Skip to content

Results for: philippine internet time server

December 25, 2011

Merry Christmas to all, especially the winners!

It’s been a hectic evening as we close in on the final hours of our YugaTech Christmas Give-away. Unfortunately, our last blast this evening created a huge number of new entries in the comments that the server eventually broke down.

Continue Reading

December 14, 2011

Apple iPhone 4S Review

Apple’s newest iteration of the iPhone was greeted with mixed reactions from the market. A lot has been said, both praises and disappointments, about what it should have been in the first place. Since the local launch of the iPhone 4S with Globe and Smart is just a couple of days away, let me share with you what I think of this phone. Check out our iPhone 4S review after the jump.

Continue Reading

December 07, 2011

Huawei E586 Review

The HSPA+ network of Smart and Globe are continuously growing and getting wider coverage around the country. Devices like the Huawei E586 maximizes the speed of the HSPA+ network (just like the ZTE MF60). Check out our full review after the jump.

Continue Reading

September 08, 2011

ZTE MF60 HSPA+ Pocket WiFi Review

We featured this HSPA+ capable mobile hotspot from ZTE a few weeks ago and we’ve finally gotten a review unit to test. Like many other pocket WiFi (MiFi) devices before it, the ZTE MF60 is one pretty kick-ass unit. If only it were more affordable.

Continue Reading

December 29, 2010

Bandwidth caps explained, NTC endorsed

A recent draft memorandum by the NTC indicates some sort of service level agreement where ISPs are required to provide a minimum guaranteed speed on subscriptions as well as allow for daily bandwidth capping on subscribers.

Continue Reading

April 03, 2009

Odysseylive Reboots: Interview with Jay Fonacier

Starting this month, I will be doing regular feature interviews with local start-ups, internet entrepreneurs, executives of blue-chip companies and interesting web personalities to add to the mix of topics I’m covering for this blog. For this month, I’d like to check back on Odysseylive and talked to President & Managing Director, R. Jay Fonacier, and what he thinks of the digital music scene in the Philippines.

Continue Reading

December 28, 2008

3G vs. HSDPA: Does speed matter?

3G or HSDPA — most mobile users would not mind the difference these two have when it comes to connecting via mobile 3G internet. This is mainly because most people think 3G in the Philippines is slow anyway. I looked into this to see if the difference between 3G and HSDPA speeds really matter.

Continue Reading

March 15, 2008

NBN ZTE Project: A Closer Look

Now that the Bill of Quantities (BoQ) of the controversial ZTE National Broadband Network Project by the Philippine government has been released, I was asked to take a look and see what I make out of it. Here are my findings so far.

Continue Reading

October 11, 2006

Hosting & Terrorism on the Internet

Just read this article in the email about the issues on hosting terrorism-related sites and there has been growing concerns about it in the west. The Feds are actually already on top of it:

In August, the US government approached one of the largest domain registrars in the industry, eNom, to deal with the issue that domains can very easily be repointed at a moments notice. eNom, like other large registrars, maintain a set of DNS servers for the purpose of providing a quick and convenient mechanism from moving domains from ip address to ip address very quickly and conveniently. Changes on these DNS servers happen instantly instead of taking as much as 72 hours to propagate. This is great for consumers but a bit of an issue in fighting terroristic organizations.

In the eNom case, the domains in question were for the primary Hezbollah group in Lebanon and their sympathetic counterparts. The organization was able to maintain uptime on the domain by utilizing multiple providers and cycling through them as providers took content down. These end providers had no part in the sale of the domain but could be guilty of hosting the content. In this case, the authorities decided not to pursue the server providers but that did not mean that laws were not broken.

Now that’s something to look out for. I checked their SDN List (Special Designated Nationals) here (PDF) and found several names listed under Cotabato, Jolo Sulu, Basilan, Tawi-tawi, Zamboanga and even Manila, Philippines. There are at least 20 people listed there.

I am sure these laws covers us as our servers are located in the US. The consequences of non-compliance are serious. There are both criminal fines and jail time possible for those who do not comply with the law. Fines can reach $500,000 per offense and individuals can receive up to 20 years for failure to observe these laws.

November 29, 2005

Will podcasting pick up in the Philippines?

Somebody asked me that last week and I sort of said more on the negative side. Mostly, I’m optimistic when it comes to the area of blogging but with podcasts, I’m still a bit skeptical. I actually don’t know. Maybe in terms of podcast listeners, it would pick up fast, but not so much with the number of podcasters.

Here are some of the technical and not-so-technical reasons I had in mind:

  • As Leo Laporte once said in TWiT, podcasting is all about the “long tail”. Meaning, you get the precipitates in traffic. People could happen to visit your blog but not necessarily listen to your podcast.
  • Timeliness. Podcasts are not as fast as your regular blog. It takes time to record, edit and publish. Most of the time, it’s stale news or about last week’s issues.
  • Technical barriers. Not everybody has a mic or knows how to edit a recording and convert them to .H264 or MP3.
  • It just takes more effort. If a regular blogger can’t manage to post a single entry on a daily basis, much more for a podcast.
  • Podcasting is more than just the content, it’s about personality and delivery — and not every blogger has that. It’s basically an internet radio show.
  • ROI. Yes, there’s Fruitcast but that’s it. Even Diggnation and TWiT had a hard time coming up with revenues to offset their server costs. Imagine, the bandwidth for the TWiT RSS feed alone costs over $200 a month!

Well, these are inherent barriers actually and are not limited to the Philippines. However, if you add factors such as the number of people on dial-up which cannot easily download the podcast, the number of people accessing the net via internet cafes that have download restrictions, and the number of people accessing the net thru their work offices which do not have PC speakers or even sound cards for that matter — that just makes your potential audience a wee bit thinner.

Come to think of it, a lot of the long-standing Pinoy podcasts I’ve been listening to are not recorded in the Philippines. Despite that, I still hope I could add myself to the pinoy podcaster stats sometime soon.

[tags]free podcasts, ipod podcasts, video podcasts, vidcast[/tags]

August 02, 2005

The Philippines According to Blogs

Blogging is slowly becoming a popular alternative to mainstream media. Even mainstream media has already recognized blogging as a tool for gathering news while others even use blog entries to quote interviews in their news articles. The social phenomenon that is blogging has already made a significant change on how information is disseminated thru the internet.

Before we begin to examine the usual signs how blogging has crept into the arena of mainstream media, we need to understand what blogging is and how it came about.

A blog is a condensed term for weblog, commonly used to describe web sites that maintain an ongoing chronicle of information. Blogs range from the personal, technical, informational to the political, and can focus on one specific subject matter or a whole range of subjects.
Many blogs focus on a particular topic, such as “web design”, “politics”, “sports”, or “mobile technology”. Some are more eclectic, presenting links to all nature of other sites. And others are more like personal journals, presenting someone’s daily life and thoughts which most of them started off first.
Blogs have been around almost as internet was introduced in the Philippines in the early parts of 1995. During those times, the early bloggers didn’t have a name for what they were doing besides calling it a personal website or an online journal.

Back then, if you want to have your own blog, you’d have to learn the basics of HTML and a little bit of the technical aspects like FTP (File Transfer Protocol). Besides that, when one has to publish or update their site, it was done manually – editing the pages, adding links and pictures and then uploading the affected files or webpages. It was a tedious and time-consuming effort, added to that the scarcity of internet connectivity, updating a website or blog takes a great deal of effort and patience. Thus, the frequency of updates was scarce and nowhere near with what we enjoy today. Now, there are blogging tools and services which allow almost anyone who has internet connection to create their own blog in a matter of minutes.

Blogging became so phenomenal because of its viral effect – linking other related blogs, pointing to online sources and digging deep into the issue with a personal touch. It has democratized people thru the internet and allowed regular folks to express their own thoughts and opinions without censor or editorial filters which all professional journalists have go to thru before getting published. In a way, blogging is instant news delivered with a touch of personal opinion.

Blogs will not depose mainstream media, rather it will add to it. News media, despite it’s inherent credibility is still more often than not, bland and too objective. What blogs offer is a taste of personalized news coupled with reader interaction – something which traditional media lack.

In the Philippines, blogging has just begun, yet we now have several prominent people who use blogging as a tool to reach their audience and to freely express themselves.

Comm. Dondi Mapa of the CICT could probably be the first high-ranking government official to put up a public blog (http://1mjobs.blogspot.com). His blog aims to reach the relevant sectors and the general public to the importance of CICT in in generating jobs. The blog allows direct interaction with the readers and Comm. Mapa likewise gets suggestions and comments direct from his readers and the general public.

There is also a blog entitled “Philippine Debt Management Issues” (http://lowerphildebt.blogspot.com) which was published by former Philippine Treasurer, Nina Lasala. Her blog was meant to server as an open forum for investors, fellow finance officers, and other interested parties to discuss the state of Philippine Debt Management.

One of the most popular Filipino blogs today is HouseonaHill.net (www.houseonahill.net) of Connie Veneracion, a retired lawyer now currently staying at home and working full time with her blogs. Her blog topics spread from photography to politics. She also runs a cooking blog at PinoyCook.net which has been popular with a lot of OFWs around the world.

Dean Francis Alfar, a seven time Carlos Palanca Awardee, also runs his own personal and literary blog called “Notes from the Peranut Gallery” (deanalfar.blogspot.com). Jim Paredes of the Apo Hiking Society has been blogging since November 2003. His blog is entitled “Writing on Air” (http://haringliwanag.pansitan.net/).

Former Inquirer columnist Dean Jorge Bacobo was the first Filipino journalist who started to blog (deanjorgebocobo.blogspot.com) though he has not been publishing anything on his blog for a while now. Joey Ararilla (http://babelmachine.blogspot.com/) of Inq7.net now holds that spot. Manuel L. Quezon III, also a columnist of Inquirer and curator of the Ayala Museum, also has a blog at www.quezon.ph/blog as well as technology columnist Chin Wong (hwww.info.com.ph/~chinwong/) of the Manila Standard (www.manilastandardonline.com).

Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) has also recently put up their very own blog at www.pcij.com/blog. For some months now, Inq7.net (www.inq7.net) has been maintaining a blog-hybrid on their news website, entitled “Talking Points”. They also ran a section featuring interviews with regular bloggers, YOU Blog Addict (http://you.inq7.net/gear/index.htm), and another one for HackenSlash (www.hackenslash.net/gameblog/), the game blog. Likewise, Manila Bulletin Online (www.mb.com.ph) also created a feature in their Technology section specifically for blogging and Filipino bloggers called “Blog-O-Rama”.

The blog portal “The Philippines According to Blogs” (www.pinoyblog.com) is a collaborative blog that aims to serve as a starting point for any Filipino blogger and even regular blog readers to explore the Philippine blogging scene. The PinoyBlog portal enables regular blog members to re-publish a short summary of their entries with links pointing back to their own blog site. Likewise, casual readers will only need to browse to one site, read the summaries and click on the entries which interest them. This blog aggregation service is what converges the bloggers and their readers in the portal which in turn creates the blog community.

Last May 7, 2005, the 1st Philippine Blog Summit (www.iblogph.org) was held at the NISMED Center of UP Diliman. Over 150 bloggers and blog enthusiasts attended the summit which was covered by news media GMA 7 and ABC 5. This event initiated the evangelization of blogging in all sectors of society. Prominent speakers and presentors at the summit included Comm. Dondi Mapa, Dean Alfar, the delegates from Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ).

Though blogging is still in it’s infancy in the Philippines, we may someday find more and more people, especially those from the government sector, to use weblogs as a tool to reach their constituents. Presidential candidates in the recent US elections have their own blogs that acts as a marketing tool and a portal to for their constituents during the election period. Who knows, maybe some time in the near future, the President of the Philippines will also have a blog of her own?

April 06, 2005

About

How did it all started?!

I was about to graduate from my degree (circa 1999) in Chemistry and Computer Engineering at the Ateneo de Manila University. Everybody in our class were applying for jobs and taking exams from several big companies like Intel, P&G, Accenture, Canon, IberPacific (now Soluziona). To make things more convenient, we all made ourselves personal websites using a web server that was dedicated to our class. Thus, my first URL was something like http://balot.admu.edu.ph/yuga and it contained some profile about me and a copy of my resume.

I was still editing my site using pico on a Linux terminal then and accessing my emails thru pine. The rest, they say, is history.

Why “Yuga”?

Most people I know now or who have known about me thru the internet calls me “yuga”. It’s a long story but as far as I can remember, it was one my dorm mates at the Cervini Residence Halls in Ateneo way back in college who started it all.

Most of the 200 or so residents of the dorm then were from down south, just like me. A good percentage of us were either from Cebu, Cagayan de Oro and a few neighboring provinces like Davao, Cotabato and Zamboanga. Only as few were from Bacolod or Iloilo. I was, allegedly, the first and only from the island-province of Guimaras — a small isle between Iloilo City (Panay Island) and Bacolod City (Negros Occidental).

Despite the cultural diversity and social differences, I managed to sneak my native tongue amongst the dozens of languages being spoken — Ilonggo (my local dialect is Kinaray-a). Though I can understand Cebuano/Bisaya, I spoke Ilonggo most of the time, and quite often inserting Ilonggo expressions and slangs in between Taglish conversations. That got me the nickname of “yuga”, meaning — an expression of disbelief or amazement, as in “really?!”, “ows?!” or “talaga?!”

Not long after that, everyone started addressing me as “yuga”. About a year later, only a handful knew me by my real name – Abraham (from US Pres. Lincoln).

That was it! I got stuck with Yuga, until now. :D

Why “Abraham”?.

I was born and raised in the small town of Poblacion, Nueva Valencia in Guimaras on February 22, 1978. My grandmother (from my father’s side) thought it was Abraham Lincoln’s birthday that day so she suggested I’d be called the same. My mom, who was an avid fan of Ryan Cayabyab, at the same time wanted to name me after her idol. But my dear lola prevailed, unbeknownst to her that it was actually George Washington’s birthday and not Lincoln’s. Well, that was how the story went as was told to me by my dear mother. I also got several nicks back home. Two of the most popular are abang and abe.

How I ended up here?

Ours was a relatively small town in a farway island deep down south. I went to the local elementary school just a hundred meters from our home where my mom also teaches grade 4 students. Being the eldest of 3 sibling (all boys), I had the undeniably heavier burden of bringing pride and honor to the family. My mom would scold me if I did not include the “E.” (as my middle initial) whenever I write my complete name. She said it is a sign that I am also proud to be an Estaya in the same way as an Olandres.

And indeed, I (think) was able to do so by excelling academically. I was the top of our class from kinder to grade 6, and eventually ended up as the class valedictorian. I was also getting major achievements on co-curricular activities by joining all sorts of quiz contests. Several of my most successful attempts were a Division runner-up for the DOST-Caltex Science and Technology Quiz, another second in the Division Nutrition Quiz and the Division Champion and Regional delegate for the Super Science Quiz Bee (circa 1994) in Cadiz City, Negros Occidental.

For high school, I applied for 2 scholarships — one is the Philippine Science High School (which I failed on the second exam) and the Special Science Class (DOST-INHS) which I landed 11th of the top 30. With 12 Valedictorians, 8 Salutatorians and 10 more with Honor students from different elementary schools across Western Visayas, it was a very tough job working my way up to the top of the class. After 4 years, I managed to get a spot on top 5 and ended up getting the 3rd Honorable Mention. Of course, I also managed to rake in several awards and citations like the Regional & Inter-Regional Champion of the Philippine Math Olympiad, the Regional Representative for the Super Science Quiz Bee (again!), Golden Harvest of Excellence (from DOST) and the Math and Science Wizard of the year (circa 1995). I was close to getting the Mercury Drug Award for Excellence in Science and Excellence in Math — something I was really rooting for.

Then came college. I only took the UPCAT and the ACET. I luckily passed both (Molecular Biology & Biotechnology in UP Diliman and Chemistry with Computer Engineering in AdMU) but opted for Ateneo since I got a full scholarship there while I only got the DOST-SEI scholarship for UP Diliman.

After successfully finishing my double degree on time, I waded through the IT industry for several years. Five companies, several dozen freelance stints and hundreds of thousands of paid taxes later, I’m still blogging during my spare time.