Frequency Allocation in the Swedish 2.6 GHz band

This is the current allocation of the Swedish 2.6 GHz band after the frequency auction among the operators for the emerging 3G+ services such as WiMax and LTE to be used in Sweden. More bands are likely to follow.

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Duplex distance for FDD bands are 120 MHz. Uplink covers UARFCN 12500-12850 and downlink is 13100-13450 and the TDD band is 12850-13100.

The 50 MHz TDD band in the middle between UL/DL portions of the FDD band is thought to be used for Wimax in the future. Intel Capital Corporation will probably work together with some operator to provide WiMax coverage in this band.

Internet Silverback

Image linked from msnbc article, click for reference.
Image linked from msnbc article, click for reference.

I just received an email from an old friend calling me one of the ”Internet Silverbacks” that he knows. I felt quite flattered and I started thinking about what kind of feelings that epithet set off inside me and I kind of like the label and I will actively start using it.

Of course the name is a comparison with the Silverback Gorillas of the jungles of Rwanda and similar places in Africa. I have heard people being called that before on the net, always with affection and always about someone who has been around for a while. I have had my domain up for more than eight years and when I started it the web was certainly different from now but even before I had that I had a home page (it’s defunct but some remains are still to be seen there) located at one of the really early swedish ISPs called Algonet. This ISP was later bought by Telenor who kept it running much as business as usual and then Glocalnet took over and they did not have the competence it seems to keep it running properly. These days most of the services of the online shell accounts you could get there are broken and with no fix in sight.

Used to spend lots of money on my 14k4 and later 56k modem dialing up their modem pool and the monthly fee was pretty high for someone then back in the early nineties. The web wasn’t really around yet, but there were other things such as Usenet news (kind of like forums but all text based and much sleeker designed than any web based fora you see today) and IRC for chatting with people in real time all over the word. IRC is still going strong but it’s not widely known and used mainly amongst geeks, oldtimers and people controlling botnets unfortunately.

I remember Gopher. That’s a precursor to the web, only text based and used port 70 instead of port 80 that the http protocol used for the web is defaulting to. Before gohpher there were several off-line hypertext file systems such as AmigaInfo that could be used to make ”pages” and then transmit them using UUCP (Unixt to Unix Copy Program).

I used to run a Fidonet enabled BBS back in the days when Internet was only for people on universities and really large corporations, I had two modem lines and the fido address was 2:205/309 it was located in the south end of Dalarna here in Sweden. We had great fun then, started a computer club called MoosE-NET and played lots of games, did some serious hacking, played poker and went hiking together in the strange areas around Ludvika…

I guess I might be an Internet Silverback or just very nostalgic or both.

Here is my humoristic definition of an Internet Silverback

  • Knew the Internet before the web and regarded the www with suspiction as a great bandwidh hog.
  • Can hand-craft old style HTML from the earliest versions and remember when every home page out there had animated gif pictures of hampsters or something equally ridiculous. Just because it was possible.
  • Used Netscape with the built-in editor.
  • Has been a channel admin of some channel in IRC and knows what the ”big split” in the IRC was.
  • Remembers when Iceland ran their full Internet transmission over two 9600 baud modems to Scotland and Norway.
  • Remembers when the RIP protocol was widely used all the way down to the endpoints and that you could set up your own machine to listen to it and find out about the best route to Australia  on the net.
  • Remember the spat between Linus Torvalds and Andrew Tanenbaum
  • Used to write own tools in both sh and C just to get things done
  • Have at least a rudimentary understanding of Lisp and an appreciation of its beauty

More?

Jan Jörnmark

Jag var för några veckor sedan tillsammans med några kollegor och lyssnade på Jan Jörnmarks föreläsning i Kungliga Myntkabinettet här i Stockholm och det var en härlig föreläsning på många sätt. Jan som är docent i ekonomi och därtill en ivrig fotograf som började fotografera övergivna platser knöt ihop detta med den moderna ekonomin, kriserna, det svenska stålbruket och många andra intressanta delar av våran vardag med dessa övergivna platserna.

Har ni möjlighet att gå och lyssna på Docent Jörnmark (se hans evenemangskalender här) när han håller en föreläsning eller att gå på någon av hans bildutställningar så tveka inte, gå och bli hänförd ett par timmar över hur utvecklingen drar fram i vårt avlånga land.  Gå även in på Jans hemsida och bli hänförd över bilder och text där.

Jan har även skrivit två stycken böcker som kan köpas bl.a. via hans hemsida, ”Övergivna Platser” och ”Övergivna Platser II”. Bilderna är bra men framför allt uppskattar jag hans underfundigt humoristiska, lite cyniska och ofta melankoliska texter till bilderna som ibland sitter som små nålsting i hjärtat.

Rekommenderas mycket varmt!

Carl Sagan’s Baloney Detection Kit

Carl Sagan
Carl Sagan

The ”Baloney Detection Kit” is a set of rules of conduct derived from the Scientific Method and written down in Carl Sagan’s book ”The Demon Haunted World” a great book on how people get let astray from the truth not only by bad science but also by religion and other tales. If you repeat something enough times some people will start to believe it without independent confirmation. The Baloney Detection Kit is a tool to allow people to detect bad arguments and science.

If you do not know who Carl Sagan was then you must visit this site or check out the wikipedia article on him. Sagan and his show ”Cosmos” was something that spellbound me as a young lad and I have read several of his books and he’s always been one of my childhood heroes.

Here goes:

Argument litmus test

The following are suggested as tools for testing arguments and detecting fallacious or fraudulent arguments:

  1. Wherever possible there must be independent confirmation of the facts
  2. Encourage substantive debate on the evidence by knowledgeable proponents of all points of view.
  3. Arguments from authority carry little weight (in science there are no ”authorities”).
  4. Spin more than one hypothesis – don’t simply run with the first idea that caught your fancy.
  5. Try not to get overly attached to a hypothesis just because it’s yours.
  6. Quantify, wherever possible.
  7. If there is a chain of argument every link in the chain must work.
  8. ”Occam’s razor” – if there are two hypothesis that explain the data equally well choose the simpler.
  9. Ask whether the hypothesis can, at least in principle, be falsified (shown to be false by some  unambiguous test). In other words, it is testable? Can others duplicate the experiment and get the same result?

Additional issues are

  1. Conduct control experiments – especially ”double blind” experiments where the person taking measurements is not aware of the test and control subjects.
  2. Check for confounding factors – separate the variables.
  3. Common fallacies of logic and rhetoric
  4. Ad hominem – attacking the arguer and not the argument.
  5. Argument from ”authority”.
  6. Argument from adverse consequences (putting pressure on the decision maker by pointing out dire consequences of an ”unfavourable” decision).
  7. Appeal to ignorance (absence of evidence is not evidence of absence).
  8. Special pleading (typically referring to god’s will).
  9. Begging the question (assuming an answer in the way the question is phrased).
  10. Observational selection (counting the hits and forgetting the misses).
  11. Statistics of small numbers (such as drawing conclusions from inadequate sample sizes).
  12. Misunderstanding the nature of statistics (President Eisenhower expressing astonishment and alarm on discovering that fully half of all Americans have below average intelligence!)
  13. Inconsistency (e.g. military expenditures based on worst case scenarios but scientific projections on environmental dangers thriftily ignored because they are not ”proved”).
  14. Non sequitur – ”it does not follow” – the logic falls down.
  15. Post hoc, ergo propter hoc – ”it happened after so it was caused by” – confusion of cause and effect.
  16. Meaningless question (”what happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object?).
  17. Excluded middle – considering only the two extremes in a range of possibilities (making the ”other side” look worse than it really is).
  18. Short-term v. long-term – a subset of excluded middle (”why pursue fundamental science when we have so huge a budget deficit?”).
  19. Slippery slope – a subset of excluded middle – unwarranted extrapolation of the effects (give an inch and they will take a mile).
  20. Confusion of correlation and causation.
  21. Straw man – caricaturing (or stereotyping) a position to make it easier to attack..
  22. Suppressed evidence or half-truths.
  23. Weasel words – for example, use of euphemisms for war such as ”police action” to get around limitations on Presidential powers. ”An important art of politicians is to find new names for institutions which under old names have become odious to the public”

Nuclear Policy

The Swedish nuclear policy is a strange thing, ever since in 1980 when there was a poll what people thought of nuclear energy (just after the Harrisburg incident mind you) we have had a policy to dismantle and rid the country of nuclear power plants. Of course we have not had that much to replace it with, we do have a fair lot of hydro power plants that work well but that is also a limited resource and the large rivers suiteable for this are mainly already used.

Fortsätt läsa Nuclear Policy

LTE Training Course

I have just completed a 2-day course in the new wireless architecture called LTE. LTE is not necessary 4G, it depends on what each operator is talking about but the largest operator in Sweden, Telia-Sonera will be calling their LTE network for 4G so I guess the terminology will stick to it pretty soon. Ericsson is pretty careful in pointing out that the fourth generation would actually be LTE-Advanced which they are working on right now.

But time will tell. Enough to say that this is a very different radio approach from UTRAN with WCDMA and HSPA radio access and the core network has evolved further to be much faster putting more intelligence at the base station itself rather than higher up in the network. Basically LTE is just focused on setting up incredibly fast data pipes between you and your network and no matter if you use them for voice, online gaming, blogging, downloading music or streaming video will just affect how many radio resources are allocated to you.

It was quite exciting but also a very tight course with too many acronyms spinning around my head right now…

Museum of Nordic culture

The museum of nordic culture, or ”Nordiska Museet”, is located on the south-west of the Djurgården island, not far from the Vasa museum. The entrance is from the south and we got there from the wrong direction at first but managed to get around to the right place.

The museum was not really what I expected it to be but it was still a nice day out. I had hoped for more clothes and fashion, but that whole department was closed off, they are curating a new display ready in the spring 2010 so we had to make do with what we got.

The Nordic Museum
The Nordic Museum main hall. The architecture here is quite impressive and worth a visit just to admire them. You are not allowed to use flash or a tripod in here so get your fast lenses mounted and crank up your ISO setting...

Architecture and the building itself is remarkable. It is worth a visit just for these things, the main hall being especially beautiful and with the larger than life statue of Gustav Vasa the king that joined all the warring fractions of Sweden to one nation is also quite impressive.

Gustav Vasa who joined the various kingdoms into one Swedish nation.
Gustav Vasa who joined the various kingdoms into one Swedish nation.

There was a fashion display but that was mainly a few photographs on a wall and a projector showing fashion photographs and that was it.

The impression I had from the museum was that it was difficult to see who they were aiming for, the exhibitions were trying to fit all different age groups and actually did not really do a good job in some cases. The Sápmi exhibition about the Sami people and their land in the north of Scandinavia felt a little misplaced. Not that I don’t think it should be here, it was just that it seemed very half-hearted. I would have expected far more photographs from the older days and there were some nice items and clothes here but everything seemed a bit devoid of context.

But we still had a really good day out and I got to see some stuff from my favourite epoch, the sixties:

A JVC television from the sixties. I want one like that. Not a flat screen though mind you!
A JVC television from the sixties. I want one like that. Not a flat screen though mind you!
Functionalism when at its best!
Functionalism when at it's best!
The Ericofon was originally intended to be used by people who suffered from some illness and in institutions. This way they did not have to lean over to dial a number, they could just lift the whole thing and dial easily from the bottom of the phone. Ma Bell in the US bought many of these.
The Ericofon was originally intended to be used by people who suffered from some illness and in institutions. This way they did not have to lean over to dial a number, they could just lift the whole thing and dial easily from the bottom of the phone. Ma Bell in the US bought many of these.

CIA destroyed interrogation video tapes

In the media lately we have been told that CIA have destroyed tapes of violoent interrogations after the American Civli Liberties Union (ACLU) decided to go ahead and press charges against the intelligence agency in a court in New York.

US temporary minister of justice, Mr. Lev Dassin, writes about the video tapes in a letter to the judge in charge of the case. Earlier the CIA only admitted to destroying a few tapes but now it seems that over 90 tapes have been destroyed.

According to the New York Times the tapes shows interrogations of Abu Zubaydah, suspected member of the al-Qaida and Abdel Rahim al-Nashiri suspected to be involved in the bombing of the warship USS Cole outside Yemen in the year 2000 when 17 able bodies seamen died as a result.

Dassin have now asked the court of law to order CIA to produce when documentation of the case can be turned over to the court.

I wonder if we will ever know what happened to the Egyptian people the CIA picked up here at Bromma in Stockholm in 2001  and taken away to some suiteable country well clear of American and European laws and order. I doubt they will ever be seen again in any official capacity or else.

Nikon F mount celebrates 50 years

Yes, indeed, the longest lasting 35 mm camera system lens mount is now celebrating 50 years of existance. And 50 years of remarkable compatibility I must say, of all the well known brands for small frame cameras the Nikon F mount is the longest lasting and surviving mount that is still around.

There are many advantages to this of course, any lens made since 1956 or so can be used on modern cameras wich means the used lens market is huge. You might not get metering or autofocus but if you are prepared to do some of these things in manual mode then this is for you.

Canon changed their mount with the introduction of the digital cameras to their EF mount. There are even two types of EF mounts, one for the small APS-C sized digital cameras and one for their ”full frame” counterpart, the reason being that because of the tightness between the lens aft parts and the mirror some lenses designed for the 1,5 crop format would actually touch the mirror when it flips up if mounted on full frame cameras.

I have used older lenses with mechanical autofocus on my Nikon D70s and D300 cameras and both makes great use of them. I have even tested fully manual lenses and they work pretty well if you take the time to focus properly or use a sufficient large DOF of course :-)

The drawback is that the standard F-mount puts the lens a bit further from the focal plane than Canon and some other makers does, this means that it is not possible to use say Canon lenses on Nikon bodies while the reverse can be done with some success.

So happy birthday F-mount!

Bedbugs and Design

Design or Evolution?

There are a lot of people I have met on the Internet who thinks that the universe is designed. Myself, I do not. There is nothing in this world that to me is unquestionable evidence for design, not even the human body in all its marvelous chemistry and biology.

To me there is no thing as a soul or a spirit. We are what we are and our brains create the illusion of free will. I am an atheist and therefore I do not believe in any gods at all.

Recently there has been a discussion in which I was involved dealing with the design or not of the universe and I decided to write this little piece, perhaps it will give you something to think about. Perhaps not. Anyway, there are things in this universe that clearly look to me as if they where NOT designed by an omnipotent, omniscient just god.

The Bedbug

Cimex lectularius, the first of the two species I’d like to mention is equipped with a very long and sharp, hard penis which it uses to stab-rape females of its species and to ejaculate into the female body cavity—bypassing the usual genital opening in the female. The sperm travels through her blood stream to special receptacles where she can store it until she ovulates.

Xylocaris maculipennis has developed this method even further. The male of this species stab-rapes other males! In fact a male of this species may even be assaulted by another male while copulating with a female.

The sperm of the rapist enters the vas deferens of his male victim and is used by the victim during copulation. Which is not to say that the sperm of the rapist is injected directly into the raped male’s vas deferens with accuracy – the sperm simply ”migrates in the recipient’s blood to his testes”, ”and hence to the vas deferens tubules attached to his testes, where the rapist’s sperm is then pumped out of the penis of the raped male, and into the female.” [MacQuitty & Mound, Megabugs]

The Wasp

The ichneumon wasp is a lovely creation. It paralyses the caterpillars and lays its eggs inside them. Their larvae when developing will eat the caterpillar alive from the inside. Imagine the mind of the god which designed something like that. I wonder what he thought of.

My conclusion

Creationists may want to conclude that this is the creation of an all-loving, omnipotent being they call god, but I have a feeling that there is no such thing. This together with all the rest of the compelling evidence that biodiversity is a result from evolution.

Thanks to zawawa@space.net.au for his post to alt.atheism regarding this issue and this little article is based much on that.

Ref:

1. Adrian Forsyth, A Natural History of Sex.

2. MacQuitty & Mound, Megabugs.

3. Richard Dawkins, Climbing Mount Improbable