IPv6 rollout is still inefficient with problems ahead, but there is slow progress.
Read the article - posted 2013-01-04
Here are my slides (PDF, 2.7 MB) for my lightning talk at the internet new year's 2013 event later today. It's in Dutch with English subtitles!
You can read the full story at Ars Technica: IPv6 takes one step forward, IPv4 two steps back in 2012.
Permalink - posted 2013-01-10
Image link - posted 2013-01-20
We speculate on the properties of a rumored Apple "iWatch."
Read the article - posted 2013-02-18
Image link - posted 2013-06-29
When I get the new computer, I guess I'll have to buy a second GE adapter so I can transfer data between the two computers at the highest possible speed. There are now 10/100/1000 Ethernet - USB3 adapters. Those should give me full GE performance on the new computer that will have USB3, but in the meantime something better than wifi using USB2 on my current machine.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-05
It's that time of year when people tend to go on vacation, and although data roaming in Europe is now slightly less expensive, it's still not cheap, so here's a link to my Ars Technica story on how to use your iPhone without a data plan.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-05
Twenty years ago today, Peter Steiner's now iconic cartoon was published in the New Yorker. Of course with all the tracking and spying, on the internet everyone knows you're a dog these days.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-05
Looks like draining the oceans would be quite beneficial to us Netherlanders!
Read the article - posted 2013-07-09
Five years ago I turned this site into a blog. I used Apple's iWeb software, thinking this would make it easier to update the site than crafting HTML by hand. And it was, for a while. But iWeb has been dead for quite some time.
So I decided to relaunch the blog using a homegrown content management system (this makes it sound a lot bigger than it really is, trust me). With this, it's easier to fire off quick posts or just link to somewhere else with a comment. The title of these posts starts with a →.
To avoid scaring people away with large swaths of text, the homepage just shows a short intro by default. You have to click on the red triangle to expand the full text of a post in place. Because the text is already loaded, you'll see it immediately. You can of course also click on the title to see the post on a separate page.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-09
Image link - posted 2013-07-09
It just occurs to me that Google may have shot itself in the foot by discontinuing its Google Reader RSS reader service, because now more people will do their Google searching without being logged in.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-12
Image link - posted 2013-07-14
Between 31 july and 4 august OHM2013 ("Observe. Hack. Make.") will take place in Holland. I'll have a talk on the 4th at 16.00 about how network protocols that let you run your own server foster freedom, while monolithic services such as Facebook and Twitter do the opposite.
Decisions, decisions: update your iOS apps now for iOS 7 and be ready on day one, or wait until new iPhones and iPads arrive and incorporate support for a possible new screen size/resolution in the update?
Read the article - posted 2013-07-17
For years, I always used to include an If-Modified-Since header in my PHP scripts in order to allow their output to be cached by web browsers. Turns out, it takes a bit more work.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-18
Gedeon Maheux of the Iconfactory makes the point that it takes a lot of developer time to create new versions of apps and then asks:
how willing would you be to re-purchase your favorite apps if they are optimized for iOS 7? Look at your device’s home screen and go down the list of apps you use most and ask yourself if you could live without it once you upgrade. I think that most users (at least those that matter to developers) would answer that they would gladly pay again if it means having the latest and greatest version of their favorite apps, at least I would hope so.
I hope so too. I would much rather pay for new iOS 7 optimized versions of my favorite apps than be stuck halfway there because of lack of time/money to do the work to get fully on board with iOS 7 and/or the need to keep supporting iOS 6.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-18
Image link - posted 2013-07-20
Turns out that there is a video book review of my BGP book. It came out three years ago but I just found it. At 59 seconds it's short and sweet, so if you have Flash installed, check it out.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-21
Image link - posted 2013-07-21
My homegrown CMS now lets me make posts go live automatically at a predetermined date/time.
Read the article - posted 2013-07-25
Image link - posted 2013-07-31
These are the slides for my talk "federation fosters freedom" at OHM2013. (PDF.)
Read the article - posted 2013-08-03
A month ago, I got a message from the OHM2013 speakerdesk:
Since you you'll be giving a presentation, lecture or workshop at OHM2013 (for grownups), we'd like to ask you; do you feel like giving a little talk about your subject for kids?
Thinking that my talk (about federation of online services, where you can have a choice of service providers or even run your own server rather than be beholden to big companies like Google, Facebook and Twitter (PDF of the slides, explanation in Dutch) might be a tad too abstract for kids age 6 - 10, I proposed something else instead: writing secret messages in invisible ink.
Read the article - posted 2013-08-05
Last week at OHM2013, Bert Hubert had an interesting talk: What you need to know about what you eat: health & weight. He started with a slightly simpler version of this graph that show how we all started getting a lot fatter since the mid-1980s:
These are some photos I took at OHM2013.
Also see my photos from HAL2001 and HIP'97, WTH2005, HAR2009, and SHA2017.
Read the article - posted 2013-08-08
These are some photos I took at OHM2013.
Read the article - posted 2013-08-08
Image link - posted 2013-08-14
Recently I noticed when I delete photos from the iPhoto trash, iPhoto doesn't necessarily delete the image files from its library. My iPhoto library is the single biggest thing on my MacBook Air's hard drive, and it's the reason I had to pay extra for a 256GB SDD rather than use the stock 128GB one. I'm in the habit of taking a bunch of shots of every subject to make sure at least one has the correct focus, exposure, and is level. All this is to say I have a lot of extra photos that I need to get rid of.
But as I noticed, sometimes iPhoto doesn't delete photos when you empty the iPhoto trash. It just removes them from its database so they're no longer visible without deleting the actual image files. Those files still use up disk space—to the tune of 10 GB in my case.
So, after a little tinkering, here's how to get rid of those unwanted photos and reclaim that disk space in eight easy steps.
Read the article - posted 2013-08-19
On Tuesday October 8, 2013, I'll be teaching the new IPv6 routing course for the first time. I'm very excited about this new training course!
Several times a year I teach two training courses in cooperation with NL-ix: a BGP training course and an IPv6 training course. The thing that makes our BGP training course unique is that half of it consists of the participants getting their hands dirty configuring BGP on a Cisco router. But until now, the IPv6 course was basically just me explaining IPv6 and showing a few examples.
But we now have a new, improved IPv6 training course: the IPv6 routing course. Just like the BGP course, people who participate get the chance to configure IPv6 on a Cisco router.
Read the article - posted 2013-08-20
On Tuesday October 8, 2013, I'll be teaching the new IPv6 routing course for the first time. I'm very excited about this new training course!
Read the article - posted 2013-08-20
Image link - posted 2013-08-21
Over on gogo6.com (through the .vantronix newsletter) Bruce Sinclair asks and attempts to answer the question When do we Turn Off the Lights on IPv4? They actually did a poll on gogoNET. The answers form a beautiful bell curve...
Read the article - posted 2013-08-21
Yesterday on the penultimate day of the Internaational Vuurwerk Festival Scheveningen 2013 I took some photos with my new Canon Powershot SX280 camera. These are the results.
Read the article - posted 2013-08-24
Image link - posted 2013-09-06
Anyone who's been reading my stuff on Ars Technica will know that I love podcasts. I'm always adding new ones to my rotation and retiring ones that have run their course for one reason or another. So I thought I'd share some of my current favorites with you.
Read the article - posted 2013-09-13
According to Olivier Bonaventure, Apple is using Multipath TCP (MPTCP) so that iOS 7 devices can communicate with the Siri servers over both Wi-Fi and 3G/LTE at the same time. If you want some background, see this article in the IETF Journal about MPTCP that I wrote in 2009.
Read the article - posted 2013-09-19
According to Olivier Bonaventure, Apple is using Multipath TCP (MPTCP) so that iOS 7 devices can communicate with the Siri servers over both Wi-Fi and 3G/LTE at the same time. If you want some background, see this article in the IETF Journal about MPTCP that I wrote in 2009.
Read the article - posted 2013-09-19
When the iPhone 5 was released last year, Apple didn't bother with any cases or docks. Third parties certainly addressed the lack of cases, but as far as I can tell, there were never any good docks. But now there's the iPhone 5s dock, which is also compatible with the iPhone 5. So I got on my bicycle and went to the nearest Apple Store to get one. Read on to see if it was worth € 29 and cycling 63 km.
Read the article - posted 2013-09-22
In the past, Google has created alternatives to widely used networking protocols such as SPDY in order to deliver search results as fast as possible. Apple is now doing something similar by having Siri use Multipath Transmission Control Protocol (MPTCP). MPTCP is an extension to the TCP protocol that's used for about 85 percent of all Internet traffic. Generally, it allows TCP to operate over multiple paths at the same time. However, Apple seems to use MPTCP for one very specific purpose: to allow Siri to switch between Wi-Fi and 3G or LTE as quickly and seamlessly as possible.
Read the article - posted 2013-09-26
English translation by the RIPE NCC of the Dutch version written for Surfnet by Sander Steffann and me.
Permalink - posted 2013-09-30
As an avid podcast listener, I felt a strong urge to dispense some advice after listening to Marco Arment talk about his ideas for his upcoming Overcast podcast player application for iOS. First a rant about iTunes 11.1.
Read the article - posted 2013-09-30
This weekend, I was in the neighborhood of Radio Kootwijk, so I took advantage of that opportunity to take some photos of Radio Kootwijk gebouw A ("building A"). This is the site of a big shortwave radio transmitter that allowed the Netherlands to keep in contact with Indonesia, which was a colony of the Netherlands at that time. The time being the 1920s. I love this kind of art deco architecture.
Read the article - posted 2013-10-04
I bought Apple laptops in 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008 and 2011. So that's one every two years on average. In 2008, I learned the hard way that I really need to have a decent backup computer in case my primary one fails. So a while back I decided that I should probably buy a new computer every two years, and keep the previous one as a backup for another two years. So I'm due for a new laptop this year.
Which brings up the question: is 2013 a good year for buying a new Mac laptop?
Read the article - posted 2013-10-09
Originally, I intended to write a story under the title "saying goodbye to the optical drive". But after a few minutes of research, it turns out that, in my particular case, the optical drive may be on its way out, but it hasn't quite left the premises yet, and not just because I may need to rip a DVD or CD once or twice a year. Let me tell you a tale of backups and storage management.
Read the article - posted 2013-10-14
Image link - posted 2013-10-19
We have new dates for the BGP and IPv6 routing training courses:
See the NL-ix website for details.
Read the article - posted 2013-10-22
Have you ever wondered when losing weight, where the weight goes? Or what the chemical formula for body fat is? Even if you already know, this is a very interesting video:
The mathematics of weight loss: Ruben Meerman at TEDxQUT
Read the article - posted 2013-10-23
Image link - posted 2013-10-26
No more bottlenecks: the late 2013 MacBook Pro reviewed
Over the next few days, I'll publish my review of the new MacBook Pro¹ here in several installments. This is the first one, which looks at battery life.
Read the article - posted 2013-10-28
No more bottlenecks: the late 2013 MacBook Pro reviewed
Over the next few days, I'll publish my review of the new MacBook Pro here in several installments. This is the second one, looking at CPU performance.
Read the article - posted 2013-10-30
No more bottlenecks: the late 2013 MacBook Pro reviewed
Over the next few days, I'll publish my review of the new 13" MacBook Pro here in several installments. This is the third one, looking at the MacBook Pro's I/O ports and wireless networking. Also see the earlier instalments about battery life and CPU performance.
Read the article - posted 2013-10-31
The Dutch government has an emergency alert system called NL-Alert. With this, they can send alerts to all cell phones in a region using the cell broadcast feature. So unlike SMS messages, everyone who has them enabled in the deployed region gets them immediately, even if the network is otherwise congested and without the government knowing the phone numbers in question.
As of iOS 7 the iPhone can now receive these alerts, as you can see with today's test in this Youtube video.
Read the article - posted 2013-11-04
No more bottlenecks: the late 2013 MacBook Pro reviewed
Over the next few days, I'll publish my review of the new 13" MacBook Pro here in several installments. This is the fourth one, looking at the MacBook Pro's audio capabilities. Also see the earlier instalments about battery life, CPU performance and ports and networking
Read the article - posted 2013-11-08
This is the last instalment of my review of the 13" late 2013 MacBook Pro. Now also available in ePub format, for reading in (for instance) iBooks.
Read the article - posted 2013-11-11
Image link - posted 2013-11-15
My latest Ars Technica post, extolling the virtues of the IBM Model M keyboard. This got a lot of comments on Ars and on Twitter, but so far nobody has picked up on the easter egg. Have a good look at the photo (larger version).
Read the article - posted 2013-11-18
Image link - posted 2013-11-19
When you're at the beach in The Hague, you can see this oil rig 12 km away:
Read the article - posted 2013-11-20
My review of iWork '13 for Ars Technica. I tried to be open to the new incarnations of Pages, Numbers and Keynote, but that quickly went out the window as I kept discovering new problems. But I still got called out for being too generous by a commenter.
Read the article - posted 2013-11-25
RFC 7059, "A Comparison of IPv6-over-IPv4 Tunnel Mechanisms", was just published. This is a document outlining the various way to tunnel IPv6 packets over (under?) the IPv4 internet. I am one of the three co-authors, together with Sander Steffann and Rick van Rein. We were commissioned to write this document by SURFnet.
Read the article - posted 2013-11-27
S. Steffann, I. van Beijnum, R. van Rein
November 2013
Last month I posted a picture of the lightning cable I got for € 6.29 at my local super market—a third of what Apple charges.
At first, it seemed to work well except for this warning that pops up when I connect it to my iPhone 5...
Read the article - posted 2013-12-16
Interesting presentation by Marc Heuse at Hack in the Box 2012: bugs in IPv6 implementations, differences between IPv4 and IPv6 filtering by large websites, discovering IPv6 systems without brute force address scanning. Did you know that on 63% of networks the ::1 address replies to pings on at least one subnet? And then the hacker security researcher knows which subnets are live.
Video at Youtube (64 minutes).
Read the article - posted 2013-12-18