Categories
GIS Thoughts

Road User Charging – Don’t Panic !!

Yesterdays announcement, that the Government in looking into a system of road usage charging has resulted in the usual doom vendor calls of another government IT disaster in the making.. it is easy to agree with this based on the track record of delivery of big IT projects so far, but here I believe there should be more optimism.

Installing black boxes with GPS and GPRS modems in every car in the UK will be a major logistical challenge, as will the development of the backend systems to support this and a potentially complex pricing system to allow temporal change in charging perhaps even pricing models based on demand (EasyRoads anybody ?).

But… The technology here is actually already robust – GPS vehicle tracking and the associated telematics infratrucutre already exists for niche markets such as high value parcel tracking, and there is already considerable experience in building complex billing systems from the mobile phone industry; and of course in the UK we have the necessary underlying geograhical data.

So lets not kick this project before it has even started.. we can in the UK lead the world in developing this technology – the real challenge will be politically making this happen !!

Written and submitted from the Roadchef at Northampton on the M1, using a BTOpenzone 802.11 network. (Glamorous eh!)

Categories
Thoughts

And now there is Mactel !!!

So the rumours were true as reported by cNet, Apple are switching from IBM to Intel processors for future Mac’s.

Much jeering of the Mac fundamentalists no doubt, but it is just the CPU in the box – it appears from Apple CEO Jobs that MacOS X has always been compiled for Intel chips in secret, so the mirgration is nowhere near as big as it might have been.

Apple will not allow anybody to produce Mac clones and they are really not going to produce ugly boxes in beige.

Watch the video stream here, Steve Jobs remains the worlds greatest IT salesman, running his mainstage demo on an Intel powered Mac !!

Written and submitted from home, using my home 802.11 network.

Categories
Technology

Safari 2.0 and Favicons

Depending upon your browser (Mozilla and firefox see most reliable) you should see my favicon displayed next to the url in your browser. Favicons have been around for a while and are one of those areas where standards are a little fuzzy.. I spend a couple of hours yesterday evening getting the icon to appear in the Safari browser in Tiger, it seems you need not only to refresh the browser’s cache but also actually delete the files themselves in ~/Library/Safari/Icons.

Written and submitted from Cafe Nero in Pimlico, using a free 802.11 network.