Saturday, January 12, 2008

Open and Free Radicals

Online Etymology Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This
disenfranchise
"deprive of civil or electoral privileges," 1644, from dis- + enfranchise. Earlier form was disfranchise (1467).

Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper

When duly elected officials engage in politically expedient knee-jerk reactions like the endorsement of The Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act then I have already been disenfranchised.

I believe this legislation has made the American Revolution illegal. This legislation has overturned the rights and privileges guaranteed by the framers of the Constitution. This legislation makes a mockery of the lives sacrificed by the women and men who fought and died to keep this nation free. This kind of politicized flip-flop-flappery only serves to debase this great nation further in the ethical and moral court of world opinion.

What is worse, much worse, is that by succumbing to such social paranoia in drafting this sort of legislation we have lost faith in the very democratic process that we hold so dear. When dissenting voices are suppressed either by the rule of "Law" or by violent means then we have become no better that the most petty despot.

History, and full prisons, have clearly shown that we can not legislate morality. It is laughable that our current political leadership somehow believes that they can legislate "faith" in this manner.

Save Democracy
REPEAL
The Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act

Friday, January 11, 2008

Open Coercion

This is a great analysis of the M$ vs. OLPC situation ...

  • It's a threat Microsoft can't let stand: the entire third world learning Linux as children, and growing up to use it. And Microsoft is going to get its way.
  • It comes after a sudden wave of SCO-like problems for the OLPC project. A specious patent lawsuit over keyboards. Board-member Intel thrown out of the project for attempting to convince national governments to drop OLPC purchases and go with its own (Windows) product. First, OLPC is shown what its problems will be if it doesn't cooperate with Microsoft. Then, Microsoft approaches with money and technical help - you just have to run Windows to get it.

    The move is presented as enabling choice. It starts out with a dual-boot capability, provided by Microsoft engineers. Not that any work by Microsoft was really needed, Open Source firmware that boots Microsoft operating systems has existed for ten years. Microsoft says they will issue guidelines, and start field trials this month. Dual-boot sounds harmless, but Microsoft's version of choice is better stated as we'll give you choice and then make you choose Microsoft. I'm sure there will be pressure on national governments to select Windows-only loads for their OLPC purchases, or to specify texts protected with Windows DRM for classroom use.

    Nobody can pretend that the world has ever been absent any choice to run Microsoft software, or that Microsoft must work with OLPC to increase choice. Microsoft operating systems are the only option offered with the vast majority of desktop and server computers. By refusing to tolerate hardware that runs another OS by default, Microsoft is working to reduce choice.

    Consider how good it might have been for the third world to have a computer infrasturcture they could support on their own, without any capital and technological drain to the United States. That's what they'll be losing. But that was never the goal of the OLPC project. It's meant to bring free e-Books to students, at a lower cost than their national governments could sustain. With OLPC based on all Free Software, it was likely that those books would have themselves been under similar licensing like Creative Content. Now, it is likely that third world students will be running DRM-locked textbooks that are only acessable under Windows.

    Nicholas Negroponte has always been willing to go where the wind blows: the original OLPC prototypes ran Debian, notable because it's produced by a public-benefit non-profit. Once Red Hat offered money and resources, Debian disappeared from the system. Now it's Red Hat's turn to disappear.

    The folks I have the most sympathy for are those students who might have been offered a way to take control of their own destiny, and make their nation self-sufficient for the IT infrastructure they need to participate in worldwide trade. Now, they'll get less. But I also feel sympathy for the many Open Source developers who participated in OLPC, and will now see their work discarded or perverted to support Microsoft.

    Bruce Perens


  • Open Bourdain

    An excellent interview with Anthony Bourdain

    anthony bourdain
    316
    The well-traveled chef reflects on a life of eating and other excessive behavior.
    by Sean O'Neal

    Thursday, January 10, 2008

    Open and Shut ... Again!

    In my previous post RANT ( Open and Shut ... Picasa no es mi casa! ) I stirred up at least one hornet from the nest ... and the comment dialog with Dan Kegel isn't over yet.

    Then I found this ...

    Give Wine apps the look and feel of GNOME or KDE

    By Andrew Min on January 10, 2008 (4:00:00 PM)
    Wine allows users to run Windows programs natively under Linux without paying a dime. However, there's a tiny problem: programs running in Wine don't look so great. They don't even try to fit into your native GNOME or KDE color scheme or use your preferred fonts. You could use a Windows theme, but themes make Wine run extremely slowly. Luckily, with a little configuration editing, it's easy to make Wine applications look at lot more like the rest of the apps on your desktop.
    ...
    My comment at Linux.com, reposted here sums up my feelings....
    NO NO NO ...This is WRONG! Port applications to Linux. Do not foster the illusion that it is in any way appropriate to _make do_ with Microsoft apps in a Linux environment.
    ...and PLEASE, don't ever call them "Wine apps" again... What an insult to Wine!

    Wednesday, January 09, 2008

    Open Contradictions

    Nicholas Negroponte is skating on very thin ice. Even suggesting that OLPC should get into bed with Microsoft will have far reaching (detrimental) effects in the world of Open Source development.

    Linux.com reported ...

    Reactions to the story this morning on the OLPC developers channel on irc.freenode.net ranged from shock to anger, with one developer saying that it is "utter crap, and is exactly the opposite of why I support this project."
    Notice the very carefully chosen words, "...why I support this project." My bet is that they were spoken by an individual who has donated his/her time to the OLPC project. Negroponte is risking future projects by debasing the value of donated time.

    Personal experience tells me that many people will make personal sacrifices (donations) that no amount of money can buy. The value to the giver of such a donation is in contributing to a project that has social value and has integrity. If the giver believes that the integrity of a project is compromised then their personal sacrifice or donation is compromised.

    Watch out for the old maxim: "Burn me once, shame on you. Burn me twice, shame on me!"

    If Negroponte burns the contributions for this project who will step up for the next one?

    Open Countdown

    The Time is Now: Countdown Begins on 12.12.07

    SIGN THE MANDATE DONATE TO SUPPORT OV VISIT OUR BLOG OV ON FACEBOOK

    THE TIME IS NOW.

    Today, December 12, 2007, to mark the start of official negotiations between the Israeli and Palestinian negotiation teams, OneVoice is starting the countdown for 365 days of civic action toward a two state solution - one year of holding ourselves – the international community and our elected representatives accountable.

    Last month in Annapolis, Prime Minister Olmert and President Abbas agreed "to engage in vigorous, ongoing and continuous negotiations ... [and] make every effort to conclude an agreement before the end of 2008." And OneVoice was there too in support of the leadership.

    OneVoice supports the serious steps that Abbas and Olmert are taking to negotiate a mutually-acceptable two state solution, guaranteeing a viable independent Palestinian state at peace with Israel. And we are pledging to put our support behind them as they start this difficult process.

    To remind all citizens of their duty to support the process, on December 12, 2007 OneVoice launched 11 digital screens – 5 in Ramallah and 6 in Tel Aviv – displaying countdown clocks set for a one year: one year to achieve a comprehensive two state agreement, one year to end the violence and end the conflict ... one year for citizens to take a stand in support of the process.

    OneVoice is simultaneously launching countdown clocks online, as a representation within the international community that we are holding ourselves, and our leaders who took part in the Annapolis conference, accountable to playing our part in this process.


    We all too often speak about the failures of leadership. But we too have a responsibility to do our part. We are launching a countdown clock to remind ourselves that over the next year until December 12 , 2008
    we must consider: What are WE willing to do to help end the conflict?

    Countdown with us – ways you can be involved:

    The OneVoice Teams

    You are subscribed to PeaceWorks Foundation's OneVoice Movement Update List.

    For removal requests click here or e-mail: MailListAdmin@onevoicemovement.org and specify Unsubscribe in the subject line.

    Open Grammar

    Seems that proper grammar may not always be your friend...

    From Barbados gallimaufry.ws offers ...

    A co-worker pointed out this paragraph from the Nation’s election coverage today.

    There is a claim that a third of our water supply is stool-contaminated and it comes from Patricia Inniss, the Democratic Labour Party’s candidate for St. Michael North East.

    Open Home

    A New Home for the Elephant God

    Imbi_temple_3

    Near Imbi market we're alerted to an auspicious Indian occasion by the presence of hanging decorations made from coconut leaves. A new shrine to Ganesha, the Hindu elephant god, remover of all obstacles, is being conscecrated by a priest (in black) and his assistant.

    I am taken with the importance of food in the dedication of a shrine.

    Eat when you are hungry
    sleep when you are tired
    ...
    chop wood
    carry water

    Open and Shut - Picasa no es mi casa!

    There is only one reason in my mind for making Wine* a pre-requisite for a Linux application - the Picasa program is not written for Linux! This approach to application development for Linux is up-side-down and backwards. In my simple view it is kowtowing to Windows while paying lip service to Linux.

    Note to Google: Either support Linux or don't but do not insult us.


    * Wine is not the villan or the problem here. Wine in an exceptional program suite designed to meet a very specific need - access and integration into a Windows networking environment.

    Ok, now Papa you have really stepped in a pile of doo-doo this time... What about all the real Linux users that just want to use a Microsoft application (without having to have a complete Windows system)???

    THIS IS MY POINT EXACTLY!!! Instead of properly developing programs and applications for Linux we are relegated to second-class citizen status - stuffed inside a Microsoft box.

    Let my software go!

    [Follow-up - Added 01/10/08 in response to comments.]

    About Picasa for Linux

    So, how does it work? Picasa for Linux runs the current Windows version of Picasa using a carefully tested version of Wine, an open-source implementation of the Windows application-programming interface (API). Wine runs on top of the X Window System and Linux or Unix. But it’s not a Windows emulator; instead, it provides a Windows API middleware layer that enables Windows programs to run on Linux without the slowing effects of OS emulation or a virtual machine.

    Tuesday, January 08, 2008

    Open Thank You

    The Gratitude Campaign




    Hat tip and a Salute to Douglas Karr

    Monday, January 07, 2008

    Open to serious review

    I used to take politics, seriously...

    ...then my mom made me put them back.

    Open Mouth, insert foot

    I owe Doug Alder an apology. Doug left a perfectly correct comment on my Papa Predictions for 2008 posting. In it he observed, "I think you must have missed MS' decision to not charge any licensing fees for server 2008..." He is absolutely right. I missed that bit of news. (More on that elsewhere.)

    Doug also mentioned that "Your comment form does not appear to give me a place to put my url when signing in using my gmail account - it is             "

    Now this is a really serious matter. Apparently the comment form strips out e-mail addresses as well(?). This is not boding well for Google.

    All that aside, Doug Alder has been and continues to be a long-standing member of the blogging community. I am sorry for suggesting anything to the contrary.

    Sunday, January 06, 2008

    Open Notation

    Length: 38:20 - Longish but worth it.
    This is something akin to landing on the moon. Its potential is huge but I won't be using it in my kitchen anytime soon. Still it represents a noteworthy paradigm shift in thinking about programming.

    Actual video removed - click here to view it. Subtext

    (It was taking too long to load the entire video each time you visit this page.)

    Open Snow

    This reminds me so much of Battle Creek Michigan...

    IMG_7404.jpg

    Click on the picture to go on an adventure.

    Click here for a clue to the location ( Iran:Frozen Tehran in Photos )

    Open Popularity

    I read the following quote and was unsettled...

    Kenya: Deep lessons for South Africa

    THE events of the last two weeks in Kenya have exposed just how fragile democracy is when it does not enjoy the protection of a country’s political leadership.

    I am unsettled because I believe the onus of responsibility lays not on the political leadership but on the people. I contend that we are the keepers of our democracy, not our leaders. If we as a people do not agree with our leaders then it is our democratic responsibility to 'vote the bums out of office.' If, through a democratic process, we do not then the conclusion must be drawn that we accept a given leader.

    If a leader assumes power through a means other than the democratic process then it is our, the people's, responsibility to address the matter. Social unrest, as seen in Kenya, is an indicator that the democratic process is still just that, in process.

    I believe that the author and publication above are confusing democracy with economic stability. I believe a more apt observation might be, "THE events of the last two weeks in Kenya have exposed just how fragile an economy is when it does not enjoy the protection of a country’s political leadership."

    Open Polarity

    In a bi-polar paradigm...

    Ya'll are on one side or the other...

    pro or con
    republican or democrat
    left or right
    south or north
    east coast or west coast

    right or wrong

    ... you is either fer us or agin us...
    so make up yer mind!
    C'mon mister ya'll gotta choose 'r it don' mean nothin'.

    Which bi-polar side are you on?

    http://www.csusm.edu/rms/training.htm

    Open Celebration

    Mass in church marks Armenian Christmas

    January 5th, 2008 by anush



    On the evening of 5 January each year a special mass is conducted in Armenian churches to mark Christmas.


    Lots of visitors are here on this day. Most of them come not to hear the mass but to light a candle and take it home, which is the tradition.



    The real meaning of taking a light home, which is having it in your heart and taking it home, comes true after staying here for a couple of hours.

    Saturday, January 05, 2008

    Open Papa Predictions for 2008

    Linux Mini-laptops

    Beginning just after "Tax Time" there will be a run on OLPCs and ASUS Eee PCs. Once computer users are let out of the MS-Box they will quickly realize that the power and features of these and other small form laptops is perfectly suited to their everyday computing needs.

    Real prediction: Enthusiastic reception of the Linux based mini-laptop will cause a landslide acceptance of Linux on the Desktop.

    Bonus link: Noahpad

    Google Tribulations
    Coming under the privacy watchers fearful gaze Google will begin to reveal what will come to be known as the gShiner, the GoOgle - the Google blackeye. I view this as an unfortunate side effect of Google's main mission - to acquire and provide information upon request. Privacy watchers will insist that it is too much personal information. Google will suffer a blackeye for doing well exactly what it is used for...by everyone - vanity searches.

    Real Prediction: Google, to stay competitive in the 'Information Display' market will release a new AI based criteria parser that significantly improves the average user's search experience. By implementing a more 'common-language' parser Google will be able to reduce the returned 'hits' to a much more succinct and manageable number.

    Microsoft will rush MinWin to market...
    Realizing that Papa's Prediction #1 is bearing down on them like a run-away freight train Microsoft will begin to do what they do best... FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt). Claiming that their 'small foot print, fully Windows compatible' version of MiniWini (MeanieWeenie) is just around the corner Microsoft will attempt to undermine common sense and the public's realization that surfing and internet are the only things they really do with any PC.

    Real Prediction: Microsoft will implode! With revenue falling at a rate of 32 feet per second squared the Redmond Giant will come tumbling down the economic bean stalk at breakneck speed.

    The real Real Prediction: Microsoft will slowly begin to release the Linux based versions of its "popular" applications. And foolishly try to sell them at bloated MS-Prices.

    Friday, January 04, 2008

    Open Hunger

    There is a sensation that affluent Americans experience when they skip one or possibly two consecutive meals. I felt it today.

    I left the house this morning in a bit of a rush having consumed only a couple of cups of coffee. When I got to the office things started up right away so I didn't have time to lounge around. Later, when I passed through the main office, I looked over the selection of Vendor donuts and just kept walking. Errands to run on my "lunch" hour pushed my schedule back even further.

    On the way back to the office I did manage to grab a Veggie Sub. That is when I felt that sensation. It wasn't a pain or a pang. It wasn't really uncomfortable. It was just a mild sense of ... hunger.

    But more important was the sense of relief. A sense of being unburdened. I was not engaged in a food process just because it was a particular time of day. I was not mindlessly pushing just another meal into my face. I was involved in a marked celebration of culinary and sensual delights. A completion of a circle.

    eat when you are hungry
    sleep when you are tired
    ...
    chop wood
    carry water

    Thursday, January 03, 2008

    Open 15 Minutes


    ... of fame?

    Wednesday, January 02, 2008

    Open Support

    A is for Allah by Yusuf Islam (Cat Stevens)



    Support peace...

    Tuesday, January 01, 2008

    Open Reminders

    I know better than to make resolutions. For me they have been little more than momentary declarations of good intentions. Followed quickly on by first slivers then planks of guilt as each well intentioned point of resolve fades away...

    So instead I thought I would make a list of reminders.

    1. I am busted and broken, not perfect. To believe any part to the contrary is to set myself up for disappointment.
    2. I don't dance... I am simple and blunt. In matters of the heart I am to the point.
    3. ...and I don't do magic. The wondrous and curious events that might occur around me are not of my doing.
    4. I have what I need. "Hence always rid yourself of desires in order to observes its secrets;"
    5. I do not have what I want. "But always allow yourself to have desires in order to observe its manifestations."
    The quotes for 4 and 5 are from the Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu (Author), D. C. Lau (Translator)

    Chapter 1

    The way that can be spoken of
    Is not the constant way;
    The name that can be named
    Is not the constant name.

    The nameless was the beginning of heaven and earth;
    The named was the mother of the myriad creatures.

    Hence always rid yourself of desires in order to observes its secrets;
    But always allow yourself to have desires in order to observe its manifestations.

    These two are the same
    But diverge in name as they issue forth.
    Being the same they are called mysteries,
    Mystery upon mystery -
    The gateway of the manifold secrets.

    Monday, December 31, 2007

    Open morning

    Golden sunshine, heavy with promise, cuts across the mist rising from the cold flowing Ohio river of December's last day.

    The last day brings a host of last things...

    Sitting at the breakfast table across from The Saint (my wife, who must be a saint to have put up with me these past 25 years). Fresh coffee, a two egg omelette, three sausage links and two slices of buttered toast. It won't be the last time sitting across the table...but it will likely be the last of the cardio-challenging breakfasts.

    Inexorably the river flows...

    Off to the office - yes, working on New Years Eve... I could have taken a vacation day - but there are those last sniggling year-end-roll-over issues that Information Systems Administrators need to watch over. So working today isn't really a bad thing - I would have been called in anyway. Besides, it is very quiet today... everyone else, well, almost everyone else opted to take the vacation day...

    ...and the river flows...

    Open afternoon

    I broke the mirror of my life
    and cut myself
    trying to pick up the pieces

    ...and the river flows...

    Thursday, December 27, 2007

    Open Darkness

    RAWALPINDI, Pakistan - Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was assassinated...

    I am heart broken.

    I did not know Ms Bhutto. I did not know her political views. I did not know her social views. I did not know her religious views.

    I believed that in an open and democratic process Ms Bhutto represented the possibility of change.

    I believe that Ms Bhutto was singled out as much for her gender as for any other value she may have held or supported.

    I believe that Pakistan _and_ the world has lost an opportunity to grow.

    We, as a world society, are less for this atrocity.

    Open Travesty

    Pakistan's Bhutto killed by bombing

    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2007-12-27 22:09

    RAWALPINDI, Pakistan - Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was assassinated Thursday in a suicide attack that also killed at least 20 others at a campaign rally, aides said.


    Pakistan's former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto wears a shawl presented by her supporters, a gesture of respect, during her visit to Peshawar, Pakistan, Wednesday, Dec. 26, 2007. [Agencies]

    Open Taxes

    As we approach the tax season the disparity of who pays more taxes will again raise its attention grabbing head. And as a group we howl... Beth-who-does-not-blog-yet, knowing my penchant for moral puzzles, sent me this link

    BUSINESS | December 25, 2007
    Professor Cites Bible in Faulting Tax Policies
    By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON
    The work of a professor at the University of Alabama Law School has prompted some other scholars to scour religious texts to explore the moral basis of tax and spending policies.
    I found this to be an interesting read as well as a fearless assertion in light of the author's criticism leveled at her home state. Without offering the specifics the gist of the article is that there is a disparity between how much the poor pay and how much the wealthy pay in taxes.

    Formal notation: There is a disparity between the amount of taxes paid by the wealthy and the amount paid by the poor.

    [Firestorm Alert]

    The issue of the disparity between the amount of taxes paid by the wealthy and the amount of taxes paid by the poor IS A SMOKE SCREEN!!!

    It effectively prevents us from focusing on the real issue.
    Changing my tax rate by a couple of percentage points either way will not affect my personal economic standing significantly. Changing the tax rate for the wealthy 10's of percentage points will not affect my personal economic standing significantly!

    This disparity issue only serves to obscure what will actually affect my personal economic standing: Government Spending. What is the government doing with the taxes that it is taking from us, albeit inequitably.

    Here... is this really good stewardship of our taxes?

    Cost of the War in Iraq
    (JavaScript Error)
    To see more details, click here.

    480 BILLION as of this writing... Those monies invested in Education and Health Care would have a significant effect on my personal economic situation.

    Wednesday, December 26, 2007

    Open Weave

    If you have read me before you know that I have taken a big gulp of the Google-Aid. So you won't be surprised at all to hear that I was an early adopter of the Google Browser Sync extension for Firefox. Across platforms my Firefox experience is [almost] the same. Now I should mention that this extension is just a bit idio-sync-ratic. I mean, I have lost my bookmarks once or twice but... seems that backups abound on the other platforms so... only a little blood, a little harm, so only a little foul.

    Caveat: Google is a search engine. It is intent on acquiring data and then drawing conclusions, specifically merchandising meta-data.

    Mozilla enters the sync-ronicity fray offering ...

    The general idea is that by utilizing a Mozilla online services backend, users can store data such as bookmarks and history. That data can be synchronized with their local browser or even multiple browsers.
    ...

    According to the Mozilla Labs blog post announcing the Weave effort, one of the goals of the project is to, "ensure that it is easy for people to set up their own services with freely available open standards-based tools."

    Mozilla also expects the Weave effort to grow into a social effort, enabling a user's online hosted data to be shared and accessed by friends. The group also plans to build out tools and APIs so that developers can expand and utilize the platform.

    - InternetNews
    Just what we need...
    • YASN - Yet Another Social Network
    • "a user's online hosted data to be shared and accessed by friends" ??? Maybe someone from F*ceB00k will give them a call and explain the facts of life to them. Sheeeeesh!
    • ...and just what will Mozilla do with this wealth of meta-data? To whom will they sell my personal information?
    I don't know what better fits this situation: 'Better the devil you know' or 'Out of the frying pan, into the fire'.

    Tuesday, December 25, 2007

    Open meaning

    This all started for me when Jeremy at too many topics, too little time. pointed me at ...

    sean cubitt's blog

    Thursday, December 20, 2007

    Crisis in the meaning of meaning

    Meaning was the once-natural sequence of being, knowing, interpreting, judging, willing and acting . It is this sequence which no longer operates as it did in earlier times.
    ...
    (Please read the entire post - it is well worth it. -Papa)
    Which in turn prompted me to reflect on an article that Beth (who doesn't blog, yet) pointed my way from ...

    Notebook

    Sat Dec 01, 2007 at 01:40:42 PM PST

    ...

    I had thought we had decided as a nation that internment camp was a monstrous thing. What foolish thought; it needed only a new era, and someone new to exhume it and give it the kiss of diplomacy, and now even that is a reasonable pair of words to utter.

    Truth, though, seems the coldest word of all. We have decided that truth does not mean truth, and from that atomic alteration, all the other words reorganize themselves in seismic shifts. If truth does not mean truth, then journalism does not mean journalism, and law does not mean law, and freedom does not mean freedom, and equitable does not mean equitable, and every other word can be decapitated as well, left on the ground like so many fallen soldiers in an unexplainable war. Is one of our presidential candidates secretly a Muslim, and hiding it from us? Who cares, if the accusation can be made? Does a new law have a claimed effect? Who cares what the facts themselves might say, if there is someone to dispute the point?

    Meaning doesn't. Truth isn't. Law does not mean law. Freedom does not mean freedom.

    So am I surprised at all when ... From the Desk of David Pogue

    The Generational Divide in Copyright Morality

    ...

    In an auditorium of 500, no matter how far my questions went down that garden path, maybe two hands went up. I just could not find a spot on the spectrum that would trigger these kids' morality alarm. They listened to each example, looking at me like I was nuts.

    Finally, with mock exasperation, I said, "O.K., let's try one that's a little less complicated: You want a movie or an album. You don't want to pay for it. So you download it."

    There it was: the bald-faced, worst-case example, without any nuance or mitigating factors whatsoever.

    "Who thinks that might be wrong?"

    Two hands out of 500.

    ...

    I don't pretend to know what the solution to the file-sharing issue is. (Although I'm increasingly convinced that copy protection isn't it.)

    I do know, though, that the TV, movie and record companies' problems have only just begun. Right now, the customers who can't even *see* why file sharing might be wrong are still young. But 10, 20, 30 years from now, that crowd will be *everybody*. What will happen then?

    Finally I stumbled upon this offering from Winston Rand...

    The Appearance of Governance…

    The world is governed more by appearances than realities, so that it is fully as necessary to seem to know something as to know it. — Daniel Webster

    Then again, some who neither seem to know anything, nor actually know anything, like to pretend play to be king. They are most dangerous when they really begin to believe that they are above the law of the land, that the Constitution is just a “damned piece of paper”, that they infallible since their words and deeds are directed by their god, and that their own wants and needs come before the wishes of the people they are supposedly governing. Do you know of anyone like that?

    I have done justice to no individual contributor in citing these works. I suppose if anything I have used their lanehartwell images and included them in this textual montage...to further my own personal objectives.

    Each in their own rite speaks to a form of cultural or social disintegration.

    In my simplistic view this is a harbinger of great catastrophe. I believe that as societal and cultural values disintegrate a pervasive fear grows. It is the fear that has served as the foundation for worst of our human atrocities. This fear is not substantial or palpable but just the reverse. This fear is a societal and cultural vacuum, the very absence of values.

    History is clear that horrendous things have risen up to fill such vacuums of fear. The Inquisition, Witch Hunts, Racism, the Holocaust, Apartheid, Ethnic Cleansing, Terrorist Extremists, and my personal favorite; the "War on Terror". In each case oppression has been the method of resolution. In each case violence has been the tool.

    When we as a society and culture surrender the meaning of our language we surrender the meaning of our thinking. Effectively we cannot think. Without the power of our intellect to mitigate the irrationality of our fears we can only react. Unscrupulous and unsavory "leaders" down through history have leveraged this reaction at each turn usually to increase their own power and wealth.

    How then can I prevent this disintegration? How can I insure the meaning of my words? How can I safeguard the effectiveness of my thinking? I can do so by bonding my words to my being. My words mean who I am. In turn my life is the manifestation of the meaning of my words. I am charged with the responsibility of upholding the meaning of my words. I am responsible for my actions that are predicated on the meanings of my words.

    My word is my bond.

    Sunday, December 23, 2007

    Open Stuff.com



    ... the Story of Stuff with Annie Leonard

    Open Searching

    "...Searching for freedom, dignity, justice, equality, Shura and all the remaining Islamic values which are missing.. for Raghad and Khitab (his daughters)."

    Fouad Al Farhan

    Saudi Arabia added yet another accolade to its freedom of speech record by arresting its first blogger. Fouad Al Farhan, considered by many as being the dean of Saudi bloggers for being among the first to blog in his country using his real name, has been arrested in Jeddah. No further news is available for the reasons for his detention.

    Thursday, December 20, 2007

    Open Protocol

    This Mary Jo Foley announcement may well have the greatest impact of all time on Free/Libre Open Source Software...

    December 20th, 2007

    Microsoft and Samba finally come to terms over Windows protocols

    Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 12:49 pm

    After years of public disagreement over ensuring interoperability between their respective software, Microsoft and Samba have come to terms. And not surprisingly, each vendor is offering quite a different spin on the licensing agreement they unveiled on December 20.

    Microsoft and Samba finally come to terms over Windows protocolsIt took an intermediary, the Protocol Freedom Information Foundation (PFIF) — a non-profit organization created by the Software Freedom Law Center — to hand off the Microsoft protocol documentation that Samba said it needed to make its Unix/Linux file/print sharing products work properly with Windows.

    According to a press release issued December 20, Samba is paying Microsoft a one-time sum of 10,000 Euros, after which the PFIF will make available to the Samba Team, under non-disclosure, “the documentation needed for implementation of all of the workgroup server protocols covered by the European Union decision.” (The EU decision to which this refers is the Microsoft’s loss of its appeal to overturn the European Commission’s 2004 antitrust decision against the company.)

    Not surprisingly, Samba and Microsoft had quite different spins on today’s news.

    The cynic in me wonders just how much Microsoft will change the protocol when they release MinWin. (I so much so wish for a level playing field and a sense of fair play.)

    Open Exposure

    Lane Hartwell has turned a great exposure possibility into a "I won't give your work another look" instance.

    Let us get a grip on this situation. If...IF... a Hartwell image was being used to create an income stream for a separate party then I can understand Lane's objections. In the instance of the Bubble video there was no attempt to capitalize on the work of any given individual.

    I see this as a litigious moment. "I can raise a stink because the letter of the law supports my sanctimonious position." Let common sense take a back seat to my egotistical "concerns".

    So here is the laughable part of this whole thing.... if... IF Lane Hartwell had acknowledged the use of her photograph and... AND... didn't make a whiny mess... people would have surfed to her site in droves. Perhaps evens spending a few dollars on her photography.

    As it stands now... "I won't give your work another look" regardless of the quality - you see, I can stand on the pinnacle of principle too. (But I won't lose any money on the deal. So sorry.)

    Open Blogging (Pt. 2)

    In the previous post Open Blogging I echoed a couple of reports about Zhai Minglei. He is a Chinese blogger/publisher who was "visited" by authorities. I became a little concerned when I couldn't find any more information about his circumstances. Then I came across this report posted at Civic China. ..

    December 2, 2007

    Short Update

    Filed under: china, censorship, current events, ngo, personal, politics, blogs — Peter Marolt & Sophia Ong @ 12:21 am

    According to the latest post on his Blog named “One Man’s Paper” (一个人的报纸), Zhai Minglei has safely returned home. For now.

    After copying it, the authorities have also returned his harddisk.

    Mr. Zhai spent long hours trying to convince the police that Minjian has done nothing illegal whatsoever.

    We hope that this effort will reach the right ears and eventually bring about some positive development!

    ...and I am prepared for the worst. This is the price to be paid in struggling for freedom of speech and media freedom. - Zhai Minglei, November 29, 2007

    Open Commentary

    The Accidental Russophile mentioned...

    Wednesday, December 19, 2007

    Putin Announced as Time Magazine's "Man of the Year"

    Perhaps not-so-surprising announcement regarding Time Magazine naming Vladimir Putin as their "Man of the Year" for 2007. Reuters has the story of one of the more negative sounding pronouncements of "Man of the Year" in recent memory.

    Whether you like the "Man of the Year" or not you have to respect the man...
    To commemerate the occasion, I'm sharing the following Putin cut-out figure. Now you too can have a little Putin, Man of the Year, watching over your desk!
    I am folding mine now.

    Tuesday, December 18, 2007

    Thirty-one Bullets?



    Ali Shafeya Al-Moussawi

    Born December 16th, 1984. Killed on December 14th, 2007.

    ... Ali Shafeya Al-Moussawi was a contributor to the video blog, Alive in Baghdad. He was killed while at home, during a raid by the Iraqi National Guard in his street. Ali took 31 bullets between the chest and head and died immediately. Ali was not the only victim of that raid. Hussain, his neighbour, was found dead. Hussain's brother and nephew have disappeared too.

    Ali is survived by his mother and sister. Alive in Baghdad are collecting donations to help the family with the funeral costs.


    Thirty-one Bullets?

    Sunday, December 16, 2007

    Open Frustration




    Perhaps you have noticed this red block in the sidebar. Originally I was pleased to support the fight against Breast Cancer by displaying a well designed campaign logo/poster design by the Manderin Design group. I finally decided to find out what became of the excellent design and why the block turned solid red. Much to my dismay I find that the Manderin Design group has not renewed it's domain registration - which is tantamount to dissolution of the business. A sad day.

    The battle against Breast Cancer remains. The logo is gone, the fight goes on.

    [Spelling correction - Mandarin Design]

    Friday, December 14, 2007

    Steroid Baseball and Jackass 2.5

    Wikipedia asserts...

    "There's a sucker born every minute" is a phrase often credited to P.T. Barnum (1810 – 1891), an American showman. It is generally taken to mean that there are (and always will be) a lot of gullible people in the world.
    However, when Barnum's biographer tried to track down when Barnum had uttered this phrase, all of Barnum's friends and acquaintances told him it was out of character. Barnum's credo was more along the lines of "there's a customer born every minute" — he wanted to find ways to draw new customers in all the time because competition was fierce and people bored easily.
    Emphasis mine...

    Whether you characterize them as 'suckers' or 'customers' H. L. Mencken hit the proverbial nail on the head... "
    No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public."

    Just as sure as Paramount Studios is releasing Jackass 2.5 somebody will get the bright idea to sanction Steroid Baseball. Just look at what the entertainment industry has done with rasslin'.

    Coming soon to a television stadium near you... Step right up ladies and gentlemen, see the mighty Slugger with the 42" biceps... He can hit that pill a country mile, step right up!


    Wednesday, December 12, 2007

    Open w00t

    December 12, 2007
    'w00t' Crowned Word of Year by U.S. Dictionary


    "w00t," an expression of joy coined by online gamers, was crowned word of the year on Tuesday by the publisher of a leading U.S. dictionary.

    Massachusetts-based Merriam-Webster said "w00t" -- typically spelled with two zeros -- reflects a new direction in the American language led by a generation raised on video games and cell phone text-messaging.

    It's like saying "yay," the dictionary said.

    "It could be after a triumph or for no reason at all," Merriam-Webster said.

    Tuesday, December 11, 2007

    Enough!

    Open Bemoaning

    I followed Boyd back through Scoble all the way to Gates (sorta)...
    to hear the moaning and bemoaning of corporate software initiatives and the relative 'sexiness' of them... SHEEEEESH!!! Give us a break! Can't you guys hear the paradigm shifting? It is not corporate software or the individual as a group or even sexiness!

    People have just begun to wake up to what their real computing needs are.

    The personal computing revolution will not be televised, streamed, meme'd, podcast or blogged... the PC revolution will be live ... lead by little children carrying OLPCs. People are waking up to the fact that they do not need HUGE personal computers running BLOATED software.

    People are realizing the Google's Documents & Spreadsheets are all they really need. Businesses large and small are beginning to understand that we are not headed for a paper-less environment. We are headed for a paper-paradigm-less environment. As long as applications and programs were/are designed to render a final product on paper we are stuck in the paper-paradigm.

    There are two great examples of this paradigm shift. The first of course are web browsers. Their final 'product' is not designed to be rendered (printed) on paper. So web browsers and by association web sites do not have to conform to the paper-paradigm.

    Lotus Notes in my opinion is another great example of the paper-paradigm-less computing environment. Very early on criticism was leveled at Lotus Notes that its e-mail interface was built on a poor word processor. I argued then as I do today that Lotus Notes was never designed to be printed on paper. I found that if I left my e-mail messages inside Lotus Notes they formated perfectly. It was only when I tried to print them on paper that the formating appeared to change. I attribute this concern about format change to a deep seated paper-paradigm expectation. As soon as I moved away from that expectation I was able to accept Lotus Notes formating as it is. As it should be - in its native digital form.

    Now I realize that I have dragged you the long way around the barn to get to this point but... people are beginning to realize that they don't need paper-paradigm computing applications or platforms. I am confident that we will see a new PC revolution, albiet a very small form revolution, with the advent of the small-form laptops.

    Coming up next: In my next post I will offer up the paper-paradigm-less challenge.

    Monday, December 10, 2007

    Human Rights Day (Reprint)

    From Global Voices Online...

    Happy Human Rights Day

    Today, is International Human Rights Day and while this is good cause for reflection (and depression) about the terrible state of affairs in the world, there are also some remarkable victories to celebrate. Activists around the world are finding new, innovative ways to use technology to tell their stories, and fight back against censorship and oppression.

    Yesterday, six Global Voices bloggers on different continents participated in a conference call with Desmond Tutu, Mary Robinson, and Graça Machel. You can listen to an audio recording of the conversation here (thanks to Preetam Rai).

    These heroes of human right have recenltly joined forces with Nelson Mandela, Aung San Suu Kyi and eight others in a new group called The Elders. And they are asking the world's bloggers and citizen media activists to help them in their campaign to make human rights more relavant to individuals around the world.

    A new campaign

    The Elders new online campaign, Every Human has Rights is aiming to get as many signatures as possible on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    On openDemocracy's women's rights blog, 5050, I wrote:

    … Desmond Tutu said he would like to see “a billion” signatures on it. I wonder how many have even read it? Considering the enormous mailing lists of organizations like Amnesty International, UNICEF, Action Aid, and other who are partnering in the effort, it shouldn’t take too long to reach the first million signatures. But 1 billion signatures? Has that even been done before?

    Open Headlines

    From Datamation

    Headlines I Never Expected to Read

    Warning sounded over 'flirting robots'

    Microsoft pulls plug on potty-mouth Santa

    How Your Creepy Ex-Co-Workers Will Kill Facebook

    Your Computer Thinks You're Lazy

    Cops: More Smoke Toad Venom to Get High

    White House Mum On Destroyed CIA Tapes*

    * Just kidding. This one's no surprise at all.

    Posted by Chris Nerney at December 10, 2007 01:47 PM

    Sunday, December 09, 2007

    Open Silence

    Silence should be put on the endangered list.

    We live out in the county. That is a way of saying 'out in the country' or 'out in the sticks' or 'out in the boonies'. Sure the road out front is two-lane blacktop. And yes, the "highway" that is half a mile away is two-lane blacktop as well but out here at the 12 Mile marker we are about as far away from things as a body can get. Why, any farther away and ya'll start gettin' closer to somethin' else. If you get my meaning, if ya'll catch my drift...

    So I made a point of pausing the most excellent work of The James Quintet. That leaves only the chiclet clicking of this laptop's keyboard and the rhythmic ticking of the two battery driven clocks that are in audible range. If you open your mouth slightly (improves the acoustic resonance - lets you hear better) you can make out the low rain slick whisper of the occasional car on on the highway.

    Returning from town this morning after dropping my eldest off early I absentmindedly reached to turn on the car radio. I thought to myself how comforting it would be to hear the familiar NPR Weekend Edition. Then I stopped (not the car) and asked just why is it so comforting?

    Certainly it is familiar - like hearing from an old friend. It is part of my vehicular ritual - listening to NPR during my regular morning and afternoon commutes. I also noted that the sound of the radio covers a multitude of niggling little 'road' noises - those little audio reminders that I am driving a 10 year old car that really wants a little more TLC than it is receiving.

    I occurs to me there is one other reason, one personal pressing reason that I want something on the radio, something comforting. I really don't want to be left in my own personal silence. I don't want to have to listen to myself. I don't want to hear what I truly have to say.

    If sound were a drug I would be the worst kind of junkie. Jonesing when the music isn't playing. Getting the shakes and the delerium tremins when the TV isn't on and blaring. (How about those odd moments when the TV is on but the volume is off?) Heck fire, I've even taken to talking to myself just to fill up the silent spots.

    Now I am curious. Just what would I say if I would just shut up and listen.

    Say "Yes!" to the James Quintet

    Sometimes it is so few words

    Thank you Betsy Devine ...

    Our mother’s belief system, summed up in four lines: “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, do without.”

    Friday, December 07, 2007

    Christmas List (Rev. 002)

    From the wonderfully twisted mind of Platicus at Sandwich Flats...

    The "Fatal Attraction" Kitchen Set

    I wan' it, I wan' it, I wan' it... NOW!

    Thursday, December 06, 2007

    Christmas List (Rev. 001)

    Here is something fun to say...

    ...a silicon photonic wave guide...
    I want one...or a few... hundred.

    Wednesday, December 05, 2007

    Open & Closed


    Joi Ito received this when attempting to access Twitter...


    While the United Arab Emirates are well within their rights to block objectionable content it is imperative that we see first hand the result of their actions.

    Tuesday, December 04, 2007

    Open the door



    Thanks Frank (RIP)

    Monday, December 03, 2007

    Open Pains of Glass

    When I posted "Open little "w" windows - MinWin" I tried to put the best possible spin on a commodity that I grudgingly endorse, Microsoft Windows. As an IT professional I have to embrace Windows even if I find them contemptible. When I learned about MinWin I thought there might be some redeeming value... until I heard this

    Monday, December 3

    Maximum Wait for MinWin, Windows 7.0

    By The VAR Guy

    ...

    Yes, Microsoft needs to address its bloatware problems. It’s time to put Windows on a diet. But MinWin and its desktop operating system personality — Windows 7 — won’t arrive till 2010. Yet CRN is predicting that MinWin could “Soothe Vista Headaches.” Wow. That’s quite a leap of faith.

    TWO THOUSAND AND TEN ?!?!?
    You have got to be kidding me. Listen to this...

    Microsoft Partners: Use Of Downgrade Rights Is Surging

    By Kevin McLaughlin, CMP Channel
    4:49 PM EST Mon. Dec. 03, 2007

    Microsoft (NSDQ:MSFT) claims that adoption of Windows Vista and Office 2007 is chugging along nicely, with more than 88 million Vista licenses and 71 million Office licenses sold in the past year.

    But these numbers belie the fact that some organizations just don't see the value in upgrading to Vista and Office 2007, and are perfectly content with XP and Office 2003. Many solution providers are seeing surging interest in downgrade rights, which Microsoft offers to business users of both Vista and Office, and which allow companies to use previous versions of Microsoft software.

    Emphasis mine! This is the final tolling of the Microsoft death knell. "Surging interest" in downgrading from Vista to XP means that Microsoft's income stream will shortly dry up to a trickle. Couple that with a 'wait until 2010' forecast for the future and I can only ask if Microsoft can survive its own desolation?


    It used to be that Linux was a fringe alternative. Now it is looking like the mainstream choice.


    Sunday, December 02, 2007

    Open Blogging

    Amid the raging controversy of whether blogging is dead comes a not so quiet report from Rebecca McKinnon ...

    Is Web2.0 a wash for free speech in China?

    Zml ComputerThis is a picture of Zhai Minglei's computer after his hard drive was removed and confiscated on Thursday.

    Blogger and publisher of the recently-shut-down grassroots newspaper "Minjian," Zhai posted the photo on Friday along with an account of the questioning he had undergone that afternoon. See John Kennedy's translation of Zhai's Thursday blog post describing how his home was raided. Friday's post is a long account, which hopefully somebody will translate in full. His hard drive was returned to him, with "Minjian"-related material removed.

    After reading Rebecca's excellent reporting along with associated articles I am ashamed that I even dabble in the "is blogging dead" spit-fest. How easily I (we) are distracted (again) by bright baubles and glittering trinkets. How quickly we rise to the self importance of who is Scoble-izing whom and what does Calacanis have to say about that...

    China: NGO blogger’s house raided, hard drive confiscated


    In an urgent post [zh] on 1bao this morning, Zhai writes:

    At just after 10 this morning, on November 29, 2007, five people from the Shanghai Municipality Cultural Market Administrative Enforcement Squad (three men, two women) suddenly showed up at my home. Three of them produced identification, two did not, and they proceeded to search through every room and every corner of my house. Even the paper in my printer was confiscated, along with my last remaining copies of the forty-one issues of Minjian. At the same time, they demanded to search my home computer. They searched through files on the computer, and even removed the hard drive which they took with them. The reason they gave was my involvement in work on the illegal publication Minjian.

    I told them:
    1. Minjian is internal material pertaining to the Civil Society Center at Sun Yat-sen University, and not something I have published privately.
    2. Minjian is non-profit.
    3. Minjian contains nothing pornographic reactionary or related to religious minorities.

    I respectfully asked them to work appropriately and in good faith as they carry out their work.
    As they left, they told me that on the afternoon of the 30th, tomorrow, I am scheduled to undergo an investigation.

    This is most likely connected to the notice I posted online informing readers of Minjian’s closure [zh], and I am prepared for the worst. This is the price to be paid in struggling for freedom of speech and media freedom.

    Fortunately, I was able to express myself fully in [zh] the online notice, and it is also my formal statement in this matter: the shutting down of Minjian was illegal, a violation of academic freedom, of freedom of the press, and of media freedom in general.

    Zhai signs off in a solemn, but carefully-worded tone; Minjian translates to ‘the civil,’ or ‘that among the people’:

    Pass this news on to as many readers as possible, tell them to take proper care of Minjian, to appeal on behalf of Minjian.
    […]
    Yours,

    Zhai Minglei
    November 29, 2007

    ...and I am prepared for the worst. This is the price to be paid in struggling for freedom of speech and media freedom.
    Can we even comprehend "for the "worst"? Incarceration? Being held incommunicado? Imprisoned for the expression of beliefs of freedom?

    Oh yeah, blogging sure is dead.

    GV Advocacy


    Saturday, December 01, 2007

    Open little "w" windows - MinWin

    Microsoft has driven the last nail in Vista's coffin if the reports about MinWin are true.

    Microsoft Partners: MinWin Could Soothe Vista Headaches

    By Kevin McLaughlin, CMP Channel
    7:19 PM EST Fri. Nov. 30, 2007


    In the year that has passed since Microsoft (NSDQ:MSFT) released Windows Vista to business users, the operating system has gained a reputation in the channel as a bloated memory hog that many companies are avoiding like a trip to the dentist.

    But Microsoft partners have a more positive opinion of Windows 7, the next generation of Windows that Microsoft expects to ship in the 2010 timeframe. That's because Windows 7 will be based on MinWin, a scaled down version of the Windows core that will also serve as the framework for Windows Server and Windows Media Center.

    MinWin's source code base takes up about 25 megabytes on disk, compared to about 4 gigabytes for Vista. Solution providers see this as a sign that Microsoft has learned its lesson from trying to cram too much into the Windows OS, and some feel that Windows 7 will be a roaring success in the market.

    From an end-user and "integrator" perspective this means never having to say I am Vista. It also means another 12-18 month delay before I make another significant Microsoft investment.

    The silver lining that I can hope for is that with a 25MB foot print Microsoft can create a unified cross platform environment. I can see where PCs and Phones and PDAs all running the same OS could be a great boon to connectivity.

    All that said I believe in my heart of hearts that Microsoft is again dabbling in the fine art of vapor-ware. Promising 25MBs while rolling out a 1-2GB package.

    Friday, November 30, 2007

    Open Journalism

    At the recommendation of the august Blogist and Philosopher Frank Paynter I clicked on a link that took me to the writings of Ben Paynter. Most specifically the article in The Pitch - Don't Look Down.

    Ben, you've done it again!

    Open Forests

    Who plants trees although he knows he'll never sit in their shadows has at least begun to recognize the sense of life. - Anonymous

    Thursday, November 29, 2007

    Fore score and 7


    Our forefathers should be forewarned
    about the potential abuse of forearms...

    Thanks to The Way I Think for the pic

    Open Face

    As I have posted earlier I have no love for FaceBook. So it is sort of antithetical that I offer the solution to FB's privacy issues.

    According to the WSJ's informal survey some 60+% of FB users would not like their friends to automatically be notified if they bought Prada or tickets to see Lion King. Ok, the answer is simple.

    FB users should be notified that X number of their friends have bought the latest Stephen King thriller. Then privacy is maintained. No specific user is named. But the endorsement is implicit. AND the unknown aspect of X will only server to create a greater conversation (reads more FB traffic = more FB revenue.)

    Somebody over at FB owes me a nice fat check!

    Wednesday, November 28, 2007

    Open Freedom?

    We have allowed lawyers to define 'freedom' and as such we have lost it.

    Tuesday, November 27, 2007

    Open Privacy

    In a recent segment broadcast on NPR about Privacy I heard (paraphrasing)

    'A potential employer might discover something about me that I hadn't intended them to find.'
    The segment was concerning the publishing of personal information on sites like Facebook or MySpace and that employers were 'researching' prospective employees as a part of the vetting process.

    I so much so wish that the speaker had not used the word "intended" when expressing his/her concern about privacy. For me their entire arguement implodes when there is a suggestion that sensitive material was shared in a public forum BUT it is "intended" only for certain parties. Or conversely, that there might have been an intention to hide or deny particular personal information from a prospective employer. That is just this side of deception, a personal characteristic that I would question if I were vetting an individual for any kind of sensitive work.

    Open Ramblin'

    Chris Sanders, who claims to be full of I.T., said he was thankful for growing up here-abouts...in Kentucky...just a bit west of here...

    I can’t say that I will stay in Graves County for the rest of my life, as we all know how twists and turns can throw things off course. I will however, guarantee that no matter where I go and what I accomplish, I will always be Chris Sanders from Mayfield, KY. That would be about 30 miles southwest of Possum Trot, 40 miles southeast of Monkey’s Eyebrow, and about 10 miles north of the state line….just in case you were wondering….
    Way to go Chris... now they will never leave you alone. Prolly be two or three more people a week be round to look you up. :)

    . . .