Consumer Technology Bill of Rights
Good stuff! Link
Consumer Technology Bill of Rights
Good stuff! Link
OS X 10.2 Rocks
1) I have Visual Studio .NET on DVD. 2) My PC doesn’t have a DVD player. 3) My TiBook has a DVD player. 4) My TiBook has OS X 10.2 with smb support.
“Ah hah!” One small change to /etc/smb.conf:
[volumes]
path = /Volumes
read only = yes
comment = Mounted Volumes
Yeah, 10.2 rocks.
Sad day in Robertland
Not Found
The requested URL /~rose was not found on this server.
Apache/1.3.26 Server at engr.oregonstate.edu Port 80
Diagnostic Tools for Linux
My Winxx box has been crashing hard lately, and I haven’t the slightest clue why. Up until tonight I didn’t care (too much) because rebooting it “made it all go away…” Well tonight it finally wouldn’t boot at all, before I even had the option to hit F8 it said that it couldn’t load the kernel: “could not load kernel. reason: load dlls failed, contact your support person.” Not even a BSOD– just right after POST it would display this error.
In an effort to recover I downloaded the Linux Crash Recovery Kit ISO (www.crashrecovery.org) and was impressed how quickly I had a working system up and running. I mounted my NTFS partition, enabled the networking stack, and ftp’d all my important files over to my [mac] laptop. Whoot.
Now I want to know what went wrong. Was this some Windoze snafu or do I have a piece of failing hardware? I went on a search for linux hardware diagnostic tools and came up pretty dry. The only thing I’ve found that remotely ressembles hardware diagnosis is the linux “badblocks” tool, which comes standard on most all linux distributions. Running badblocks -s -v -w /dev/hdxx will run a complete read/write scan of your harddrive.
The linux community needs to make a thorough diagnostics suite. A simple RAM read/write scanner, IO port checker and CPU stresser would make a very nice self-boot ISO distribution!
Microsoft’s “switch” campaign gets pulled
Space travel at the speed of light
“What would it be like to travel in a real starship? It’s weirder than Star Trek, but not nearly as fast-paced.”
Regime change for Iraq
I am against any kind of war action with Iraq. If Iraq really has the “weapons of mass destruction” that the U.S. and Britain claim, war would only provoke Iraq into using them. If it turns out after a war that they didn’t have the weapons claimed, then it would be embarassingly clear that the war effort was nothing more than a multi-billion dollar bail-out blood-bath for the oil industry (Shell and Chevron have been lobbying for drilling rights in Iraq for decades). An interesting quote from The Economist:
There is only one way of both disarming Iraq and proving the regime-changers wrong. That is for the Security Council to tell Mr Hussein unmistakably that he will be stripped of his weapons, by force if need be. The choice is then his.
Why the economy still sucks
Politics again have gotten in the way of real company accounting reform, this week in the form of the SEC not being able to elect a chairman to their new PCAOB (Public Company Accounting Oversight Board). It’s antics like this that scare international investors, and is one of the core reasons our economy is still in the toilet. The Economist has the story.
I finally got around to installing iCal and playing with it.. Pretty cool. iCal syncs with your [Palm] PDA, iPod, Bluetooth enabled cell phone, and can publish calendar data on the web. iCal can also use the iCalendar protocol to synchronize with other calendar data that has been published on the web, so if you’re publishing your calendar on the web, other people can sync with you, and you can sync with other people that have published their calendars using the iCalendar protocol.
By default, iCal will publish to Apple’s pay-for-use .Mac servers (boooo), but you can specify your own web server to publish your calendar too, if that webserver supports the WebDAV protocol. If you’re like me and you want to do this yourself on your own webserver, check out the Apache based WebDAV HOWTO. Neato.
Digital Choice and Freedom Act
Now here’s a Congresswoman that has her ducks in order, Representative Zoe Lofgren of California. This week, she proposed a house resolution that would reinforce the legal [and moral] rights of people who legally own copyrighted works. Under her bill, we will again be able to legally reproduce and backup our [legally owned] music and video to whatever digital medium we please, be it mp3, DVD-R, etc. Reading the bill almost brings a tear to my eye:
This bill goes head-to-head against major portions of the DMCA. Write your Representative today!!