Archive for: May, 2007

Exams fini

May 24 2007 Published by under Uncategorized

Thats it. All exams finished this year. The algorithms exam was easier than expected, I actually enjoyed it. Really, I did enjoy myself; a lot to be said for starting revision less than 24 hours ago.

I've been eating strawberries and ice cream, strawberries having spent the best part of 18 hours in the fridge coated with sugar. Mmmmmmmm....
Tomorrow is to rewrite my CV and apply for jobs to keep the bank happy. Theres a general staff position in the uni over the summer to refurb/clean/maintain the halls of residence and stuff, which is ideal whilst I stop in brum, others include IT general stuff, bar work and an admin job (I think).

Now to wait for the results writing software :-)

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Freedom of Information

May 23 2007 Published by under Uncategorized

http://ourcampaign.org.uk/foi Petition against MP's being exempt from the FOIA, and Lobby a Lord "LoL" ;-)
I've already done it and won't say any more about it.

One more exam to go, Data structures and Algorithms. Joy. I don't think this year I'll require resitting stuff, I'm hoping that I won't at any rate.
Car's bearing up, no brake failures, no bits have fallen off, its being fairly economical (< £7 of petrol to do 40 ish miles from here to chase n back)

Everythings pretty normal.

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You can't have everything both ways

May 15 2007 Published by under Uncategorized

Microsoft and its attack dog, the Business Software Alliance (BSA), have both been in the news today.

MS because it has announced that FOSS possibly infringes 238 of their patents, and the BSA complaining about the lack of progress against pirated software.

OK then. MS is trotting out it's FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) about Linux and FOSS because of the recent Dell moves to support Ubuntu Linux. The Fear comes from "use Linux, get sued by Microsoft"; Uncertainty from MS not specifying the supposed patent infringements, and Doubt because MS have not actually stated they will file lawsuits.
MS also know that a large collaboration of companies with interests in Linux, such as HP, Red Hat, Novell, Sun, Oracle and most importantly IBM won't sit idly as FOSS is sued in court; between them they have a vast array of patents to retaliate with.
Someone should probably inform MS that the biggest fish in the patent pond, IBM, supports the opposite side.
Personally, I would like to point out that an audit for possible patent violations in Linux was carried out in 2004 by Open Source Risk Management, which found 283 unproven patents that Linux may violate. In contrast, MS has been in court many many times over patent violations in Windows and Office.
Since MS knew for over a year that FOSS possibly infringed on their patents, they should have done something then; they loose the right to sue if they don't proactively pursue infringers (from what little I know of patent law). MS are just generating a lot of hot air to cause FUD in IT managers, however I think a lot of IT managers now are wise to this tactic and take MS's FUD with a pinch of salt.

The BSA however are complaining that the UK has a piracy rate of 27% for business software, and that the government should take a proactive role in reducing this.
Right. Government, which gets it in the neck from business when they legislate against business practice (minimum wage, HSE requirements) should legislate for business to stop piracy.
The way to do this? "... governments could reward firms that had licences for all the software they used, she said. Corporate tax breaks could help drive piracy rates below current rates." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6654033.stm
Government should reward companies for having licenses for software with tax breaks? I'm all up for that. I use FOSS, which is all correctly licenced. I'd like my tax break and the savings I have from buying software please. I bet the BSA didn't think of that.
However, there would have to be a substantial reduction in tax to make it worthwhile; you pirate a £500 piece of software 100 times (saving £50,000) or get £10,000 in tax rebate for being fully licenced; it isn't really an incentive.

I've finished ranting now.
I've exams this wednesday, thursday and same again next week, then thats it for the 2nd year. I'm fairly relaxed about everything (as ever).
My car brakes have been tested a lot this weekend gone, someone pulling out in front of me at a junction (didn't even bother to look, fools) and the rain soaked roads making it extra fun. It seems to be bearing up quite well :-)
Not a lot else on, I'm slowly updating packages in lapwing and still need to finish the installer off. I will get round to it.
Job hunting also these next few weeks, I cannot afford a repeat of last year.
I also recommend watching (if you haven't done so already) the panorama report on Scientology from last night: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/programmes/panorama/default.stm : it is hilariously scary.
Back to revising ... ish. ;-)

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Moral compass points north-east-east across the North Sea

May 05 2007 Published by under Uncategorized

The Norwegians, flush with cash from their oil exports, put a lot of money away over the last decade. $300billion to be exact.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/04/business/worldbusiness/04norway.html?ex=1335931200&en=bf2bff622406f256&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

With this they make investments in companies "to make the Norwegian people feel less guilty.”; so, they've decided to pull out a lot of money from American companies that don't meet their ethical investment criteria, such as makers of cluster bombs and mines (Lockheed Martin) and "toleratores of child-labor violations" (WalMart).

Now, having sold off over $400million worth of WalMart stock, the Americans did what they do best; blame everyone else. The ambassador stated that " Norway has taken aim at companies arbitrarily, based on unreliable third-party reports and, in the case of Wal-Mart, on a cottage industry of Wal-Mart bashers."
This why WalMart didn't bother to reply to the Norwegian governments' concerns in March? If I were a large investor in a company, I would expect them to at least send a letter of acknowledgement back.
WalMart basically thought "we are WalMart, we're the largest company on earth, we don't have to reply to our investors", then get the American government to cry foul when the investor dumps their stock.
As the proponents of a completely free economic market, they get their government to apply a lot of pressure on their behalf, in a kinda Mafia-esque style.

In other news, our robot BEAST came 2nd out of 18 competitors. Ben's write up will save me having to type the same thing again :-)

Right, I'm late for chasewater, everyone enjoy the bank holiday :-)

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Digg folds

May 02 2007 Published by under Uncategorized

Yesterday I posted a random set of hex numbers.

Well, also yesterday, digg banned those same numbers because of some over zealous lawyers at the AACS.

"Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned". Subsection b; except for the digg community. Piss them off and go hide in a bunker in Russia.

Every single post since yesterday has been about the numbers and they've all been "digged" up to >3000. This community backlash caused the founder Kevin Rose to publically announce digg staff won't block the number.

So, without further ado, here's the digg front page link, with the number plastered everywhere: http://digg.com

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