Author: ttcsadmin

  • Public Forum on Development of Trinidad & Tobago’s Smart Grid on Thursday November 6 2014 from 2-4pm

    smartgridtt-illustration

    In collaboration with Research and Development Impact Fund, IEEE TT and NIHERST, The SmartGrid UWI project team at the University of the West Indies  (UWI) will be having a public forum on the Development of Trinidad and Tobago’s Smart Grid.

    From the flyer on SmartGrid’s Project website at http://smartgrid.tt/

    “Countries throughout the world are making use of advances in Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) to improve the efficiency, availability and reliability of their electrical power grids.

    The application of ICTs to these grids results in what is typically called a Smart Grid (SG).

    Such smart grids use secure communication technologies and computational intelligence in an integrated fashion across electricity generation, transmission and distribution networks to achieve a cleaner, safer, securer, more reliable, more resilient, more efficient and sustainable system.

    The Trinidad and Tobago Electricity Commission has already started introducing ICTs into their grid using Advanced Metering Infrastructure.

    The University of the West Indies is collaborating with the Ministry of Energy & Energy Affairs and the Commission to investigate additional technologies that can be introduced. Our joint team invites the general public to this forum to know the benefits of a Smart Grid, its implementation challenges and how they too can participate in forming a nationwide smart grid.”

    What, Where and When

    • Title:  Public Forum on Development of Trinidad & Tobago’s Smart Grid
    • Venue:  Noor Hassanali Auditorium, Faculty of Law, UWI, St. Augustine. Parking by Old TGR Reserve Car Park (North)
    • Date:  6th Nov. 2014 (Thursday)
    • Time:  2pm – 4pm
    • Registration link: Seats are limited so participants are advised to register in advance at https://meetings.vtools.ieee.org/m/29761
    • More infohttp://smartgrid.tt/

     

     

  • new version 1.3 of our TTCS OSSWIN DVD (a collection of Free and Open Source Software for Windows) available for download

    ttcs-osswin-dvd

    The Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society is pleased to announce the release of the TTCS OSSWIN DVD v1.3, a collection of Free and Open Source Software.

    You can use your web browser to read detailed information about each program in this compilation : what the program does, its key features, useful related websites, view a screenshot, find links to the program’s website and to download/install the program from the TTCS OSSWIN DVD.

    The web-based interface allows you to quickly browse the variety of software organised  into the following categories:

    • Desktop Applications
    • Educational
    • Games
    • Graphics
    • Internet
    • Server
    • Sound and Video
    • Utilities

    There were many updates (see the changelog) with 9 programs removed and 6 new programs added and numerous updates.

    See the TTCS OSSWIN DVD page at http://www.ttcsweb.org/osswin-dvd/ for more details, including a complete listing of programs included on the DVD, download links and checksum information to verify the download.

     

     

  • #ICANN51 public meeting from October 12-16 2014 – how you can participate in the discussions

    icann-51-meeting-guide

    The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)  will be having its 51st public meeting from Saturday October 12 to October 16 2014 in Los Angeles, California (although sessions have started on October 11).

    Some important ICANN related links:

    • ICANN 51 Meeting Guide (PDF) – This document notes what the chairs of the various Advisory Committees (ACs) and Supporting Organisations (SOs) in the multi-stakeholder ICANN Community and the ability for remote participation in many of the sessions.
    • ICANN Daily Meeting Schedule  – this will show the meetings happening on the day. Clicking on the meeting title will show the remote participation links that would allow you to follow the conversation and if you use the “Virtual Room Stream Live” link, that conferencing tool allows for persons in the virtual room to type questions or comments that could be read or answered by the Working Group chairing the meeting.
    •  ICANN Full Meeting Schedule – this table (you will have to scroll in both directions) shows the various meetings happening in various rooms at the same time. All times listed are local to Los Angeles. The time in Los Angeles is 3 hours behind that of Trinidad and Tobago. So when looking at the ICANN 51 schedule, you’ll need to add 3 hours to get the time of the  meeting in Trinidad and Tobago.
    • The At-Large Meeting Agenda Workspace – lists the very busy schedule and agendas of the meetings of the At-Large Community.

    The Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society (TTCS) is an accredited ICANN At-Large Structure (ALS) and a founding member of the Latin American and Caribbean Regional At-Large Organisation (LACRALO), which today has 44 At-Large Structures in 18 out of 33 countries in the Latin American and Caribbean Region. At-Large is the name for the community of individual Internet users who participate in the policy development work of ICANN.

    Currently, as the TTCS’ At-Large representative (Dev Anand Teelucksingh) will be completing his 2 year term on the 15 member At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC), The ALAC is responsible for considering and providing advice on ICANN’s activities as they relate to the interests of individual Internet users (the “At-Large” community). LACRALO selects two persons to be on the ALAC.

    This final year was an busy one for me. A rundown of what I’ve done this final year:

    • I’ve been a penholder for several ALAC statements that was submitted to the ICANN Board and Community after approval by the ALAC,
    • The 2nd At-Large Summit (ATLAS II) bought together more than 150 ALS representatives. As someone who attended the first At-Large Summit in 2009, this event was the catalyst for me to get involved in ICANN At-Large, serving as LACRALO secretariat from 2009 to 2012 and being involved in many At-Large Working Groups. With ATLAS II, I was involved in many of the ATLAS II Working Groups and deliverables to help organise the ATLAS II event. I also served as session moderator for Thematic Group 5 (“At-Large Engagement in ICANN”) during ATLAS II and participated in the drafting of the ATLAS II Final Declaration.
    • A summary of my activities during the period from 2009 to 2012 can be found in my statement of interest for the ALAC position in 2012.
      I am serving as chair of 4 At-Large Working Groups : Technology Taskforce, Social Media, Outreach and the Community Regional Outreach Pilot Program Review Team. The first three Working Groups (WGs) are tasked with the implementation of recommendations coming out of the ATLAS II Summit Final Declaration.
    • Also involved as a member of other At-Large WGs such as the new gTLD WG, Finance and Budget Subcommittee, Capacity Building WG and ALAC Metrics.

    This has represented a large amount of time and energy and I do intend to scale back to focus on my life and TTCS. The important thing is that getting involved in ICANN At-Large, representing the interests of Internet end users is doable, once you have an interest.

    This blog post is quite long and its late, so I’ll stop for now. However, I do want to encourage anyone with a interest and a desire to learn more about ICANN policy issues, to email me at [email protected] and I’ll help to orient you to attend WGs conference calls for you to discover more.

  • Ars Technica: Google, Oracle Java API copyright battle lands at Supreme Court

    Ars Technica covers the copyright battle between Google and Oracle re: whether Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) can be copyrighted.

    The legal fracas started when Google copied certain elements—names, declaration, and header lines—of the Java APIs in Android, and Oracle sued. A San Francisco federal judge largely sided with Google in 2012, saying that the code in question could not be copyrighted. But the federal appeals court reversed, and ruled that the “declaring code and the structure, sequence, and organization of the API packages are entitled to copyright protection.”.

    Read the full article:
    Ars Technica: Google, Oracle Java API copyright battle lands at Supreme Court

  • Ubuntu users can watch Netflix with Google Chrome browser v37 installed

    Great news for Ubuntu users: you can watch Netflix with the Google chrome browser v37 installed.

    From the announcement at https://insights.ubuntu.com/2014/10/10/watch-netflix-in-ubuntu-today/

    Thanks to recent efforts at Netflix and Canonical, Ubuntu now supports watching Netflix with Chrome version 37. Chrome is available to all Ubuntu users with up-to-date installations of Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, 14.04 LTS and later.

    Netflix subscribers who already use Ubuntu can now watch simply by installing the Chrome browser .

    Think this should also work with Google Chrome OS for Chromebook and Chromebox users.

  • #Trinidad and #Tobago Internet Exchange Point (IXP) launched

    Logo of the Trinidad and Tobago Internet Exchange Limited
    Logo of the Trinidad and Tobago Internet Exchange Limited

    The Trinidad and Tobago Internet Exchange Point Limited (TTIX) have announced that the Internet Exchange Point (IXP) has been activated according to an article in the Trinidad Guardian dated October 9 2014 .

    An Internet Exchange Point or IXP for short, allows for Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to route data traffic between ISPs locally rather than transmitting the data outside the country.

    The TTIX website is http://ix.tt .

    TTIX was founded in 2013 by several telecommunication providers in Trinidad and Tobago:

    TTiX Board of Directors are made of representatives from these founding members. Its current chairman is Kurleigh Prescod from Columbus Communications.

    The physical interconnection point is located at Fujitsu Caribbean (Trinidad) Limited Data Center in Barataria.

    The TTIX website shows some statistics being exchanged by some ISPs and the IXP at http://ix.tt/statistics/. Currently, Flow Communications shows 1.73M with an average of 2.67M and a maximum of 10.52M.

    This is data that, before an IXP was installed, would have required Flow to transmit this amount of data outside of Trinidad and Tobago, usually to Miami in the United States and then back to Trinidad and Tobago.

    The concepts for an IXP in Trinidad and Tobago has been around for several years. In June 2006, the then Ministry of Public Administration and Information (MPAI) published “Internet Bandwidth Management”  for comment.  The Trinidad and Tobago Computer Society (TTCS) published its comments on this Internet Bandwidth Management document in 2006.

  • INET Trinidad & Tobago event from 8-9 October 2014

    ISOC (Internet Society)  will be organizing in collaboration with the Telecommunications Authority of Trinidad and Tobago (TATT) an
    “INET” from 8-9 October 2014.

    INET is ISOC’s brand-name with respect to its specific events addressing Internet challenges including

    • The Global Internet Landscape
    • The Future of the Internet
    • The Domain Name System
    • RPKI
    • DNSSEC
    • IPv4 Depletion & IPv6 Transition
    • Cybersecurity
    • Identity and Privacy
    • ccTLD Management
    • OTT Challenges
    • IXPs
    • Internet content development

    and more.

    Please read the INET Trinidad and Tobago Invitation Flyer for details on how to register.

     

     

     

     

  • Microsoft announces Windows 10 – Tech Preview download available October 1 2014

    Screenshot of preview.windows.com on 30 September 2014
    Screenshot of preview.windows.com on 30 September 2014

     

    Microsoft announced that the next version of Windows will be Windows 10 and also announced a technical preview will be available for download at http://preview.windows.com/

    They have also released a short video highlighting some of the new key features which include:

    • new Start Menu – the familiar Start menu with the ability to personalise with Live Tiles
    • Windows Search in the Start Menu
    • ability to run Windows Apps in Windows Desktop in its own window similar to Windows Desktop apps
    • New Task View button to show and switch between open apps
    • Smarter Windows Snap when dragging apps to sides of your screen with the ability to snap 4 apps on the screen
    • virtual desktops

    Watch the 4 min video at
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84NI5fjTfpQ

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=84NI5fjTfpQ

     

  • Yahoo shuts down Yahoo Directory

    screenshot-of-yahoo-home-page-circa-1997
    Screenshot of Yahoo home page circa 1997 via the Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org/)

     

    In a Yahoo post on Tumblr on September 26 2014, Yahoo announced it was removing the Yahoo Directory on December 31 2014 (now offline – perhaps because so many persons are trying to access it).

    The Yahoo Directory was a human curated listing of websites, organised into a hierarchy of topics. First organised by the founders Jerry Yang and David Filo nearly 20 years ago, they named their listing “Yahoo!”, short for “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle”.

    It was popular in the 1990s before search engines (or more specifically, Google) in the late 1990s and early 2000s gave users better relevancy in automated search. That, coupled with the ever increasing number of websites and updated content made it difficult for Yahoo to maintain the Directory’s relevancy.

    See Danny Sullivan points out on SearchEngineLand article for other highlights re: Yahoo Directory. Hmm, I wasn’t even aware that Yahoo shutdown Altavista last year.

     

  • Techcrunch: Adobe Brings Photoshop For Chromebooks To Its Education Customers

    Pic from Google Chrome Blog showing Adobe Photoship running on a Google Chromebook

    Good news for Chromebook users and Adobe Education Customers with Creative Cloud subscriptions (only for the US for now, unfortunately) – you will be able to run Photoshop on your Chromebook.

    According to the Techcrunch article, and in turn the Adobe FAQ:

    “…..this is the complete version of Photoshop, but it will run in a virtualized environment, so you don’t need to install anything on your local machine. Opening, saving and exporting files is handled by Google Drive. The only thing this version can’t do for now, however, is use any GPU dependent features in Photoshop and it also can’t print.”