Let's face it: nobody does high weirdness like the Japanese, and as this Gizmodo article featuring illustrations from the Japanese safety manual shows, new technologies give rise to new weirdness.
Who's Bogarting the IPs?
File this under “It may be old, but it's new to me and it might be new to you”: over at the blog Modern Life is Rubbish, they've got an article that shows which countries have the most IP addresses per capita and which have the least.
Here's how the article's author did the math:
First of all, I obtained an IP address to country lookup list, which revealed the blocks assigned to each country – from this I was able to calculate the total number of IP addresses allocated to each country. I then divided that total figure by the country's population, giving an indication of the number of IPs available to that country per capita (person).
Here's a world map, color-coded by people per IP addresses. Green is fewest (best); red is highest (worst):
Let's look at the ten countries with the most IP addresses per capita. As you might guess, all these couuntries seem like pretty decent places to live. To find out more about each country, click on its flag or its name; you'll be taken to that country's entry in the CIA World Factbook.
![]() 1. Vatican City |
10.5 IPs per person |
![]() 2. United States |
4.5 IPs per person |
![]() 3. Canada |
2.2 IPs per person |
![]() 4. Iceland |
2.0 IPs per person |
![]() 5. Monaco |
1.8 IPs per person |
![]() 6. Gibraltar |
1.7 IPs per person |
![]() 7. Liechtenstein |
1.51 IPs per person |
![]() 8. Sweden |
1.501 IPs per person |
![]() 9. Finland |
1.496 IPs per person |
![]() 10. Australia |
1.459 IPs per person |
Now here are the 10 countries with the fewest IPs per capita. Unsurprisingly, most of these countries don't figure very heavily on most people's vacation lists. To find out more about each country, click on its flag or its name; you'll be taken to that country's entry in the CIA World Factbook.
![]() 195. Afghanistan |
1,458 people per IP |
![]() 196. Madagascar |
1,514 people per IP |
![]() 197. Guinea-Bissau |
1,550 people per IP |
![]() 198. Central African Republic |
1972 people per IP |
![]() 199. Burundi |
3,278 people per IP |
![]() 200. Myanmar |
4,112 people per IP |
![]() 201. Malawi |
4,197 people per IP |
![]() 202. Ethiopia |
4,582 people per IP |
![]() 203. Niger |
58.139 people per IP |
![]() 204. Democratic Republic of Congo |
58.140 people per IP |
In response to this entry, someone on Reddit posted this list of holders of class A address spaces, each address space representing about 16 million IP addresses:
3/8 May 94 General Electric Company 4/8 Dec 92 Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. 6/8 Feb 94 Army Information Systems Center 8/8 Dec 92 Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. 9/8 Aug 92 IBM 11/8 May 93 DoD Intel Information Systems 12/8 Jun 95 AT&T Bell Laboratories 13/8 Sep 91 Xerox Corporation 15/8 Jul 94 Hewlett-Packard Company 16/8 Nov 94 Digital Equipment Corporation 17/8 Jul 92 Apple Computer Inc. 18/8 Jan 94 MIT 19/8 May 95 Ford Motor Company 20/8 Oct 94 Computer Sciences Corporation 21/8 Jul 91 DDN-RVN 22/8 May 93 Defense Information Systems Agency 25/8 Jan 95 UK Ministry of Defense (Updated - Jan 06) 26/8 May 95 Defense Information Systems Agency 28/8 Jul 92 DSI-North 29/8 Jul 91 Defense Information Systems Agency 30/8 Jul 91 Defense Information Systems Agency 32/8 Jun 94 Norsk Informasjonsteknology 33/8 Jan 91 DLA Systems Automation Center 34/8 Mar 93 Halliburton Company 35/8 Apr 94 MERIT Computer Network 38/8 Sep 94 Performance Systems International 40/8 Jun 94 Eli Lily and Company 43/8 Jan 91 Japan Inet 44/8 Jul 92 Amateur Radio Digital Communications 45/8 Jan 95 Interop Show Network 46/8 Dec 92 Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. 47/8 Jan 91 Bell-Northern Research 48/8 May 95 Prudential Securities Inc. 51/8 Aug 94 Deparment of Social Security of UK 52/8 Dec 91 E.I. duPont de Nemours and Co., Inc. 53/8 Oct 93 Cap Debis CCS 54/8 Mar 92 Merck and Co., Inc. 55/8 Apr 95 Boeing Computer Services
It figures Halliburton would be in the list.
We're a Little Busy Right Now…
Unlike Om, Scoble, Kevin McDigg and the rest of the techno-pundits with bigger, more heavily-trafficked blogs than this one, we've got real work to do…real man's work. We'll have some articles posted tonight. Stay tuned!
A couple of people I know actually fell for this site, msfirefox.com, which purports to be a site announcing that Microsoft has purchased Firefox and is releasing it as Microsoft Firefox 2007…
That Slippery Wii Remote
I've got my hands full with a PS2, XBox 360, a handful of software projects and a life, so the Wii is not likely to be part of my hi-tech entertainment altar in the near future. There's another factor: aside from good looks, a quick wit and a bon vivant approach to life, I have also inherited this from my father: sweaty palms.
Given that the Wii's control — the Wiimote — is a motion-sensitive thing that you're encouraged to wield and movelike a sword, a fishing rod or gun, depending on the game, it comes with a strap that users are encouraged to wear in order to prevent it from accidentally being sent flying across the room. Ed Burnette points to a YouTube video demonstrating what happens when a sweaty-handed player loses his grip:
Nintendo has issued a safety bulletin that explains the proper use of the Wiimote's strap, complete with these rather airline-safety-card-like diagrams:
Included in the safety bulletin is this bit of sage advice:
Hold the Wii Remote firmly
and do not let go.
“Damn,” I can hear some Wii owners saying, “Now they tell me!”
Burnette suggests that Wii oweners might want to get their paws on Wiimote protective sleeves:
or perhaps the skid-proof glove:
Meanwhile, the jokers at the Penny Arcade webcomic suggest that it's some Wii users' lifestyle choices that are ruining their gaming experiences…
OpenCola Lives On in Swarmcast
I'm sure we've mentioned it before, but in case you didn't know, both George and I worked at OpenCola. George was a biz dev guy, and I was both an user interface developer as well as the developer relations guy. George worked out of New York, while I started off in Toronto, moved to San Francisco to work with co-founder Cory Doctorow and then went back to Toronto after the San Fran office closed.
Globe and Mail technology writer Matthew Ingram recently posted an entry titled Toronto's OpenCola Lives On in Swarmcast. Swarmcast is a “swarming” technology created by Minneapolis-based developer and former OpenColan Justin Chapweske that does peer-to-peer swarm-based file serving in a manner that's conceptually similar to BitTorrent.
In the article, Ingram writes:
So why is BitTorrent a relatively well-known name and Swarmcast is not? Because the two took different approaches to commercializing their software. Bram Cohen chose the “open source” route and released the code for his software so that anyone could use or distribute it (so long as they didn’t charge money for it or claim it as their own). It quickly became the technology of choice for downloading everything from cracked software and illegally copied movies to pornography, although it was also used for distributing large files such as the various flavours of the Linux operating system. And that in turn got the attention of content owners.
Swarmcast, meanwhile, decided to focus on working behind the scenes with companies that would have an interest in distributing large amounts of content over the Internet — including distributing digital films to movie theatres. The company also helps power MLB.com, the major-league baseball service, which distributes huge quantities of video and audio to baseball fans. Not as sexy as doing deals with Hollywood movie studios, but not bad either.
It's nice to see that Justin and company are getting some deals, and it's also nice to see them getting some recognition as well.
Here's a message in the browser tabs that takes advantages of “favicons” (you know, those icons for sites that show up in the address bar)…