cell phones

Signal vs. Noise has an interesting post on the state of cell phones. I disagree with one statement:

Today’s phones are failures — mainly software/interface failures.

I think today’s cell phones are mostly that – phones. All the other features – with the exception perhaps of sms/text messaging – are mostly a failure. But the problem is not mainly the interface or the software. The problem is the total control of the cell phone carriers. The carriers only think in the old pay-by-the-unit model. The don’t think out of the box. Their services are overpriced and deliberately crippled. Ever tried doing data on a cell phone? It sucks. You get minimal bandwidth (since when is 300kbps broadband?!) that is advertised as ‘all you can eat’. However, if you try to really use it, chances are you’ll get a letter from your cell phone company stating that you use too much bandwidth, and that you will be cut off. And don’t try to use it for *real* work – ssh and the like are most likely blocked. In the mind of the cellphone carriers, using the internet equals browsing the web and if you’re lucky, doing e-mail. Of course it also includes the use of their totally superfluous ‘portal’ where you can do all sorts of amazing things: download a new ring tone for your cell phone. Download a new background image. ‘Distinguish’ yourself. How fantastic. Obviously you will have to pay for each and every thing you do.

Things are changing. Look for wifi-enabled devices like the Nokia 770. Combine that with city-wide wifi networks and VOIP. We’ll break out of the carrier-controls-all mold soon. I can’t wait!

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Cory Doctorow on DRM

Cory Doctorow has an excellent article on Information Week on the idiocy of DRM.

Posted in DRM | 1 Comment

new license drafts

The second draft of the GPLv3 has been released, as well as a first draft for the LGPLv3. Have a look at the Guide to the new drafts of the GPL and LGPL.

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Stupid credit card terminals

A while back, a bunch of the electronic credit card terminals in and around Boston seemed to have been ‘upgraded’ with software that simply refused my signature.

The first error was ‘Please start closer to the X’ – when I wanted to start signing. My signature happens to start on the *right*, coming to the left with a line at the bottom where I then continue. I end with a couple of quick right-left-right strikes, again near the bottom, at which point the terminal complained ‘Use stylus only’. Even though, of course, I *was* using the stylus.

I had not encountered this problem recently, so I figured many people complained and whoever makes those terminals quickly pulled their flawed upgrade.

Until today – it seems the CVS in Porter Sq still has that software loaded on their terminals. These terminals make it impossible for me to write my signature.

I’m trying to imagine what kind of use those checks would have. Signatures always have to start on the left? Because… why? People who can write really fast need to be told that they should use the stylus? Good thinking, developers!

I think someone got carried away. It’s about time they re-join with their brain and fix this nonsense.

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Bono

So – if you don’t like DRM, it’s time to sign the petition that asks U2′s Bono to take a stand against DRM. Go Defective By Design!

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new server, and LinuxBIOS

So I’ve ordered parts for a new server, and half of them got here today. It’ll be a nice machine – Tyan S2881-based, Opteron 265, 2GB of ECC ram, 2x 74GB WD Raptors and 2x 320GB Seagate drives.

And if I can get one last thing solved, it’s going to be running LinuxBIOS. All I need is fan control – everything else works just fine. The problem is that the ACPI support is not complete for the S2881. That’s not really a problem for a server, except that I can’t control the fan speed – they come on at full speed on boot, and I’m worried they will wear out more quickly. Hopefully the folks on the LinuxBIOS list can help with the fan control…

This box, by the way, will be hosted on a nice fast pipe in what must be *the* best connected building in New England: the Markley Group’s facility in downtown Boston at 1 Summer St. We went on a tour a few weeks back, and it was really impressive – pretty much every provider that matters around here has bandwidth and/or rackspace there – with the unfortunate exception of SpeakEasy, the only DSL provider with sane, permissive policies and support that actually understands things like ‘traceroute’.

I hope I can get things installed before I leave for Switzerland next week!

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Belgium jumps on the ODF bandwagon

The Belgian federal government is switching to the ODF format for its office documents by September 2008. Here’s the press release (in Dutch and French only). Here’s an article in English describing the move, and here’s the Belgian government interoperability framework website with some related information.

I think we’re going to see an ODF plugin for MS Office real soon now.

Posted in Open Standards | Leave a comment

swiss chard

Swiss chard is a curious vegetable. Raw, it smells like rhubarb. It looks like rhubarb – though the stems are not as thick.

When cooked, it smells like spinach and the leaves taste like spinach too. But it has the same effect on your teeth as rhubarb!

Of course, the real question is why it is called Swiss chard… Not even Wikipedia provides that answer.

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dapper rocks

A friend came over with her 20″ Imac that did not boot anymore – hard drive problems. Macs can be started up in Target Mode, where you essentially turn the computer into an external Firewire hard drive.

I hooked the broken 20″ Imac up to our 20″ Imac (yes, I have pictures, two of those side by side is a sight!), booted the broken one in Target Mode, and it showed up on the other Imac. Well, almost – only one partition showed up, and unfortunately it was the OS X Install partition, just 5 GB out of the 250GB drive.

I used Disk Utility to try to mount the other 240+GB partition that holds all the data, but it just didn’t do anything. A quick try on the command line showed ‘Incorrect super block’. Uh-oh. The man page for the fsck command shows that you can repair this kind of problem by telling fsck to look at another superblock, for instance like this:

fsck -b 32 /dev/disk2s3

That didn’t work either, I got a nice prompt:

BAD SUPER BLOCK: MAGIC NUMBER WRONG

LOOK FOR ALTERNATE SUPERBLOCKS? [yn]

Telling it to do that yielded nothing.

At this point I was starting to fear the worst. I figured I’d hook the machine up to my trusty Ubuntu laptop to see if I could repair the partition.

So I connected the broken Imac – in target mode – to my Ubuntu laptop. And icons for all three partitions on the drive popped up on the desktop. It just worked. Plug and play. And those are hfs+ partitions!

I copied the data off the drive without problems, and the backup DVDs are being burned as I write this post.

Ubuntu Dapper Drake rocks. I propose a new slogan:

Dapper Drake. It just works.

If you find this post because you have a corrupted hfs+ partition, just download the Dapper Drake live CD, boot a PC or Mac with it (it won’t install anything, it can run off the CD), and see if it helps you recover the corrupted partition. What have you got to loose? Just try it. And have a look at Ubuntu while you’re at it. You might like it ;)

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Sony…

A lot has been written about Sony’s delayed PS3. This article gives a good overview of one of the main reasons that I don’t buy Sony: they refuse to follow standards regarding storage media.

Posted in Completely clueless, Open Standards | Leave a comment