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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 137 January 22 - 28, 2001

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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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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  January 22, 2001

Home. I have some Burning Tower to write. And lots of mail.

Roland tells me that the copy protection for Whistler has already been hacked.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/16223.html 

Why am I not surprised?

 

California has an immigrant population of 9 million, more than the entire country of Norway, nearly as large as Norway and Sweden combined. There is lots of power per capita for any sane projection of population from 1992, but when you add that many new people -- two first world country's worth --  very quickly you will run out of energy, because one thing that attracts people is plentiful energy. How could we not have run out?  If we want to import people, export jobs, and refuse to build new power plants, the results are predictable and in fact were predicted. 

 

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Tuesday, January 23, 2001

Does anyone actually BUY anything on the web? I ask because I find it nearly impossible. First there was my miserable experience with the Treasure Chest people. They finally shipped the slocket I ordered, weeks late, no explanation, charging me premium shipping costs amounting to more than the product, but shipping it weeks late so what was the point of paying Fedex? By the time they sent it I sure wasn't willing to pay more than the part cost just to get it here fast. 

Then there's the experience of trying to BUY something. Roland recommends a Saitek X-36 joystick. (Actually he said X-35 and that caused some problems but eventually I got that corrected.) A search on google -- and that is a good place to being searching, as opposed to the Microsoft search engine that is guaranteed to find everything but what you are looking for -- gives me pages and pages of reviews, and the home company, and even a few places that allege that they sell the things, but all my attempts to actually BUY one have failed. Perhaps Fry's will have them again; Roland bought his there. But I sure have been unable to find a reliable company that will sell me the product. Naturally.

And it's that way all over the Internet. Amazon does make it relatively easy to buy things, but they sure are limited on out of print books, I suppose I can't be too surprised there. The brotherhood of book borrowers got my classics library copy of Acton's Essays on Freedom and Power, and I thought I would get another. Amazon offered several used copies (it is out of print which says a lot about the state of our schools and scholarship, doesn't it? I mean why assign readings in that when you can get politically correct feminist books that explain why the Principia Mathematica is a rape manual, and no I am not making that up) -- anyway, I ordered one after Amazon managed to tell me my credit cards were no good, and I spent half an hour with Citibank on the phone before we determined Amazon hadn't tried to access my credit card but apparently tried some other number -- then spent three rounds of email -- eventually Amazon decided I did have a good credit card and the book appeared. Paperback. Not what I wanted but that's my fault, and it will do as a reading copy. So off to look for a good hardbound. Google ad USED BOOKS did send me to a place that offered it, and I may have managed to order a good edition with an intro by Gertrude Himmelfarb (I have not read that intro; the one I had was published in the last century and I sure wish I had not managed to loan it to someone) so we will see if I get the book. Maybe.

But I sure miss going down to Pickwick Books on Hollywood Blvd. and going through old books, and the other old book stores along there. All priced out of business by high rents of course, and except for Dutton's there really aren't any good old book stores left. Now it's the web or nothing and I suppose I better get used to it, but I sure wish they'd improve their communications interfaces.

I did manage to find what I needed at www.lef.org which is a source for many of the vitamins and other stuff I fondly imagine keep me going at my age... And that at least wasn't painful.  But ecommerce has a long way to go.

And as usual I have much mail on this and have managed to solve the problems; thanks to my readers. 

Dr. Pournelle:

The current issue of Scientific American has an article on the re-discovery of the creation of Damascus steel swords. Fascinating reading.

Unsigned mail. I will look for it though. 

I do not usually recommend the competition, but look at this one:

http://www.zdnet.com/anchordesk/stories/story/0,10738,2677247,00.html 

An odd story indeed.

 

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Wednesday, January 24, 2001

I have to go out to mail letters, but first I had to do an audio.byte.com  recording. (That's really http://www.byte.com/audio but if you put in the above without www and stuff it will work). Before that I found my mail wasn't coming in. That triggered a panic. In the panic I managed to whop something I don't understand. Eventually it cured itself, and the moral of that story is that if it used to work, nothing has changed in your establishment, and it involves connecting to the outside, and something outside has changed -- it was raining last night in Los Angeles -- then LEAVE IT BLOOMING ALONE FOR PETE'S SAKE! 

In the course of fooling around I did learn a bit about phone lines and their routes in Chaos Manor, and that my DSL line isn't conditioned yet -- the DSL modem continued to blink and won't lock on -- and I am still on 56K modem. I happen to be using a Creative Modem Blaster, but when there is a problem I haul out the US Robotics which I KNOW works. Of course it didn't this time. The phone lines would give me a tone and negotiation signals if I dialed manually, but apparently those weren't strong enough for the modem to hook into. After a couple of hours in which nothing had changed (except of course I had rebooted the Netwinder and done a number of other frantic things) it all started working again while I was on the air.

I have now got to do some serious work getting a phone company official who understands what "t-1" means; so for no one I have spoken with at Pacific Bell admits there is any such thing. Real competence. And you get to spend hours on hold waiting. Thanks Judge Green, thanks a whole bunch. AT&;T had its problems and couldn't market eternal youth, but at least they had some human beings on the telephones, people you could talk to, and it was all only an "O" away...

I see Fry's now has iWill motherboards for Athlon chips. I have had success with iWill in the past. A combination Athlon and iWill mother board runs under the cost for a gigahertz Pentium III now. I'll have to have a look, if I can get out there today. Roberta is off testing the beta of her new WINDOWS version of her READING SOFTWARE! which we should be able to ship in a couple of months, but of course her cell phone was left on charge in her car so that wouldn't start so she has mine, and the rain clouds are coming again, and I have to go mail the bills. And I am not going to take a bicycle to Fry's...

I have a great deal of mail about doing business on the Internet, and ordering books and the like. I may even pull much of it together into a special reports page since the advice collectively is quite good. See yesterday and today's mail.

We also have a reference to an emulation system that may solve my DOS program problem. And may not.

And this, with the subject "Wow! You are weird":

Hello!

I'm a big fan of your SF-novels and the complex worlds you create with others. Guess if I was surprised when I tried to make sense of your homepage. Is it supposed to make sense ? I can´t tell. Anyway, I just had to tell you to keep up the good work. I´m looking forward to the next Janissaries novel.

Sincerely Yours,

Peter Svedman Tyresö, Sweden

"How can you tell the difference between a swede and a Swede ?!" "Easy, Swede has a capital S !"

Is it REALLY THAT BAD?  Good heavens. Perhaps I need a contest for a redesign of my home page. 

And I have corrected the paragraph about population and energy: 9 million is nearly the population of Norway and Sweden combined, two first world countries added to California after 1992 when the power projections were being made and Amory Lovins was telling us how we could conserve our way to prosperity and do without new energy supplies. Sure, if you used the population projections of 1992. But in fact we have brought in FAR more people than were projected.

Which may or may not be a good thing -- cultures can be overwhelmed by sheer numbers -- but if you don't provide energy for newcomers then either everyone else has to use a lot less, or the price will go up, or both, and there ain't no way out of that. As anyone could have seen, which makes me wonder, could they be THAT incompetent?


Regarding White House vandalism:

From: Steve Setzer <setzer@backfence.net>

Subject: White House vandalism

It's far worse than originally reported, according to Drudge:

http://www.drudgereport.com/wh93a.htm 

If any of that is true, it's way beyond pranks. I am not a regular Drudge reader, but it is my understanding that he has a better record for accuracy than most; not 100%, but quite good.  And this is serious.

 

Has anyone looked at:

http://cicentre.com/SpyDrive.htm 

and see

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37276-2001Jan23.html 

both called to my attention by Sue of the pshrink establishment. Fascinating...

 

 

 

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Thursday, January 25, 2001

In today's mail:

Q: How do you tell the difference between a liberal and a conservative?

A: Easy. Watch a man drowning fifty feet offshore. The conservative will
throw out 25 feet of rope and shout "swim for it!" The liberal will toss
out 50 feet of rope, drop his own end, and go off to do another good deed. 

There is a fair amount of truth to that. But there's another possibility: the liberal will look about to find another liberal, get together with him, and discuss the methods by which they can get someone else to throw out 50 feet of rope, so they can  look at the generic cause of the problem. They they will demand that the government dam the stream so that won't happen to anyone else.  Eventually they'll create a rope throwing job, and take applications, awarding job preference to the handicapped. the job will be given to an armless black woman with a Spanish surname and they will then have to hire a "tutor" to "assist" the rope thrower. By then the original drowner will be long gone but they'll have solved the problem.

Conservatives will try to get a religious group to stand by the stream with privately paid for rope, and hold swimming classes.

Bob Thompson says:

And a libertarian would ask the guy how much it was worth to him. Once they'd negotiated a fair free-market price, the libertarian would toss the guy fifty feet of rope, pull him in, collect his fee, and then go about his business.
 

But in fact I suspect that most libertarians would simply throw in the rope. If there was a rope.

Dutch Reagan used to be as proud of having rescued people as a lifeguard in high school as he was of being President.  And paying a lifeguard is no bad thing for a community to do, for that matter. It may be an infringement on your liberty for the community to collect taxes and pay a lifeguard, but then so is collecting taxes to pay the police. 

One of our fundamental documents says that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. This is a pretty crucial concept.

In general, societies are best in which the largest numbers of people consent; and that is usually obtained by putting the decisions down at the lowest practical level, which is what Federalism was supposed to mean. It's no good having individual communities decide whether the nation shall have aircraft carriers or missile defenses; but it certainly does make sense to have each community decide whether or not to hire lifeguards for the local swimming hole. And it's time for breakfast.


"Sources" tell me that the new product name for Whistler (the Microsoft NT/WIndowsxx combo) will be Microsoft XP.  I have no clue as to the accuracy of that. It seems a poor name to me, but perhaps I am missing something.

Please log in.  My Windows 2000 Professional workstation says this to me periodically. I am logged in. I certainly didn't tell it to do that to me. Does anyone know why a feminine voice every couple of hours asks me to log in? It may or may not be connected with receiving email.  I don't really know. It doesn't happen often enough and there is no warning.

 

 

 

 

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Friday, January 26, 2001

It was raining in Los Angeles.  Had to drive out to Kaiser in Panorama City. Lots of crazies on the road. Days like this I really like having a BIG Explorer.

BEWARE of this one. Apparently overseas scam artists are sending people mail telling them they have money in paypals. They then send a link to an address that looks like paypals, but is not. From there bad things can flow. See MAIL for details.

Somewhere there is a bad link. Here's the right one. Now if I can find the old:

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html 


Those interested in this sort of thing will find

http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft0101/articles/bethell.html 

Against Sociobiology

by Tom Bethell

fascinating. It's a very good account of the sociobiology controversy, its relationship with Darwinism in general, and other such matters. Clearly given where it is published it is an apologetics article, and a good one.

 

 

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Saturday, January 27, 2001

A slow day, cleaning up mostly.

Saw Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon tonight. Interesting movie.

 

 

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Sunday, January 28, 2001

"Scarlet" as in Scarlet O'Hara, was built from an AMD K6-2 3D Now chip running at 66 MHz x 4.5 and at the time I built it to be Roberta's development machine it was the fastest system in the house. It was built on an iWill XA-100  Ver 1.2 board, and so far as I know worked all right until retired in favor of a faster system. She got "Mohican" which was the last of the Pentium III systems built on PC-100 memory, and that one she still has until I retire an experimental 1 GHz system to replace it. (Her choice, not mine, as in "It works and you touch it and you sleep in the doghouse," and since we don't have a doghouse that could be serious.)

Anyway, I was cleaning up things and there was Scarlet, useless to me, and the neighbor lad down the street who helps me throw things away -- THREE dumpsters full of junk in three weeks -- could use a Windows machine, so I set Scarlet up on the workbench to clean things up. I also went to the Microsoft Windows update site and downloaded and installed everything from there.

And I looked around for the manual and disks for the board, but they seem to have vanished into the swim. Possibly they're downstairs somewhere with other stuff I told Roberta to keep when I gave her the system. Don't know.

But while everything else in Scarlet works, the floppy disk drive does not. It's not the hardware and not the cable. I have swapped out those. The symptoms are the same. If there is no disk in the drive I get a drive not ready message. At one time when there was a disk in the drive I got a "Disk not formatted" message, but now I don't even get that: when I try to access the A: drive with a disk in there, the system locks. It is clearly trying to access the disk, but nothing happens. Same at boot up: if I put a bootable floppy in there it locks on "Looking for Boot Record on Drive A" or something like that.

I am wondering it something in the Windows 98 updates and installations changed things? I don't have a lot of time to put into this -- it's a giveaway system after all, and while it's pretty sophisticated for the neighbor lad, I doubt many of my readers care a lot about an AMD K6-2 which is, I think, a Socket 7 system.  But I am curious. Anyone out there know?


New FPRI essay on the future of the west.

 

 

 

 

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