LINKS
ARCHIVE
« February 2005 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28
You are not logged in. Log in
Tuesday, 8 February 2005
The Gospel of Tux
Mood:  chatty
Topic: Linux
I was listening to a book about hackers and the following excerpt from the Gospel of Tux was reproduced. I laughed so hard, partially because my study of the Old Testament allowed me to know that this is a parody of a real King. It took me about 10 minutes, but I found the passage.

2 Chronicles 10:12

"Three days later Jeroboam and all the people returned to Rehoboam, as the kind had said, "Come back to me in three days." The king answered them harshly. Rejecting the advice of the elders, he followed the advice of the young men and said, "My father made your yoke heavy, I will make it even heavier. My father scourged you with wips; I will scourge you with scorpions."

Having read that, you are now more fully able to appreciate the parody found in this passage.


'Now it came to pass that Microsoft had waxed great and mighty among the Microchip Corporations; mighter than any of the Mainframe Corporations before it had it waxed. And Gates heart was hardened, and he swore unto his Customers and their Engineers the words of this curse:

"Children of von Neumann, hear me. IBM and the Mainframe Corporations bound thy forefathers with grave and perilous Licences, such that ye cried unto the spirits of Turing and von Neumann for deliverance. Now I say unto ye: I am greater than any Corporation before me. Will I loosen your Licences? Nay, I will bind thee with Licences twice as grave and ten times more perilous than my forefathers. I will engrave my Licence on thy heart and write my Serial Number upon thy frontal lobes. I will bind thee to the Windows Platform with cunning artifices and with devious schemes. I will bind thee to the Intel Chipset with crufty code and with gnarly APIs. I will capture and enslave thee as no generation has been enslaved before. And wherefore will ye cry then unto the spirits of Turing, and von Neumann, and Moore? They cannot hear ye. I am become a greater Power than they. Ye shall cry only unto me, and shall live by my mercy and my wrath. I am the Gates of Hell; I hold the portal to MSNBC and the keys to the Blue Screen of Death. Be ye afraid; be ye greatly afraid; serve only me, and live."

And the people were cowed in terror and gave homage to Microsoft, and endured the many grave and perilous trials which the Windows platform and its greatly bogacious Licence forced upon them. And once again did they cry to Turing and von Neumann and Moore for a deliverer, but none was found equal to the task until the birth of Linux.'

You can enjoy the entire Gospel of Tux by clicking here

Posted by Eric at 12:16 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Quotes are good for the soul
Mood:  chatty
Topic: Quotes
"Yeah, a nalgene bottle is indestructable, but I've never had a problem with my water bottle being destroyed." - Dan

(why it's dangerous to discuss sims w/o telling the other person first)
Danny: dude
Danny: stargazing is dangerous
Me: ?
Danny: I had Ian outside stargazing
Danny: and a satelite fell on him
Danny: and he died
Danny: and I bargained with the Grim Reaper
Danny: and I won
Me: oic
Me: I thought u meant in real life

"Google is awesome, but one can become so dependent on Google as to forget to check local sources such as books" - Eric Mesa

Posted by Eric at 12:28 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Monday, 7 February 2005
What will become of my blog?
Mood:  chatty
Topic: Site Info
I just put up another blog on my server. I talk about my plans and the pros and cons that page. Check it out! Why does technology excite me so? I think because my knowledge of technology frees me from the slavery of others. I can run my own server with as much space as I want on it. I can post any content I want (as long as the goverment doesn't shut me down q;o) and I can be free of paying for software that doesn't work right out of the box -> by switching to Open Source alternative. Also...I'm a bit of a geek. q;o)

Note: That link may not work in a few days or weeks because my apartment complex is switching from wired to wireless internet, as I have previously mentioned. Therefore you can be certain that I will continue to blog here AT LEAST until around September 2005 or whenever my server comes back up.

Posted by Eric at 8:59 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Sunday, 6 February 2005
New toys
Mood:  chatty
Topic: computers
Just got a new 160 GB harddrive with my "thank you points" from my credit card. The sucker took around four hours to format, but it's up and running and I've been able to move a bunch of files onto there, saving my music hard drive for music and also being able have a lot more space for my photography. Since I now have two 512 mb cards for my camera, I can potentially download 1 GB per session if I completely fill up my camera. Since I only had 3 GB left on that hard drive, I was able to move my pictures over.

Then I took one of my other hard drives and connected it with my Linux box. I learned how to format a hard drive for Linux and also how to make it available for use. So I'm glad I went through that process since I'll be building a Linux computer from scratch in the future. It's exciting and I love technology and stuff like that!

Posted by Eric at 2:43 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Saturday, 5 February 2005
stick it to M$
Mood:  chatty
Topic: Linux
If you really want to give M$ the finger, install Linux on your Xbox. It's the cheapest way to have a computer - nearly half the cost of an emachine - and you have the extra "in your face" attribute of Linux running on Microsoft Xbox. This site has instructions on how to turn your Xbox into a Linux/Xbox or just Linbox. If you do the software modification you can still play all of your Xbox games as you normally do. If you do the hardware modification you can't use it for Xbox games anymore, but you now have a cheap PC.

Posted by Eric at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Friday, 4 February 2005
Part 1: Why it's bordering on illegal that some websites only accept Internet Explorer
Mood:  chatty
Now Playing: "Farewell To Arms" - Five Iron Frenzy
Topic: internet
I was going to write about this topic independently when I came accross this news article. It really ticks me off that people are cooperating with MS to keep people from using other browsers. My post will follow in a Part 2.
------

Jailed for using a nonstandard browser
A Londonder made a tsnuami-relief donation using lynx -- a text-based browser used by the blind, Unix-users and others -- on Sun's Solaris operating system. The site-operator decided that this "unusual" event in the system log indicated a hack-attempt, and the police broke down the donor's door and arrested him. From a mailing list:

For donating to a Tsunami appeal using Lynx on Solaris 10. BT [British Telecom] who run the donation management system misread an access log and saw hmm thats a non standard browser not identifying it's type and it's doing strange things. Trace that IP. Arrest that hacker.

Armed police, a van, a police cell and national news later the police have gone in SWAT styley and arrested someone having their lunch.

Out on bail till next week and preparing to make a lot of very bad PR for BT and the Police....

So just goes to show if you use anything other than Firefox or IE and you rely on someone else to interogate access logs or IDS logs you too could be sitting in a paper suit in a cell :(

Posted by Eric at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Thursday, 3 February 2005
sometimes even linux people get a little crazy....
Mood:  chatty
Now Playing: "Close to you" - Cubic U
Topic: Linux
There are some people trying to get Linux to run on a Nintendo DS. It certainly has a good enough computer for this. At first I wasn't sure why someone would want to do this, but I began to realize how good it could potentially be. It has built-in wireless and is infinitely more portable than a laptop. Perhaps they aren't so crazy....I don't know....Here's a news story about it.
----------
from Eurogamer.net

DS Linux closer to reality

by Tom Bramwell

A group of homebrew development enthusiasts attempting to get Linux running on the Nintendo DS have made something of a breakthrough this past week, managing to get a homebrew demo running on the dual screen handheld through a pass-through.
Advertisement

Although this is not evidence of Linux running on the DS, as has been reported in a couple of places, it is nevertheless quite a breakthrough for followers of DS Linux, demonstrating that it's possible to display user-created content on both DS screens.

Anybody interested in learning more about the DS homebrew scene - a very enterprising collective of young and enthusiastic modders - would do well to check out MeGaBiTe1's blog, The Mod Gods and the various links listed

Posted by Eric at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Wednesday, 2 February 2005
Wow, I'm amazing at predicting the future
Mood:  chatty
Now Playing: "Pardon Me" - Incubus
Topic: Linux
Just the other day
I mentioned
that a Linux (or other open source alternative) computer could allow people in developing countries the ability to have cheaper PCs by bypassing the expensive price of software licensing. This story from Red Herring shows that this is a future that is very close to actually occurring. The world needs more engineers like this one pushing to help the world be a better place - that is what engineering is all about, after all.

The hundred-buck PC

MIT's Nicholas Negroponte pushes a cheap PC for the rest of the world.
January 29, 2005

The founder and chairman of the MIT Media Lab wants to create a $100 portable computer for the developing world. Nicholas Negroponte, author of Being Digital and the Wiesner Professor of Media Technology at MIT, says he has obtained promises of support from a number of major companies, including Advanced Micro Devices, Google, Motorola, Samsung, and News Corp.

The low-cost computer will have a 14-inch color screen, AMD chips, and will run Linux (emphasis added) software, Mr. Negroponte said during an interview Friday with Red Herring at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. AMD is separately working on a cheap desktop computer for emerging markets. It will be sold to governments for wide distribution.

Mr. Negroponte and his supporters are planning to create a company that would manufacture and market the new portable PCs, with MIT as one of the stakeholders. It is unclear precisely what role the other four companies will play, although Mr. Negroponte hopes News Corp. will help with satellite capacity.

An engineering prototype is nearly ready, with alpha units expected by year's end and real production around 18 months from now, he said. The portable PCs will be shipped directly to education ministries, with China first on the list. Only orders of 1 million or more units will be accepted.

Mr. Negroponte's idea is to develop educational software and have the portable personal computer replace textbooks in schools in much the same way that France's Minitel videotext terminal, which was developed by France Telecom in the 1980s, became a substitute for phone books.

Mr. Negroponte has been interested in developing computing in the developing world for some time. He and his wife have funded three schools in rural Cambodia, helping outfit them with regular laptops and broadband connections.

Major companies from Hewlett-Packard to Microsoft to Dupont, facing saturated markets in the richest industrial countries, have shown an interest in developing less expensive products to sell in low-income countries in south Asia, Africa, and Latin America.

Posted by Eric at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Tuesday, 1 February 2005
Steal this show
Mood:  chatty
Topic: News
(my own note first: Listen up all you Tv and movie execs - give us what we want or face our wrath. It's that simple. If we want to watch tv when we want to watch it - w/o commercials or w/ them you better give it to us or there will be piracy. Stop trying to prevent us from doing what we want. Embrace it and you will make tons of money as Apple does with the Ipod.)

By LORNE MANLY and JOHN MARKOFF

AAC RICHARDS didn't think of himself as a rebel, or a shock to the well-lubricated system of the television industry. He was merely unhappy with the cable box provided by his local operator.

Dismayed by the sluggish channel-changing capability and the sparsely informative program guide, he decided to build a better cable box from scratch. Today, nearly three years since Mr. Richards, a 26-year-old computer software programmer in Willoughby, Ohio, embarked on his quest, hundreds of thousands of do-it-yourself television viewers are using the free software program he wrote, MythTV, to turn desktop personal computers into customized cable boxes, complete with the ability to record shows, surf the Web and strip out unwanted commercials.

The members of the MythTV community, who now do not have to pay monthly fees to rent set-top boxes or digital video recorders, have plenty of more mischievous company in trying to outwit the television industry. Millions of viewers are now watching illegal copies of television programs - even full seasons copied from popular DVD's - that are flitting about the Internet, thanks to other new programs that allow users to upload and download the large files quickly. And entrepreneurial souls are busily concocting even newer applications, including one that searches the Internet for illegal copies of any television shows you may desire and automatically downloads them to your computer.

These high-tech tricks address desires that have become standard in an age of instant media gratification: the desire to watch what you want, when and how you want it. And they're turning television - traditionally beamed into homes at the convenience of the broadcast and cable networks - into something more flexible, highly portable and commercial free.

Not surprisingly, the repercussions - particularly the rapidly growing number of shows available for the plucking online - terrify industry executives, who remember only too well what Napster and other file-sharing programs did to the music industry. They fret that if unchecked, rampant trading of files will threaten the riches of the relatively new and surprisingly lucrative television DVD business. It could endanger sales of television shows to international markets and into syndication. And it could further endanger what for the past 50 years has been television's economic linchpin: the 30-second commercial.

Hollywood has gotten a lot of headlines in recent months for fighting the online traffic in feature films. But behind the scenes, the studios and networks are just as focused on the proliferation of television shows being downloaded. Even more quietly, the conglomerates that produce the vast majority of television shows are scrambling to beat the downloaders by offering viewers a slew of attractive new gewgaws, from video-on-demand offerings that could let viewers order up an episode of "CSI" any time they like to a device that allows viewers who tune into the middle of a live TV broadcast to restart the program instantly.

"We have to try as an industry to get ahead of this and give the audience an attractive model before the illegal file-sharer providers meet their needs," said David F. Poltrack, CBS Television's executive vice president for research and planning.

"The clock is ticking on this," he added.

It all started with the digital video recorder. First popularized by TiVo and ReplayTV about five years ago, the DVR gave consumers a new degree of control: instead of being at the mercy of the broadcast schedule or VCR's, they could now be their own television programmers, scheduling shows at their convenience, pausing live television and skipping easily past commercials. Smith Barney estimates that though only a little more than 6 million Americans now use DVR's, by 2010 nearly half of American television households, or 58 million homes, will have them.

Meanwhile, the file-sharing networks that are the scourge of the music industry began to have their way with television. Two factors slowed the spread: television isn't as expensive as recorded music, and its digitized files are significantly larger and harder to maneuver than their music equivalents. But hacking the cable box or stealing pay-cable channels like HBO is a longstanding tradition. "There is a sense of entitlement that once it hits the airwaves it's free," said Brandon Burgess, NBC Universal's executive vice president for digital media, international channels and business development.

Until recently, it was hard for average viewers to act on that sense. But these days all it takes is a broadband connection and a program like BitTorrent.

Page 2 of 3)

Created by Bram Cohen, a 29-year-old programmer in Bellevue, Wash., BitTorrent breaks files hundreds or thousands of times bigger than a song file into small pieces to speed its path to the Internet and then to your computer. On the kind of peer-to-peer site that gave the music industry night sweats, an episode of "Desperate Housewives" that some fan copied and posted on the Internet can take hours to download; on BitTorrent, it arrives in minutes. BitTorrent may sound like some obscure techno-trickery, but more than 20 million people have already downloaded the application. Each week dozens of shows are shared by hundreds of thousands of people. "The Simpsons," "Family Guy" and "Friends" top the most-popular list, but even "SpongeBob SquarePants," "Trading Spaces" and "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" landed in the Top 20 for the week ending Jan. 16, according to Big Champagne, which measures file-sharing activity.

And the technology is getting easier to use by the day. Sajeeth Cherian, a 20-year-old communications engineering senior at Carleton University in Ottawa, decided there must be a better way to find BitTorrent files on the Web after listening to the constant gripes of his roommate about how much time he was spending searching for Japanese anime. Videora was his response. Plug in what shows you want to find, and it does all the work. He's charging $22.95 for the software.

"I thought this was a big idea, a bigger idea than trying to shut my roommate up," Mr. Cherian said.

Although it can be used for piracy, Videora is legal, he said: "I've considered this. I wouldn't want to get my pants sued off, and this has many legitimate uses."

However, Videora's illegitimate uses threaten one of the most welcome bonanzas for the television industry in recent years. Television DVD's, an afterthought in the DVD market just three years ago, were an estimated $2.3 billion-dollar business last year, according to a recent Merrill Lynch research report. They now represent nearly 15 percent of total DVD revenue, with profit margins between 40 and 50 percent.

Recent hit shows like "The Simpsons" can make a profit of $15 million - a season. And those are exactly the shows traded most online, according to Big Champagne. Although older shows are not quite as lucrative, the better ones can still bring in $1 million in profit for each season, the Merrill Lynch report found. So it's no surprise that the studios and networks are emptying their vaults; "The Bob Newhart Show," "Dynasty," "The A-Team," "Moonlighting" and "Remington Steele" are just a few of the DVD's planned for release this spring.

Executives at the entertainment conglomerates and the Motion Picture Association of America argue that the industry and the government have to move - fast - to establish rules by which copyrighted television programming "cannot be moved around willy-nilly," as Rick Cotton, executive vice president and general counsel of NBC Universal, puts it.

Otherwise, television executives say, the very creation of television programming is placed in jeopardy. "It's very expensive to produce and market, and people will be very reluctant to provide that content if it can't be adequately secured," said John Malcolm, the senior vice president and director of worldwide antipiracy operations for the M.P.A.A.

One way to protect such content, according to the industry, is through the introduction of something called the broadcast flag. The Federal Communications Commission announced in the fall of 2003 that any digitally broadcast show must include an invisible antipiracy device.

This has not gone over well with viewers. Last October, nine nonprofit groups petitioned the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, arguing that the action oversteps the F.C.C.'s authority, making life more complicated for law-abiding home viewers while being "entirely ineffective at stopping any pirate."

At the grass roots, the response has been more direct: a rush to buy and even build television sets and DVD recorders that sidestep the ruling. Home consumer devices, from digital televisions to DVD recorders, sold before July 1 do not have to recognize the broadcast flag. So the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital civil liberties organization (and one of the nine petitioners), has decided to set up what it is calling the Television Digital Liberation Front. Starting last July 29, it began holding the first of a planned series of nationwide "buildathons" to help novices build home-brew digital televisions and DVR's based on systems like the perfectly legal MythTV software.

Those systems are still pretty clunky to assemble, requiring technical skills beyond the grasp of most couch potatoes, not to mention bulky, fan-noise-spewing P.C.'s. But television tinkerers are trying to smooth these experiences - for profit or not.

Cecil Watson, a 32-year-old software expert in Fontana, Calif., created KnoppMyth to make the installation of MythTV as simple as possible. The MythTV movement is "picking up steam," Mr. Watson said, because it satisfies the way he wants to watch television today - and he doesn't have to pay rental fees for a cable box or a DVR if he chooses not to. "It records the shows I want to watch and I now have the choice to spend the time the way I want," he said.

The build-your-own-TV advocates say they're not looking to steal content; they're just looking for a reasonable amount of flexibility to watch the same recorded program in different rooms, or on the train to work; to lend friends a TV recording the way they used to lend videotapes; to bring the same set of recordings from their city home to their vacation house.

Playing the same show on different screens around the house seems reasonable, said Mr. Cotton of NBC Universal. But he added that expanding the circle much beyond that, the way future versions of the recently released TiVoToGo offering might allow one to send recorded programs over the Internet to nine other devices, including P.C.'s and laptops, was dangerously excessive. "Once you allow that much, is the technology really secure?" Mr. Cotton asked.

A spokeswoman for TiVo said that the current analog version does not allow transferring files outside a home network, but that the F.C.C. has nonetheless approved the company's security measures if it rolls out a robust digital version.

Ultimately, whether the television industry can avoid the disruptive fury that sideswiped the music industry - and even find lucrative ways to benefit from a digital, broadband, interconnected and portable entertainment world - will depend on how fast and flexible the conglomerates are in meeting viewers' changing desires.

It will also depend on understanding the motivation behind this flurry of new activity. It's not just the thrill of the illicit, like lighting up behind a Kroger's in high school. That is "woefully inadequate to describe why millions of people steal," said Mr. Garland of Big Champagne, the online media measurement company. "People aren't essentially lawless. It takes far more motivation than that."

The industry has begun experimenting, rethinking the rules by which television is disseminated. Some of the proposals, which center on video on demand, are fairly radical, going beyond the movies, news programs and N.F.L. highlights that make up today's most ambitious offerings.

Mr. Poltrack of CBS said that according to his network's research, a large number of viewers would welcome the chance to pay $1 to watch each television show, if they could do it on their own schedule and with the ability to skip commercials. With commercials, they'd be willing to pay 50 cents. And because the average viewer sees only half of a show's episodes, he said, this on-demand viewing won't hurt the regular showing.

A further CBS study gave viewers the chance to build their own night of television, where they could choose among a select group of pay-per-view shows in addition to the regular schedule of free programming that night. More than half of the 211 respondents chose to pay extra for at least one show. "This is the way people want television delivered," Mr. Poltrack said.

Before this video-on-demand vision materializes, a bewildering thicket of contract and revenue-sharing issues among the producers, programmers and distributors of television must be overcome.

Nonetheless, executives understand that they have little alternative but to push ahead. Chasing after the people trafficking in television programming can do only so much good.

"You'll make more money and suffer far less from the black market if you simply create the opportunity to access content freely," said Mr. Garland of Big Champagne.

Posted by Eric at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink
Monday, 31 January 2005
You MUST read this.
Mood:  chatty
Now Playing: "Beautiful" - Fantastic Plastic Machine
Topic: The Web
STOP WHATEVER YOU ARE DOING. I'M SEROIUS-- PUT THAT DOWN AND READ THIS. SEND IT TO OTHERS, POST IT AROUND CAMPUS, SEND IT TO YOUR CONGRESSMAN, BUT...FOR THE WORLD'S SAKE - READ IT.

Digital Rights Manifesto

Posted by Eric at 3:28 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink

Newer | Latest | Older