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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

View 164: July 30 - August 5, 2001

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Monday  

Carried over from Yesterday:

MONDAY: The Code Red Worm is coming. Pay attention.

If you know anyone who has not run an anti-virus program on their Internet-connected system, do them and yourself a favor: make sure they do. The Worm will wake up again Tuesday night on those machines still infected.

How seriously you take this is clearly debatable. Most of the thing's damage has been done and fixed with routers alerted to it. Some systems won't be.

I have an alert from Steve Gibson.

It says in part "

It has become *CLEAR* that at midnight of Tuesday, July 31st (UTC), when

the dates set into the clocks of the world's nearly 5 million IIS servers

< http://www.netcraft.com/survey/ > change the "Day Of Month" from 31 to 1, a

repetition of the exponential growth of the Code Red worm will IMMEDIATELY

commence. If you have not seen CAIDA's excellent write up on the previous

event, you must: < http://www.caida.org/analysis/security/code-red/ >.

 

 I also have this:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/20719.html 

which takes a somewhat different view. And I am in Seattle, with no knobs to twist. See you tomorrow...

(I returned to Studio City Monday Evening.)

 

 

 

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Tuesday, July 31, 2001

Home and ready to write the column, work on my books, and keep the world going...

John McCarthy sent this:

An Israeli view of the attack, which claims to correspond also to the results of US Congressional and military investigations in given in the Spring 2000 issue of the magazine Azure published in Jerusalem. The URL of the article by Michael Oren is

http://www.shalem.org.il/azure/9-Oren.htm 

It is in fact a strong defense of the Israeli position that they were incompetent rather than malicious in the attack on the Liberty during the 6-day war. They don't put it that way, of course.

In my judgment, if you take this account as absolutely true,  the torpedo boat skipper who attacked a crippled ship and machinegunned life boats should have been dealt with more severely.

Two of the most astute men I have ever known, Stefan Possony and General Daniel Graham, believed there was considerably more to the incident than ever came out and that none of it was to the credit of Israel. General Graham as chief of DIA would have had access to all the US documents. He would not necessarily have had access to any Israeli documents; and nothing he told me contradicts the account given above.

I find the title "Case Closed" extremely irritating. Otherwise I know nothing to contradict this version of the incident.


I just spent some time on the telephone with Greg Bear, Poul Anderson's son in law. Poul has had a rather nasty form of prostate cancer for some time. It looks as if it's about to finish him, sooner rather than later. I first met Poul about 1960 and we have been close friends off and on and good friends all that time. He and Gordon Dickson and I were a fairly constant trio at SF Conventions. I think I have missed my chance to be at one last convention with Poul.


A few views from our Seattle trip. First, an official visit to Microsoft:

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This is the "New" campus, a few blocks from the old. They keep expanding.

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Product managers:Kelly Weadock of Microsoft FrontPage, and Chandler Myrick of "PC Experience" which is the user interface stuff that's part of Windows XP. We also met John Montgomery, old friend and former colleague and technical editor of the old BYTE, who is lead product manager for the .NET framework. Unfortunately my pictures of him are too dark: I did something wrong.

When you meet and talk with these people you find that, as I have always known, they mean well: Microsoft is not a vast conspiracy to take over the world, or make life miserable for their customers. I'll have more on that in my August column.

It is probably true that with Steve Balmer in charge it is going to be a considerably more hardball company: if you thought it was ruthless before, wait until you see what happens with Balmer and the legal eagles in charge. Previously Gates was naive about politics and thought he could ignore it. Now they know better, and since Bill hasn't the stomach for what's coming, the bulldog is in charge. That is another Clinton legacy, along with the current Microsoft stock prices...

I will have a good bit about my visit in the August column.

And a visit to Mount Vernon. Allan Susia was my room mate and friend in college days, and built my two boats, one a midget ocean racing sailboat that Poul Anderson and I took many places back when we were both younger. Allan and I explored Catalina and the Channel Islands in that boat. He was also best man at our wedding more than 40 years ago...

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Allan and Judy sold their house on Green Lake in Seattle and bought this. From Judy's photos it wasn't a lot when they got it: it's sure nice now. Even the old shed looks interesting. Mount Vernon isn't quite the end of the Earth but it can't be too far away.  They like it up there...

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And the Hollywood Bowl concert we went to Tuesday evening.


This was sent to a different forum, but I think it applies here:

 

Friends --

It's with a heavy heart that I write that my father, Poul Anderson is receiving hospice care at home and is not expected to live more than a week. I know that some of you are fans of his work, and if you would care to send an e-mail direct to my parents house ( trigonier@earthlink.net ) expressing what it has meant to you, he would be very appreciative. I'll be going down there myself tomorrow (they're in the Bay Area), so will not be getting mail here for a few days.

Astrid Bear


Poul died at midnight, Tuesday.

This aye night,

this aye night,

Every night and all,

Fire and fleet and candlelight,

and Christ receive thy soul.

 

 

 

 

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Wednesday, August 1, 2001

Poul Anderson, mentor, author, colleague, and friend, died last night about midnight. It wasn't unexpected.  He was at home with his wife and daughter and friends, having long ago declined to be frozen and possibly take part in the nitrogen party at the end of time.. I will be doing a memorial piece for Locus and other science fiction publications. We don't do Viking funerals any more. We should.

We used to sing an old drinking song at conventions. It keeps running through my head. Fire and fleet and candlelight, and Christ receive thy soul.

 

 

 

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Thursday, August 2, 2001

Deadlines and stuff. Sorry. 

 

 

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Friday, August 3, 2001

It's also Alex's birthday and Phil's anniversary and I almost forgot both of those. I seem to be in a fog.

I will be driving up to Berkeley with Niven this evening. Deadlines: the column and appreciations for Poul. I'm used to deadlines but I can't say I care for this assignment. That's not quite right. I did those when he was GOH at conventions and rather liked it. Now if I can keep that degree of enthusiasm...

Successfully used Drive Copy yesterday with a big SCSI system. Everything went just fine...

Apparently Ricochet is not going to go away: someone is buying them, it is still operating, and all seems to be well.  However, there have been some major connectivity blackouts, whole states without dialup access of any kind with the demise of psinet. See column.

It's a Telco world and getting to be more so. Surprise. Now there's the REAL monopoly threat.


I'll be off line until Sunday evening or Monday morning. I doubt there's anything that won't keep until then.

 

 

 

 

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Saturday, August 4, 2001

I am in the Bay area for Poul Anderson's memorial services.

 

 

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Sunday, August 5, 2001

Niven and I drove back last night, with a stop in a random motel on I-5. I'm home and still facing deadlines: column, appreciations for Poul, and an odd commentary for the National Academy of Sciences.

I have pictures of the memorial. Since I was MC I don't have any of me there, but I presume the news people there took some. I have no idea what they look like because I inadvertently sent the means for transferring CompactFlash pictures from the CF card to a computer off in the travel bag with the laptop. I'll have those back in a day. Meanwhile 

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A family friend, Karen Anderson, Poul's son in law Greg Bear, and Larry Niven in Poul's office; another picture taken at Greg's insistence in the same room; Larry, Gregg and me in the living room where we have all spent some of the most pleasant evenings of our lives; and Karen getting ready to go to the memorial. That's her brother in the foreground, Linda Anderson (Mrs. John Anderson) facing us, and Janet Anderson, Poul's niece, in profile.  And enough.

Of course I found that Ricochet is going away. Really, and our hopes that someone had bought it or would buy it in time to keep from interrupting the service were based on the wrong information. Sigh. So that's another thing I have to do.

At least I keep busy maintaining my hideous web site.

 

 

 

 

 

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