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May 2004 Archives

Gordon Meyer

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Related link: https://www.shellhomegenie.com/

I don’t know if anyone has postulated a theorem like this yet, but if not please allow me to plant the seed:

Given enough time and money, all multinational corporations will eventually attempt to bring home automation to the consumer market, either directly, or in a partnership with a technology company.

The Shell Home Genie is the latest entrant in the race, with starter kits just under $900 and monthly-access at around $25. Professional installation is required.

What do you think? Are you ready to sign up?

Francois Joseph de Kermadec

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Before we begin, allow me to say that I have delayed writing this blog for a long time… why ? Because such pieces are doomed to be archived somewhere and used as laughing stock ten years after their publication when it has become obvious that their author was completely blind and narrow-minded… Still, a recent visit to my news agent made me realize that I had to write a word about “Media Centers” and the “convergency” trend that every single self-respecting computing or consumer electronics magazine is praising.

Apparently, in a few years, we will all look at movies on iPod Mini-sized players and run our iPhoto slideshows on our TV screens. Furthermore, our iTunes libraries will be available around the house, thanks to AirPort Extreme networking and AAC-compatible Hi-Fi equipment.

I must say, the idea sounds quite tempting. When reading the recent flurry of articles one can only be left wondering why such devices are hitting the market so slowly and, more importantly why we aren’t all using them…

After all, all these new convergent devices have been available in an form or another for quite some time now. Even old Macs can be hooked up to a TV monitor, many pre-iPod music players could be connected to hi-fi equipment… Sure, lots of improvements have been added and the experience you can get by connecting devices together now is a lot better than the one you would have had a few years or even months ago but the basic functionality was there…

If this has been available for a long time, how come so few people did actually do it ? When TV first appeared, the image was tiny and not very enjoyable to look at. Nevertheless, since it answered a need people had, it was quite successful from the beginning…

The answer came to me when I looked at a recent HP advertisement. The ad was built around the picture of a family, lazily watching a home movie on their flat-screen television, in a huge, sun-lit room. The television was neatly placed in a wooden bookshelf, surrounded by beautiful books and two loudspeakers, that were visibly part of some high-end stereo system. On the far left was a computer, also tucked in the bookshelf, complete with flat monitor and custom mini-tower.

In other words, an HP-driven heaven. Now, how many of us do have custom-designed bookshelves to put our computer and our TV ? In order to watch this movie, the computer and the TV had to be networked or linked together in some way meaning that there were wires running behind the shelf. The two appliances were so close to each other that the presence of the other was too distracting to do some serious work or enjoy a relaxing movie. Also, try to put your tower into your bookshelf, along with your monitor : do they fit and can you wire them to AC power without it being noticed or would you have to have your bookshelf custom-built — keep airflow issues in mind too?

As soon as the ad and reality were put one in front of the other, this technological heaven began to strangely look like hell… In fact, the whole house had to be designed around the computer, for the pleasure to view slide shows on a TV screen or listen to an MP3 on good speakers…

I am probably very narrow-minded but I cannot seem to understand why someone would want to do that… Of course, importing photos into iPhoto, burning a DVD to view them later, hooking up an iPod to a stereo system through the Dock do make sense to me : you have the pleasure of enjoying your media files “in big” but the system remains, at the same time, convenient and easy to manage…

I am sure digital convergency and media centers do have a bright future in a way. However, right now, the devices we are asked to admire by most PC manufacturers do not look very attractive or even useful to me… There is a good idea for sure but there still lacks a bright mind to find how to apply it.

Until next time, dear Mac users, enjoy thinking different !

And you, what do you think of media centers ?

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~33~2174543,00.html

Microsoft is apparently preparing to battle the iPod. Not satisfied with decimating the Macintosh with undercut pricing (and, admittedly, a more sound distribution model) Microsoft wants the iPod to have a more Apple-like 5 percent market-share.

But will it work? Yes, and no.

Yes, because there is a significant percentage of people out there who simply don’t appreciate the stunning combination of design, technology, and usability that is Apple. These people appreciate a cheap price, languish in the familiarity of all things Microsoft, and don’t appreciate good design.

No, because this percentage of people is not 5 percent! The only reason Apple currently has such a low percentage of market share is because of the corporate market. Fueled by cost savings (helped along by Microsoft’s more sound distribution model as above) corporations flocked to Windows. Yes, they have suffered with buggy systems, viruses, and more but that is beside the point. To the bulk of working America a PC is, well a PC. This has led to parents demanding more and more that their children have a “real-world” experience with computers in schools which leads to less and less Macs in the school. It is a downward spiral that leads to 5 percent and until the Mac conquers the corporate domain I’m afraid it’s going to stay that way.

Where does that leave the iPod? Glad you asked! Because most consumers won’t have PC’s forced upon them by their bosses they will have a choice. And because Apple (wisely) released the iPod for both Mac and Windows everyone can use an iPod.

Yes, there will still be those who chose mediocrity over Apple. But something tells me that more than 5 percent of the population get it. And no matter what monopolistic cannons Microsoft aims at Apple this is a battle it can’t win.

Do you think Microsoft can beat the iPod in the marketplace?

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Related link: https://petition.democracyforamerica.com/verify

This week Democracy for America started a petition requesting that polling agencies require a paper trail for any electronic voting machine. This week, I also had an opportunity to speak with someone that participated in some local tests of the Diebold machines. Below is my retelling of some of the details of the local equipment and procedures. It’s really quite ridiculous.

The electronic voting machines are running un-patched versions of either Windows NT 4.0 or Windows 98 on 400 to 500 Mhz PCs with 128 MBs of RAM. The machines are not networked at the polls, but instead have a floppy disk drive. They have a built in uninterruptible power supply, use a touch-screen LCD panel, and sport neither a mouse nor keyboard. There are locks on the floppy drive and power switch.

Polling uses a card that is similar to a credit card. After voting, the user is presented with an opportunity to change their votes and is even asked to confirm their vote before the card is marked as used and the votes are recorded. A standalone laptop then reprograms the card for additional use. The votes are copied from the polling PCs to the laptop by floppy and then sent to a central computer via modem.

My source also confirmed that Diebold is still using a Microsoft Access database on the polling computers and presumed that the file copied to floppy is most likely a CSV (comma separated values) file.

Just the reliance on floppy disks seems like a disaster waiting to happen. They aren’t the most reliable of storage media, nor are the drives tolerant of harsh environments. Then, there’s the fact that Access is used on the polling systems and the central tabulating computer. The votes and audit log can both be manipulated without a trace.

Unless you support the United States of America as a Banana Republic, be sure to sign this petition, get involved, spread the word, and explain just how flimsy current electronic voting systems are to your less technically inclined friends and family.

Do you have any additional insight into how these voting machines do or do not work? What are you doing to make sure your vote counts?

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.ipodlibrary.com

The iPod Library is a great idea! While you wouldn’t want to read War and Peace on your iPod, quick reference material is great to peruse while listening to tunes on the subway. There isn’t much content yet but hopefully this will grow.

Would you read a book on your iPod or is this overkill?

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.tentechnology.com/products/products_navipod_gen2.php

One of the fun things about owning an iPod is all the great third-party gear that is out there to discover. A lot of companies have taken the zeitgeist of the iPod–fantastic design coupled with cutting-edge technology–and used it as a springboard for their own imaginations. The NaviPod is one such product. The Navipod comes with three pieces. The first you plug into the top of your iPod. It contains and IR remote receiver. The second part is the remote control itself, with Pause, Play, Rewind, Fast Forward, and Volume Up and Down buttons. The remote is a small circular disc, light, but not light enough that you’ll lose it.

The third piece is stand that props your iPod up at the perfect angle for remote use and room presence. Plug the audio out jack on the NaviPod to your stereo and suddenly your home stereo and been iPodded. Perfect!

Do you own a NaviPod? What is your set-up like?

Todd Ogasawara

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Related link: https://plone.org/foundation

You can find the full Plone Foundation announcement text at: https://plone.org/foundation/about/pr/formation. Here are a few exerpts from the May 21st announcement:

The Plone Community today announced the formation of the Plone Foundation, an organization committed to providing high quality open source software products focused around the Plone content management system.
[…]
The Foundation will provide development, marketing, and financial support for Plone and related projects. This support comes as Plone is developing critical mass as the most popular and powerful open source content management system. Although the Foundation will provide oversight for all Plone activities, the technical aspects of each project will continue to be governed by each project team.

Zope and Plone anyone?

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20040516220739506#comments

This little hack is courtesy of macOSXhints.com and boy oh boy does it work great! The hack comes out of an interesting piece written by the Safari developer David Hyatt on the adding of timers to browsers. Apparently, in order to render obsolete flashing pages that can occurs when a webpage loads, (due to the client getting data from any number of sources; the stylesheet, various data sources, etc) web browsers are programmed with a little delay. The delay is, appropriately, conservative. But by adjusting a variable in the Safari preference file you can speed Safari’s delay time up.

To try this (after backing-up, etc.) go to the terminal after Safari has quit and type:

defaults write com.apple.Safari WebKitInitialTimedLayoutDelay 0.25

The default time in the Safari preference time is 1.0. Now go ahead and launch Safari. Notice a difference? I sure did! As someone commented on macoxhints.com it was like getting a new machine. I wouldn’t go that far, that is certainly feels like Safari had a double-shot espresso.

Have you tried to speed up Safari? Or are you more of a Firefox or IE kind of person?

Derrick Story

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Back in 1999 when I was the editor for the now defunct Web Review, I covered this fascinating event in Crested Butte, Colorado called the Digital Storytelling Festival. My stuff isn’t online anymore, but Dan Bricklin’s excellent webphotojournal still survives. Attending that event high in the Colorado mountains, and my getting to know its cofounder, Dana Atchley, has influenced my work ever since.

People continually ask me, “What is digital storytelling?” It’s simply applying current technology — digital photography, video, music, and voice — to communicate ideas. Usually, these “stories” are only a few minutes long, and you can publish them on the Web, CD, or any other suitable media.

I’ve been contacted by business executives, HR departments, small business owners, and educators who realized that they could use these techniques to better speak to their respective audiences and customers. My books, heck, my whole approach to writing, is an extension of digital storytelling.

In December 2000 Dana Atchley died from complications of a bone marrow transplant, and the festival’s future was uncertain. Fortunately it reemerged in 2003, led by its original cofounder Denise Atchley. The Digital Storytelling Festival is now in Sedona Arizona, June 10-12.

I spoke at last year’s event and am looking forward to speaking again this year. I know from the correspondence I receive from O’Reilly readers that many of you would benefit from the ideas presented at the festival. (Mention this weblog with your registration and take 10% off the already reasonable price.)

If you’ve never visited Sedona, it’s worth the trip alone. The combination of nature’s beauty and the works of art there inspired by it will impress you. It’s a great place to get the creative juices flowing again.

Hadley Stern

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Don’t worry, this isn’t a Mac vs. PC piece. Well, not explicitly at least. I just find the discrepancy between Apple’s updating schedule and Microsoft’s, well…interesting.

Mac users who took the plunge since the first official release of Mac OS X have had to contend with upgrade after upgrade. Just as we got used to one cat another one was thrown our way. Of course many of us were delighted to get innovation after innovation and, lets face it, the first version of OS X was rough at best, unusable for many things at worst (did you ever try to select more than 10 items in OS 10.1?)

Contrast the above with Windows XP which has been around for quite a time now (4 years?! I am blissfully ignorant of all things Windows). Microsoft releases service back after service pack but no upgrades like Apple does. Longhorn seems more likely to arrive after world peace at this stage and even Microsoft is talking about an XP plus in the interim.

Neither model is necessarily better. Apple users have been struck with dead hard drives (albeit in the minority) with even interim OS upgrades and getting used to new ways of doing things can be tiresome. Not to mention the myriad third-party software out there that has to keep up with Apple and simply can’t.

On the other hand Microsoft’s all-eggs-in-one-basket approach leaves innovation on a very slow timeframe. Say what you want about Apple’s upgrade approach, it is definitely visionary.

This all reminds me of someone I met recently who was a successful digital fine art photographer. She used an 8100 (yes, an 8100) with 64 megs of ram and a 4 gig hard drive for all her work. I was aghast. And her work was beautiful. Maybe innovation doesn’t come in the latest bits and bites and updates and upgrades. Maybe it comes in spite of it.

Which do you prefer, whirlwind upgrades or slow ones?

Todd Ogasawara

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Related link: https://channel9.msdn.com/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=7726

Ward Cunningham created the Wiki concept. He works for Microsoft now and discusses how the concept emerged in a video interview on the Microsoft MSDN Channel 9 site.

My favorite comment segment in the interview by Mr. Cunningham occurs when he discusses the chain of events that led to the Wiki idea: I’m a lazy guy. I don’t know how to organize. Let’s just let the community organize. :-)

Do you Wiki? What Wiki software do you like to use?

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Related link: https://www.google.com/search?q=fedex+sucks

So, I ordered a PowerMac G5 Dual 2Ghz last week (yes, yes, I know, faster ones are coming out Real Soon Now). It was scheduled for delivery yesterday. Because I’ve had trouble with UPS finding my house in the past, I put my wife’s office address down for delivery. She works for a bank and the bank’s building she works in is 2 million square feet. Mr. Magoo could find the place.

I called her sometime after lunch to see if it had arrived yet, and she said it hadn’t. I checked the status on the web and saw no updates for it. I finally called customer support to learn that it wasn’t delivered because the delivery location was “closed” — the building is open 24 hours a day. After calling FedEx twice and asking for someone from the local office to call me back about this (and never receiving a call back), I called again for a third time and was actually transferred to someone from the local office. He told me he didn’t know where it was, and put the driver that delivers to the building on the phone. The driver didn’t know where it was either. So, basically FedEx has not only not delivered my PowerMac, but they’ve lost it on top of that.

How can you lose a PowerMac? It’s not like it was an iPod Mini! I guess the same guy that can’t find a 2 million square foot building can lose a huge PowerMac box.

Isn’t FedEx’s core competency supposed to be delivering things?

Judging by a few of the results from that Google search, Apple customers seem to have lots of problems with FedEx. Do you have a computer delivery (or lack thereof) experience to share?

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.macsurfer.com

Mac news feels like what I imagine drugs must feel to a drug addict–you can never get enough or have too much. The trick is finding it. For years and years now the best source of all links Mac (and now, with the iPod, all links Apple) related has been the venerable Macsurfer. The site publishes a simple list of links day in and day out culled from it’s editors surfings and site submissions.

Indeed, while getting listed on Macsurfer is not equivalent to the short-term hit of being Slashdotted, for publishers like me (I run Apple Matters Macsurfer ensures a steady stream of engaged Apple readers. Other sites have tried to usurp Macsurfer but never with success. The site may not have forums, op-ed pieces, but like many sites with a singular purpose, it does a bang up job of providing the Apple community with interesting reads day in day out.

If your technology horizon includes other (gasp!) computing companies make sure to check out Macsurfer’s sister site,TechNN.

What are your favorite Mac sites? Do you read Macsurfer?

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/biztech/05/17/thailand.hitachi.reut/index.html

Apparently Hitachi can’t make the hard drives used in the iPod and iPod mini fast enough! The iPod mini is on back order everywhere…it’s probably easier to get a new Ferrari than a pink iPod mini these days. I guess all the pundits who said the iPod mini was over-priced (the very same pundits who scoffed at the original iPod) were wrong. Hitachi is going to add 4000 employees to help speed up the six-week waiting time for a mini.

Do you have your mini yet? Still waiting?

Francois Joseph de Kermadec

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Some of you may recall my last blog, about the new “cost efficient” computers… I received many mails about it and thank you for your feedback. Within these mails was one of my PC friends who, somewhat jokingly, asked me to show him how I got to such a conclusion.

For fun, we agreed, to “purchase” a PC and see what we could get for this price. This short blog presents the results of our little personal survey, for anyone who is interested. Of course, before we get further, allow me to say that I do not pretend to have written a definitive cost comparison between Macs and PCs : this is not my goal and such a thing cannot really be done. Consider the following lines the summary of a personal experience that I wished to share with my Mac friends.

How we proceeded : To gather the information, we decided to ask a sales person of a mainstream, inexpensive computer manufacturer. Since we may not be both aware of ongoing promotions at this company, we thought it was a better policy than simply looking at websites.

We began the chat by asking for a complete desktop system, under $800 since Apple’s eMac can be found for $799, without any discount. Luckily, for us, there was one system in this range, but for $899. We agreed to have a look at the specs.

The first surprise came when I told the salesperson I needed to do some light video editing with it and, therefore, hook up my FireWire camcorder… No, this was not possible unless I was willing to invest $30 for an add-on FireWire card…

What about text editing, then ? Yes, we would probably manage to get Word installed on it…

Then, we talked built-in memory which was 256MB — but see below…

The second surprise came with the screen, which was 15″, much smaller than the eMac. It was also separate from the computer — some may see it as a positive point but it adds up some space and cables that are difficult to manage in some environments.

I was lucky to hear that network ports were included (Uh? I didn’t even know there were computers without them) and that I could hook up all the cool serial devices I can buy thanks to the super-cool built-in serial port (Re-Uh?)

We then discussed video capabilities… The “Integrated Intel Extreme video” system was, as I suspected, a cool name to explain that the system uses the main RAM for its video needs — while the eMac has dedicated memory. Of course, with such a system, the sales person used the word “video chores” instead of “graphics calculations”…

Software-wise, the machine came with a whopping combination of Windows XP home, Free Internet Explorer (Uh?), Outlook Express, Encarta and Norton Anti-Virus…

To top the description, the person added there was a super-useful parallel port too !

Since these specifications let me somehow stumped, I kindly asked this man if I could do any small video editing onto it — not a lot, I added, but a few home movies. The reply came : it’s too slow and you should spend more than $1000 to get a system able to do video properly…

All in all, nothing compared to the entry-level eMac, especially when you take into account the peripherals, the operating system and all the software that Apples ships with it, which includes the iLife suite…

Sure this is only the conclusion of a home experiment… But next time someone tells you that Macs are expensive, you will have a few numbers to put into the conversation !

Until next time, dear Mac users, enjoy thinking different !

Update 2006.02.19: This little note to thank all of you who kindly took the time to comment and share your thoughts with the O’Reilly community and myself. While comments on this entry are still open and, as far as I can see, should remain so, please remember this post dates back from May 17, 2004. Many things have changed since then and I hope my musings here can be seen keeping these elements in mind. — FJ

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://scotthaefner.com/kap/

I’ve always wanted to do this. Take a kite, strap a camera on it, and snap away. I’m fascinated by aerial photography and have gone up a few times in Cessnas (with someone else flying of course!!). The problem is, wuss that I am, I always get sick. Another photographer who is also a pilot told me that it is because, when looking through the lens, your brain thinks you are at a certain altitude when in reality you are much higher. Hence the sickness.

Either way kite photography seems like a perfect way to create beautiful aerial imagery without a plane.

If one was really fancy, and the kite wasn’t flying too high, I suppose you could create a networkable kite of some kind. Connect a digital camera to some kind of wireless protocol (probably 802.11b/g, bluetooth would let you only put your kite ten feet up in the air!). Have the digital camera’s display mirrored on your powerbook so you can preview before you snap. If wireless was too much you could simply create a super long firewire cord and use that.

Anyone game?

Have you ever created a kite-cam?

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Related link: https://www.brewingdesigns.com/archives/000016.html

Last week the rumors about iTunes Music Store prices rising past $1 reached their peak. Thankfully, Apple stepped in and let everyone know it isn’t happening. It did make me think about the way the recording industry has been treating their customers over the past few years, and about a way that we can do our part to revolutionize musical culture.

We need to support artists and labels that don’t consider their listeners the enemy. In the past it was time consuming and possibly even down-right difficult to find good independent music, but Apple has provided an excellent way to facilitate this with the most recent release of iTunes. I’ve created an iMix that lists a few of my top indie songs. Check it out, rate it, link it, and support these people.

Other indie iMixes (as I find them): indie goodies

If you’ve made or seen other indie-only iMixes, please Talk Back with links to them.

Hadley Stern

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Related link: https://www.medianorthpro.com/iPodRIP.html

It seems like from the very first day the Mac was created people have been pondering, forecasting, and droning on and on about it’s supposed inevitable death. We can now add the venerable iPod to the list of Apple products technology journalists like to spell doom and gloom for. We now have the iPod Death Knell.

What do you think? Will the iPod end up with the Mac’s five percent marketshare or will it forever dominate the portable digital music marketplace?

Francois Joseph de Kermadec

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Today’s word du jour is “cost efficient”. Everything must be cheap, small and tough. And, since the cheaper it is, the better it gets, we should all be very happy to follow the trend…

You’re right, I am exaggerating a bit… However, the latest push in the mass media for “cheaper solutions” disturbs me somehow — no, not because I love paying more money than I should for something but because I am afraid that, in our quest for the cheapest solution, we are forgetting some of the core values that founded the computing community.

This week, while reading a respected “business” magazine, I found a column explaining to managers that buying computers from companies like Apple, IBM or even Dell was “out”, old-fashioned and simply the worst idea you could have. Instead, companies were to order custom-built devices, on which they should all install a free operating system — the article didn’t specify which one — and push it at every level of the hierarchy…

I seriously do hope that nobody takes such articles too seriously or the companies in question may suffer a great deal… Sure, putting components together and installing a free OS on top of it, whatever it is, may seem like a good idea at first. However, such a piece of advice forgets one extremely important rule : computers are here to be used.

In theory, none of the devices we use is perfect : our cell phones could be twenty times smaller, our laptops could all be replaced by compu-watches and the mice by eye-controlled tracking systems. In fact, we — at least for now — do not rely on such technologies. Why ? Because, even though they are theoretically perfect and efficient, they work against the way we want to work and interact with our devices : your phone needs to be big enough to have a usable keyboard, creating a website on a watch isn’t exactly our idea of convenience and, even though mice need to be changed once in a while, it’s nice to be able to look up through the window while we work without the cursor going crazy on the screen…

The same rule applies to computers as a whole and the way they are designed. Theoretically, every plastic box that does not ignite when components heat up and every operating system that manages I/O correctly can do… But in fact, we still need a computer that holds up to use, does allow for efficient interaction and is sufficiently well conceived to be usable by an average user — true geeks want to use their geekiness to push the envelope, not start a device and connect a USB thumb drive.

Since I am a Mac user, let me take the case of the eMac, that was originally designed for schools. It’s amazingly tough, it features a gorgeous flat screen that avoids glares and is easier on the eye, the ports built into it are placed conveniently on the side for easy access and space-saving, the curve of the enclosure allows for a minimal footprint and optimum airflow while making defacing the computer difficult, its serial number is printed on the inside of the CD tray in both human-readable and machine-readable format and, of course, it runs the wonderful Mac OS X that I do not need to praise any more. The whole circuitry inside is composed of components that were designed and picked to work together to ensure constant and smooth operation. There is of course much, much more to say but this is not an Apple catalog.

Against it stand the “cost efficient” computers recommended by the article I was referring to — no specific model but I have worked with enough “cost efficient” computers in schools to describe them a bit. The case is made of cheap plastic that breaks if you put the manual onto it (I saw it happen), components vibrate into it and make an awful noise that prevents you from working or detach themselves from the mother board, the screen that comes with it (if any) is a good old CRT that flickers and requires drivers written in some language you don’t know, the ports are in the back, right next to the ventilator, so that your connectors get full of dust (or, if there are some in the front, chances are you will get a headphone jack and USB 1.1 port), it’s extremely large since the case wasn’t built for it and the power supply is external… The OS, well… you don’t know what it is but chances are it will be an outdated distribution of Linux that nobody took the time to tailor properly. Of course, it may feature a high-end P-something processor but, to compensate for the price, it is surrounded by cheap components that slow everything down to a crawl and can’t be serviced properly.

On paper, the second computer is more cost-efficient : free software, cheaper to buy, no “vendor lock-in”… But, once you actually use both or even look closely at the specifications, you realize that they both belong to different worlds. I have actually helped a few people whose IT department had bought similar machines and, even though they hold up pretty well for 2 weeks, more money was invested to keep them running that it would have been to purchase a high-end video-editing, Mac-based system — I did the math for fun at the time, when mirrored drive doors PowerMacs were the latest and greatest.

Don’t get me wrong, free software can be excellent (as I have already and will continue to say) and there is a market for throw-away PCs. However, we should not let our passion for cheaper devices make us overlook the fact that cheap does not always equal “better”. Sure, some things are overpriced but not everything is : as a Mac user, I spend less than my PC (i.e. “non-Mac” computer) friends on comparable equipment — that I can actually use for years before I donate it to a charity. Next time someone tells you to buy something, please, do keep this in mind — even if you don’t agree with me.

Until next time, dear Mac users, enjoy thinking different !

And you, have you already suffered from cost-efficient systems ?

Todd Ogasawara

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Related link: https://zopeur.org/interviews

Zope continues to be one of my favorite tools. However, Zope out of the virtual box is not a complete toolkit for me. Zopeur.org conducted brief interviews with 7 (so far) authors of some of the Zope products that start to fill out the toolbox (including one of my favorite Zope products: ZWiki).

For those who missed it, there is also an interview with Plone.org’s Limi and Runyan on OSDir.com: Interview with Plone: Back from Comdex from last year.

Zope product developers do not seem to get much press outside of the Zope community. If you know of other interviews with Zope devs, please post it here.

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According to the mostly reliable ThinkSecret, Apple is planning to build Qmaster into its line of Pro Apps, including Final Cut Pro, DVD Studio Pro, and the recently released Motion. Qmaster, which is already part of Shake, is used for distributing rendering tasks to other Macs on the network.

The whole idea behind distributed computing is to use spare processor time on other machines in a network to “share the load” of a particular task. The most famous distributed computing project to date is SETI@home, from the Space Sciences Laboratory at UC Berkeley. With over 4,979,107 registered users to date, SETI@home is an ingenious use of distributed computing, since it not only allows others to share the load, it also lowered the financial burden off of what could have been a very costly project. (In case you’re not familiar with SETI@home, users download a client application that downloads and crunches on data collected from the Arecibo radiotelescope in the quest for extraterrestrial intelligence. The SETI@home application can run in the background or as a screensaver to process the data. Once it has finished processing a chunk, the results are sent back to UC Berkeley, another data chunk is downloaded, and the process starts over again.)

If you look at what Apple’s done in the past, once they find a technology that seems to take off, they pursue it like a cheetah chasing down a gazelle. For example, Apple introduced Rendezvous as part of Jaguar, and look where that’s propagated to: iChat AV, iTunes, iPhoto, and Safari (plus not to mention where others have used it, like SubEthaEdit).

Apple seems to be pushing the whole distributed computing thread (excuse the pun), what with Xcode doing distributed builds, Qmaster possibly spreading across the Pro App line, and Xgrid grabbing a lot of attention from the scitech market. If prior history counts for anything, it really makes me wonder, what’s next?

Man, I can’t wait until the WWDC (June 28 to July 2, 2004) to find out.

If the rumor is true and Qmaster makes its way into the Pro Apps, what’s next for distributed computing on the Mac?

Todd Ogasawara

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With all the talk about who did what when in the Linux kernel, you might have missed another interesting battle: The battle between SCOX and RHAT share prices.

While looking at various investment options the other night, I took a look at SCO (SCOX) and Red Hat (RHAT) on a whim. I had not looked at either one in a long time. If you are like me, you will probably be surprised by what you find. If you have the time, chart out SCOX and RHAT for the last 12 months in a comparison chart (say one that assumes an initial $10,000 investment).

SCOX is up a healthy 71% for this May 2003 to May 2004 period. However, that is a far cry from the 486% move it saw from May 2003 to November 2003. RHAT is up an even healthier 275% with what looks like a relatively steady growth to my amateur eyes in the same May 2003 to May 2004 period. Note that none of this is investment advice. I’m just noting some interesting numbers here. (Tonight I took a look at Novell (NOVL) and noticed it is up 249% over the same 12 month period. But, like SCOX, it is down somewhat sharply from its peak of 393% a few months ago. And, if anyone is wondering Microsoft (MSFT) is up 1% for the past 52 weeks).

With this knowledge several days old, I was not too surprised when Slashdot pointed to two articles reporting that SCO is laying off 10% of its worldwide workforce (Santa Cruz Sentinel) and that the Royal Bank of Canada has elected to convert 10,000 shares of SCO’s Series A-1 Convertible Preferred Stock it currently holds into a total of 740,740 shares of SCO’s common stock … (and) … Additionally, Royal Bank of Canada informed SCO that it has sold 20,000 shares of Series A-1 stock to BayStar Capital II, L.P. (Yahoo Finance/PRNewswire).

So, what do you think will happen in the next few months?

Derrick Story

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If you’re a Mac DevCenter reader, you’ve probably noticed that I posted the Call for Participation for our Mac OS X Conference. Your response over the next couple weeks will have a tremendous impact on this year’s event.

Why? It works like this. Within O’Reilly we agree upon our vision for the show. This year we see programming, scripting, enterprise computing, system administration, academic environment, digital music, and an insanely great Mac track (which includes everything from home automation, to mobility to digital video, to research, and beyond).

How you, the expert in your field, responds to our call is what actually shapes the conference. Because so many things have to happen early in the process, such as launching the registration site, creating the brochures, etc, those who respond early to our call have the greatest amount of influence on the event.

We’re all so damned busy these days; we tend to wait until the deadline is upon us before we act. I’m asking you to act now to create an amazing event in October.

Some of you have already submitted talks. Thank you. I’ve been thrilled by the topics.

If you haven’t submitted yet, but know you want to help shape this year’s conference, please do get your proposal in within the next two weeks. It only takes a few minutes to complete the online form, but those few minutes could have a profound impact on what happens in October.

If you have any comments, please post a TalkBack below, or feel free to write me directly. I’m this year’s program chair.

Todd Ogasawara

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The June issue of Reason magazine features 40,000 personalized covers. Each cover has a satellite photo of the building associated with the subscriber’s address. Is this a cool publishing hack or a just 1984-ish scary?

There’s a streaming audio interview on NPR with Reason magazine’s Editor-in-Chief, Nick Gillespie with more information about this innovative magazine publishing idea.

How much personalization is too much? Or is there no limit?