China: Hijacking Satellite TV Signals

AP – Hackers hijacked satellite signals –

Viewers complained that their TV screens went blank for nearly two hours or showed anti-government messages for 30 to 40 seconds Tuesday evening…

Given the minimal amounts of transparency in that area, the details are sketchy. Interesting attempt however.

03. May 2007 by Shlok Vaidya
Leave a comment

Politics Industry Drops The Ball – Again

This is indicative of a trend I touched on earlier. Points to remember: Joe Anthony is the empowered individual; Obama + Campaign staff are indicative of an arcane political industry that does not get it. They simply can not have both: empowered masses transmit their message AND maintain top-down control.

03. May 2007 by Shlok Vaidya
Categories: Thinking | Leave a comment

Review: Brave New War

“I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.” – Wayne Gretzkey, and the header of John Robb’s personal web log.

I once told John Robb that he was too far ahead of the curve, and pointed out that the logic for his thinking on the Global Guerrillas weblog was simply not diffused among the general public. With this book, Brave New War: The Next Stage of Terrorism and the End of Globalization,  he renders that concern irrelevant. Robb brings in a wide variety of sources and, in the tradition of John Boyd, creates an impressive “snowmobile” – a coherent replicatable synthesis of ideas – and does it well. For a full listing, refer to Mark Safranski’s excellent review.

This is the first real text on next generation warfare designed for the general population and it sets the bar high for following acts. It is smart, it is a short read, and it will change your thinking. It also embraces the new paradigm of authorship, in that Robb, by providing the logic for his thinking in the book and tracing new developments and specific examples online, is able to add value to both his paper and electronic streams. For the first time the leading war theorist is directly accessible to his customers. A sign of the times I suppose. Robb understands this and makes engaging in both print and web an incredible experience.

The initial examples offered are not new to readers of Global Guerrillas, and so I first zoomed in onthe thought provoking discussion of American air power being confused for strategy during Desert Storm. By building his case off the thread of Effect Based Operations Robb allows for the normal variant of strategic thinker to change vectors instead of starting from scratch.

This is very important, because at its very core, the book is a catalyst, a conversation starter, a first but pivotal step in assessing and adapting paradigms. The burdens of security are increasingly being off-loaded onto the shoulders of the average individual and those around him. Robb wants us to understand and embrace this change. He understands that there will be as many different approaches to resiliency as there are groups involved, and so he offers us the basics, a platform, to do with what we will.

James Fallows, in the foreword, seems to agree with this assessment:

I don’t agree with every one of the perspectives and recommendations offered here, and I expect many readers will find areas where they differ from Robb. But I am very glad to have read this book, and I expect others will be, too.

We would all do well to understand the logic and the framework John Robb offers in Brave New War, because our enemies have proven, without a doubt, that they do. 

02. May 2007 by Shlok Vaidya
Categories: Thinking | 4 comments

What Should Superempowered Individuals Do?

Terry Frazier makes an important point:

Current futurists and military analysts like John Robb (my source for the original story) are busily deconstructing the projected fall of the nation-state, peak oil,  the rise of non-state entities, etc all of which is important. But no one seems to be thinking about my problems in the way that Davidson and Rees-Mogg did – deciphering what all this chaos means to the individual – and more importantly what to do about it.

Some of this concern is mitigated by a point Robb makes in his book, that we are in an era of superempowered groups, not yet in that era of empowered individuals.

That stated, I too want to see the conversation move to what individuals can do to help shape thee communities Robb focuses on from the bottom up. For example, a very  basic step would be to move off grid, or to set up collective group-buys of off-grid systems and the like.

02. May 2007 by Shlok Vaidya
Categories: Thinking | 1 comment

30 Days With An AppleTV

Interesting enough. Still trying to figure out whether I need one or not.

02. May 2007 by Shlok Vaidya
Leave a comment

← Older posts

Newer posts →