Unsubsidized: Difference between revisions

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Now that carrier frequencies are more standardized, like the "desktop" Internet it'd be better if we bought handsets from a free market, which would lead to more competition, better prices, and no contortions around "contracts."
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Carriers like Rogers embed a 'subsidy fee' for handsets (phones) which is a substantial part of every bill (about 20% of a smartphone bill), if you want to get your own handset you're paying nearly double. In the future a smartphone will be many people's only computer, so choice, competition, and free will from the carrier's decisions are all very important, yet today buying a handset is very different from buying a computer.
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Do you think it'd be worthwhile to try to create a movement around subsidy-free pricing?


== Interested? ==
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AI wrote:
 
i remember when i was in spain 10 years ago, you could buy a cell phone for $17 from a vending machine and then just buy a pay-as-you-go card as needed. we are so far behind compared to europe in terms of phone infrastructure.
 
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JM wrote:
 
here in pakistan, i can get a SIM for $3. cheapest nokia is about $15. an ISDN BRI costs about $8/month.
 
as i recall, the prices were quite similar in kenya.
 
i recall being in canada last year, and heading to the mall to get a rogers SIM. they offered me a subsidized handset on contract, and i said no, i wanted an unlocked phone that i could take back to Dubai with me.
 
the guy looked shocked, and then whispered to me that they don't sell unlocked phones but he knew someone who did.
 
like i was trying to buy drugs or something.
it was quite hilarious.
 
== Why bother trying to get Rogers to adjust their policies? ==
 
Rogers opened their [http://redboard.rogers.com Redboard] with the claim it will post every legitimate comment to let consumer's voices be heard. Yet many legitimate posts are ignored. The process to fair and unhindered Internet can be short-cut by putting pressure on companies such as Rogers to skip to the end point — fair lowest-possible pricing with consumer choice.
 
== Posts on the topic ==
 
Post made to http://redboard.rogers.com/2010/redboard%E2%80%99s-faaq-frequently-asked-android-questions/ June 1, 2010 by DavidM:
 
I agree. Android 2.1 is running on the Dream handset, yet Rogers won't let us install our own version (as we would an operating system on our home computer). After less than a year, stuck in a two year upgrade term, we have an effectively obsolete handset (can't run the latest Google Maps and other apps) which was sold to us as an "open" Android device.
 
For the Magic, we're forced to use HTC's version which is encumbered with the battery sucking Sense which after a few moments of "gee whiz" makes it more incompatible with "Android." 
 
Want to get your own handset on the free market? You'll pay TWICE as much because you're continuing to pay for subsidization.
 
I'm going to keep complaining and looking until a carrier offers me reliable cross-Canada wireless Internet at the lowest price, which is where this should be heading, not branded experiences and lack of choice.
 
 
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Revision as of 13:43, 8 June 2010

I don't like talking about myself, but after I was chastised for simply describing myself as a "big nerd," I decided to try to summarize some current interests for people I've met recently. If you just want to see what I'm up to, skip to #Current work.

After moving to Montréal from Toronto in December 2007, I've managed to take some French instruction, complete Concordia's one-year Graduate Diploma in Community Economic Development, and participate in a few local, national and international projects. Transitioning to Montréal hasn't been easy, without strong French it's like living in a small town with a big city's bureaucracy. I'll take full blame for not learning French better, but I need to find a way to study it full time for an extended period without sacrificing all I'm developing, and even then it will take years of dedication to become fluent. (And, I have to admit I still enjoy feeling like I'm living in a foreign city, but I know I'm missing out on a lot in this wonderful place.)

http://semantic-mediawiki.org/w/images/smw.gif

My work and interests from way back have revolved around developing participatory systems. I'm a strong believer in government, but today's service oriented bureaucracy, with many gatekeepers and alpha-leaders, is just wrong. I want to help get people involved any way they can. So I focus on digital systems and literacy, trying to make Web based systems that are read-write, not brochures. Digital literacy goes well beyond filling in forms, people should be learning about hypertext, content policies, what's happening behind the scenes. Wikis have been a key tool; I used to develop low-level custom software (source code and database stuff) but now I find Semantic Mediawiki has ways to do most of the things groups need, while preserving the ideals of wiki. Wiki is Hawaiian for quick, while wiki systems can be used for restricted Web publishing, their best application is to allow anyone to quickly edit, as well as follow the low level development of a site, and make activity and content transparent. It does get complicated, but a good wiki will have ways for anyone to quickly participate, supporting diverse roles and interests. Semantic Mediawiki adds in database features, which makes managing structured data easier, so a wiki can contain both free-form pages and reusable data like tables, events, map data, and so on. (see more thoughts here.) Add in a clear and fair content license and it's a pretty good model for shared public data.

I expect the long term results to be significant. As data becomes more linked, quality will increase, and like a puzzle, missing pieces will become evident. With the ability to easily find out answers, useful participation will become something like playing video games, using Facebook, or stamp collecting; creating fun visualizations, adding data, asking simple questions, fulfilling our natural desires to organize in commonly useful ways, making our systems better organized and linked. It will include young and old people. The only thing holding this revolution back is cynicism.

Among the many examples of participatory culture, http://www.openfile.ca is a standout. It's a geographically focused "newspaper" that follows up on community submitted stories, and encourages full community participation in their development. They don't wiki, but they use a Creative Commons license. The UK, led by Tim Berners-Lee (a truly great man), also appears to be sincerely attacking publishing their data in re-usable formats in an open way. Along with many other government initiatives, open inquiry individual and citizen group efforts. Unfortunately, many businesses and non profits still take an opaque, silo approach.

Current work

On to my current work, where I try to balance ideals with realities. To pay the bills, refine technical skills and spread wiki, I work part-time at Concordia's Fungal Genomics lab. That's right, the programme in CED led to supporting scientists working on things like "directed evolution." The goal of the group is to find more efficient enzymes for biofuels. Today's ethanol solutions hardly make sense from an environmental perspective, but growing cellulosic material — trees — is beneficial in the carbon cycle. Fungi are pervasive in nature as part of the cycle of breaking things down, necessary to create efficient biofuels. So our group analyzes tens of thousands of digital genomic samples, and when a likely candidate is found — they grow it. It's pretty cool stuff, and a breakthrough would be huge. Wiki is successfully used for internal communications and for the project's websites.

I am called a Fellow at the Health Innovation Cell in Toronto. The group analyzes technology and social innovation to make recommendations and implement interventions to make the health system more responsive and efficient. I'm quite happy with the web site, from it's Wikipedia-inspired front page (great inspiration, Carlos), to use of wiki to manage content, to its potential as a linked data participant. Good projects are under development, and Innovation Cell has also been a strong promoter, in the health field, of unconference, participant led conferences.

Speaking of Unconference, I'm participating in Rococo 2010, a wiki and Open Spaces (very similar to unconference, with simple rules to help things stay on track and have deliverables) event in Montréal June 25 - 27. Judging from a recent Open Spaces event, it should be great.

I'm also an associate of Equalit.ie, a technical human rights support group, supporting the technical platform and helping to develop a wiki based publishing system.

I'm also helping bootstrap Asian Canadian Wiki, today it looks basic but has some good content and eventually I expect a vital resource.

In June I also had a chance to speak at the Spring 2010 Semantic Mediawiki conference at MIT, and participated in a focused roundtable at Harvard about independent media and human rights groups dealing with hack attacks.

Well, now I'm really tired of talking about myself. I'm working on several other good, formative projects, but always welcome "on the ground" projects with common factors. Getting experience on an "away from keyboard" project is something I'd like to do someday, but in the meantime I always find capacity for good projects with committed partners.

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