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August 21, 2007

"Trust" Bonus Track

I've previously mentioned my Networkshop 35 presentation in Exeter, and the fact that some of the material I prepared went unused because of lack of time.

As an experiment, I've narrated the unused slides and they are now available for download in one of the following formats:

The presentation is a little under 20 minutes long. Please let me have feedback if you find this kind of thing useful, or for that matter if you find my voice too soporific or annoying. I'm considering doing more along these lines, and it would help to know in advance whether I'd be wasting my time.

Gearheads can read on for technical details…

I've been meaning to get round to this project for some time; what finally prompted me to complete it was the release of Apple's Keynote '08 presentation software, which finally allows recording an audio track synchronised with slide timings. I'm sure the PowerPoint users in the audience are snickering at this point; they've had this ability for ages.

Of course, I ran into a couple of bugs along the way, the most annoying one being that you can't export a movie from a presentation that you've backed up at any point, for example to re-do a slide you fluffed delivery of.

In any case, it turns out that I make enough mistakes in narration to need a lot of post-production work to avoid sounding like an idiot with a terminal respiratory disease. So my current workflow for each major section goes a little like this:

On the hardware side, I'm using a Sennheiser e815S microphone and an M-Audio Fast Track USB interface. Which is to say, I'm using the cheapest non-junk bundle I could find a year or so back. While this is far from professional studio audio standard in any sense, it is a huge step above either a built-in microphone or one of those desktop microphones that used to come with PC sound cards.

The biggest problems I've had with sound quality from this setup have all been rookie mistakes; for example, the golden ears among my readership will easily discern a quality jump in the recording at the start of the "Trust" section. Before that point, I had the microphone on a metal desk stand which meant that it was picking up keyboard and other noise through the stand. From "Trust" onwards, the microphone was mounted on a photographic tripod pretending to be a microphone boom by having its legs splayed out in interesting ways and weighted with lumps of metal. Far from ideal, but it makes a surprisingly large difference to the sound. If I do any more of this kind of thing, top of my list is a proper boom-style microphone stand.

Posted by Ian at 1:15 PM in Identity | Permalink

August 7, 2007

Insecurity Excuse Bingo

In the wake of the Californian voting machine review, Matt Blaze and Jutta Degener invite us to play Security Public Relations Excuse Bingo:

(Via Matt Blaze.)

Posted by Ian at 6:19 PM in Security | Permalink

August 5, 2007

Ranum on Codependence

Marcus Ranum has started podcasting. The second episode in his Rear Guard podcast is a short but nicely put together rant explaining the parlous state of computer security today in terms of a dysfunctional relationship between practitioners and their organisations:

It's clear that security will be exactly as bad as it can possibly be while still allowing senior managers to survive. Whenever it gets across that line — worse than it can possibly be — there will be a brief fire-drill in order to duct tape things back together again until next time.

Last week a friend remarked, after hearing one of my long rants on an unrelated subject, that I had a very cynical view of the situation. "Thank you", I replied, quite seriously. Marcus Ranum has a very cynical view of the security landscape: not completely without rays of hope, but nevertheless aware that a lot of bad things happen out of pure unenlightened self-interest.

Posted by Ian at 6:20 PM in Security | Permalink