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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 169 September 3 - 9, 2001

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Monday  September 3, 2001

Email tells me that the latest Harry Potter won the Hugo for best novel. Interesting. A best selling children's book....

I just finished Snowcrash. Interesting that I hadn't read it before. Just missed it somehow. I could have written Cryptonomichron (well sort of) but I wouldn't have wanted to: not what I do well. I couldn't have written Snowcrash.  Niven tells me I am not mad enough to write some of the stuff he does; that's doubly true here.

I am also incapable of glaring inconsistencies. My problem (or strength depending on how you look at it) is following logical implications. If this happens, what events will that force? If there is this odd social institution, what will arise in reaction to it. And so forth. That is precisely what Snowcrash doesn't do, and sticking in ad hoc details no matter how finely crafted to solve a novelists problems isn't what I would do. But it is one heck of a ride...

I cannot resist posting the new Democratic National Committee bumper sticker.

DNC Bumper Sticker

 

 

 

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Tuesday, September 4, 2001

I have been sent a copy of a document from Adobe purporting to give their side of the story. Since the document itself says it is copyrighted with all rights reserved I decline to reproduce all  of it lest Adobe send the FBI after me. I note that the document states, 

"A: Sklyarov was not arrested for anything he said or for presenting a

scholarly paper. According to the press release issued by the U.S. Attorney's

Office, Dmitry Sklyarov was arrested as the copyright holder of the "Advanced

eBook Processor," a product distributed by his employer, ElcomSoft."

Of course Sklyarov is not the copyright holder, and the information that he is the copyright holder is contained in the complaint as information the FBI obtained from Adobe.

Also "A: Adobe did not order the arrest. That was the decision of the U.S.

government based on the information gathered in its investigation.

Q: Why was a criminal (vs. civil) action pursued?

A: The U.S. government decided to pursue a criminal complaint based on its

judgment that ElcomSoft's activities violated U.S. law. Despite Adobe's

efforts to get ElcomSoft to cease and desist the for-profit sale of these

tools, ElcomSoft did not, so Adobe forwarded the information to the U.S.

government.

Once again I note that the only information on this case came from Adobe to the FBI; that every account I have seen says that "only a handful" of copies of the Elcomsoft program were sold; and that this is a damage control document.

Adobe also states that the entire intellectual property community supports its position. It then cites mostly publishers, including, surprise, the RIAA. It does not cite PEN or any author association as being in support of the Adobe position in this matter.

 Note also that the ebook reader is only available for desktop computers and if you buy an ebook in Adobe format you can't read it on a hand held. Well, actually, you can, if you know how to get the Elcomsoft program (which only works if you have the password to the ebook). I am told that it's not hard to find a copy of the Elcomsoft program for free even though very few were ever sold.

If I get a URL to their document I will cite it, but I am not going to chance publishing the whole thing given the copyright notice.

The LA Opera has its opening gala tonight, Queen of Spades. Tchaikovsky opera success is measured by how many of those attending commit suicide after the ending...

I hate not having Ricochet. I hate it. I hate it. And it is slower here than in San Diego on a dialup connection. I just hate this. Earthlink seems very slow today. 

Everything is slow. I hate it.

Apparently Earthlink and everyone else are in a conspiracy: I can't even download large web pages. Something times out. About half the time I can't even see the BYTE site. I guess I am going to have to try some other service, but what?

I hate this.

 

 

HP buys Compaq. This may be interesting. HP has some good engineering. They also have residuals of their old marketing team which sold products by the philosophy of "if you don't know how good our stuff is already, you don't deserve to have any. Grovel and beg and maybe we will tell you, but probably not."

Compaq has a more aggressive marketing style. Their engineering has been Good Enough for me.  I like the company as it is...

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Wednesday, September 5,  2001

I found this in a conference I read. It is the story of the origin of AIDS: in chimpanzees, come out of Africa, from preparation of chimpanzee meat for eating, perhaps by consumption as well:

"Since the viruses mutate at a roughly constant rate, the researchers could construct a path of how the virus had mutated and determine how long it would take to move from one virus to another one with the amount of genetic diversity found today. From those calculations, they found a date when the spark of the epidemic was lit: 1931, plus or minus 15 years.

"You might think, if the virus was present in 1930, how on earth did we not see it?" Dr. Korber asked. "But if it is only present in a few thousand individuals and it takes a decade to get sick, it could easily have been missed."

Researchers say the virus almost certainly infected humans repeatedly as they killed and ate chimpanzees over the years, but that it is hard to start an AIDS epidemic. For it to develop, the virus must be prevented from dying with its victims and a steady chain of transmissions must occur.

"We think that these transmissions have gone on forever and a day, for all the centuries that people hunted chimpanzees," Dr. Hahn said. "The rule is that these transmissions go nowhere. They just peter out, unless you have additional factors that promote subsequent spread in the new human host."

One possible explanation for the extensive spread of H.I.V.-1, several scientists said, was that people began congregating in cities in Africa. There, the conditions were ripe for an AIDS epidemic."

Entire story at 

NYT SEP 04, 2001

The Genesis of an Epidemic: Humans, Chimps and a Virus

By GINA KOLATA

And it looks pretty convincing to me. Strike that. Let's say plausible, an interesting hypothesis worth examining. The implications for new diseases out of Africa are fairly obvious.

Column time. I have a new DVD drive that reads and writes 4.7 GB on a side. I have a new Plextor PlexWriter that is faster than ever. I've got some problems with software I thought I could recommend. I have notes all over the place....

And I don't have high speed access.

 

 

 

 

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Thursday, September 6, 2001

Column time. For some interesting thoughts and the news of a non-Via chipset SMP Athlon board, go see Bob Thompson's page 

http://www.ttgnet.com/rbt/daynotes/2001/20010903.html#Thursday

which also has some trends on Intel sales and stuff. Plenty to think about while I write.

 

 

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Friday, September 7 2001

Column time...

You might want to read this...

 

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Saturday, September 8 2001

Column technically overdue but since it was due last night and that was a Friday night if I have it in Tokyo Monday morning all will be well.

Don't panic, but go check out

http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46655,00.html 

since it is likely to become the subject of a lot of disucussion.

 

 

 

 

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