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RU in Phoenix

My sister and I caught the 5:30 pm flight from Newark on Christmas Day, heading to Phoenix via Houston. Our goal (or mine, anyway) – to see Rutgers win the Insight Bowl on December 27. And from what we saw on our flights, we weren’t alone. Rutgers fans had filled the planes, including college acquaintance Dave Shaw and Randal of Apprentice fame.

Yesterday we headed out to Sedona, a trendy tourist town about 100 miles north of Phoenix. The red rock formations were beautiful as we drove and hiked through the area. We also spent some time wandering through the town, a western down with some parallels to New Hope (i.e. a high New Age spiritual content).

And today should remain a low key day as we gear up for a huge Rutgers win over Arizona State tonight!

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Iran

A great interview with the Iranian expat who runs Editor: Myself.

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Thoughts on Telecom

I’ve given some thought lately to the changing telecommunications and media landscape. Largely due to several BusinessWeek articles, Susan Crawford’s blog, and a stake in the stock of Verizon due in large part to Briefing.com analysis, I’ve tried to come up with a rational way for how companies in the telecom/media space can compete effectively.

This led me to think back to my college course on networks and the OSI model, which breaks networking down to seven layers. These are, in order from most fundamental to most diverse, the physical layer, the data link layer, the network layer, the transport layer, the session layer, the presentation layer, and the application layer.

Currently traditional cable and phone service have unique implementations in all seven layers of the network and complete accordingly. However, the upcoming conversion to fiber, combined with technologies such as IPTV and VOIP, to enabled all existing telecommunications services, from cable to telephone service to the Internet, to function over the same physical, data link, and network layers. This revolution leads to a fundamentally different operating and regulatory model than currently exists today.

Consider for a moment the cost of connecting fiber lines to every home in the country (trust me, very expensive). Then think about how every company today that comes in to your home (cable, telephone service) has to connect each house serviced to their own network. Given the cost and the infrastructure required to connect each house and business, does it make sense for every competitor to try to physically reach each house?

Then think about the ease of competition at the application layer of the network, where we have such time consumers as e-mail, web browsing, streaming video, television, and phone conversations. The potential for competition at this higher level is far greather, as is the opportunity for new applications and services to be developed that don’t even exist yet. Why should money be siphoned off to support expensive, redundant infrastructure investments that lock consumers in to monopoly services when the competition is at the higher network levels?

Instead of viewing the telecommunications landscape through traditional eyes, regulators, investors, industry, and consumers should instead take a page from recent energy deregulation initiatives, such as New Jersey’s. Under this model, the physical layers responsible for transportation are separated out from the application layers. A de facto, regulated monopoly or franchise would have ownership only over the physical layers. There would be agreements with appropriate regulators that would ensure a steady investment in the underlying infrastructure while rates would be set that ensure a stable return on investment. A sexy business it would not be, but like any utility it would prove steady and regular.

This move would free up all the remaining companies interested in competing in video, telephony, and other services to compete on their own merits. Consumers anywhere could select the TV, telephone, and Internet options that best meet their needs and demands. Consumers could choose whatever options they want at whatever price points exist in the marketplace. No one would be tied to using Verizon or SBC, or Cablevision or Comcast. If another company offers a lower price or better selection, you’re free to switch. Consumers would have the choice that has so often been promised yet not realized.

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Merry Christmas

While I’m on the subject of odd questions, there’s a Christmas song that has always been bothering me. Maybe it’s because I’m naughty, not nice, but I can’t help it.

In the song “I saw mommy kissing Santa Claus”, was she supposed to be kissing the real Santa Claus, or was “Santa Claus” really Daddy, dressed up either to make the little kid who’s supposed to be singing believe, or to live out some fantasy that Mommy always had (or both)? Yes, this has been a burning holiday question of mine for at least 10 years now.

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Pope Names

You know how they reuse pope names, i.e. Clement X, Clement XI? Do they ever retire a pope name after a really good pope, similar to retiring a jersey in sports?

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Cookie Monster

I baked this afternoon. From scratch. Two recipes, one for chocolate chip cookies, the other for peanut-butter chocolate pinwheels. Something around 100 cookies in total.

Talk about a way to ruin your appetite.

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Narnia

I may not have needed a sick bag while I watch The Lion, the Witch, and The Wardrobe, but the not-so-subtle religious overtones leave me feeling queasy. While I haven’t read the book in years, I recall being distinctly uncomfortable when I read phrases like “Daughter of Eve” and “Son of Adam” thrown about. In some ways the religious usage was almost too casual, and certainly entirely intentional.

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XBOX lovers

If you’re interested in an XBOX, you’ve got two choices. Either you can go to Japan or check out Best Buy.

Myself, I’m waiting for the PS3.

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Katamari Damacy

A little something for all those Katamari lovers out there.

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Weekend Roundup Coming Soon

Ever kept a few browser windows open with the intent to comment on them? I do that all the time, and usually I end up losing the links first.

In any case, I’ll do some posting tomorrow evening with a collection of curious links I’ve stumbled across this weekend.