Emergency Texting

The American government is scheduled to be text messaging you in a couple of years, but these messages obviously won’t resemble the majority of the estimated 48 billion or so text messages that are sent each month. The Commercial Mobile Alert System or CMAS, has been approved by Federal regulators to utilize text messaging to send emergency alerts.

Low Cost Laptops

There’s a new breed of laptops powered by open source software. Heard of the Asus EEE, the OLPC XO, the HP 2133, or the Everex Cloudbook? Many of these are subnotebooks, designed to be very portable, weighing under 3lbs, and powered by Linux to keep costs down and surf the the web and perform basic productivity tasks more efficiently.

Maryland Computer Services Tax

In November of last year, the Maryland General Assembly passed the Tax Reform Act of 2007, which would expand Maryland’s six percent sales and use tax to “computer services.” This tax is planned to go into effect on July first. There is concern that, with the mobility of IT services, that IT jobs will relocate to neighboring states such as Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Virginia to avoid these taxes. Mario speaks with Tom Loveland, CEO of Mind Over Machines, and founder of the Maryland Computer Services Association. Find out more at Fight the Tech Tax.

Going Beyond Politician Generated Content

The Internet has played a large roll in disseminating poltical information quickly. According to the Pew Research Center, nearly a quarter of Americans say they regularly learn something about the campaign from the internet, more than double the amount of people from 2004 and forty-two percent of those aged 18-29 regularly learn about the campaign from the internet, making it the number one information source for that age demographic. We’ve seen a candidate like Ron Paul, who gets the least exposure on television, raise the most amount of money during the last quarter. He is also the only Republican candidate to increase his fundraising totals in every quarter of 2007 thanks in part to his supporters’ use of social news sites like Digg and viral videos. Additionally, new sites like Maplight.org are allowing users to examine the connection between campaign contributions and legislative votes, going beyond the official politican blogs and online videos to portray a more transparent view of the candidates.