...more recent posts
Often hilarious, to me at least, fake Steve Jobs blog: "Dude, I invented the friggin iPod. Have you heard of it?"
POW (Plain Old Webserver) is, amazingly, a FireFox plugin that turns your browser into a web server. It's written entirely in javascript.
Javascript is sure growing up fast.
Sweet looking Samsung Ultra Smart F700 mobile addresses all the complaints against the iPhone. Namely, it has a full qwerty keyboard, a 5 megapixel camera, HSDPA high speed data, SD memory slot, and removable battery. On the downside, this was announced in Korea (where else?) with no specific availability date (so it will hit US shores approximately never) and I assume it will be running Windows Mobile (or if not, there's little chance Samsung will get the software right.) Still, it's nice to dream. I can't wait for the iPhone, but really I can't wait for something like revision 3 of the iPhone.
Steve Jobs comes out against DRM on digital media. I'm only commenting because this was all over the news yesterday. Obviously I'm a big fan of Jobs. But this needs a little clarification. I mean, I believe him, but...
First, keep in mind that Apple is under legal attack in several European countries about the iTunes music store. So, in some ways this is probably a maneuver to shift focus off of the iTMS (and Apple's FairPlay DRM) and onto the record labels. And this seems fair, since it definitely is the record labels who forced Apple to sell music encumbered with DRM.
On the other hand, a little pinch of salt is needed here since Jobs seems to indicate that he would rather sell non-DRM'd music online (just as he points out the labels sell non-DRM'd music on CD,) but the fact is that many bands are interested in selling their music this way (and have asked Apple) yet Apple says it's not possible. Clearly it is technically possible to have both DRM and DRM free tracks for sale at the same time on iTMS.
I'm not really trying to criticize him here, it's a very complex issue, and Apple has to walk a number of very fine lines. I think they have done a very good job given the backwardsness of the record industry. Still, in a perfect world, Apple could be doing more. And these comments of Jobs shouldn't be taken as an indication that they are about to start selling mp3s without digital rights management.
Interesting, very technical paper on the Bitfrost security platform for Nicholas Negroponte's OLPC (One Laptop Per Child) project.
I've always been skeptical about the OLPC, although, sure, it's a great idea (I just didn't/don't think they can deliver what they promised.) But this paper has value in terms of security thinking far beyond that project.
Wired magazine editor and "The Long Tail" author Chris Anderson says this is "[t]he most inspiring thing I saw all day. This is why I do what I do...." He's talking about this 4.5 minute YouTube video that attempts to explain whatever it is we are trying to do in building online interconnected databases that is variously described as "the web," "the semantic web," "web 2.0," "XML," etc....
Pretty nicely done. A good, if a little slick, high level overview of the situation. Worth a look.
Short interview (advertisement?) in Salon with Scott Rosenberg about his new book "Dreaming in Code". It is an effort to explain coding to non programmers, or as he puts it:
My goal was really more to write something that, if you were a developer, then yes, you might find it interesting. But even more, if you had a relative who was always wondering, "What is it that you do all day?" you could hand my book to that relative and say, This is what my work is really like.Most of what he has to say really resonates with me as being correct. Especially the parts about the advantages of having only one person writing a particular piece of software.
Jonathan Rentzsch, an actual programmer (Rosenberg is just an observer,) has some push back that strikes me as correct as well.
Interesting discussion.
Internal Microsoft emails discussing Apple's release of OS X 10.4 (Tiger,) made public recently during an anti-trust trial in Iowa. I am surprised how impressed they are by it - especially spotlight.
This is from a Microsoft engineer who had an early release he had just gotten at the WWDC (Apple developer's conference)
You will have to take Vic's disk ... I am not giving mine up ;)I like that he won't give up the Mac install disks!
Tonight I got on corpnet, hooked up Mail.app to my Exchange server and then downloaded all of my mail into the local file store. I did system wide queries against docs, contacts, apps, photos, music, and ... my Microsoft email on a Mac. It was fucking amazing. It is like I just got a free pass to Lonqhorn land today.
It reads like a spoof.
Don't you love when you have a problem in your head for weeks (or months) and then one day you're reading through RSS links and discover someone has built a tool that solves your problem? And released it for free with a BSD license? Nice.
SoundManager 2:
is a Javascript Sound API which talks to Flash, effectively mapping most of Flash 8's native sound capabilities to Javascript. It enables web developers and front-end engineers to programmatically control sound in a cross-browser/platform way, using a language they already know.
Vint Cerf says 1 in 4 computers are secretly controlled by hackers:
Of the 600 million computers currently on the internet, between 100 and 150 million were already part of these botnets, Mr Cerf said.
Botnets are made up of large numbers of computers that malicious hackers have brought under their control after infecting them with so-called Trojan virus programs.
While most owners are oblivious to the infection, the networks of tens of thousands of computers are used to launch spam e-mail campaigns, denial-of-service attacks or online fraud schemes.