Computer Genius Blog :: aka “TheGarage”

March 31, 2004

Does Capitalism Stifle Innovation?

Filed under: Business — admin @ 8:49 am


From the beginning of the personal computer movement, richly described
in Steven Levy’s book
Hackers,
there was a euphoria abuzz about how the free flow of information would
literally change the world. Not that that hasn’t happened or doesn’t continue
to do so, but it is unarguable that the early adopters did not succeed
in their efforts to ensure total free flow of information.  One of
the last gems in their crown is the politician’s fading reluctance to tax
the internet. But there is still one bright shining jewel: Open Source
in general and Linux in particular.

By 1980 there was really no mass marketing of "personal computers."
 There were darn few choices anyway. As a result, at this point in
the timeline of the personal computer it was just a bunch of hobbyists
kicking the technology can down the road. Hackers.

These hackers were the nerds of the day. The geeks. They formed clubs so
they could meet to discuss all the new techniques they had learned to make
their gizmos whiz and whir. Over time, these groups began to set up simple
electronic bulletin boards so all the different clubs could interact, propagate
and build upon their combined knowledge further. There was really a strong
sense amongst many of the industry’s pioneers that information should be
shared openly and freely–for the benefit of all. They felt that these
new computing and communication capabilities would usher in a new age of
freedom. Keep in mind, these hobbyists primarily were in communities like
MIT, Berkeley, and San Jose.

Then came the dark horseman, rearing his ugly head. Call him Capitalism.

When IBM entered the game, the capitalist smelled money. When capitalist
smell money strange things start to happen. They want to lay claim to things
that have value. They want to control that value and personally benefit
from it. Enter serious young men in crisp blue suits touting license restrictions,
copyrights, intellectual property, and software copy protection schemes.

The software copy protection schemes were a stop-gap measure only. There
was a robust market in software that could defeat the copy protection.
Of which you could of course get a free copy. You needed several of the
most popular anti-copy protection programs in your everyday arsenal in
order to overcome all the copy protection schemes you might come up against.
Recognizing that the digital locks would always be pickable, the capitalist
went to the lawmakers. Those who advocated the free sharing of knowledge
and information are basically turned into criminals if they swap software.
The term ‘Hackers’ becomes a dirty word. Funny how similar sounding Napster
is to Hacker.

So the question hangs, by allowing the capitalists to lock down and put
a lid on the free-flow of technical knowledge, did we hinder the development
of technological advancements over the last 25 years? If so, by how much?
I guess the answer to that question boils down to whether the enthusiasm
of a bunch of brilliant kids dreaming of utopia could provide the incentive
and leadership to entice society as a whole to adopt, and thus fund, technology
to its current state. Probably not.

If today’s capitalists fail to win the day in their efforts to outlaw
free Linux,
(and thereby making
the users of Linux criminals,) and Linux can overtake Microsoft’s various
flavors and become the predominant operating system on the market, the
question of whether information free flow (Open Source) is a better model
for technical advancements over the capitalist’s strict regulation of intellectual
property will have to be re-evaluated. The disastrous security track record
of Windows in all it’s flavors is an excellent example of stifled innovation
due to the privatization of information.

Does Capitalism Stifle Tyranny?

From a different perspective, you could also pose the question does capitalism
protect us from tyranny. The tyranny that would result from, lets say,
one pharmaceutical company owning and controlling all the medicine. With
our country’s addiction to every kind of medication under the sun, from
high blood pressure to anti-flaccids, the voting block– or mob as the
case may be– would inevitably bend to the subtle whim of those who control
the magical life-extending potions (FDA approved, of course).

Or how about one software company owning and controlling all the essential
knowledge needed to support something essential like… life support systems.

Capitalism, by its build-a-better-mousetrap nature, inherently disperses
economic activity relating to the provision of goods and services. The
lure of profits is the incentive that stokes the fires of innovation. That’s
how a little company called Microsoft can knock off Big Blue as the dominant
provider of personal computer operating systems. That’s also how Microsoft
in turn can get knocked off by Linux. Individual innovation ensures that
everybody has access to the newer and better technology. Individual innovation
keeps a single corporate entity from controlling entire technologies. Individual
innovation keeps the flow of information and technology on stream.

Nothing motivates innovation like the chance at big money.

Is the bottom line that the success of capitalism is largely due to it’s
natural tendancy to seek the right balance between encouraging technological
advancement and protecting private (intellectual) property while not stifling
the free market system that keeps it all going? Politics not withstandng
of course. There is nothing worse for capitalism than a good dose of socialism.

March 29, 2004

New keyboard

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 2:57 pm



I am trying out the new

Kinsington Comfort Type Keyboard. Model# 64331
.
It has a supposedly ergonomic design. Not like the Microsoft design where
the left-hand and right-hand keys are seperated, but where the keys are
angled such that the left-hand keys have a right-leaning slant to them
and the righthand keys have left-leaning  slant to them.

So far, there is no way to tell if the keyboard will actually help me type
without missing so many keys or whether it will have any effect on the
hand, elbow, wrist, and shoulder discomfort that results from hours and
hours every day spent on the computer.

I will keep ya’ll informed…

How many days are in March?

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 10:43 am



It just dawned on me last night why I get a nagging feeling something is
not quite right everytime I look at the calendar over on the top-right
side of the page. How many days are in March? When they fixed the leap
year bug, maybe it just ran to the next room. Or maybe I dont have the
leap year bug fix.


I think I will put my own little calendar in anyway. It has controls to
move from month to month.

March 24, 2004

The O’Reilly Factor in Prime Time

Filed under: Whimsy — admin @ 9:53 pm


I think The
O’Reilly Factor
is the result of
a prime number. Or is it that he is a prima donna. I dunno. But he is striking
me as more and more arrogant as each and every second passes. Is he really
that smart? Or does he just do his homework. He is firm on his assumptions.
His biggest problem is trying to get anyone to say anything of substance.
You know, like directly answering his questions.
And
when he can get his guests to answer, he talks all over them.

My favorite show was when O’Reilly had the porn queen on. Thinking about
what must have been going through his mind as he sat there all cool and
collected and discussed "serious" issues with her was hilarious.
Especially since he is a self-proclaimed reformed barbarian. But I do try
to stay away from the imagery.  I am sure I have seen his guest in
action a few times, but I cant recall her name. I bet O’Reilly can. Probably
right on the tip of his tongue.

Tuesday night, He kept pushing a couple of statisticians about what would
happen to America when by 2050 the white population reached less than 50%.
The guests would respond with stutters or numbers or causes or trends but
absolutely would not comment on what America would be like
once the ethnic population shift was complete. No matter, after repeated
attempts, O’Reilly pretty much just came right out with a Pfft and editorialized
that basically paraphrases to its good to be dead in 50 years. And if O’Reilly
takes offense to that being to strong a characterization, I’ll say at a
minimum he factored it down to he is happy he wont have to be here to worry
about it. Or something to that effect.

One thing he might have been inferring is that, for example, all the money
that social security is in debt for is predominately due to white baby
boomers. How easy will that be to wave away as a failed program forty or
fifty years from now when the payees are a political minority? Right when
I will be needing a new oxygen bottle, too. Or, what if reparations were
to come up again? What if the police forces are predominately Asian or
Muslim or black where you live. Maybe in the whole state. Lets face it.
White people aint making enough babies to keep up.  Keep the porn
queens coming O’Reilly, perhaps we can get the birth rate up, so to speak!

If you subscribe to O’Reilly’s site I think you can get exactly what he
said, but I am not sure if he does transcripts.  I’m not subscribing.
When I saw all the blog adds in every corner of his real estate I clicked
out. A site like that is libel to put 50-60 cookies on your machine.

Anyway, all kidding aside, my take on the population shift is that it may
never come to pass. The Mexicans are opportunists. More and more each day,
unless they are buying stock in internationals, America is losing its allure
as the land of milk and honey for immigrating opportunists. Hell, natural
citizens of all ethnicity may begin to emigrate within 25 years, much less
50. If I could speak Hindi or Punjabi I could probably be a top earner
in India. India is the place to go. So they loaded up the truck and moved
to New Delhi. (Hum the song, its funnier.)

If the blacks are still pissed about slavery in fifty years, fuck ‘em.
 They can take it up with the Mexicans.

Recording Industry Boo Boo?

Filed under: Business — admin @ 8:00 am


The more I consider the Wal-Mart per song service, the more fascinating
I find the topic. And they are not the only ones coming out with retail
 per song offerings. Only an arrogant SOB ignores their flank like
that. RIAA thought they were embroiled in a skirmish with the customers
and now find themselves in a full-scale war with formidable competitors.
It is this same type of arrogance that always knocks off the top guy. I
guess that is where the old sayin’, "Pride goes before the fall"
originates.

The recording industry got caught sitting on it’s ass. The per song download
thing has been around for a while, and it has been immensely popular since
it gained traction with
Napster.
 They should have had there own service and been giving a song away
with the purchase of a song. It is now only a matter of time before the
artists catch on and start selling on their own website any song they ever
made one at the time for eighty eight cents a piece.

Once an organization thinks they are so powerful or so smart or so entrenched
or so whatever that they believe they control the market and can force
feed their customers, they inevitably find themselves getting knocked off
in ever more fascinating ways. Martha Stewart being the latest jaw dropper.
(I thought she would get off.)

"Curtis Mathis, the most expensive TV money can buy, and darn well
worth it."

(I wanted to be sure I got the quote right, since I was quoting it, and
found
this.
Its pretty intetesting.)

Gotta run. I may actually proof read this post later.

When did Albright die?

Filed under: Whimsy — admin @ 12:04 am


Looks like the government’s secret reanimation
project was a success!

Looks like she OD’d on Botox.

March 23, 2004

Wall Mart Hits a Homer?

Filed under: Business — admin @ 11:36 pm

At $0.88 a song thats $8.80 for a 10 song cd. For 14 songs: $12.32. About the going rate. The customer gets to buy only what music they want and Wall Mart is making probably the same or more money with the per song service than stocking the vinyl. And they will probably exert control over the music industry inside of 5 years much like they do the publishing and pickle industries. Only a blind mouse could not see this market opening.

This all while the big media companies are suing their customers.

I really dont know how to sum that up adequately at this point. Any help?

Via Drudge.

Albright the Atrocious!

Filed under: Whimsy — admin @ 11:14 pm

Anybody remember this?

Pfft.

Please, dont do me any favors!

Filed under: Whimsy — admin @ 9:54 am


Why do some people want to act like they
are doing you a favor when it is obvious to even a casual observer that
it is you who are doing them the favor?

March 22, 2004

Tsk Tsk

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 12:54 pm

ok just lost another post using the online posting. Silly me, I said it wouldnt happen again. I opened a link  from another window and the target opened in the Blog window, wiping out my story, of course.

 

Tsk Tsk

March 20, 2004

Blogsphere

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 2:00 am


Ok, I am starting to get the hang of this Blogshpere software. Especially
since I also started using the picture database template for my
photo
gallery.
Picture gallery is based
on the same Blogsphere template (available at
openNTF.org)
I am using for this blog site. By putting all my pictures in the gallery
right off the bat, I have access to a thumb, a 800×600 scaled version,
and the original "bild".

I am not so "up-to-date" with all the web interface advances
over the last few years, such as XML, RSS, CSS.  I also was never
much into web development before that. But, by necessity, I am catching
up quick. I always seemed to wind up coding all the applications that were
back-end-process heavy. A lot of Notes security, the "middleware"
portion of data migration both batch and real-time, building relational
data models to store Notes data in Oracle and SQL Server, fax server integration
into a large scale trading operation, and meetings. Meeting, meetings,
meetings.  

Looking under the hood of these two open source templates has not been
very fun. Very enlightning, but not very fun. Like touring a sausage factory.
Maybe I am being too critical because I don’t really understand how the
entire open source process works. I guess I will sum up my understanding
of the process to date: Cook 1 did his or her or their part, any other
chefs out there want some more functionality, feel free to cook it up yourself.

As I contemplate contributing to the open souce effort for software that
I find personally useful, I realize the amount of time that must be committed
to such efforts. Its just like work, except for free.

Anyway here is a list so far of what I am going to look into.

1. Saving from the web after a conection time-out.

2. Waaayyyyy too slow saving a story.

3. The html insertion to a RTF is no bueno. I can see by browsing thru
the web that it is a buggy situation, but hey, thats what they need good
developers for right, to go around?

4. Easier form modification. Too much sausage. I know documentation is
the bane of coding. Two things short of real chapter and verse documentation
that is absolutely mandatory is self-documenting code and liberal use of
comments within the code to outline your logic. Six months to a year down
the road, if I dont do this, I cant read my own code. You think you will
never forget, but trust me, after twenty years in this gig, I know, you
will forget your logic sooner rather than later. Also, if the original
developer does not do this, it makes it very difficult for the next programmer
to come along and modify it.

5. Display is not correct when the IE browser text size is set to one of
the higher sizes. The columns tend to over lap. This probably can be handled
with css settings? Display also seems to not like 800×600 on a 19"
monitor. (The kids change resolution on the wife’s computer for games.)
I dont know really how to fix these issues, but I am sure it is doucmented
somewhere.

March 18, 2004

Interesting story about internet use…

Filed under: Internet — admin @ 12:33 pm


The AFP
story
linked by Drudge
reports a
Nielsen/NetRatings
survery
indicating 200 million
internet users in America. There is a troubling, unexplained disclaimer
in the story, however:  

Nielsen/NetRatings,
said its survey from February showed 204.3 million people or 74.9 percent
of the over-two population of 272.8 million. That was up nine percentage
points from the same period a year ago.

To me it would seem that under-two population would follow the same normal
distribution as the overall population. Culling the under-two segment of
the population from the results could imply that the vast majority of the
under-two population are in homes either with or without the internet,
thus skewing the results.

Or maybe this was just a handy number to use because it already existed.

March 16, 2004

This is Interesting: Suse, Novel, and IBM

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 10:44 pm


As a longtime Lotus Notes/Domino developer, I always find these
types
of stories interesting. Of
particular note:




Novell today also announced that IBM intends to make a $50 million investment
in Novell convertible preferred stock. In addition, Novell and IBM are
negotiating extensions to the current commercial agreements between IBM
and SUSE LINUX for the continued support of SUSE LINUX on IBM’s eServer
products and middleware products to provide for product and marketing support
arrangements related to SUSE LINUX. Both of these agreements will be effective
when the acquisition of SUSE LINUX by Novell is completed.








This seems like Novel
is being welcomed into the IBM fold. Wonder how this deal affects the the
long-term viability of Groupwise. A dollar says the Groupwise front end
will co-exist with the Notes forntends, both having a common data structure
within DB2 back end. Websphere at the fore of course.

No matter what its good to see some stuff starting to pop.


March 6, 2004

NT Logon services using Samba on Linux

Filed under: TheGarage — admin @ 10:17 pm


I dont know about how you guys that configure this type of stuff all the
time feel about it, but for all us guys that know how to manipulate arcane
config files because we used to do it a long time ago but who dont do a
whole lot of it any more, getting all the user names and passwords and
drive mappings to synch up as you move from machine to machine is a pain
in the ass.

My biggest problem is that I get the file services working half-assed good
enough to continue on with what ever other project I was working on, then,
as long as the Samba server is running, I dont fiddle with it anymore.
Then after some weeks, or months, pass and I need to use another workstation
or add another server or printer, I have to figure it all out again and
usually wind up with a glitch due to continual process improvement.

Apache was pretty easy to get up and running, but I dont use it for anything
yet because I am a Domino kind of guy. But I do hope Hylafax isnt as complicated.
I also downloaded Websphere eval for Linux and plan on giving that a whirl
here pretty soon. Like in the next day or so.

I started looking at Linux almost a year ago. Went ahead and bought the
Suse distribution since I had no real experince with Unix or Linux. Been
pretty happy with it so far. Yeah its pretty much old school (no matter
how much pretty graphics they throw out there, you are eventually going
to edit a config file, no?) but I want out of the Windows trap. I have
never been a gamer; the office suites seem to be adequate. Graphics? I
dont know if a Gimp will be of much use (One thing is for sure, when these
Linux/Unix programmers named their programs, marketing was not at the fore
of their thought process.) I’ll need to look into graphics, but even if
I keep one Windows machine around for Paint Shop Pro, I will still be loads
better off. Maybe even get a Mac for my
pics.
I just dont see any reason to keep on going on with the whole daily security
patch thing from now on.

Will Linux be shot full of holes the same way as Windows once it gets to
be the dominant player in the desktop OS market?

March 5, 2004

More on SCO

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 11:08 am


From CNET again, this
about SCO’s money problems. Regardless of whether the $50 million Baystar
investment came via Microsoft or not, the fact remains that without it,
SCO would be insolvent. Time to make some friends the SCO way:

Other parts of the memo seemed to indicate that the company has been searching
for patents on Novell technology to give it leverage in its lawsuit against
that company.

It is interesting though to consider whether Microsoft is using SCO to
fight a proxy war against the increasingly popular open source effort.
Funny how the wheel eventually comes full circle.

SCO is making friends…

Filed under: Tech — admin @ 10:43 am


This CNET
news story
tells how they are doing
it. They recently made friends with Computer Associates, Leggett &
Platt, and Questar who have recently "purchased licenses for [SCO’s]
intellectual property, allowing them to run Linux without fear of SCO legal
action."

According to the story, SCO is now initiating its strange courtship of
AutoZone
and DaimlerChrysler
and preparing
litigation against Bank of America
.

Some folks, like Sam Greenblatt, senior vice president and chief architect
of Computer Associates’s Linux Technology Group seem to have a sour taste
in their mouth resulting from their new friendship:

"CA disagrees with SCO’s tactics, which are intended to intimidate
and threaten customers. CA’s license for Linux technology is part of a
larger settlement with the Canopy Group. It has nothing to do with SCO’s
strategy of intimidation,"

SCO has been dying one of the slowest deaths I believe I have ever witnessed
in over 20 years in this industry. I have seen a lot of carnage in that
time and SCO seems to be in its final, desperate death throws–suing its
customers. I hope they do not win the day in court over these license issues
because $699 for a server license, or even a quarter of that, will kill
the Linux momentum. It will probably be the final nail in the coffin for
SCO as well.

SCO’s endgame is probably to pressure IBM to purchase Linux. Who knows?

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