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Blazing World

Filed under: General — irvken @ 8:46 pm February 28, 2005

Paul, not being bitter and twisted in the least …
Blazing World
poem: A Curse
(for two lovers in a café)

You smile at each other,
as lovers do,
so suffocating-sweet

I half expect
the milk to curdle
in the cup.

Do not get me wrong,
for you I will wish
a life together,

the days of it measured out
in front of you.
So much so, I would

have them happen all at once:
your life played out
in front of this audience

you have made of us.
(We sit politely,
feign indifference,

though all of us
know otherwise).
Let us have the highlights

and the lows, now,
as the days
reel out in fast forward.

Even as you pause to sip
your drinks together,
in sly complicity,

I can see the end coming
towards me — as you raise
your arms to drink,

your faces freeze
into a rictus as the skin
goes slack, then mocking grey.

We leave. File out quietly,
one be one,
to leave you there:

your cups raised,
your gazes forever locked
in stone memorial

to your pledge of love,
the looks, the words that say,
stay with me, now, forever.

jkOnTheRun: jkOTR review- Sharp Zaurus SL-C3000

Filed under: General — irvken @ 9:20 am

Only £450 – hmm, where can I get hold of £450?
jkOnTheRun: jkOTR review- Sharp Zaurus SL-C3000

Using air to charge mobiles

Filed under: General — irvken @ 10:28 pm February 24, 2005

Bringing mobile tech to areas not only without comms but without even mains lecky for recharging batteries (as long as it’s windy :) ) – Noted on Slashdot – another useful battery-less must haves
A Faraday Induction Torch

Where are they now ….?

Filed under: General — irvken @ 10:28 pm February 16, 2005

One of my heros in the 80s
IMPARTIAL REPORTER
Now a primary school headmaster apparently.

The Infinite Matrix | Cory Doctorow | I, Robot

Filed under: General — irvken @ 5:57 pm

Cory Doctorow is currently one of my fave authors, not least cos he lives in Creative Commons land :)
The Infinite Matrix | Cory Doctorow | I, Robot

“I gave up short story writing for a while when I started writing novels (which I think every writer does), but I’ve started doing it again. What spurred me to it was Bradbury going crazy about Fahrenheit 9/11, saying Michael Moore was a crook for having stolen his title. For a champion of free expression, in the original Fahrenheit 451, to assert that the person who comes up with the meme has the right to control the condition as to who can riff on that meme is not just ironic, it’s ludicrous! So I started writing a whole batch of new stories that had the same titles as famous science fiction. I’ve finished an ‘Anda’s Game’ and an ‘I, Robot’ and my next one might be a ‘Jeffty Is Five’. Ellison’s original ‘Jeffty’ is an anti-technological story — Harlan’s an antitechnological guy. He told us at Clarion that we should get offline and stop screwing around (the best advice I ever ignored). I’m just going to play with that for a while and see how it goes. Let a thousand ‘Nightfall’s bloom!”

Bill Gates and other communists | Stallman Writes

Filed under: General — irvken @ 5:54 pm

Bill Gates and other communists | Tech News on ZDNet
When CNET News.com asked Bill Gates about software patents, he shifted the subject to “intellectual property,” blurring the issue with various other laws.

Then he said anyone who won’t give blanket support to all these laws is a communist. Since I’m not a communist but I have criticized software patents, I got to thinking this might be aimed at me.

When someone uses the term “intellectual property,” typically he’s either confused himself, or trying to confuse you. The term is used to lump together copyright law, patent law and various other laws, whose requirements and effects are entirely different. Why is Mr. Gates lumping these issues together? Let’s study the differences he has chosen to obscure.

Software developers are not up in arms against copyright law, because the developer of a program holds the copyright on the program; as long as the programmers wrote the code themselves, no one else has a copyright on their code. There is no danger that strangers could have a valid case of copyright infringement against them.

Patents are a different story. Software patents don’t cover programs or code; they cover ideas (methods, techniques, features, algorithms, etc.). Developing a large program entails combining thousands of ideas, and even if a few of them are new, the rest needs must have come from other software the developer has seen. If each of these ideas could be patented by someone, every large program would likely infringe hundreds of patents. Developing a large program means laying oneself open to hundreds of potential lawsuits. Software patents are menaces to software developers, and to the users, who can also be sued.

A few fortunate software developers avoid most of the danger. These are the megacorporations, which typically have thousands of patents each, and cross-license with each other. This gives them an advantage over smaller rivals not in a position to do likewise. That’s why it is generally the megacorporations that lobby for software patents.

Today’s Microsoft is a megacorporation with thousands of patents. Microsoft said in court that the main competition for MS Windows is “Linux,” meaning the free software GNU/Linux operating system. Leaked internal documents say that Microsoft aims to use software patents to stop the development of GNU/Linux.

When Mr. Gates started hyping his solution to the problem of spam, I suspected this was a plan to use patents to grab control of the Net. Sure enough, in 2004 Microsoft asked the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) to approve a mail protocol that Microsoft was trying to patent. The license policy for the protocol was designed to forbid free software entirely. No program supporting this mail protocol could be released as free software–not under the GNU GPL (General Public License), or the MPL (Mozilla Public License), or the Apache license, or either of the BSD licenses, or any other.

The IETF rejected Microsoft’s protocol, but Microsoft said it would try to convince major ISPs to use it anyway. Thanks to Mr. Gates, we now know that an open Internet with protocols anyone can implement is communism; it was set up by that famous communist agent, the U.S. Department of Defense.

With Microsoft’s market clout, it can impose its choice of programming system as a de-facto standard. Microsoft has already patented some .Net implementation methods, raising the concern that millions of users have been shifted to a government-issue Microsoft monopoly.

But capitalism means monopoly; at least, Gates-style capitalism does. People who think that everyone should be free to program, free to write complex software, they are communists, says Mr. Gates. But these communists have infiltrated even the Microsoft boardroom. Here’s what Bill Gates told Microsoft employees in 1991:

“If people had understood how patents would be granted when most of today’s ideas were invented and had taken out patents, the industry would be at a complete standstill today…A future start-up with no patents of its own will be forced to pay whatever price the giants choose to impose.”

Mr. Gates’ secret is out now–he too was a “communist;” he, too, recognized that software patents were harmful–until Microsoft became one of these giants. Now Microsoft aims to use software patents to impose whatever price it chooses on you and me. And if we object, Mr. Gates will call us “communists.”

If you’re not afraid of name-calling, visit ffii.org (the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure), and join the fight against software patents in Europe. We persuaded the European Parliament once–even right-wing MEPs are “communists,” it seems–and with your help we will do it again.

Bannerman Road School Moodle

Filed under: General — irvken @ 10:43 am February 14, 2005

I spent most of my computer time over the weekend installing a demonstration moodle for the project I’m helping to organise at a local school. 2 things I learnt:

1) apt-get is not a panacea
2) I’m getting a bit too old for troubleshooting software problems by pulling an all-niter

Bannerman Road School demo

Still. it looks very nice, please test it out.

Community Enterprise Operating System

Filed under: General — irvken @ 9:29 pm February 10, 2005

….. or not another bloody distro !
Linux Times : An Online Linux Magazine – CentOS – A Decent RHEL alternative
Community Enterprise Operating System

OpenVPN

Filed under: General — irvken @ 1:27 am

VPN for the masses! :)
Meet OpenVPN | Linux Journal
Thx Bails

First day on the job, first post on the blog

Filed under: General — irvken @ 5:35 pm February 9, 2005

ninetyninezeros: first day on the job, first post on the blog

mark jens has just been sacked by google because of his blog
http://99zeros.blogspot.com/

Which is interesting enough, the link at the top refers to his post after his first day at google, I don’t think he’s blogged the last day yet.

What interested me though was the nature of the google intranet -

“the rest of my day was spent surfing the corporate intranet. this was quite an experience. you’d think that an intranet would typically be oragnized and very cohesive – after all, it’s the internal network for a single company. however, google has managed to recreate the chaos of the internet on its internal network. fortunately, they’ve applied their search engine to help sort through everything. which begs the question – did the intranet become messy becuase google had a great search engine to find things anyways? or would intranets naturally become a mess if not for the fear of creating a huge tangled mess with no search tool to help users?”

seems to describe the dilemma around the bristol wireless wiki . Some people are really in favour of architecture and categorisation , but I’ve taken a few newbies through the site and they’ve had no difficulty finding what they want either through the link structure or the search functions. Is there really any point in imposing a structure of our own design on it, when the software imposed structure seems to work so well.

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