Introducing People’s Forum – Australia

There’s a lot of great debate on Australian political topics, with many gems of insight. But much of it is getting lost, or just available to a very limited audience. Why? Because

  • Twitter is highly transient; you can search, but it becomes harder as you go back further in time. It’s not suitable as an archive, nor as a place for engaged discussion;
  • Facebook comment threads are limited to the page or group-of-friends;
  • Online newspaper articles allow comments, but require a separate signup/login which is tedious. Also it makes for a very scattered discussion, when a topic gets discussed on various sites.

With great help from Peter Lieverdink and James Purser, I have set up People’s Forum – Australia. Using Open Source tools this took mere days. It accepts quick Twitter, Facebook and OpenID logins as well as having the ability to interact further with the big social networks. But it’s not dependent on or restricted to them, and I think that’s very important.

Ages ago I wrote that social networking is a great tool, but cannot optimally be restricted to one site or infrastructure. Hoarding the social graph is silly. The social network can be open and used everywhere, with broad benefits. Interestingly, the technology to do this is now available – and that’s what we’ve used. So the site is also a little experiment to see how this works in practice. Some examples:

  • To reply to a forum topic, you can simply click one of the buttons on the right to login with your Twitter or Facebook account; easy as! Or OpenID, for the more tech-savvy.
  • When posting (starting a new forum topic), the system allows you to also post a link to your own Twitter stream.
  • You can easily invite friends to join the forum.
  • Posts have “Share” (on FB) and “Tweet this” buttons, but that’s very common on other sites already.

We’ll see how this develops further. I reckon there’s no better way to figure out and develop ideas further than to put them live and let them meet the real world. It just requires a suitable opportunity – with the tools readily available, actually putting something out there –quickly– is actually the easy part!

Today is Software Freedom Day 2010, celebrating free/open software through many events around the world. I offer the People’s Forum site as my contribution, a practical showcase.

Diffusing nonsense in the election

I’m actually spending a lot of time on that right now, talking with people around me (in-person) as well as (gasp) on Facebook. Why? Because it’s important and actually makes a difference. I will also be helping at a polling booth on Saturday, and crutineering.

Several decades ago there was a party in The Netherlands with a sneaky fascist agenda. The initial approach was to ignore them. They grew. Then the approach changed: now they were addressed head-on, disassembling every bit of their dangerous nonsense with simple logic and human decency. They disintegrated.

Sometimes I indulge. Someone posted this rant (about the Greens)

GREENS R SHIT SAME AS LABOR!!!! U R ALL BACKWARDS AN OBVIOUSLY DON”T WANT THIS COUNTRY TO GO ANYWHERE!!!

I couldn’t resist, and replied

I want my daughter to get a decent education, free of religious bigotry and fascism.
So far, she’s doing great. At the mere age of five, she can write as well as type, and has already learnt to only use caps on the first letter of the first word of a sentence.
She doesn’t know about the apostrophe and double-quotes yet, but she expertly uses a single exclamation mark where appropriate.

I reckon that comments such as the one quoted are the most compelling reason for having the most excellent education. It so clearly shows the need.

When you vote tomorrow, please remember that your ballot paper only allows you to vote for someone, not against. The person you vote for will use your vote as an endorsement for them, their party and its policies. Choose wisely. It’s valuable.

The Continuing Saga of Dutch Football

People convinced me the final of the Soccer world cup 2010 in South Africa was interesting with the Dutch playing well… so with renewed hope (it’s been a while since I last checked the state of Orange football) I watched a recording, and unfortunately have to disagree.

What I saw was the Dutch playing the same old utterly boring game they have for the last 30 years (basically post-Cruyff). Different players yes, but they’re coached by old Dutch internationals, so it’s basically a clear continuation of the same strategy and attitude. Let’s summarise:

  • forward: going solo until stuck;
  • passing: a) stopping and failing a pass through lack of accuracy or b) passing backwards all the way back to the goalkeeper;
  • irritating misdemeanors, collecting yellow cards;
  • arranging free kicks through strategic falls (I can cope with that occasionally, but this is more main habit).

The commentators call it a waiting strategy (holding out for an opportunity) while the Spanish (and other more interesting teams) play “Total Football” – in connection with this, they keep moving (forward!) and pass accurately in mid flight. This makes for an interesting game.

The Dutch now have a tradition of being good in “not losing”, but that kind of defensive game is not the same as winning (an opportunity may not come if you don’t take initiative; and a single goal can wipe you out, as this final showed once again – I reckon the Spanish entirely deserved the win, considering how they played) and no less important it’s definitely not the recipe for providing the stadium or home audience with an entertaining event.

Comparing with the game of Snooker, in the UK where it’s commonly televised, there’s actually a rule that the game has to remain interesting! If a player stuffs around for too long, the umpire declares a foul and the turn passes to the other player. No kidding. I’d so love something like this to apply to football matches as well!

The irony is that Total Football was invented by (later Dutch coach) Rinus Michels, and Johan Cruyff was one of the greatest experts in this very active and engaging strategy. Where did things go so wrong that other countries currently at least partially do it (like the Spanish) and alongĀ  the way deliver something watchable, while the Dutch bore me to tears – that is if the annoyance doesn’t get to me first.

There’s much talent there going to waste, as well as entertainment value. Should Orange have a foreign coach for a bit, perhaps? A Spaniard, Brazilian, Brit? Or can the Dutch themselves just please pull their finger out and start using their skills for delivering active, interesting and probably also more successful games….. one hopes.

A Department of Infrastructure & Planning

With the talk of reassigning the portfolio of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (dBCDE) from Sen.Conroy to Sen.Lundy (which I wholeheartedly support, Sen.Lundy would really do well there), I want to question why we actually still have a separate department that deals with communications and IT.

Creating a BCDE department certainly made sense a while ago (a great improvement over the previous scenario), but now IT really is an integral part of any business, and communications is a means of transport, just like the Internet and the road outside your house. It’s infrastructure!

Today, viewing a road and the Internet as separate actually causes more conceptual problems. With hindsight, I really like the old term “Information Super Highway” as it accurately puts the Internet in the context of a road (for information) and also that like a road it’s a bidirectional medium not a one-way provider->consumer path. I believe this perspective is very important.

IT and Internet is not an (optional) extra for people and businesses to work, it’s essential, so integrated planning makes sense. When considering a new suburb or even a new city, you need to consider how people are going to work – having good Internet infra at enables telecommuting (people working remotely for a business elsewhere) and local entrepreneurship (locally operated business, possibly with employees elsewhere!)

For instance, with a good information infrastructure there’s no intrinsic necessity to place offices in a town centre. It completely changes the way town and infrastructure planning works.

The coalition talking about ditching the NBN is (to me) ignorant, it’s a capital infrastructure project just like good roads and water supply. We literally cannot do without when designing and building our future living and work environment. It’s interesting to see how Australian liberals, usually very pro road-building and the like, don’t appear to grasp that what they’re opposing is a road. Not like a road – it IS a road.

Perhaps full integration of these concepts into a new department right now (particularly pre-election) is a step too far, but thinking about it in this context will at least enable us to take the next step in what I think is the right direction.

Paying rent in DEFT fail land

I recently moved and the new property agent uses Macquarie Bank’s DEFT (www.deft.com.au) online/phone payment system. This costs at least $0.85 per transaction, or more if you use a credit/debit card. Extortion racket, but that’s another matter. I can’t even sign up for this system, because DEFT has now been down for over a week, with apparent security issues:

“Macquarie Payment Services – Powered by DEFT”

This site is currently undergoing maintenance work which is designed to upgraed the security for your DEFT payments. We are working to bring the site back online as soon as possible and will continue to provide updates on this page [they have not]. Existing payments will not be impacted. […] DEFT is committed to providing you with the most up to date protection for your transactions. We apologise for any inconvenience.

So this morning I got two weeks rent out of an ATM, and walked into their offices (by the way, it’s near impossible to get a park nearby so that’s a time drain in itself). Conversation with receptionist follows:

A: I’m here to pay the rent for <my address>.
Receptionist: Sure, how would you like to pay?
A: Cash.
Receptionist: Sorry, we don’t accept cash.
A: Yes you do. The DEFT payment system has been down for over a week, and me having to come in here is a considerable time drain already. I am very unhappy.
Receptionist: I can call the manager?
A: Please do.
Receptionist: Oh. Just a moment please [and vanishes]
Receptionist: Ok we’ll accept cash, as long as the DEFT system is down.
A: Thank you. And please pass this letter on to your manager. Have a good day.

The letter states the payment problem, the DEFT fail and apparent security issues, and a request/demand to remove the arrears notice from my rental record. Attached a printout of the DEFT front fail page, and an invoice for my lost company time, to be repeated bi-weekly until adequate and secure payment facilities are provided.

The cash was a test; apparently they are able to accept it and just prefer not to; I know I can pay through EFT (many agents don’t even accept that and require a cheque or money order which costs even more time/money). Of course I don’t want to do any of that as it requires me to go in to their offices every few weeks, which is downright ridiculous. I just want to be able to set up some automatic system. They don’t accept direct debit either. You must go DEFT.

Why do I bother getting cranky about this? Because I despise unfairness and borked business processes. And because literally thousands of people are getting screwed over by it, and they’ll generally have more hassle getting away from work.