
Finns Build a Virtual Helsinki 81
Anonymous Coward writes "Having already pioneered the mobile phone-operated vending machine, those well-wired Finns are constructing a virtual Helsinki, heavily integrated with the real one (Article from The Guardian). Broadband for all and techno-houses à la Gates... track your pizza delivery online, netcast from public booths, and keep tabs on your kids via their mobile phones. Futuristic techo-democracy with just a hint of 1984. It seems that the future will be... fun."
Tech is all around (some of) us (Score:1)
Maybe I have no room to talk because I don't own a handheld device yet (besides my Toshiba laptop).
Re:Finns and blonds ... (Score:2)
That's pretty much what I meant. My Finnish tutor used to always tell us that written Finnish did not make good spoken Finnish. She quite often gave us examples of the spoken language that didn't conform to the grammar rules - slang I suppose.
I even have a `Slangisanasto' at home that I bought in Kuopio. It contains loads of great tranlations of English and American slang into Finnish, although whether it's any use or not is another matter entirely!
Chris Wareham
I'm a complete geek. (Score:1)
---
"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine.
Re:Finns and blonds ... (Score:1)
It doesn't actually work quite like that. Our language is indeed related to small finno-ugric islands in a sea of slavic languages, but the finnish gene base is pretty much totally west european. The biggest mystery about the finns is why an overwhelming number of western settlers ended up speaking the language they are now speaking (especially since Finland spent a good few hundered years under swedish rule and the use of the swedish language was strongly incouraged). Personally I blame it on the inherent superiority of our language
The only people with some sort of finno-ugric descent in scandinavia are apparantly the saame (or the lapps as we germanic oppressors call them) and nobody understands anything about them either. Go figure.
Risto Linturi (Score:1)
The funniest thing he said, and he is a strangly funny man, "Thanks to free Microsoft technology, I have been able to automate my entire home. Unfortunatly, I now need an expensive Microsoft firewall to keep the hackers (reads crackers) from turning my lights on and off."
Re:Finns and blonds ... (Score:1)
Now that's something I'd like to see =) Especially if it tries to translate it into the eastern dialects...
Re:I'm a complete geek. (Score:2)
- Then you could be virtually surrounded by virtual Quake lamers
But that wouldn't be any different than normal...---
"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine.
Re:can't wait (Score:1)
The concept is a fun idea, but there comes a point in which too much information becomes too much.
Time to fire up gnuplot...I've been keeping track of how often I've been checking slashdot daily.
In the meantime, check out the California Highway Patrol dispatch page. [ca.gov]
Re:Yeah sure (Score:1)
Tokyo, New York, Caracas all have amazing technology, but Finland is literally backwoods and is majorly independent of most interaction with global markets except maybe for vodka and glassware.
It is awesome that such a small, remote country can be as wired as it is, and may indicate the direction other leading cities will take. Look what the Finns have done with what they have had to work with
Re:First Post! (Score:1)
Re:Tech is all around (some of) us (Score:1)
For mobile systems, there are a few reasons why this is true. The first has to be Nokia who is working closely with local operators to bring out new technology early. Imagine a nationwide test lab! The second can be traced back to the early years of the GSM system: from the very beginning we had two nationwide operators competing furiously. And before GSM, the nation was already covered with the NMT-network...
As to the Orwellian nightmares, at least for the time being, we can switch these toys off and enjoy the forests and lakes that cover most of the land araa
Information technology (Score:1)
Out of the six top contries in information tech 4 are Scandinavian: Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway. (The US and Singapore being the other two)
Wish i could back this up with a link, but i forgot where i got it from.
Re:I'm a complete geek. (Score:1)
Then you could be virtually surrounded by virtual Quake lamers
25 FIM for a beer?? (Score:1)
When I went to Finland from Australia a while back I was NOT impressed with the prices. 25 FIM works out to more than 8 AU dollars (more than 5 US) and that is NOT a good price for a beer
On average everything I've seen, from mcdonalds meals to busfares and drinks in the pub are easily 3 times the price of those things in some other places in Europe and especially Australia.
The average income (when converted to AU dollars) didn't seem to be much higher than the Australian (if at all), and I guess that's why in Finland in general both parents in a family work, whereas in Australia and other places in Europe it's usually one of the parents having the dayjob.
So how do the Finnish cope with that? Work hard?
That aside, Finland is a gorgeous place and I can't wait to go back
Finland...not for foreigners. (Score:1)
Duh, I don't believe you... I've been living in Helsinki for 15 months now, and if there's one thing finns don't like (I'm making a generality here, I know) it's foreigners. I even lost my job because some redneck businessman in the company though having a foreigner around was a threat. And they also didn't like speaking English.
I'm no Russian or Estonian (their usual scapegoats), but still I'm being insulted constantly, especially in governmental institutions on behalf I'm a foreigner and should get back to my country ASAP. You call it friendly?
I don't know where you've spent your time in Finland, really. Maybe in Kuopio, where people are really cool, but definitely not in Helsinki.
I find finns being extremely closed-minded and isolationist, not talking about their terrible tendency to racism. Looking different, speaking different, thinking different condemns you immediately to most finns' eyes. Like in Sweden, there's a culture of uniformity here that dumbs people from childhood. Be a sheep is their motto. No wonder Apple's campaign on "think different" had no impact here.
Really, if anyone's thinking about moving here, I'd tell that person to think twice... Oh, salaries are a joke here, combined with super-high taxes. Wanna buy a car? Pay 130% tax on it. everything else? Minimum 22% Goods & Services tax. Service, in general, is lousy and salespersons would easily insult you if you *dare* complaining about anything, even politely.
Finn's behaviour towards foreigners could be explained by 700 years of Swedish domination, followed by 100 years of Russian colonialism. I don't mind if people are being patriotic to some extent, but to *that* point, it's critical...
Good reasons for me to move back to Switzerland. At least there's good income there and people don't spit at you when you're different.
My 0.02 pennia.
Re: Yep, I hear ya (Score:1)
Politicains want to stay in control of the society and I think many US politicians fear the coming cultural changes. In the US, I expect some politically PTB crack-down via new taxes, fees,
I may have to retire to Canada or Mexico {;>
Re:Yeah sure (Score:2)
Re:Finland...not for foreigners. (Score:1)
That's strange considering the amount of time and energy finns spend learning foreign languages. I'm not terribly gifted when it comes to learning stuff like that, and yet I know english well enough to get a job translating stuff into it, and swedish and german well enough to handle most situations.
But you are correct about high levels of taxation. And it's easy to get paid well, but hard to get paid really well over here. It's all a part of the scandinavian way of doing things. Personally I prefer it to the American system, but luckily people are still able to choose between the two if one really isn't suitable for them (wonder why all the biochemists I know are moving to the USA
Re:The imortance of the Mobile Phone (Score:1)
can't wait (Score:1)
HandHeld (Score:1)
Ender
This .sig is under construction
Entering the 21st Century (Score:1)
I'm jealous. And is this really a bad thing? (Score:2)
But seriously, is this a good thing? Rob seems to think it's almost 1984-esque. I can't say I think this is fair. This doesn't say anything about full screen messages from the Finnish leadership, computers equipped with cameras and voice recorders, or a new dictionary. All it is is a whole bunch of conveniences, bundled up to make Helsinki a damn nice place to live. As long as you don't have to speak the language.
I've personally always liked this type of thing. I can check to see if I have mail, order food, videoconference, and run all sorts of errands without running at all. Is this going to eliminate human contact? Of course not! People aren't going to telecommute, and there really is nothing like holding a nice blonde Finn in your arms at night...
Anyway.
I would kill to have a Virtual Saint Paul, MN.. but only if Governor Jesse "The Mind" Ventura has little to say about it.
Regards,
-efisher
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Yeah, pretty exciting (Score:2)
History has been taking place all along...we're just normally too busy doing our jobs to pay attention. I'm sure there are lots of slashdotters who remember the good ol' days of ARPAnet, when posting a message to netnews just meant that other people interested in the same thing would read your message and respond. Nowadays, your message will be sucked up into search engines and possibly read by thousands of people who were looking for something completely different...as well as by email address suckers that'll get your address onto a few hundred different spam lists. A wider audience indeed!
The point I'm making, I guess, is that we've already seen dramatic evolution and growth in electronic communications, and not all of it has gone in directions the builders imagined or desired. People have been dreaming about 2-way broadband communications since long before Dick Tracy, and we'll just keep trying until we get it. Whether it'll be what's described in this article or not (I bet not) will be decided in the future.
Stop and think about the progress you've seen -- heck, built -- in the last couple of years. Darn straight these are exciting times!
geek. (Score:1)
Orwell vs. Gibson (Score:2)
Why is it that whenever the government or a corporation tries to instate virtual communities with either tracking systems or any sort of personal information tracking, we all cry out "Big Brother" and the privacy advocates flip their lids. *BUT* when we see stories like this, we think that it's cool and we cheer it on?
Perhaps more importantly, it seems that for some geeks, the more they learn about how easy it is to have their personal information leaked onto the internet, they cringe, while at the same time we have geeks who can't wait to get their entire lives out there in plain site by filling their homes with webcams and wiring their toaters to the net?
Is the geek culture diverging or am I just looking at the extremes and missing the larger picture?
Re:I'm jealous. And is this really a bad thing? (Score:1)
But in Virtual Saint Paul, Norm Coleman would probably hire someone to hack in a new stadium, so even if he couldn't have it in the real world he'd have it online.
Yeah sure (Score:4)
"I would like a pizza"
"I'm sorry. I can't do that Dave"
The "evidence" that Helsinki is wired to the lower lip appears to be internet kiosks and Mr. Linturi's Super Duper Futuro Home. Yes, I'm cynical, but these are things we already have in abundance here in America: broadband booths at airports and rich people with expensive and largely useless toys installed in their bathrooms.
Well deployed technology doesn't appear with a bang and a cloud of pyrotechnic fog. It slips seamlessly into your life. I don't think I can remember the first time I used a calling card at a telephone booth rather than 25 cents change. It just seemed to be there when I needed it. And that is the definition of a successful deployment.
Look, everybody here likes cool tech news. We've been hearing about the world of the future for so long now that "in the year 2000" is a ridiculous cliche. I for one am pretty tired of it.
-konstant
Re:First Post! (Score:3)
This Is Cool (Score:3)
At this time, you still have that option... and we'll only lose such options if people choose to give them up en-masse... There are still alternatives, though they often involve more work (like leaving your home).
The choice is in all our hands: total convenience and no privacy, or forgo some convenience and keep some of the old, inefficient, and difficult-to-monitor systems in place (there can be a balance, you can have some of both)...
Re:Orwell vs. Gibson (Score:3)
Not like 1984, more reminicent of Walden (Score:2)
A friend of mine recieves 150 e-mails (Not spam, real e-mail) every day. Imagine getting that many phone calls over a twelve hour period. Thats one phone call every six minutes. I hope you have good time management skills.
Furthermore, it seems like people in the US are wont to abuse their cell phones. Most people I know only use them for incoming emergency, and outgoing calls. I remember someone getting a 911 page because one of their friends wnated to go see a movie that evening. I think that the Finns are more willing to deal with connectivity because they have more tact.
I don't have a cell phone, pager or answering machine. I don't really want any of them.
Re:I was thinking about about the cost of it... (Score:1)
That has little to do with your question, though. It seems to me that this thing is getting financed as a purely commercial venture, by the players on the local telecommunications market. Consider it a pilot lab with 1 million people. As far as the technical merits of the project go, though, I'm not holding my breath to see anything insanely great.
Marko, Helsinki
Like a bad Douglas Adams script (Score:1)
Anyone else ever seen Shada? "You are dead. Dead people don't require oxygen. Shutting off air supply..."
I hear ya (Score:1)
Re:First Post! (Score:1)
What are you talking about? The land-line (or fixed-line) networks in Finland are and have always been among the best in the world. Have you ever been to Finland or used Finnish telecom networks?
Take a look at Virtual Helsinki (Score:1)
Virtual Helsinki mentioned in the article can be found from Helsinki Telephone Corporation's Arenanet [arenanet.fi]
Re:I'm jealous. And is this really a bad thing? (Score:1)
Clearly, what you need is a fat pipe from the grocery store to your house (possibly via a local exchange or hub). Why stick to the old 'sneakernet' method of transporting beverages when you can just download them over a direct link?
Probably, an asymmetrical link would be best, since you won't want to upload Mountain Dew at the same speed as you drink it.
Re:25 FIM for a beer?? (Score:1)
I personally don't use alcohol, so the high price of beer doesn't bother me (and to be honest, I like the idea of taxing it (and gasoline) really hard). After those, everything here seems priced around the same level as in any other European countries I have lived in (or been to any longer periods of time). Rents and alike, for example, are much lower here than in the UK or Italy.
High-tech is relatively cheap, network infastructure is fine, and as a geek you can make a pretty good living, plus the environment in Scandinavia is still in decent condition when compared to fellow industrial countries, so the most important issues are OK.
Oh, the weather sucks most of the time, though ;-)
______________
Let's face it, Nordic people are superior (Score:2)
Re:Orwell vs. Gibson (Score:1)
I suppose the difference really comes down to a matter of freedom of choice.
I was thinking about about the cost of it... (Score:2)
--
Matt Singerman
The imortance of the Mobile Phone (Score:2)
Also interesting to note was the way in which phones along with the 'net were changing society. I send roughly 100 emails a day, make about 10 phone calls and use snail mail only to send objects, not documents. After hours, I'd be lost without my mobile phone. To think that 10 years ago, we only had land lines, and email was *just* making it out of universities.
Just to think that society used to take at least ageneration to change, and is now changing inside a decade is a sign that our entire planet and biosocieconomics are accelerating in nearly every little thing we do, at an exponential rate.
And you thought keeping up with technology was difficult. Breakthroughs in all fields of Science are becoming more common. I doubt it will be long before what was science fiction 10 years ago, becomes a reality in 10 years time.
Brain drain? Exodus? (Score:2)
When it comes to Internet technology, Helsinki is hotter than Moutain View, Palo Alto, etc.
What's the rent like over there?
Seriously, I wonder how wide the gap needs to get before domestic geeks start crowding on rafts and stowing away on planes to get to a more enlightened country--like, say, Finland?
Remember the SAT's? Here's an anology....
India
United States
Is it really that far-fetched?
Re:can't wait (Score:1)
Yeah, and just imagine what Uncle Enzo would say!
Re:First Post! (Score:1)
We are first in capitalism. That's where we get the attitude
Re:Orwell vs. Gibson (Score:1)
It's all about who controls access to the information. If you carry a tracking device that belongs to you and is under your control, that's ok: you can consult the logs to find out who/what has requested information, define policy about how the information is to be given out, etc.
If the automation belongs to another body, like the government or the phone company, that's not good: you can't be sure what it is doing with your information.
The case where the collection of personal information depends on a larger infrastructure is an interesting one. Some people [greenend.org.uk] have put thought a certain amount of thought into this...
Finns and blonds ... (Score:2)
Funnily enough, the Finns aren't a Scandinavian people, or inherently blond haired. Their origin is shrouded in mystery, but they basically settled in Finland after the great migration of the tribes. One bunch of Finno-Ugrian people headed West from the Urals, and became the Hungarians. Another big bunch headed North until they hit the Gulf of Finland. Some stayed South of where St. Petersburg now stands and became Estonians (Virolainen). The remainder headed further North, met the Lapps and became Finns (Suomalainen) or Karelians.
Other small Finno-Ugrian groups are scattered throughout the North West of the former Soviet Union.
The reason many Finns are blond is most commonly because of Swedish ancestry. In the South of Finland there is a large Swedish speaking minority - the result of Swedish colonialism and the dominance of Swedish as the ruling elite's language of choice in the eighteenth century.
As for language, Finnish was codified in the mid-nineteenth century. 'Official' Finnish is the dialect spoken in the South West of the country. The further East you go the more archaic the dialect - especially in Karelia. Other dialects like Ingrian are pretty much extinct, while in the far North, Lapp is a sadly disappearing language.
Chris Wareham
Learning Finnish (Score:3)
I spent four years studying Finnish and Finnish history, and have to admit that for many Western Europeans it is a weird language to learn. The grammar is quite strict though, so once you know the rules it isn't too bad.
Personally, I love Finland as a country - sparsely populated, and covered in forests and lakes. The people are friendly to foriegners (except on occasion to the Russians), but really like their drink.
I haven't been to Finland for four years now, but used to go regularily. Hopefully I can go back some point next year for a couple of weeks.
Chris Wareham
Re:Nordic people are superior.. (Score:1)
URL for Helsinki Arena (Score:1)
Re:This Is Cool (Score:1)
Re:Let's face it, Nordic people are superior (Score:1)
Helsinki (and Finland) a tech hub (Score:1)
Re:Brain drain? Exodus? (Score:3)
The finnish geeks have an edge on you guys when it comes to getting jobs here, because you'll never be able to learn our language
Actually I don't think we have anything the americans don't have here in Finland. Maybe more services are offered for use via mobile telephone (I think Sonera is the first GSM operator in the world to be offering WAP-services), but as far as I understand you can conduct your daily business (shopping, monetary transactions etc.) on net over there as well. The big difference is, that technology being used by geeks elsewhere has become more commonplace and available to everybody here. This is largely due to the big banks, telephone companies and of course the government investing heavily into the Internet. Another big factor is the scandinavian "equality - no big pay differences - large parts of the population doing fairly well but nobody gets fabulously rich" system. When technology becomes available, it is automatically available to large parts of the populace after the phase of astronomical prices has been passed.
And the arctic circle is pretty bad. I live in southern Finland, and half the year I wish I was living in California again. Than again we do have some warm currents in the oceans around these parts, so Helsinki isn't actually much worse than central Europe when it comes down to numbers. But it gets pretty dark in the winter this far north, and that makes the weather seem a lot worse.
Gee Whiz (Score:2)
I'm reminded of the children's encyclopedia set I grew up with as a child in the 70's. It was an old Funk & Wagnall set replete with stories and photos from the 50's and 60's of kids flying to school with backpack jets, hovercraft cars bypassing clogged, land-based traffic, "interactive" tv's where you could order pizzas (sound familiar ?) and shop, videophones to see your loved ones with bed face, and a whole host of other goodies that were going to change everyone's lives immeasurably.
As each new technological innovation is introduced, we are inevitably told how our lives will benefit and change "in ways we haven't thought of yet". We find ourselves being led by the technological pied pipers to the so-called promised land. Once the initial euphoria dies down, however, people tend to do what people know how to do best -- get practical.
Did anyone seriously think putting a hydrogen fuel cell on little Johnnie's back just to get him to school 5 minutes earlier was really a good idea? Did we really need to issue everyone a pilot's license just so they could get to work? Probably not. But hey, it was fun to imagine, wasn't it!
The same thing will happen with this connectivity, internet, and virtual euphoria. People will extract what they really need and put it to use. The rest will become, well, virtual candy. Wiring the populace and creating virtual cities may or may not happen as envisioned in the article. Some of the proposed applications may come to fruition. Some may not (Fire dept phoning apt to wake people from burning building ?)
Hopefully, one of the side effects of the gee whiz euphoria regarding connectivity and the internet will be applications that will actually help people.
Re:First Post! (Score:1)
should realize that they are not the first and foremost in every
single aspect of civilization. Far from it...
I got impression that Americans are the first overall though. I can't help but think that in part many of other high developed country's ventures in hi tech are made 'to show them yanks'. US is nice cause they just do whatever they like. US made one big mistake though: its result is that almost every other nation hates their guts. If things go wrong for US.. everybody else will laugh.