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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

VIEW 101 May 15 - 21, 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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See also the New Order page, which tries to make order of chaos. These will be useful.
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If you want to PAY FOR THIS there are problems, but I keep the latest HERE. I'm trying. MY THANKS to all of you who sent money.  Some of you went to a lot of trouble to send money from overseas. Thank you! There are also some new payment methods. I am preparing a special (electronic) mailing to all those who paid: there will be a couple of these. I am also toying with the notion of a subscriber section of the page. LET ME KNOW your thoughts.
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Monday  May 15, 2000

Back from San Diego. Went down Saturday, Roberta being down at the beach house I had to be there for Mother's Day, feeling rocky or not. Actually I managed to get some heavy duty plotting done for the next Janissaries book.  Drive back was easy enough.  

A new reader has been reading View from number 1 on, and found that most of the pictures in View 76 were not properly linked. I have linked them and in doing it discovered that many of the images in

www.jerrypournelle.com/slowchange/simages/morechaos/ were never properly linked to anything. Ah well. There are a lot of them including pictures of Chaos Manor in Chaos, us up on the hill, and other stuff.

Having just gone over to that list, I realize that some of the pictures may be confusing. Toward the beginning of the list we have Chaos Manor and www.byte.com Editor in Chief Paul Schindler; he's the bearded lad somewhat younger than me.

Toward the end we have some typical scenes at Chaos Manor: i.e., a MESS. It's not much cleaner now, although it has been  between then and now. And I am fighting...


For those interested in the future of Intel and some recent problems,

http://www.ttgnet.com/rbt/daynotes/2000/20000515.html#Monday 

on Bob Thompson's site should prove interesting. I don't yet know enough about all this to know: I missed WINHEC this year, which is where I would have learned. I think it is the last time I will miss that particular conference.


I am told this is on alt.sysadmin.recovery

On Mon, 15 May 2000 16:27:34 +0800, Lionel <nop@alt.net> wrote:

>On Mon, 15 May 2000 04:15:27 GMT, in

><m3d7moih43.fsf@pyrophore.ogoense.net>, Rebecca Ore

><rebecca@ogoense.net> said:

>

>>ptomblin@xcski.com (Paul Tomblin) writes:

>>

>>> In a previous article, adb@news.onramp.ca (Anthony DeBoer) said:

>>> >Parsed as "favourite napster moments", for some reason.

>>> My brother has been banned from Napster for accidentally

>>> downloading *one* Metallica song. And he hates Metallica.

>>

>>Jerry Pournelle was last heard from getting into an unholy alliance

>>with some of the wonkier alt.slack people to destroy Altopia and stop

>>text piracy.

>

>Bwahahahahahaha! You have no idea how much I wold enjoy trolling Jerry

>Pournelle. Wanna email me the name of the groups in which this is

>happening?

>

>>Harlan Ellion got real life info on one person who was posting text

>>binaries of copyright protected work and is making lawsuit noises.

>>

>>Some saner parties are pointing out just how fast it took us to catch

>>H**C****.

>

>Yeah, but HC has been a little clueier about hiding his location than

>most warez kiddiez.

Can anyone explain ANY of this to me? Who are the alt.slack people, and what kind of alliance might I make with them? I know that the Science Fiction Writers of America, of which I am a former president, has some investigations of web sites that have posted entire copyrighted works, including some of mine, without consulting the authors or publishers, and is looking into actions to protect intellectual property. My suspicion is that little can be done about this, but certainly a writers association has the right to try, and I have told the officers they have my support for what good that will do them.  Harlan I think is no longer a member of SFWA but I am not sure: he has joined, resigned, and rejoined more than once and I don't know his current status. In any event I have not spoken with him about it, but he's got bigger troubles than me: I suspect few will read an entire novel on line and of those even fewer would have bought it in the first place. Harlan is mostly a short work writer, and his material is more susceptible to piracy of this kind or so I would guess.

But why this discussion, and why someone would like to "troll" me, and what that would amount to is I fear outside my knowledge base. I would think a conference of sysops involved in recoveries from problems would have better things to discuss -- if indeed that is who these people are.

 


I am told that view77 also had some dead pictures; these appear to be most of those that were in the folder and not indexed, so if you want to see Chaos Manor or a walk in my Studio City Hills, view77 is the place to go. I expect I ought to do something about providing a complete guide to these little view snippets some day, but I probably won't.

 

 

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Tuesday, May 16, 2000

If you're new here, View 76 and View 77 had some interesting pictures and the links ought to be fixed now.

I have concluded that some systems administrators have far too much free time, and their employers ought to give them more to do: sitting about chatting about SFWA and speculating on trolling me surely is not what they are paid to do. The problem of protection of intellectual property is a serious one, and if those discussions are an example of what the best and the brightest can do, we are all in trouble. Fortunately I suspect I have among my readers considerably smarter, or at least more serious, people. It really is a serious problem.

There's a lot on killing Clippy in Mail. Me, I don't mind him except when he pops up and says "You're trying to write a letter."  I know I am trying to write a letter. I have been writing letters longer than Clippy and his inventor have been alive. I was writing letters when Clippy's inventor's parents were in school. Some people need help writing letters and ought to be offered it, but I'd as soon tell Clippy to leave me be on that one. On the other hand he has sometimes suggested things I didn't know.

What's needed is a way to tell him, after he's made an offer, "don't make this particular offer again uninvited."  That shouldn't even be hard to do. Microsoft, are you listening?


BAD MAIL:  I recently did a test mailing. I am getting returns. Please see the badmail page if you are a subscriber and did not get a recent test mail. I am now about to do a substantive mailing. That has NOT gone out yet. If you are on BADMAIL please correct.

---

Larry Aldridge of PC Power and Cooling, is very fond of the Tyan Trinity board. I have one in use and love it too.


I have utterly failed in my attempts to make Windows 2000 Server work as a Primary Domain Server. I tried to create the domain CHAOS2000. It doesn't like that name: it wants a .net or .com designation. But I won't be hosting a web site here, and I merely want a domain name. I used 2000 server to create that, and added a number of computers to the domain. The Windows 98 systems seem to see that all right, and seem to be able to log on. The Windows 2000 Professional systems see the domain, but fat lot of good it does: attempts to log on get the message that they can't find the domain.

I am temporarily using NetBeui to make things work here (complicated by a mechanical damage I seem to have done to my HP 4000 printer, not it's fault) but I can't get any kind of domain going with Windows 2000. My next move is to scrub that machine and install NT 4 with a new domain of Utterchaos and see if I can make THAT work.  Nothing else does. There is some trick to using Windows 2000 that none of my books seems to know.


 

 

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Wednesday, May 17, 2000

The atomz search service says I have now exceeded the limits for free and I need to pay. I've been putting in  the FreeFind service as well. Do any of you have any preferences? I don't mind paying atomz, but there's a certain amount of work to that, and the FreeFind seems to work as well. Comments invited.

My HP 4000 printer finally has a problem. It's all my fault, I have somehow managed to break the on-off switch. It should take someone who knows what he is doing about half an hour. My problem is these things never break so I don't know where to take it. Even the product manager in Idaho doesn't.  Does anyone know of an authorized HP repair service in the East Valley somewhere near Studio City or North Hollywood (Los Angeles area). On line I find one in Redondo but that's 35 miles I don't want to drive. Alex uses a service in Orange County which is even farther.

Thanks to all who responded: Alex will take it to his Orange County shop which we know is reliable.


Hi Jerry...

Speaking of Clippy, the Office Assistant... There is a security hole big enough to drive a truck through.

http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2570727,00.html 

Oh Joy...

Microsoft will not comment, but a patch has been issued.

Jerry Wright jgw@rocket.com Primex Aerospace (formerly Rocket Research (a much cooler name...))


 

 

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Thursday, May 18, 2000

Today was largely devoured by locusts. Threw away two truckloads of STUFF and we're still not there. Remember Borland Turbo Prolog? Well I had a copy. Chucked it. I have got to simplify things, stop keeping stuff for its historical value. Pilot, Prolog, were interesting languages at one time, but no one hears of them any more. Pity, really, because Prolog used some interesting algorithms to establish patterns, and might have been useful in AI. But now machines are so powerful you can use brute force...

And that was a dumb observation. See below.

 

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Friday, May 19, 2000

Some observations on the Microsoft mess in Mail. It starts here and there's a link to more.

On Prolog: (this opened quoting the paragraph above)

Hi Jerry

I think you'll find that Prolog is still used in AI, though AI itself has dropped out of fashion somewhat of recent years.

Prolog was never a specially efficient language, from an execution point of view. When I learned it at University, in the 1980's, it was dreadfully slow and required vast amounts of memory to run non-trivial programs. I would say that today's fast computers make it more viable, rather than less.

Prolog's beauty was in it's ability to express logic problems succinctly. A few dozen lines of Prolog would perform a task which might take thousands of lines of C or Pascal. It was ironic that simple programs often took longer to execute than they did to code.

Ah well, nostalgia isn't what it used to be.

--  Michael Smith emmenjay@zip.com.au Emmenjay Consulting Pty Ltd http://www.zip.com.au/~emmenjay/

Just when you've made it foolproof, along comes a better class of fool.

You know, that was my recollection of Prolog. I threw out Borland Turbo Prolog because I am out of room, but now I wonder if it wouldn't be fun to experiment with Prolog again now that we can execute programs? You point out the disadvantage of rattling on late at night without thinking, which is how that paragraph got in here: I completely agree with you. The big problem was that it was slow.

But it sure died, and does anyone learn Prolog? IS THERE A DECENT PROLOG available now? You revive my curiosity.  But of course I don't have the language any more; perhaps I can buy it back from the group I donated it to...

Jerry: Saw your mention of prolog. It is available from gnu @

http://pauillac.inria.fr/~diaz/gnu-prolog/ 

Health,

Chris

See also Mail for Turbo Prolog

Roland sends the following URL

http://www.ebnews.com/story/OEG20000516S0075 

about the final demise of Number Nine, a company that was very innovative in high performance video, particularly 2D which is what businesses need. Alas, they never quite caught on, and slowly died, which is a real pity: their boards were solid, and after an iteration or so their drivers worked. RIP>


If you have any interest in biology and the future:

http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/story/92.html 

is by Paul W. Ewald [Greg Cochran's research partner]. Cochran and Ewald have been turning things upside down with their germ theories of all kinds of diseases thought until now to be hereditary defects.

And see below.

 

 

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Saturday, May 20, 2000

For more on the new germ theory, I have a special report by Cochran.

I have wasted a bit of time on a new game, Majesty; a report will be in the column, but not as the game of the month; I can't recommend it. Pity. For why see the column.

I have got a bunch of administrative stuff out of the way despite feeling awful: this summer cold just hangs on and about the time I think I have shaken it, back it comes. Nothing serious, just leaves me feeling filleted... 


Dear Jerry,

An article in New Scientist this week trumpeted evidence that recent warming trends were not caused by solar output fluctuations. The article below at spacedaily.com describes a commentary to the New Scientist article by the original scientists.

http://spacedaily.com/news/greenhouse-00f.html 

Jim Ransom

Thanks. I've never quite understood why people are so eager to form conclusions in the absence of enough data.

 

 

 

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Sunday, 21 May 2000

An astonishing story about cloning in mail.

Clearing up a confusion:

I was inattentive I guess: for some reason I got the idea that Socket "Super Seven" and Socket 370 were the same. They are not, and here is Bob Thompson on the subject:

No. Super Socket Seven is just a minor enhancement of Socket 7. It's more a marketing term than a technical one. Super Socket 7 was basically an AMD initiative designed to support their K6-* series of processors better than the older Socket 7 boards did. Super 7 boards support 100 MHz bus (which some plain old Socket 7 boards do, too), support AGP, have recent BIOSs that support large hard disks, and so on. But SS7 uses the same basic electrical protocols, pinouts, and so on that Socket 7 does.

Socket 370 is basically a socketed implementation of Slot 1, uses the GTL+ protocol, and supports PPGA Celeron processors in its first variant. The most recent version of Socket 370 is backwards compatible with the original Socket 370 (that is, it supports PPGA Celerons) but it also supports Socket 370 FC-PGA Pentium III and FC-PGA Celerons (the "Celeron II"), which the original Socket 370 boards do not. There are actual pinout differences between the original Socket 370 boards and the current versions.

Which should take care of that confusion. In case it doesn't:

Actually, the boards you mention support SC242 (Slot 1) and Socket 370, rather than Socket 7. The Intel 440BX chipset indeed supports 100 MHz FSB, UDMA/33, and AGP 2X. There are two similar VIA chipsets at issue. The Apollo Pro133 supports 133 MHz FSB, UDMA/66, and AGP 2X. The Pro133A is the same, but adds support for AGP4X. All of this goes to show the danger of buying on numbers, however.

Nearly all benchmarks show that Apollo Pro133/133A motherboards using a 133 MHz FSB are actually slower than a 440BX-based board using 100 MHz FSB. When running a 100 MHz FSB processor (or a 66 MHz FSB Celeron), the VIA boards are much slower than the 440BX boards.

UDMA/66 shows little or no throughput advantage relative to UDMA/66 with even the fastest of the current-generation ATA drives. The maximum throughput of a drive depends on whether data is being transferred from the inner or outer tracks. Drives like the Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 40 barely exceed 30 MB/s at their fastest, and typically only provide 16 MB/s at their slowest, with perhaps a 22 MB/s average. That's well below even UDMA/33. My best guess is that we're unlikely to see drives that can actually benefit from UDMA/66 for at least a year or two. Even when we do, the impact of UDMA/66 versus UDMA/33 will be a relatively minor factor in overall system performance.

AGP 2X versus 4X is another non-issue. Current systems and video cards typically can't come close to saturating even AGP 2X. AGP 4X shows no discernable real-world advantage in any situation I know of. And in fact, the only time that AGP has any advantage whatsoever over even PCI is when the video card uses system memory as virtual video memory. You'll notice that most high-end video cards (the only kind that could even theoretically benefit from AGP) usually come with 32 MB, 64 MB, or more of physical memory installed on the card. That's because local video memory is even faster than shared system memory accessed via AGP. So the truth is that any flavor of AGP has no real-world benefit whatsoever, and downgrading a motherboard because it supports only AGP 2X instead of AGP 4X is ridiculous. And, yes, my opinion of VIA chipsets holds true across the board. Given the recent news articles about Intel's chipset problems, it's easy to forget that historically Intel chipsets have been rock-solid, fast, and bug-free compared to competing chipsets from VIA, which have always been a step behind Intel, particularly in compatibility and stability. And VIA's problems extend beyond Intel processors. For example, it was recently disclosed that problems with the VIA KX133-based Athlon boards may have been responsible for AMD's decision not to release their new Thunderbird-core Athlons in Slot A, except for limited OEM distribution. Why? Because the KX133 has timing problems with Slot A and the Thunderbird core. Even the elderly AMD-750 chipset can support Thunderbirds in either Slot A or Socket A, so how did VIA, which apparently based the KX133 on the AMD-750, end up producing a chipset that can't run the Thunderbird in Slot A?

All of that said, I don't think that VIA chipsets are junk, but I'd always choose a board based on an Intel chipset if I had that choice. In my opinion, you'd be better off going with a 440BX based model. It'll be faster and more stable, and you won't miss those marketing-speak features that appear to give VIA the advantage. Although it is elderly and being ramped down, the 440BX is still the best chipset that Intel has ever made, and that's very good indeed.

-- Robert Bruce Thompson

 thompson@ttgnet.com

 http://www.ttgnet.com


Much ado about cloning article. See Mail. But it was probably all a hoax. Sigh.

 

And things are coming apart in Rhodesia now known as Zimbabwe...

Link: www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/Sunday-Times/frontpage.html?999 

You have to find the WORLD index on the left side, then the Zimbabwe story.

 

 

 

 

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