, FLOSS gives people a common framework to work around so that all work around a single standard. This way users and developers are insured that they have a reference point to work around, so they know that what changes it's the way they interact with the standard.

What needs to be stable for all to work with are the standards, not the software used to work with them. Both standards and software need to be free and open source, so that all can contribute to the them and be free to use them without fear of lawsuits or losing their data because one or the other are no longer supported.

As computers, and thus software, is becoming more prevalent in our lives there is a bigger need for them to be free and open. Also the standards that are used to interact with them need to be free and open, otherwise there is the real danger that a single person or company to be too powerful or our data be lost simply because of choices made by third parties.

FLOSS, and open standards, are not a luxury. They need to be that way, so that we the people don't lose our freedoms.

11/22/2012

Another attempt to take control over the Internet away from us...

It's sad to see that now the UN is on the road to try to take control over the Internet. Instead to let the Internet to grow organically, in an open and transparent way in every aspect, it seem that there are special interests groups that want to take Internet behind closed doors.

The Internet belongs to the people, all development that affects its inner workings is to be made on the open. Those working on the Internet, whether on its inner workings or developing its standards, should work on a transparent way so that we all know what they are doing and how their contributions work.

Not a single part of how the Internet works, or how it's developed, should ever be behind closed door. All activity should be on the open, so that any interested party on a certain aspect of the Internet, can have full access to it and the rest of us to know what that party is doing.

Any attempt to take the Internet's control behind closed door, should be opposed by everyone as a question of principle. After all, the Internet is ours. So, we must have a world on how it works and its development.

In many ways, the Internet is an extension of the real world. We live part of our lives on it, as such we must have the same freedoms on it as we have on the real world. So, we should be able to have our freedoms respected as they are on the real world.

11/19/2012

In peace, science and technology should move faster...

It's sad to see that technology advances faster on times of war, than it does in times of peace. There is a urgent need to change it so the reverse becomes the norm, so that peace time becomes where science and technology advances faster.

Not only that, we need to have the benefits from new scientific discoveries, and the technologies that develop from them, get to a larger part of society faster.

There must be a way to make peace the norm, by making war at any level undesirable. All conflicts need to be resolved without relying to violence, and people's needs are to be meet as they come.

We need to make it so that conflicts that drive the advancement of science and technology, don't result on violence that ends in bloodshed. Science and technology need to be instruments of peace and understanding, not those of war and violence. If wars and violence are common place, it many ways society at large has failed to do what's needed to keep peace.

Science, and technology, are two of the most important instruments that we have to help keep peace. That's we need to make it so that in peace time it's when their advancement is the greatest and beneficial for society at large.

If we are able to do so, we could be able to turn the world we all want into a reality.

11/17/2012

Science and technology bringing the world together...

I would like to see science research and technology development being something that brings the world together.

Instead of being done in secret, by single individuals, corporations, or countries, they should be conducted in collaboration by anyone interested in the subject. Not only that, it should be done in the open in full view of the world.

The education to be able to conduct science research, or technology development, should be given as a priority at any stage of life. Most importantly, people should graduate from basic education with the ability to at least understand the basis science and how it's applied on the technology we use everyday.

Even if end goal of an individual isn't getting a degree on a science or engineering area in college, they should have a functional understanding of science. The same goes the other way around, every part of the human knowledge important.

In the science and technology areas, it's becoming ever more important not only to give the average people a working knowledge in those areas. It's imperative that what happens on those areas is open to the public in every way possible. People should not only know whats going on, but also should be able to participate if there is a desire to do so.

Science and technology are the foundations of the modern societies, and they also be bringing those societies together.

11/14/2012

I'm all about Linux and FLOSS...

The more I use Ubuntu, the less likely I'm to switch back to Windows or even make the move to Apple. If I ever change my OS, it would be to another Linux distro that's Debian based as Ubuntu.

I simply have found that Ubuntu works for me far better than Windows ever did, and I don't agree how Apple manages it's software. Also because as a matter of principle, FLOSS strikes a core with what I believe in. Mainly that software should be free in the sense that anyone should be able to see it's source core, modify it, and to redistribute any improvement made to the code.

The freedoms that come with FLOSS gives the users the control over the software they install on their machines. Not only in the way it works and its configuration, but in order to make customizations to the software independently of the source. This makes FLOSS a lot more flexible to the end user, while it benefits the community of users as a whole since those modifications can be shared back.

In the personal level, I feel confident that if Canonical takes Ubuntu on a path that I disagree upon I can change to another Linux distro and have access to the same software I use now. And even if there aren't I can't use a particular one, there will be another that works for me.

In many ways, FLOSS is about people not about the software itself.

11/11/2012

Diversity and open standards...

Even though I believe that the diversity on ways to do your work, or have your fun, is one of the strengths of FOSS it means nothing if they aren't built on common ground in order to achieve interoperability.

That interoperability should be made through open standards, so that everyone who want to work with them knows that they can so so without fear of being locked into using software from a single vendor. Closed standards are to be avoided at all costs, since they mean that the future of that standard is tied to the whatever happens to whoever holds it or unilateral choices by the vendor.

Standards should be considered a common good, and as such they should be keep open for to use or contribute to it with freedom. No single entity should have a position to totally control any standard, all standards should be in the hands of a governing body made up by all those who have a stake on the future of those standard.

Not only that, that governing body should work openly and with transparency. Anyone that has an interest on how that body work, or how it reach a decision should be able to do so.

At the end, standards are the foundations on which all technology are built upon. As such, is in our best interest for them open so we all know that there will be always be available for everyone. Not only that, any improvement made to any standard will be beneficial to as many users as possible in the least amount of time.

The building blocks of out society, and our future, should belong to all of us.

11/08/2012

Looking at the Android options...

I've been doing some checking around for a new smartphone, and I'm convinced that it'll be an Android device. There are a several options out there at my price range, from several manufactures.

Not only that, for me it's important my next smartphone to run Android, since it's open source software. In a sense it's a matter of buying a smartphone that runs software that is compatible with what I believe, and the only Android manage to do so.

The fact that I can choose from a wide range of manufactures, and several models they offer, calls me even more. It means that I can choose the experience I get from Android, looking for the smartphone thats form and design is what I'm looking for. I'm not tied to a single manufacturer, giving me whatever they think I want.

Android gives me the level of freedom I want, letting me choose the handset that better suits my needs and what I like. All this while being a modern a robust mobile operating system, the only things that change from one manufacturer to another are the form factor of the handsets, the user interface and the software it comes with. The core is the same you get is the same.

At the end, Android is the mobile OS for me. So, now is just a matter of choosing the smartphone I'll buy.

11/05/2012

Portability and connectivity...

It's interesting to see how technology seems to be consolidating several devices into one, which means that as a whole people will need fewer devices to do more.

The idea that with a couple of devices you could replace most of the ones you have now. Not only that, those devices will be portable enough to be taken with you everywhere. And with modern connectivity technology you'll be on line most of the time, with all the implications it brings along.

Today we are connected to the Internet almost 24/7, and almost from anywhere, thanks to laptops and smartphones. In many ways, both laptops and smartphones are points of access that grant humanity to share all what they want in an instant.

So much so, that nowadays the question is no longer if we could share our daily routine with our friends and family. The real question has become what should be sharing, and how much privacy we want for ourselves.

This is why is so important have a complete control on our information. With so much of our personal information out there, it's most important to be able to have a granular control over it in order not to loose control over it.

It's both a blessing and a curse, but we have to learn to live with it.

Curious about the iPhone user experience.

Even though I'm looking forward to the Android 15  on my Google Pixel 7a , I still see the iPhone  and wonder how would be using it as a...