Xen 3.2.0

So Xen 3.2.0 was released last week.

Oddly enough there are no precompiled 64-bit binaries anymore. That does not make much sense to me – running Xen on 32 bit is just… painful. Problems with accessing ram beyond 4GB, issues with libc6, etc. On 64 bit all that stuff just works.

Sadly, the 3.2 release is broken. It simply does not build – make world dies with this mercurial error:

select-repository: Searching `.:..' for linux-2.6.18-xen.hg
select-repository: Ignoring `.'
not found!
select-repository: Unable to determine Xen repository parent.

Google returns some hits suggesting that this is caused by using a version of mercurial that is too old, but that is nonsense – I’m seeing this even with 0.9.5. It’s a bug in the Xen 3.2.X release.

The fix is easy; just check out the linux-2.6.18-xen mercurial repository yourself in the parent directory to where you have downloaded Xen:

  apt-get install gawk libssl-dev libncurses5-dev pciutils-dev
  cd /usr/src/
  hg clone http://xenbits.xensource.com/linux-2.6.18-xen.hg
  cd xen-3.2.X
  make world
  make install

Of course you can use make -jX to compile things faster. Time to give 3.2 a spin now :)

Posted in Free Software/Open Source, Xen | 1 Comment

openid

Thanks to the WP-OpenID plugin, this blog now supports OpenID. Woohoo!

Posted in Open Standards | 1 Comment

I wouldn’t steal

Another sane message about copyright – this time from the European Free Alliance in the European Parliament (the Greens): I wouldn’t steal.

This site touches on two points that have irritated me for a very long time in the whole copyright debate: copying is not stealing, and if the media industry would simply start selling quality goods – i.e. unencumbered, no DRM – at a fair price, people would most certainly buy them.

The big music labels seem to have finally understood the latter point – they are slowly starting to offer their music in DRM-free formats. The big movie studios are still a ways from that point. But neither the big music labels nor the big studios have understood the difference between stealing and copying. In simple terms: stealing implies that you derive someone of a good, by taking it away from them. Making a copy of a digital file by its very nature leaves the original intact – ergo, the original owner is not derived of anything. Equating copying with stealing is nonsense.

The counterargument is that by copying a digital file, the citizen is somehow ‘stealing’ revenue from the big content publishers. All I can say is – wake up and smell the coffee. Perfect digital copies are a fact of life, and they are here to stay. It’s been almost 10 years since napster – big content has had a very, very long time to adjust their business models to that fact, and for the most part have simply refused.

So what can ordinary citizens do? Buy music from independent labels that understand todays digital reality: see Audiolunchbox, Cdbaby or Emusic.

Support the artists – go to concerts, buy merchandise. If you want music that’s published on a big label, buy second hand CDs or buy DRM-free songs, for instance at Amazon.

If content publishers don’t want to adapt, they will go out of business.

Posted in Copyright, patents, and trademarks | Leave a comment

copyright sanity

The ever amazing Michael Geist published a great list of “fair copyright for Canada” principles, which he thinks should be adhered to in the drawing up of new Canadian copyright legislation.

A lot of it applies world-wide, in my opinion. This is great stuff, worth a read.

Posted in Copyright, patents, and trademarks | Leave a comment

intel

Sometimes Google Finance has its issues – check out INTC’s listing this morning:

Posted in Finance/SRI | Leave a comment

SMT soldering

Via Hack-a-day, this is a great (video) introduction to surface mount (SMT) soldering.

Posted in Hardware | Leave a comment

and that’s four

Sony/BMG has finally announced it is going to drop DRM for at least part of its catalogue. Original source: Businessweek. They were the last holdout among the four big labels.

That’s it for music, now on to video :)

Posted in DRM | Leave a comment

time to take away the RIAA’s privileges

Alexander Wolfe over at Information Week has an article up with a great suggestion: deal with the RIAA as we do with misbehaving children: take away their privileges. He proposes shortening corporate copyrights from the current 125 years to 5 years, because they are clearly being abused – cf. the RIAA’s legal carpet bombing of file sharers. Copyright terms are way too long, and a little accountability for the RIAA’s abuse of the legal system would be nice. This is a great proposal.

Posted in Copyright, patents, and trademarks | Leave a comment

10 years of free public transportation in Hasselt

Carectomy has a nice writeup on 10 years of free public transportation in Hasselt, Belgium. I remember when this was introduced – most people wrote it off as a political stunt. It’s really nice to see that the project is still alive and kicking 10 years later.

Posted in Environment | 1 Comment

Steve Jobs was almost right

When Apple launched DRM-free music on the iTunes music store, Jobs predicted that by the end of the year, all labels would be selling music in an unencumbered format (on the iTunes music store).

Well, Warner has joined the MP3-selling party, which makes Sony-BMG the lone holdout. But Warner and Universal are not selling their music without DRM on the iTunes music store – that’s the labels trying to reign in Apple’s market share in digital music sales a bit. I would not put my money on the labels in that fight, not with the track record of their management…

Posted in DRM | Leave a comment