Wide Area Pondering

input -> filter -> output

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Book recommendations from a genius..

Cornells Jon Kleinberg gave a few book recommendations in a recent email interview. With Christmas and all coming up, I thought a link was in order.

Here's the citation:
"Six Degrees, by Duncan Watts, and The Search, by John Battelle, are two good examples; the first covers network theory and social networks, while the second covers the growth of the search industry and what it means for everyday life.

Both are engagingly written, and both succeed marvelously at conveying some of what I was discussing earlier -- the mix of excitement and frustration that comes from doing research in science and technology.

Duncan Watts's book is reminiscent of a very thought-provoking earlier book that I've been recommending to students for a number of years: Thomas Schelling's Micromotives and Macrobehavior. Through a sequence of compelling examples, he illustrates how clever insights and quantitative models can expose the ways in which large-scale social processes are often influenced by very localized mechanisms.

At a more general level, I'd also mention some "classic" collections of biographical essays about famous scientists of the past; for example, Paul de Kruif's Microbe Hunters and E.T. Bell's Men of Mathematics have remained inspirational reading long after they were first written. "

Thursday, December 01, 2005

The Future: Push Browsers are Coming (and Needed)

This bold statement was given 3 years ago; yet I don't think we are much closer to a realization. We are seeing Ajax technologies coming into use, presenting new boundaries to what is possible applications in a browser. As we conjecture in the paper "Engineering Push-based Web Services", many applications would benefit from both push-enabled client applications, as well as a network where push is used in combination with pull to optimize network usage.

Google is clearly going to present a push-based browser sometime soon. The scenario depicted by Tyler and Bosworth of BEA Systems clearly coincides with what Google is doing with diverse desktop applications. It becomes even clearer when we know Bosworth got hired by Google last year. My guess is that Google will buy Open Office and let users use it through their browsers.

In the meantime, we are quietly working on the Internet architectures to make such applications computationably feasible. Both in regards to network traffic, but also to user distruption. Wide Area Information Filtering is the Future..

Configuring Push-based Web Services (available online)

My paper to the NWeSP'05 is now available online through our project website.
http://www.waif.cs.uit.no/publications/brenna-nwesp.pdf