What’s really going on with Skype blogger issue

Yesterday I posted this about Skype blogger Jan Geirmaert’s problems with Skype. It tunrs out the issue was far less an issue than first presented. He wasn’t given any cease and desist of any kind. He was denied offical support, and nothing more. His decision to change domains was simply flag waving and unnecessary.

Skype-gadgets.com - Skype-watch.com closed down in order to legally comply with Skype.

I am removing my Skype blog away from www.skype-gadgets.com and www.skype-watch.com in compliance with the legal request of Skype

Copy of the email as received from Skype from Seema Sharma [seema.sharma@skype.net] on Sat 4/28/2007 1:45 AM

Dear Mr Geirnaert

Lester Madden has passed to me a copy of your email below so that I may respond to it. I am an IP lawyer at Skype.

In the first instance, I should like to stress that we work very hard at Skype to prevent third parties from illegally registering and using domains with the trade mark SKYPE in the URL where the domains in question are not officially endorsed by or associated with Skype. It goes without saying that we do not want third party domains and the associated websites to appear to the wider community as being associated with or endorsed by Skype when they are not. I take your point that it may be the case that there are other Skype related domain names registered which do not belong to Skype.

[Read Jan’s full post]

Now this looks like nothing but an attention-getting ploy. I’m simply stepping back to the position I’ve held on SKype all along.

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Networking the home office

Looking around, I realize it’s time to start revamping my equipment layout.

Here’s my current home office network - five routers, four WiFi access points, supporting DSL, cable modem, T1 and VoIP. If you click through to Flickr on the photo, I’ve tagged what’s what on the original pic.

04/28/2007

How much resilience does a home office really need? I’ve been reliant on both DSL and cable for nearly three years now. I’d rather pay for both and have service than get caught without when something fails.

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Who’s in Charge at Skype?

Not the developers. Not the partners. Not the customers. That’s been clear for some time.

Now this from colleague Phil Wolff at Skype Journal  -

Skype silences Alpha-blogger

Wow. Talk about a chilling effect.

Skype lawyer Seema Sharma emailed blogger Jan Geirnaert Friday afternoon. She told him his popular skype-watch.com and skype-gadgets.com blogs put him in legal jeopardy.

Jan, an independent IT consultant, took the implied threats seriously. He promptly blacked out skype-watch, abandoning two years of intense daily news coverage, product reviews, and wry commentary.

Jan said “I’m not a sadomasochist. Neither am I an idiot. By doing this, Skype sent me the signal not do any of this blogging wise, business wise, in any way.”
[Read full article]

I’ve talked to Jan a lot online the last couple of years. He’s been a tremendous resource to the Skype user and developer community.

My response to Skype -

You stupid twits. I’ve been both complimentary and critical os Skype for a long time, and for good reason. I’m highly unlikely to say anything complimentary in the future as you become a useless telco. Don’t expect good karma here.

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Spring Fever with Swing Fever - N93 video

One thing that constantly amazes me when shooting video with the N93 is the audio quality

Time for real change

Fri 04/27/2007 18:03 04272007118

Starting off the Covad Blogger Relations updates

Several colleagues have mentioned that we were selected to participate in a new Covad Blogger Relations program. And things have begun to move.

Today Covad came out and installed a shiny Cisco 1721 router and the end termination to the T1 circuit that Qwest installed here a week or two ago. So right now, I’m the sole user of a dedicated T1 to the Internet. I’ll write more about the experience over the weekend. I’ll also do some comparison testing with DSL and cable modem, since I have both. I’ll post all the comparison stuff here.

What’s quite noticeable to me isn’t necessarily the speed. I sometimes get really good downlink speed on the cable. Sometimes, but less so on the DSL. But both are contention-based network designs. It’s the nature of those architectures. That means, after school, in the evenings and at peak usage times, the real throughput drops. Sometimes it’s painfully obvious.

What I noticed immediately with a dedicate T1 is the consistency of performance. Guaranteed bandwidth and throughput with no contention issues assures a very consistent quality of service. So far, that’s making for an awesome user experience.

I’ll be doing some VoIP specific testing over the Covad services as they ripple through here for testing, but for the moment, I’ll go for raw performance comparisons first.

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Security tools from The Grugq

Thanks to colleague Mark Collier for this recent post.

The grugq Releases VoIP Attack Tools

The grugq announced availability of several VoIP testing/attack tools at the most recent HITB conference in Dubai. I haven’t had the chance to mess with them yet, but plan to over the coming months. Here is a link to a presentation describing VoIP security history, issues, and the tools:

http://conference.hitb.org/hitbsecconf2007dubai/materials/D1%20-%20The%20Grugq%20-%20Ravage%20Unleashed.pdf

And a link where you can download the tools:

http://www.tacticalvoip.com

The grugq is pretty well known as a leader in VoIP security work and the Tactical VoIP site looks to be really just ramping up to speed.  I grabbed the tools myself, and have gone through the presentation from the HITB conference twice. Interesting that this caught my eye prior to being invited to go blog about the next HITB in Kuala Lumpur in September. Finding that the grugq introduced this at the recent Dubai conference.

Here’s a bit more I grabbed from the HITB site:

Presentation Title: Ravage Unleashed : The Tactical VoIP Toolkit
Increasing numbers of users are benefiting from cheaper phone calls afforded by voice over IP technology. VoIP deployments are now common place for telcos, enterprises and consumers. Despite global adoption and rollout, voip is still hampered by ineffective security, in part due to poor VoIP penetration testing. Severe limitations in the capabilities of existing VoIP assessment tools restrict the range of attacks security practitioners can perform. The Tactical VoIP Toolkit (TacVTK) radically changes the VoIP auditing game.

This talk will focus on technical VoIP security assessment techniques, using the TacVTK core tools to demonstrate basic and advanced attacks. The primary emphasis for the talk will be SIP based VoIP security. The talk includes numerous demos, as well as providing conference participants a chance to see, and get ahold of, early release versions of the TacVTK.

About The Grugq
The Grugq is a domain expert consultant on VoIP security, digital forensic analysis and reverse engineering. The Grugq has spent 7 years working with all aspects of information security, from penetration testing to solutions and product development. The Grugq’s career has seen him working for financials, security consulting companies, start-ups and, most recently, founding his own information security company.

The Grugq’s information security expertise ranges from penetration testing and source code auditting, through to rootkit technologies and advanced digital forensic analysis and investigation. Since 2001 the Grugq has been involved in active Voice over IP security research, recently completing successful audits for major European and Asian telcos.

The Grugq’s domain expertise in VoIP security has seen him present at conferences, release advisories and complete assessments for national European and major Asian telcos. Additionally, he has developed strategic whitepapers for enterprise VoIP deployments. Based on his experiences with numerous audits, the Grugq has developed a VoIP security assessment tool suite to facilitate more accurate, effective and rapid VoIP centric penetration testing.

The presentations from that conference are also available at  http://conference.hitb.org/hitbsecconf2007dubai/materials/. I did notice that Lance Spitzner from the Honeynet Project who I was with earlier this week was there too.

Gives me serious pause to figure out how I can invest the time to really understand and use this toolkit. It also gives me tangible reason to revisit how I might take advantage of the invitation to attend that conference in September.

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Just how many “evil twins” are there? More than we think

Here’s a story that caught my eye, in large part because of my recent trip to Minneapolis.

We’re all aware of the problem with “evil twin” WiFi access points, but I wonder if we really appreciate how prevalent the problem is.

In my personal experience, what was once the most common SSID, linksys, has become a real haven for evil twins. I counted six linksys WiFi access points that, upon scrutiny, looked to be twins set up to capture data on my recent trip.

I also found multiple FreeWiFI-like names, that were quite suspect.

The bottom line using WiFi is simply know your network. Don’t risk your proprietary information to some unknown, free access without some due diligence to protect yourself. It’s a growing problem, not a shrinking one.

‘Evil twin’ Wi-Fi access points proliferate
By Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service, 04/25/07

The next time you splurge on a double latte and sip it while browsing the Internet via the cafe’s Wi-Fi, beware of the “evil twin.”

That’s the term for a Wi-Fi access point that appears to be a legitimate one offered on the premises, but actually has been set up by a hacker to eavesdrop on wireless communications among Internet surfers. Unfortunately, experts say there is little consumers can do to protect themselves, but enterprises may be in better shape.

With the growth in wireless networks, the “evil twin” type of attack is on the rise, said Phil Cracknell, president of the U.K. branch of the Information Systems Security Association. Such attacks are much easier than others seeking logins or passwords, such as phishing, which involves setting up a fraudulent Web site and luring people there, Cracknell said.
[Read full story]

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From CAnet: Cyber-Infrastructure, Platforms, grids & web services for emergency response

Since my mind has been on InfoSec and protecting critical cyber infrastructure this week, this CAnet newsletter email got my attention and led me to dig a bit.

[The Open GeoSpatial Forum - www.opengeospatial.org - has a great video and web site demonstrating the use of cyber-infrastructure - platform technologies such as web services, workflows, grids and networks for emergency response applications. They have deployed a test bed demonstrating the use of these tools in response to chemical warehouse fire in the San Diego area. I highly recommend anyone interested in attending CANARIE’s Platforms workshop to visit this site and watch the video. It will give you a good overall view of the type of middleware platforms we are looking to fund and deploy under the upcoming CANARIE network enabled platforms program. Thanks to Steve Liang for this pointer — BSA]

http://sensorweb.geoict.net/

And here is an multimedia (flash) of the demo: http://www.opengeospatial.org/pub/www/ows3/index.html

This is a movie of a Sensor Web for a disaster management application. -  http://sensorweb.geoict.net/Assets/SWEClient_004.avi

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Today’s thoughts on the Nokia N800

The week has been a blur, so I´m catching up on writing thoughts on the flight home.

Did I tell you how many N800s I saw this week? I counted nine at the conference I was at. For a population of about one hundred, thatÅ› very close to ten percetn penetration. I would never have expected such a high number at this point in time. Just took me by surprise,

In the hotel lobby today I saw another person using one. And right now, on the plane, there are at least two others in use right now. I saw people watching video on them as I walked down the aisl to the facilities.

So I have to ask, is the N800 that big in the craowd that isn´t bleeding edge gadget geeks? Or am I in some wapr of the space-time continuum, caught up in the N800 vortex?

As a portable tool, it beats every one I´ve had in the past. One of the biggest troubles with portable devices is the battery. I charged this up to near 100% at the airport, but its been on the whole flight and still shows 6 hours life left. I know the indicators aren´t entirely accurate, but the life is good enough for me

I´ve seen some pretty incredible security things being done with it. We already know it does VoIP using either Gtalk or Gizmo, video calling and generally does all sorts of cool things.

I´m going to shift focus just a tad and start paying attention to how I´m using it to get different hings done. I may just keep paper notes for a few days, then share what I catch myself doing with it,

One thing I´ve learned is that while Maemo-blog works for posting, it is not an offline tool at all. You have to be connected, and that isn´t always the case for me. So I need another tool. On the plane I´m using the built in note pad function. Sure I have two other enhanced notepads, but simplicity is key. They add zero value for this.

I need to dig into WordPy and the Python llibrary problems I´ve been having so I can give that a try. Maybe I need a simple html edittor, but I don´t think so. My needs are modest and my expectations low really.

I noted with great dissatisfaction that there is no voice recorder application on the N800. What a stupid oversight to leave something like that off. Given the speakerphone capability, this should be a built-in app that nobody has to think about. Let me pick which memory location I want to use, and how much memory, up to and including an entire card. And save it as MP3 for ease of sharing. Hell you could do podcasting straight from the N800 natively if it had that, so why doesn´t it?

More to come, but the kid behind me went into high kicking mode again.

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Thoughts on Infosec

This flight is a bit of a mixed bag. Seatwise, I´m stuck in the back of the plane in a window seat. I generally hate window seats and opt for the aisle. I´m too large to be really comfortable in the confines of a coach seat and the aisle affords an easy opportunity to get up and move more often. I hate disturbing others in the row.

I have an epileptic child behind me. I know this because itś´the only possilbe reason she could have for launching into screaming fits of kicking my seat back. Ok, that just feels tacky and unfair given that I have friends with epilepsy. Sheś an ill-mannered brat, and her parents are twits, Stuffing dad in the overhead may become a viable option as the flight progresses.

I wanted to capture some notes, thoughts and observations to share given my past three days with some pretty incredible speakers in the world of homeland security, law enforcement and information security. These are probably disjointed and are certainly in no order or priority. They´re here in part to jog my memory to write something more substantial about each thought later. So if there´s a thought or point here that intrigues you, leave a comment so I know what areas are of interest.

First, there´s the Nokia N800 I´m writing this on. Phenomenal piece of workmanship. I can´t help but write more about that ahead. Iĺĺ be contacting the company I wrote about that does the turnkey securiy assessment model. I hate to confess Im considering buying one at $3600. Im´probably more focused on getting some of the existing Linux tools running under Maemo on this one,

When it comes to successful cyber security, information sharing is the root key to success. You cannot be an island unto yourself and succeed. That´s a guaranteed path to failure.

In information security we succeed because
- We are not intimidated.
- We don´t get overwhelelmed.
- We have the passion to take on the load. Infosec professionals do the heavy lifting every day of our life.

¨Fast flux hosting¨ is the art of constantly changing the DNS and IP address entries for a system. The bad guys are getting really good at it.

Data theft is RAMPANT. Over 150 million records were breached *that we know of* already this year.

Thumb drives may be the biggest threat. They´re so cheap they´re disposable. We don´t know what is on them. But they aren´t alone. An iPod is a huge storage device that could carry off massive amounts of sensitive data.

The relationship discussions when it comes to infosec remind me of the movie Zorro. Know your circle. The more extreme the iiiiiinciden, the closer to you your circle of trusted colleagues is likely to be. We all fall back to our invidual trusted social network in a pinch. If you don´t already know your circle, get busy and find your circle.

In the enterprise, we got hooked on cheap fast and easy IT. Now we´re paying the price for our addiction. THe IT vendor community hooked us on cheap IT crack and now we´re fighting to survive. There are only two businesses where the customers are called users for a reason, Addictive behavior is a tough cycle to break.

Our old models of security do not work.

warn -> detect -> defend -> mitigate

That was our old model, built on the defense of the castle mindset. It no longer works. The castle isn´t in one place, doesn´t have one single perimeter and isn´t physical.

We need to take on the holistic medicine and managed healthcare approach.

hygeine -> triage -> viruses -> pandemic

We need to teach every user of the Internet to ¨wash their hands¨ and take care of the basic simple health needs. If we do that, we can manage the triage we have to do and reduce the virus infections that hurt us al. If a pandemic breaks out, the situation is probably every bit as bleak as we can imagine. We need a more holistic view, better health care and constant planning/preparation.

China pretty much worries about the same things we do. With some slight variations. Their biggest fear is net addiction. Is that because they see what it´s done to the rest of us?

The worst DoS attacks lie ahead. They´ll be against the infrastructure that runs the Internet. Look for DNS and certificate authorities to be hot spots.

We truly do not understand our dependence on Internet technologies. We are all dependent on the stupidest user of the Internet.

Only one quote here. This all from my own chicken scratching as thoughts were flying through my head. But here´s a quote from a CIA analyst. Very senior, Very frightening. ´Thumb drives are a spy´s best friend.¨

You might think that you take all the right steps to be safe, but you don´t. WiFi is a danger zone. Free hotspots come at a huge price. Even your cell phone carries your entire social network,

Cyber crime is a mature, pervasive ¨evil service economy¨ that leverages cyber space for profit, Follow the money. Always follow the money. It is not about script kiddes and vandals any more.

The idea of signature based malware detection is laughable at best today. Targeted polymorphic malware has shown that signature detection does not work. Signature´s rely on the law of large numbers, which is out of play in any focused attack,

Assume that there will be a very bad day. Assume that I won´t be here. Assume your infosec regulars wont be there. There will be no warning. Every time you think you have it beat and come back up, it will take you back down. Do you have a plan?

A piece of advice. Don´t let duct tape become a permanent part of the infrastructure.

You know, I have a whole lot more. Pages, ideas, notes, scratches of inspiration. I´ll never be able to make use of it all. But those were a few important points I thought Id share on the flight home via the N800. Share with myself, and with you, in this rambling visible thought-space.

I have a couple hours of flight time yet, but other things to write and a nap to take.

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Invited to HITB Conference

I received an interesting email this week while I was in Minnneapolis at a security conference. I do a fair bit of writing about the unified communications sector, but I don´t hide my interest and involvement with infosec issues in any way. I used to attend a lot of security conferences, but today my security work is pretty focused, I don´t generally attend security conferences from the perspective of press or industry analyst like I do unified communications events.

While I was on the road I was invited to attend the upcoming Hack in The Box Security Conference 2007 in Kuala Lumpur Malaysia from September 3rd till the 6th. And cover the event as press or media.

For those of us who are terribly US-centric, HITBSecConf is Asia’s largest network security conference and is organized with the aim of creating a platform for the discussion and dissemination of deep-knowledge computer security issues. For me personally, joining ths event would be a first, and it would represent a new angle at managing security conferences.
 
Held in Kuala Lumpur since 2002 and more recently in Dubai, HITBSecConf routinely hots some of the most respected members from the mainstream and underground security arena.

While the event takes place in Kuala Lumpur and is focused on that part of the world, members of the US Army will again joining and participating in the hacking challenge - Capture The Flag, as well as organizing a BZFlag competition for the conference.

They´re expecting over 800 people attending this year and I hope to be one. It doesn´t look highly likely that I can pull this off, especially since I already have a week long Alaska cruise set up for the end of September. But for the moment, I´m keeping this on my radar and will explore whether or not there might be a way to make it fit,

While I don´t expect to make this event, I have to let the idea percolate a bit. How often do you get the chance to go to a security conference in Kuala Lumpur?

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Lifeblog post

Sun 04/22/2007 18:47 04222007084

Lifeblog post

Wed 04/25/2007 12:30 04252007095

An update on the N800 as a security tool

I posted some thoughts on the N800 as a security tool perhaps an hour ago. But words spreads fast and Jonathan Greene quickly responded with what I’m sharing here via Twitter.

First, for those of you who think Twitter is a toy for chat, here’s an example of valuable, focused business information being shared very nearly at the speed of thought (to steal a concept from Bill Gates).

Here’s a preconfigured N800, built and ready to rock as a security assessment tool.

Immunity SILICA - Redefining Penetration Testing

Silica Scan

Immunity SILICA is a hand-held penetration testing product that leverages Immunity CANVAS to provide a unique testing tool for networks. Currently it supports 802.11 (Wi-Fi). Support for Bluetooth wireless connections and Ethernet via USB is planned for the near future. Its slim, PDA-like profile allows the penetration tester to perform testing while behaving innocuously.

Example Use Cases:

  • Tell SILICA to scan every machine on every wireless network for file shares and download anything of interest to the SILICA device. Then just put it in your suit pocket and walk through your target’s office space.
  • Tell SILICA to actively penetrate any machines it can target.
  • Mail SILICA to your target’s CEO, then let it turn on and hack anything it can as it sits on their desk.
  • Use SILICA as you would CANVAS on your desktop - just smaller.

Because every penetration test is different, Immunity SILICA is highly customizable. Based on the Open Source Linux operating system and the pure Python Immunity CANVAS attack framework.
[Check the whole vendor write-up]

At $3600 list price, this isn’t for the faint of heart. On the flip side, if you want to hand a security professional a tool they’ll be running with a couple of hours later, this looks damn hard to beat.

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Some observations on the Nokia N800 that came unexpectedly

I’m at a conference in Minneapolis for a few days this week. What surprised me is the startling number of times I heard the question “Is that a Nokia N800?”  Startling because they weren’t all directed at me. There are about one hundred people at this conference, and by my count nine, yes NINE, N800s. And I assure you, none of the others are here via the Nokia Blogger Relations program. This is a group of information security professionals.

I was curious why so many. That penetration rate seems huge to me. So I asked around. And I learned why - Maemo. The N800 is not an S60 device. It doesn’t run Symbian. It’s viewed as a Linux workstation. Someone showed me Kismet (a very popular wireless sniffer tool) on their N800. They use it for wireless security.

One person described working on getting Metasploit running on the N800. That’s a serious security and vulnerability assessment tool. We are not talking casual computing. We are not talking about simple surfing with an Internet tablet. We’re talking serious security assessment technology…in your pocket.

I don’t have Kismet or Metasploit installed and running yet. But those are two things that leaped to the front of my to-do list. Because fro me the N800 is a very serious tool that enables real, productive work. Serious work.

I’ll be listening closely to other people playing with the N800 because this was, for me, an eye opener. We’ve all heard the phrase, “if you build it they will come.” With the N800 Nokia built it, and I get the sense they’re coming in droves. But I’m also gaining an feeling that people are very quickly starting to use the N800 in ways Nokia probably didn’t think about at first. Users will always do the unexpected and that may be a real truism with the N800.

I’m curious who will be the first company, industry, or vertical sector that will roll out N800s pre-configured with custom apps oriented to very specific use. Truckers who hit WiFi enabled truck stops for fuel, maps and such. Real estate agents and brokers. Insurance adjustors. There are some possibilities that are both broad and deep.

Given email, web, VoIP, IM capabilities, coupled with the deep application support in a linux environment, the untapped potential is pretty amazing. I’m watching for Open Office running under Maemo real soon myself, but what after that?

I don’t think we’re even seeing the tip of the iceberg of what the N800 might become.

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Covad’s Blogger Relations Program

Phoneboy posted today and it reminded me I hadn’t mentioned it.

The Covad Experience Has Begun
Filed under: connectivity, telecom - 23 Apr 2007 15:25

I am in Covad’s Blogger Relations program. As part of that process, I get to have a T1 at my house installed and managed by them. And yes, I have to write about it. Today is where the rubber starts meeting the road.

Today, I got my phone call from Covad telling me that the Qwest portion of my installation was going to occur Wednesday–the local exchange carrier always has to do their part first. I had the call directed through GrandCentral, of course, which I attempted to pick up through Gizmo. For whatever reason, the touch tones didn’t seem to be passing thru to Covad, so I decided to call Covad just to confirm the date.

Like Dameon, I’m part of this great program as well. My experience is moving with equal progress, but a little differently. The other day I got an email letting me know things were oing to start moving in the next week or so. Then I learned Qwest was on site at my house installing the T1. So my T1 for this installed too, but I haven’t heard from Covad so far. I’m sure those of us involved will all be moving ahead now.

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Lifeblog post

Sun 04/22/2007 16:06 04222007082

On working wherever

I´ve been thinking a lot lately about two themes that have run through my life for a number of years. First is the theme of ¨working wherever¨ the need arises. I probably started on this trend way back in the mid-to-late 1980s when I worked for AT&T. I travelled a fair bit, but I did a lot of data analysis, writing extracts and reports from some large mainframe systems. My working tool at the time was a TI Silent Writer 700. For those of you who dont remember this device, and most of you won´t, it was a like an electrci typewriter, with thermal paper roll at the back. It connected via a 300 baud aoustic coupled modem. Ok, so my old fartdom is showing through, but this was the start.

Times have changed. Im sitting in seat 37F on a Northwest flight from Seattle to Mineeapolis. I cannot work on my Dell laptop here. ItÅ› too tight for space. Yet, I can even share a picture of my workstation as I work given where technology has come over the past twenty years.

I carry a number of portable tools. I recently described whatś´in my road warrior bag on most days, but this week Im focused on being light. Perhaps ultra-light. But even being ultra-light, I find I carry redundant systems.

In my carryon pouch on this trip, I have my Treo 700W and the infrared keyboard that accompanies it. That gives me full access to Word, Excel and other tools. And yes, a 1.3 megapixel camera thta I use less and less lately.

I´m also carrying the Nokia N800, N73 and the ThinkOutside bluetooth keyboard. I´m writing this on the N800 as my seatmates sort of marvel at the miniature technical arsenal in my little carryon pouch.

The N800 is ultra cool for a number of reason. Stunning video display for a handheld device. Fabulous sound quality that we´re finding can actually be enhanced with external speakers. Connectivity via WiFi or bluetooth that provides true ¨Always On Internet.¨ In short, it is tres chic in the cool factor.

I´m far more intrigued by the work horsepower. The ablility to open multiple windows, toggling between them, cutting and pasting. The extensibility of a real keyboard so I can type articles like this one. The connectivity that let´s me manage files, photos, sound and video. For me, this really is the next generation of computing, in my hand, any time, any place.

Of course this is in its´ infancy as a technology today. It really is, But Nokia has taken infancy to a new maturity too. The N800 really does show potential as a work tool. Running Maemo, open source libraries of applications and tools will proliferate. I myselef am interested in ho wsoon weĺĺ see an Open Office implementation for Maemo. It has to follow, and will bump the device up into serious workstation class for serious road warriors.

I was trading email with Andy Abramson as he geared up to fly back to the states. We talked about the differences between ¨leaning back work¨ and leaning forward¨ and how the N800 really does enable both. Casual work is more and more part of daily routine for many of us, but the ability to lean forward and dig in to meaty substantial work using the same tools heralds a new shift in the work paradigm. This clearly isn´t the era of the TI SilentWriter 700 any more.

Oddly enough, another of my working tools sits here on the lap tray beside the tech tools. I carry a Moleskine pocket journal almost everywhere I go too. It comes in handy for notes, brainstorming, network sketches and doodling. Interesting observation as I gathered my tools is how similar in size my working arsenal has become. Any one piece pretty much fits easily in a shirt pocket.

On that note, I´mgoing to save this for later handling and take a few pictures of the Rockies out the window, doodle in my journal, and catch forty winks. I dont know if I´ll revisit this and do some editing, or just post it up online as is.

With the tools we have today, the options are pretty limitless.

Lindbergh Terminal

Heading downtown to hotel

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