wireless soup

December 31, 2004


While flipping through cable channels looking for something worth watching the other day, I landed on a Campbell's Soup commercial. It featured quick scenes of people using wireless high-tech gadgets intercut with scenes of people on the go downing Campbell's Soup at Hand with the tagline "If your whole life is wireless, shouldn't your soup be?" Wireless soup? What exactly does that mean? I never noticed any wires in my soup.

I puzzled for awhile over how they heat the soup on the go like that. Does turning the lid somehow set off a chemical reaction that makes the soup hot? Do they use tiny battery powered microwave ovens? Do they just plunge the container into a convenient nearby hot spring? Or do they not heat it all and just drink it cold? In which case they could've had a V8!

We have seen the future and it is wireless, well except for that ugly broadband cable strung down the back wall of my house and in through the basement window forcing me to keep the window open a crack all winter, which Comcast refuses to fix even though it was their technician deliberately ran the cable in through a broken window to save himself drilling a hole in the brick wall. When I got the broken window fixed, the window guy had to disconnect the cable, open the window, run it out and reconnect it. Wireless-shmireless.

Speaking of wirelessness and non sequiturs in the media, I was listening to the BBC news on my local NPR station in the middle of the night and heard Jeremy Wagstaff's commentary on VoIP. Somehow hearing someone talking about packet switching versus circuit switching on the radio in the middle of the night made me feel slightly less marginal. OK, so he didn't mention fax over IP, which is what makes my family's eyes glaze over when they ask me about work during family gatherings, but still, it gives me the feeling that finally after 30 years of being so far ahead of the curve that any shop talk I might make at the table was incomprehensible I'm now enough behind the curve to fit in with the main stream.

Of course, my brain is now so thoroughly addled by aging and repeated burnout and information overload that I didn't quite grasp how the fact that people have ditched their landlines and switched to cellphones made for improved VoIP connections. Wagstaff quotes Andy Abramson: "a lot of people (at least in North America) have ditched their landline telephones for cellphones. This means people are ready for other ways to make phone calls." I can see how that makes for more acceptance of different phone technology but how does it make the quality of VoIP calls better? I think they missed a step in the transition from VoIP phones that plug into the USB port on your computer to wireless VoIP phones (VOW) becoming as common as cellphones. WiFi is gonna have to become way more ubiquitous and/or there's gonna hafta be a new wireless broadband Internet technology to support all those teenagers yakking on mobile phones and IM'ing them at the same time.

Come to think of it, just a couple weeks ago I heard, also on the BBC news I believe, though it might have been on some NPR show, that only 57% of Americans have mobile phones. That seemed astoundingly low (or mayber it was 67% -- still low) given how everybody I see in the course of the day seems to be talking on one. I think the penetration is much higher in China. Even four years ago when I was there it seemed like all Chinese must be issued cellphones at birth. Even homeless people had them. I can only imagine they're even more common there now. Of course, I was in big cities: Beijing, Chengdu, Lhasa. I don't know about the rural areas. Do they have cellphone dead spots in the rural areas like we do here in Massachusetts? I mean there's been a deadspot in Groton for 20 years. Actually my old Motorola bag phone thru Cellular One worked once or twice on the Groton/Ayer line but not routinely. Verizon has slightly better coverage but it still disappears in parts of Groton, Littleton, Harvard, and even, somewhat ironically, Acton that former home of zillions of networking and telecom startups.

So here I am musing on wireless soup over IP on New Year's Eve instead of reflecting on the year just past. But I already mentioned in my Thanksgiving entry that here in the embedded life in the bluest blue state this year meant that the Ex-Pat returned from the non-peace zone, the Red Sox won the World Series, and the Beach Boys are one among many gay couples now legally married in the eyes of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It's been one heckuva year!

 [After I wrote this entry I saw an ad for a cellular to VoIP bridging device. So that would make the jump from ubiquitous cellular to ubiquitous VoIP more comprehensible. Maybe I'm falling further behind than I thought, not knowing such a device existed.]


Today's Reading
The Highland Jaunt: A Study of James Boswell and Samuel Johnson upon their Highland and Hebridean Tour of 1773 by Moray McLaren

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan