Monday, February 28, 2005
Sunday, February 27, 2005
Thursday, February 24, 2005
Bush in Germany: Could George W. Bush Be Right? - International - SPIEGEL ONLINE: "It was difficult not to cringe during Reagan's speech in 1987. He didn't leave a single Berlin clich? out of his script. At the end of it, most experts agreed that his demand for the removal of the Wall was inopportune, utopian and crazy.
Yet three years later, East Germany had disappeared from the map. Gorbachev had a lot to do with it, but it was the East Germans who played the larger role. When analysts are confronted by real people, amazing things can happen. And maybe history can repeat itself. Maybe the people of Syria, Iran or Jordan will get the idea in their heads to free themselves from their oppressive regimes just as the East Germans did."
Tuesday, February 22, 2005
Worldandnation: Did the Army get out-gamed?: "'The Army got an incredible deal,' said Josh Resnick, president of Pandemic. 'This kind of product had never been done before.'
But the watchdog group Taxpayers for Common Sense says the game was 'full-spectrum welfare' for the companies - and a lousy deal for taxpayers.
Keith Ashdown, the group's vice president for policy, said the game was 'a feeble attempt at training our troops in urban combat. But it became a cash cow for Pandemic and Sony.'"
Sunday, February 20, 2005
Predictions Database: "Prediction on politics
By 2014, most people will use the internet in a way that filters out information that challenges their viewpoints on political and social issues. This will further polarize political discourse and make it difficult or impossible to develop meaningful consensus on public problems."
Joel on Software - Thursday, February 17, 2005: "So far, it looks like this is a nifty program, and consumers should be happy that Microsoft has announced it will be free, but it really, really would have been nice for us here in the software industry if Microsoft had set a price on this thing just to provide some air cover for the other companies working on spyware removal. This is not a software category where a monopoly monoculture will be a good thing."
Ah, but this is the beauty of the thing. The same company that flooded the world with this poorly designed bloated bag-o-crap needs to hit another home run, and it's the bottom of the ninth and all their best hitters have struck out as mighty Bill wheezes up to the plate...
"HEY... let's tie another wagon to the cash cow!"
And as what's left of Norton and Macaffee hurl themselves from the burning superstructure we watch it sink into the tar pit as MS corporate management are hanged by their private parts from the mizen mast.
err, or something.
Anyway, this whole notion that Microsoft must fix the bad design of Windows by adding more software, free or otherwise, on top of it is a major admission of failure, one of several, inability to support multiple hardware architectures quickly being the other one that comes to mind.
Like the mangled mass of metaphors in this post, Windows can't be fixed, and the egos at Microsoft won't let it be re-written. Apple use will continue to grow, as will Linux, and there will be a continuing trend back to server-centric computing that will make the outcome of the OS wars less interesting anyway. Can Microsoft succeed in a competition for on-line storage and services? Do they have the courage to buck Intel and start coding for radically new processors? Can you spell "Razor thin profit margins"?
Well, of COURSE you can NOW. Anyway, this is all fun to watch from the vantage point of never having to boot Windows again. The longer the agony lasts the better.
I don't think I should add future posts right after watching epic movies such as Return of the King.
Friday, February 18, 2005
Thursday, February 17, 2005
Wednesday, February 16, 2005
CBS News | States Mull Taxing Drivers By Mile | February 15, 2005?10:30:02: "Seeing tax dollars dwindling, neighboring Oregon has already started road testing the idea.
'Drivers will get charged for how many miles they use the roads, and it's as simple as that,' says engineer David Kim.
Kim and his team at Oregon State University equipped a test car with a global positioning device to keep track of its mileage. Eventually, every car would need one. "
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
Yahoo! News - 'Trustworthy' Computing Now Gates' Focus: "He will speak to an estimated 11,000 security experts gathered for the weeklong RSA Conference, sponsored by RSA Security Inc., based in Bedford, Mass."
Oh yes. RSA, that would be the company that puts out many of the Windows security alerts I get in my inbox (I try to stay informed even though I don't actually use Windows). They also offer training and certification (apparently at least 11,000 times so far) to become a "security expert". I'm sure Mr. Gates, the creator after all of many of their jobs, was well received.
Monday, February 14, 2005
PBS | I, Cringely . Archived Column: "Carly looked like she could walk on water because Lucent Technologies had been filled with helium."
Funny quote of the week.
Sunday, February 13, 2005
Guardian Unlimited | The Guardian | Scientists urge calm over fears of new HIV strain: "HIV and Aids scientists and advisers on both sides of the Atlantic urged caution yesterday over suggestions that a new fast-acting strain of the HIV virus resistant to most anti-retroviral drugs had emerged in New York."
I'm just curious. Has there ever been an instance where scientists urged panic?
Friday, February 11, 2005
ABC News: Silicon Insider: R.I.P. Microsoft?
"The health of established firms, especially great ones, is more difficult to diagnose. The balance sheet can give some clues, but, because it captures the recent past rather than the near future, it can fool you. Most veteran reporters look at more subtle clues, like the comings and goings of key employees, slippage in the release dates of new products (or missing features), and subtle shifts in the tone of company news releases, advertisements and executive speeches.
But most of all, at least for me, there is the smell test: the faintest whiff of decay that comes from dying companies. "
Thursday, February 10, 2005
Microsoft reels in another big one | News.blog | CNET News.com: "Microsoft landed another big fish today when Verizon Communications agreed to use its Internet-based TV software."
I'm ahead of them on this one: I already don't watch TV.
Wednesday, February 09, 2005
Google Maps - ocean city, maryland
At last a map large enough for me to read without a magnifying glass.
WSJ.com - Carly Fiorina Forced Out As H-P CEO, Chairman(subscription) It's about time that Carly, and HP gave up their positions as poster children for Women in the boardroom. Did we all grow tired of seeing profiles of her career, open bickering between her and the old guard, video specials of her holding forth on such weighty topics as, uh, marketing strategies? HP was, and can probably never be again a pure technology company. Now they look more like "Dell lite". Maybe this was inevitable, Carly or no Carly. But she BRAGGED about it, and the company has yet to show th advantages of the merger with Compaq other than dubious numbers on a spreadsheet.
I'd look for movement on IBM stock in the next few months as HP realizes there is no going back.
Monday, February 07, 2005
Yahoo! News - New 'Supercomputer on a Chip' Makes DebutThis may be a complete dupe. Exciting news though.
NAM - U.S. Senators up for Re-Election in 2006
Democrats... helping to move YOUR job to China since, oh, 1960 or so.
IBM, Sony, Toshiba to reveal "superbrain chip"
You know what I really like about this? Linux will be running on it within a month of it's release (my speculation) and it will take Microsoft 6000 years to port Windows to it. There is gnashing of teeth in Redmond, and more FUD than ever regarding the evils of open source.
Sunday, February 06, 2005
Yahoo! News - Cheney Won't Run for President, Not Even if Begged
Too bad we don't have more polititicians like this.
Wednesday, February 02, 2005
The Angry Economist : perfect-markets.html: "If you talk to people who are opposed to solving problems via the market, some of them will bring up an odd objection. They'll say that you only get optimum resource allocation in a completely free market, with so many buyers and sellers that no one could influence the market, and with 'perfect information'. Two examples: David C. Korten, and John E. Ikerd.
If those conditions do not exist -- if there is not perfect competition -- then these people think the case for government intervention is proven. This is foolish. When choosing between two possibilities, you do not compare one against perfection and if it's found lacking, choose the other. You compare the two choices against each other.
Many people think that government control of monopolies eliminates the problem of monopolies. This is foolish. They compare how monopolies would behave without government control against how monopolies would behave when controlled perfectly by government. They're making a very simple logical error. Government is itself a monopoly! All that they're doing is substituting the need to control multiple monopolies with the need to control one monopoly."
OK, so I quoted the whole damned thing!
Tuesday, February 01, 2005
Northern New York Historical Newspapers by Northern New York Library Network (NNYLN)
WOW....wish there were more of these. Maybe there will be soon. Google?
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- Bush in Germany: Could George W. Bush Be Right? - ...
- Astronomers spot first ever dark galaxy | The Regi...
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- Worldandnation: Did the Army get out-gamed?: "'The...
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- The Observer | UK News | Why chattering classes ha...
- Joel on Software - Thursday, February 17, 2005: "S...
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- CBS News | States Mull Taxing Drivers By Mile | Fe...
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- Yahoo! News - 'Trustworthy' Computing Now Gates' F...
- Just Letters Cute
- PBS | I, Cringely . Archived Column: "Carly looked...
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- ABC News: Silicon Insider: R.I.P. Microsoft? "The...
- Microsoft reels in another big one | News.blog | C...
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