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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 121 October 2 - 8, 2000

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This is a day book. It's not all that well edited. I try to keep this up daily, but sometimes I can't. I'll keep trying. See also the monthly COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR column, 4,000 - 7,000 words, depending.  (Older columns here.) For more on what this place is about, please go to the VIEW PAGE.

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Monday October2, 2000 

Column time. Building new machines. Working on RJP program. Distractions.

 

Interview with Microsoft policy people on their licensing policies. I think I see what is happening. See column.

 

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Tuesday, October 3, 2000

Yesterday was filled to distraction. I learned more than I wanted to know about DVD, CPU speeds, installing Windows ME, installing Windows 98, etc., etc. It will all go into the column.

Preparing for trip to Dallas for techie conference. Still a little under the weather. Can I be slowing down? Got a lot done yesterday. Now to write it up.

 

 

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Wednesday, October 4, 2000

Built two machines last night. Discovered yet another instance of that qaz Trojan on another system: indeed it crippled a Windows 95 system.

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Thursday, October 5, 2000

I woke up feeling much worse, and I am not sure why. But I think it's temporary. It has that 'this will pass' feel to it. Sure don't have a lot of energy. Roberta is off being a grandmother so I am batching it. Niven is due shortly for a hike. I will go with him: it will either cure me or put me to bed and have done with it.

Playing with gamma for Everquest isn't easy. On the Voodoo 5 board any gamma change can be applied but when I open Everquest immediately the screen looks like an old TV with horizontal bars running across it that can't be got rid of without hardware reset of the system. I need to examine ways to manipulate that board I think. Slow it down perhaps. Fooling with gamma is the key to seeing in the dark in Everquest but it isn't easy, and Everquest goes to prodigious lengths to keep you from getting to the desktop and settings while the game is up. I suppose that has to do with hacking prevention, and it will work for casual users; dedicated hacker types laugh at that kind of thing since there are so many ways around it. I haven't bothered. But it would be nice if there were some gamma settings that worked within the silly game. I fear I am becoming bored with Everquest, which is a pity; there are just too many annoying little details to keep track of. 

Column continues, and with luck I'll finish it tonight. Painting on the house is finished. Paint fumes haven't helped I think. 

I am not sure what all this is in aid of, but I do seem to have won the right to display those logos. To be one of the Seven Wonders (when there is one a day) isn't quite up there with building a pyramid. Or at least not with building a BIG pyramid. 

My thanks for the CoDominium emblem. Perhaps it needs dusting off again.

These United States of America seem to mind everyone's business but our own. We are intervening in the Israeli conflict, the Serbian elections -- one hopes our efforts there will have a better outcome than out intervention in Haiti, but pardon my skepticism. Haiti is closer to home and our interventions there have done little: by now we'd probably welcome a strong man who could keep order. Meanwhile we have impoverished not only Serbia but the whole Lower Danube, converted a bunch of combat soldiers into cynics who deploy an entire combat battalion in a vain effort to protect a Serbian wedding from Albanian insurgents, and now intend to unseat the government in Belgrade although in aid of what no one has told me. The DC school system is the worst in the nation and probably in the hemisphere so that gives Washington a clear mandate to fix everyone else's schools, presumably so the DC system will look better in comparison? 

Whatever happened to the "|shining example", the beacon, the city on a hill, the exemplar? We no longer practice self government at home, and we are certain we can help everyone else all over the world.

And while we expand our commitments we reduce the means to fulfill them. Walter Lippman a very long time ago pointed out that foreign policy commitments were like checks on the bank account of our military power. If you are going to act like an Empire you must arm like an Empire. An administration that drains the armed forces training budgets to meet operations commitments all over the world -- we do that, and many troops fire their weapons in training once a year only if they are very lucky --  and refuses to deploy any kind of ballistic missile defenses should be very careful about making new enemies. I fear we make enemies, and raise commitments, without any real understanding that the costs may come due any time now.

If you want to run the world you had better have a strategy for doing so. Rome for a while managed to do it through client states: Roman Legions could defeat any of the clients, and the clients were sent to do that actual work of intervention and expansion. That works only for so long: eventually the Empire depended on the Huns, and the Huns were more than a match for the Legions. That meant bringing in others, Goths and Franks, to keep the Huns in check. Aetius defeated the Huns, but his Emperor became jealous of him and had him assassinated: it was said that the Emperor had cut off his right hand with his left. And Aetius's old bodyguard eventually got close enough to the Emperor to avenge his dead master. But nothing of that sort can ever happen in this modern world. And I do ramble instead of working on the column.


In the "See, I told you so" department:

"Since the Department of Justice investigation began, Microsoft has jumped feet first into the Washington big-money game, purchasing influence and access, and bringing into this arena the same zeal it brought to its software business," Common Cause President Scott Harshbarger said. "The software giant has become a soft-money giant." http://www.commoncause.org/publications/sept00/092500.htm 

Clark E. Myers e-mail at: ClarkEMyers@msn.com I wouldn't Spam filter you!

Dr. Pournelle:

"I Told You So" indeed!

The Common Cause article is yet another confirmation of your earlier thesis that the Microsoft anti-trust case was not about anti-trust at all, but about the government asserting its power over a company that was not playing the "game." Bill Gates is in the same position as the man who has been mugged once too often, and is now buying the biggest gun he can carry. If Common Cause or some other organization eventually complains about the financial weight that Gates throws around Washington, I hope they remember that he did it in self-defense.

Tom Brosz

And that I think says it all.

 

 

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Friday, October 6, 2000

Managed to get up the hill with Niven yesterday and feel better today. So much for babying oneself.

I wonder about slashdot. Apparently that is a great place for people with infinite bandwidth. Not so hot for schlugs like me with 56K. 

Harlan Ellison called me this morning. He is to speak at a DARPA conference on the future of information. As he said it is a subject about which he knows nothing.

In fact that's not the case: they're looking for a futurist, and while the futures Harlan imagines are far darker than mine, he thinks about them. In any event I pointed him at a bunch of stuff relevant to the problem of bandwidth, "information wants to be free" and the like. (There was a discussion of this in Mail and View some time ago, too.) Unfortunately he's not connected to the Internet. Not at all. It's a point of pride, like George Wills writing with a Mont Blanc pen and genuine ink on foolscap paper. I told him about the Courtney Love article and the Mettalica Interview and of course he asked if I would download, print them, and send them by fax. Which I declined to do so he sent his secretary to pick them up.

Well, all right. Harlan and I have been friends for about thirty years, and I was a guest at his wedding -- the real one, to Susan, who is wonderful -- and what the heck. So I went on line, use my search engine on my own site entering "Courtney Love" and lo! it told me to look at Mail 111 and View 111.  Which I did, found the URL for her interview, went there, and printed it. Took a while because it is in 6 sections and I had to download and print each section, ads and all (well there is a quicker way but this was simple if a bit tedious).  Then I went to the Slashdot site for the Metallica Interview with Lars Ulrica. And I waited. And I waited. And I waited. And I waited.  After about ten minutes -- I am not kidding -- this enormous page was downloaded. I started it printing. The interview was maybe 15 pages long, probably a bit less. Then came the chatter. And the chatter. And the chatter. After about 70 pages of that I told the printer to cancel the job. There were another 400 pages to go that I did not print.

Information wants to be free. It also wants to be tedious. And pages not broken up into linked sections, no part of which can be read until it is ALL downloaded, cannot possibly be called "well designed" even if the designers are the web gurus who discuss how much this page sucks. 

Well I learned a few things. One is that if this goes on it will be cheaper for me to buy Harlan's secretary a computer and a modem...


HELP

DVD is driving me mad. I have a player that worked just fine for the Intel 933 with Voodoo 5 Video board until I updated the drivers. Now it won't work at all. This is the InterVideo Win DVD program that came with the DVD disk player. It played DVD movies just fine.

Then I updated the drivers. Now it claims that I don't have enough computing power to play DVD's.  That's nonsense, but it's what it says.

I also tried Cybermedia Power DVD. This won't work with W 2000 or ME, and in fact won't even try to work.  I own a copy of it but apparently you get to pay for "upgrades" to a different operating system.

 

All told this all sucks.  And when you look for software decoders on line one obnoxious site seems to be the first 60 hits and after that I gave up.  I suppose I can go back to Windows 98 on one or another system with a view to having one to play DVD's on, but that seems excessive. What in the world is going on?

 

 

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Saturday, October 7, 2000

Column due today.  Roland is coming over to work in CITRIX systems MetaFrame. 

 

Installation went GREAT.  CITRIX Metaframe is NEAT.  Did you ever want to see Clippy at work on a Linux system screen? it can happen...

 

 

 

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Sunday, October 8, 2000

Column goes out in a couple of hours.

The column is off. It was long, over 8,000 words, which is fine for the US edition but means some cuts will have to be made in the overseas (paper) editions where space isn't easily expansible.  I am thinking in future of having actual difference editions, US and overseas, with added sections in the US edtion.

As for instance the Amazon tempest in a teapot: Amazon tried 'dyanmic discounts' which didn't work and were resented, and not only withdrew them but is giving refunds to those who bought items at less than the lowest price. Me, I have found their prices fine for what I get and how I get it, and again I remind people of Matthew 20 on that subject...

I am off to a Microsoft conference in Dallas tomorrow. I may or may not be able to maintain this place from my hotel room. We will see, but if I'm not around for a few days, not to worry.

 

 

 

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