side note:
did you know the history of telephone companies in the usa? i was reading about it.
(someone smart left a book for me to read) =D
it's so fascinating. before the depression, it wasn't profitable for major
telecoms to go to rural communities, especially in the midwest. they disrespected the
farmers and thought they were yokels...
so the midwest used to be pretty left wing too (and the source of a lot of unrest with
the farmers etc), so there was this big tradition of DIY telephone and telegraphs. someone
gave me this history to read, it was so neat! it's weird that nobody talks
about this history now. it's like it was forgotten!
it's so weird how all these rabblerousers and farmers from the midwest are totally
buried. nobody learns about it in us history, especially kids in Kansas.
it reminds me of the indie network you are constructing at 510
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 6:14 PM, Anon195714 <anon195714(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Anthony, I know you didn't mean "no grids," but I was concerned that a
quick skim of this discussion by anyone who didn't know the material in depth, might
lead to the wrong conclusions.
For an example of the danger of over-centralization:
Consider the conversion of the public switched telephone network to VOIP, in light of the
desire on the part of telcos to reap a huge honking windfall by selling off their vast
real estate holdings. AT&T owns about 5,000 central offices, at least one in just
about every medium or larger city in the USA. Comcast has FIVE nationwide, and AT&T
would love to do likewise, and conversion to VOIP will accomplish just that.
I'm sure you know what it's called when you centralize something by a factor of
1,000 to 1:
"A high-value target."
Something that's just begging to be hit hard and taken out, by a crazed dictator or
an international terrorist group, or perhaps by a few sociopaths of the same kind who run
ID theft rings and bank-card skimmer rings, or perhaps by someone out for the sheer thrill
of smashing and wrecking.
The plans for the "smart power grid" will produce more high-value targets:
regional power control systems, centrally managed, all internet-connected and just daring
the assholes of the world to hit them.
Already, smart meters provide a tasty treat for predators. I'm aware of a couple of
vulnerabilities that haven't been published, that would enable a single person with a
grudge to black out a neighborhood for a couple of days. This situation will compound as
smart meters, smart grids, and stupid regulatory officials converge.
All of this over-centralization, and over-reliance on "smart" things, is
causing our entire society to crawl further and further out on a limb that
becomes more and more fragile every day. Sooner than later, something will break,
bigtime.
In a very practical sense, we have to be concerned with resilience.
About which more in my next post.
-G.
=====
On 13-03-26-Tue 5:28 PM, Anthony Di Franco wrote:
> To be clear, I don't mean to say "no grids!1!!1!!!" but just "use
large-scale grids only for what they're best for in the context of a broader
heterogeneous system, not for almost everything as they are now, and take into account in
a rigorous way overall system efficiency and other concerns like vulnerability to failures
both routine and rare and corruptibility of the social systems that grow up around the
technical systems."
>
> I remember discussing these points a few times in the past with you, George, and Hol,
and others around sudo room; might we like to get some documentation together on
interesting specifics? A section of the wiki maybe, where we can throw ideas up about the
details and see what sticks?
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 5:06 PM, Anon195714 <anon195714(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>> A lot of the arguement against power grids is ultimately rooted in opposition to
having our energy supply controlled by distant corporations whose decisions are not
sustainable and not in our interests.
>>
>> I agree that over-dependence on greedy corporations for vital infrastructure,
merely for the sake of convenience, is a shortcut to servitude. Google is the worst
offender, with its seductive Gmail and Google Voice offering "convenience" in
exchange for intensive and intrusive surveillance, not only of
those who use the services, but of everyone they communicate with. (Worst of all, Google
Glass: "become a volunteer surveillance drone!")
>>
>> The model we should be looking toward, to manage the power grid, is one of
municipally-owned transmission infrastructure (the wires along the streets), and
diversification of power producers (from individual households to the existing power
utilities). Everyone would be paid the same rate for power they "upload" to the
grid, and everyone would pay the same rate for power they "download." This
would immediately level the playing field and provide an enormous incentive for all manner
of renewable and new-tech power generation.
>>
>> Further, the municipal ownership model should also apply to the wired telecoms
grid: telephone and internet. (Even your mobile device is only "wireless" for
the last half mile at most; the rest of the way it's as wired as my antique dial
phones.) All of these things are using the public rights-of-way along the streets; they
are arguably public rights-of-way in themselves, and as such, should be owned by the
public.
>>
>> The municipal internet of electricity would entail each local power producer
(household or larger) having small storage capacity on-site, and a switching synchronized
inverter to connect to the grid. An onboard microprocessor with an analog voltage sensors
would monitor line power to determine when power should be uploaded to the grid or
downloaded from the grid. Simple "net metering" would keep track of the
billing.
>>
>> The small decentralized battery packs would act primarily as buffers, to level
out power production and consumption among users. Overnight and over multiple cloudy
days, and during peak demand hours, the decentralized solar
would be supplemented by other power sources such as micro-reactors and natural gas
turbines.
>>
>> The uniform pricing mechanism would prevent predatory "arbitrage" of
electricity, and provide the incentive to install solar panels on every solar-accessible
flat surface, even on bus shelters and other street kiosks.
>>
>> The point-of-production microprocessors would be isolated from the internet to
prevent cyber-attacks against the grid: the best kind of "smart grid" is one
that self-regulates locally without being vulnerable globally.
>>
>> I should also mention: Yes, electric automobiles can provide household power
storage in the absence of having a grid, but a) not everyone owns or even wants an
automobile, b) if you've drained your car battery pack overnight to power your house,
it's not available the next morning to get you to work, and
c) even if everyone could afford a new electric car, there are good reasons to reduce car
ownership and usage in favor of bicycles, scooters, motorcycles, buses, and trains.
>>
>> Beyond that, we should not be destroying our civic infrastructure in favor of
requiring everyone to have their own i-Things or do without. Public phones, public
bathrooms (do you really want to carry an i-Pee around?), public drinking fountains,
public benches for sitting, public transport, etc.: are all
civic goods that make the public sphere more user-friendly and accessible. A public power
grid is another example, as with public water supply, public sewage treatment, and refuse
disposal: life without those things would be worse than miserable.
>>
>> Don't destroy it: reclaim it, revision it, and rebuild it.
>>
>> -G.
>>
>>
>> =====
>>
>>
>>
>> On 13-03-26-Tue 3:41 PM, Anthony Di Franco wrote:
>>> Production of alternative energy can be and for most reasons probably should
be much less centralized, equivalently, smaller-scale, than production of energy mostly is
now. (Off-grid, as you mention, but very literally.)
>>> Large-scale up front + large, complex distribution networks is revealed as an
obsolete architecture; large scale distribution networks become relatively less important,
so even if the answer to your question is no, which it probably isn't given
crowdfunding and other disintermediated finance gaining momentum, it's moot, or at
least of much less relative importance.
>>> Put another way, when the most important goal is maximum efficiency rather
than maximum centralization, large upfront capital investment + large, complex
distribution network is stupid; proper accounting of all costs and benefits in a global
rather than piecewise local sense reveals this now for agriculture, manufacturing, energy,
...
>>> Even now, buffering between supply and demand is a constraint on grid
architecture leading to great economic demand within the
current paradigm for distributed storage / production of energy according to someone who
came through sudo room whose name escapes me.
>>> This loosely-drafted email brought to you by the slogan, "localize
production, virtualize everything else" and the acronym STEMI compression.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 3:17 PM, Romy Ilano <romy(a)snowyla.com> wrote:
>>>> Is it possible to create alternative energy distribution networks
(biofuels/solar/ wind etc) that replace mainstream petrol and natural gas based energy
without a large financial sector?
>>>>
>>>> the vc system that funds these alternative energy start-ups piggy backs
off the investment banks, etc. and big private equity and institutional investment funds.
vcs are like a fly on the @ss of a financial hippo.
>>>>
>>>> I haven't heard people discuss off-grid that much in
the tech talks I've been to( which are excellent). Is there a
conversation here that would show how off grid is a viable alternative, even if it's
not a big money solution?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 1:56 PM, <hol(a)gaskill.com> wrote:
>>>>> this talk about imports and exports always reminds me of energy flow
>>>>>
>>>>> compare 2011
>>>>>
https://www.llnl.gov/news/newsreleases/2012/Oct/images/25306_LLNLUSEnergy20…
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> with 2002
>>>>>
http://www.hubbertpeak.com/us/images/us_energyflow2002.jpg
>>>>>
>>>>> fascinating
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>>
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