Archive for the ‘Editorial’ Category

This is me backpedaling on my backpedal…

Friday, September 14th, 2007

Fuck Apple and fuck their iPod Classic.

So, it’s finally happened. Unhappy with other media players being better than iTunes, Apple have apparently decided to stop them from working with the new range of iPods.

Who does this affect?

This affects Linux users – there’s no iTunes for Linux, so popular Linux iPod management tools like gtkpod and Rhythmbox will not work with the new range of iPods.

Windows users who just plain don’t like iTunes and perfer an alternative like Winamp, Ephpod or many of the other iPod management applications out there.

That is more than enough for me to ditch the notion of using their player at all and even if the gtkpod team gets it working that is just plain bullshit. Face Apple, iTunes is a steaming pile of shit and fucking worthless if you want to manage a collection bigger than a handful of tracks and locking people into it by way of the iPod db is a real asshole move.

Doctorow says it better (and with less cursing) than myself:

…this is about Apple limiting the choices available to people who buy their iPod hardware.

It’s hard to understand why Apple would do this, but the most likely explanations are that Apple wants to be sure that competitors can’t build their own players to load up iPods — now that half of the major labels have gone DRM free, it’s conceivable that we’d get a Rhapsody or Amazon player that automatically loaded the non-DRM tracks they sold you on your iPod (again, note that this has nothing to do with preventing piracy — this is about preventing competition with the iTunes Store).

Hopefully Cowon will roll out a large capacity player soon or I’m going to be one miserable bastard.

File Under: Rat’s Ass, I could give a

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

I’ve been out of the loop for a little bit with the tech news, having my nose to the grindstone for the past couple of months, so I was a little alarmed when I saw this news item from ZaReason, “Today was filled with articles such as, ‘Ubuntu Kills Linux, Then Self, Dell Suspected of Foul Play‘ which had a lot of depressing but true points and even more depressing and untrue points.” A little taken aback, I re-read the article and the comments thinking to myself that this person certainly has a dislike for Linux. I then scanned the sidebar for what other articles that had been written and not really surprising it was filled with charmers like these:

  • The More Dell Lies, the More Ubuntu Community Embraces Dell
  • Ubuntu Kills Linux, Then Self, Dell Suspected of Foul Play.
  • Ubuntu’s Death Rattle
  • Typical Linux FUD Campaign towards Microsoft.
  • Ubuntu and Dell, a Mismatch Made in a Place Called Hell [IdeaStorm].
  • Smartest Linux Move Ever? And Why Ubuntu will Fail
  • Microsoft Thanks Ubuntu For Increasing XP and Vista Sales

WTF? Sounds more like someone has a score to settle or is on the payroll.

Curious about the company behind the blog I peek at their homepage which proudly crows, “open-source, non-proprietary solutions for Windows.” Ah, a kernel of truth. They are in the business of selling WAMP tools, “Apache Web-Developer Server Suite for Windows including PHP, MySQL, ASP, JSP, Perl, SSL” which, in my experience makes whatever they have to say pretty worthless. Look if you cannot figure out that Apache and MySQL run like shit on Windows and that you are better off sticking with Microsoft product offerings then you are pretty fucking ignorant. Guess what? Windows Server 2003 family ships with IIS. Why in the hell would you try and bolt on Apache? Sure it is superior in my experience to IIS but it runs like hell on MS products so if you are going to use Apache then use a *nix derivative otherwise stick with the Microsoft product family.  Same goes for the database, if you have the cash to pony up for 2003 then you sure as hell likely have it for a SQL Server license as well.  If not, then why are you screwing around with Microsoft for your back-end services?*

So to the fine folks at ZaReson, no need to get depressed or be saddened. In short, there is nothing to see there or even really worth listening to and for as how well reasoned those arguments seem or sound it really boils down to an individual trying to protect their tiny little market share and for all the “Linux, Windows, MacOS? Who cares. Just give me something that works!” comments it is quite clear what they think the world should use. FUD indeed.

* Note: I spent eight years as a Windows System Administrator and three so far as a Linux Systems Administrator.

Yahoo! Mail Officially Sucks Ass

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

When checking my mail this morning I was greeted with a pile of new ads boxing in my mail experience with Yahoo which on my current laptop makes reading damn near impossible.

Yahoo Mail Sucks

Since I’m too tired at the moment to really work myself into a froth I’ll just say that if you are looking for my new home I can be found at james AT guess-what-domain-this-is DOT com.

The Christening

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

Thinker

Little Giggler

Honestly, I thought that this day would be easier than it turned out. Nothing went wrong with the ceremony and Gabriella was so perfectly behaved sleeping on me through Mass and only complaining at the tail end of the baptism itself because the priest was taking just a little too long for her liking. No, instead I found myself deeply conflicted wrestling with feelings of anger, hurt, and fear.

I was raised in an absence of religion, instead my parents emphasized logic, reason, and skepticism. Growing up I was an outsider as I am not baptized and had never set foot in a church, excepting as a tourist, until I met my wife. To me matters of faith and religious belief were a curiosity as they are not something I have ever felt before nor really been exposed to as many of my friends were professed atheists or agnostics. In these recent years, though, my curiosity has curdled into an aversion as I hear the language of faith become intertwined with that of war, discrimination, hate, and violence, not to mention what feels like an all out assault on reason, logic, and intellectualism.

Sitting through the Mass, I had a hard time reconciling these feelings with the priests call to pray for enjoining my daughter to the church that here I stood on the threshold afraid of the capacity of their faith to do harm and what it might mean to my daughter. Can I protect her? Can I teach her to question deeply and throughly? Can I raise her to be skeptical enough to preserve her personal integrity? What will this mean to my marriage? Will we find ourselves reaching for each others throats playing out the tired stereotypes of atheist versus theist? The stress that day is still weighing on me today.

Management might know a little of my feelings. I have never been shy in expressing my dislike for organized religion, arguing that it is another political mechanism aimed at command and control of people, but I have not really expressed this fear that grips me tightly. We have only discussed this in the academic sense and never really tackled it as an emotional issue. Bluntly, I am afraid of religion and those people that call themselves religious but what makes it even harder to swallow is the irrationality of my fear.

On the surface, the fear might not seem so irrational what with the talk of this administration centering on a “divine right” to wage war, to incarcerate and torture individuals, DOMAs being passed nation wide that couch discrimination in passages from the bible, the ongoing attack on science from religious and political leaders among others. All but a handful of those issues affects me personally so why did I feel my stomach knot up and a cold shiver pass over me while I sat in church holding my daughter? I am not sure.

Maybe I want to shield my daughter from all of that, to provide her with the tools and skills necessary to survive in the toxicity of that environment. I fear for her. I fear the world we are making, or undoing, for her. I fear that I will not be a strong enough husband, father, and individual to help her through it but before I fall asleep, though, I find I am just afraid. Profoundly afraid.

(Worthless Sysadmin + Microsoft)^ Crap Police Work = Jail Time

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

The Norwich Bulletin reports that a substitute teacher has been found guilty in Norwich porn case and with her sentencing looming in March she could face upwards of 40 years in jail but there is a twist to the story.

When the facts of the case are laid out it looks to be a blizzard of incompetence ranging from the school’s IT staff, shoddy forensic police work, questionable judicial proceedings, and a the ribbon that ties it all together is one of Redmond’s flagship products. SunbeltBLOG worries about the notion of doing actual hard time for a spyware infection. A frightening though indeed.

Reading the articles I find myself question the capabilities of the police investigators and their apparent lack of understanding of how spyware operates. From another Norwich Bulletin article:

Norwich Police Det. Mark Lounsbury, who investigates computer crimes, said there was evidence that someone had directly accessed several sexually-oriented sites by clicking on a link.

Ok. Prove that to me. Do you have photographic or video evidence? Because guess what Det. Lounsbury, popup generators are designed to act like a human click-through and this is not to mention that there are no means to differentiate between a bot click or a human click. Now you might say, “But she had to install the software, therefore she must have visited those sites!” Wrong again. Nearly all Microsoft OSes log in as root by default and one of the charming aspects of this is that it allows for the surreptitious installation of software. In other words using Internet Explorer as root will allow sites to install software without your knowledge or consent, wonderful technologies like ActiveX facilitate this activity. The defense’s examination of the facts pointed to a hairstyling website as the source of the infection.

All this begs the question of what the lazy ass Norwich school IT staff was up to before, during, and after this incident. If I were Amero I would be giving serious consideration to a civil suit against the town and possibly the state. It is their responsibility to secure the PCs and the network, not the teachers, and you can scream all you want that she should have unplugged the PC but the fact still remains that shitty IT staff plus a crap OS is a disaster waiting to happen. Should she do time for the incompetence of others?

My $0.02 in closing: Don’t trust the cops and get yourself a secure OS.

US Hate Groups 2005, Connecticut Edition

Friday, December 1st, 2006

Faux Real Tho points to the Southern Poverty Law Center’s report on Active Hate Groups in the US which counted a total of 803 groups. Surprising to me, though it probably shouldn’t, was that Connecticut rings in with five active groups while Rhode Island and Vermont slip by with zero.

SPLC Hate Groups 2005 Connecticut

As far as hate goes, it seems balanced in terms of the number of groups that hate each other, though the Eastern part of the state is really representing with the hate. Go figure. I guess Danbury really is for lovers.