Domain: cavalrypilot.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to cavalrypilot.com.
Comments · 215
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What gave the cell away?
The little hood or the sickle it carried?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
So we are back to free speech?
Now we can once again TALK about something and actually be covered by free speech instead of having to toe the line for the politically correct speech of the day.
I'm glad. If it were someone with a left wing agenda, this wouldn't have even gone to trial, that's what bothers me the most. I don't like extremists of any stripe but every one of them has the right to say what they want and have all the publishings they care to have.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Javascript
Some idiots have been pestering newsgroups with javascript based posts. This is cross platform and any browser/newsgroup reader that is javascript enhanced will be stung by it. So far it's only pop-up mail and pop-up browser windows but be careful if you have javascript turned on and you read newsgroups.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
So I cannot make copies for my own use?
That is against the 'fair use' part of the copyright law.
The other question I have is can you not bit-copy the thing? It would copy the 'copy protection' over to the new one as well, but who cares? It's for my own personal use, I can do with it as I please.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
The Discovery Store
If this type of thing blows your skirt up, find the closest Discovery Store and you'll spend hours in it looking at all the various things in there.
After what 'they' have done with plants and animals I'm not sure I'm thrilled with yet another 'fast growing plant' Next they'll tell us it's perfectly safe and our kids (in my case, my kid's kids) will have three eyes and eat dog food.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
If it's not on radio
This is commercialism. That's the way it is. Pay to hear or don't pay and don't hear.
This is supposed to be surprising to someone?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Apache Pilots use this daily
This is the same thing the Apache (tank killing helicopter) uses for the 30MM. It's already tried and proven technology.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Two things
With a couple thousand hits an hours security through obscurity DOES work for minor things like this unless RIAA has enlisted the help of the NSA for number crunching for who downloaded what.
The other thing I wonder is why don't sites like napster et al use basic encryption techniques to keep WHAT is seen secret? It's not like there is a derth of encryption enabled software out there, much the opposite, recent browsers all can deal with port 443 and https. Start using it. Sniffers can only tell that a connection was made, they cannot tell what the contents of that connection did or is doing.
Come on people, time to stop whining and start using what is available to us to keep big brother from tracking everything.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Encryption
The gentleman voted against the 'back door' requirement from the FBI. That's the important thing for me. Export of encryption restrictions are BS as well.
So, I wonder if he really is for the common use of encryption with personal e-mail, personal web pages etc.
It seems he has not looked into the whole DCMA thing though but tries to give generalities about it's use and incorporation. Let's keep on him for positive ability to decompile for fair use.
Watch his voting record before you take any of this interview to heart though, remember he IS a politician.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Not only that...
No, he couldn't do that. If he even saw code that MAY have been windows code, transmeta, linus, and the entirety of the GPL would be tied up in court for eternity with MS lawyers.
Transmeta itself can put people onto the help, but I doubt very seriously that Linus would be part of that team.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
From the GPL
"You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee"
If this is considered a 'physical transfer' then they have a point.
It is not a physical transfer, it is an electronic transfer. Physical transfer is disk, CD etc.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
How many of those "attacks"
Are sites linked from
/. thinking they're in the middle of a DoS attack?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
My Goodness
Bill and Linus working on the same end-result project? Cats and dogs living together. "C'mon Martha, time to get to the bomb shelter."
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
But isn't there a limit
Yes, I see the '40 atoms in width' line. The heat from each of the transistors would screw up the transistor beside it. That was the limit of the copper lines within a chip. Now they're saying they've overcome that limitation?
Printing with UV lasers, no matter how sexy this might be, seems to be safer than the x-ray technology they were using. I would much rather be in a lab with the requirement for full covering goggles than have to wear a lead lined jock strap.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Great, a new market for MS to embrace, destroy
Not content with buying up or locking out competitors in software, MS now is taking on Sony in the video game arena? X-Box Vs PS2. Gee does this sound familiar for those of us who lived through OS2, MAC, MS all competing and the first two having better, more stable products?
I just hope people realize what this means and what MS is actually up to. Diversification is a good thing within a company, as long as that company is not using it's size to freeze out everyone else. Threats of 'you will be last in the distibution chain' and 'we will change the hooks so your product doesn't work with ours' come to mind.
I wonder if that will work with Sega, Sony, et al.
Stay tuned, coming to a playstation and N64 near you, the furthering of 'embrace, extend, kill, crush, destroy'
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
This is BS.
Second, it requires nations to develop standard procedures to capture and retrieve online and other information. Nations would have to be able to issue "retention orders" that would "freeze" data on any
computer. Governments would also need the ability to capture in real time the time and origin of all traffic on a networks, including telephone networks. For serious crimes, they would be required to
intercept the actual content of the communications.
Third, nations would have to cooperate with other nations in sharing electronic evidence across borders. And this cooperation requirement would apply to all crimes. They don't have to be the cybercrimes
laid out in the first section of the treaty or even actions unlawful under U.S. law.
So, regardless of any country's 'right to privacy' this says you have none.
There's no mention of encryption that I can find, though. Does that mean that if everything I do is encrypted then it cannot be recovered? Or that there is no encryption available because it would cause the search and recovery impossible?
This sounds like a really REALLY bad idea.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Filters
I know what you mean with this. I have started putting out all my documentation in ASCII text. Then I get a call from one of our Intel (not the chip company) people saying that Word had put all sorts of bullets, extra spaces, tabs and generally screwed up the whole document. 25 pages I had to give to him in WordPerfect format just so it would open up in Word correctly. Even then Word wanted to put all kinds of wooferdills in. Drove us nuts. Delivery was hard copy so I just printed out the ASCII file from WP, then tried the same thing in StarOffice, lpr , Abiword, and a couple others. Turns out that Word was the only one that had troubles with the straight ASCII format.
Let's see, cannot reverse engineer the format or would break the new laws, doesn't approve of any other format than it's own. Hmm, sounds like a monopoly to me. BUT this is about AbiWord.
I like it, but the idea of not enough and not really good filters bothers me about almost all of them. The only one that has a decent set of filters is StarOffice.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Filters
The primary complaint I have with all the Linux office suites is filters. Yes, Word documents dominate the workplace so a major concern of mine is can I read and write
.doc files to the point that it doesn't matter if someone has Word, they open my files fine and that I can open .doc files without having to go through fourty levels of "what type file is this?" "are you sure?"
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Time to buy more
Got 10 shares of RH when it was about $.50 more than it is now. Looks like it's time to buy more.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Was wondering when this would happen
I would have expected Humorix to get to it first. Oh well, maybe after it gets done being slashdotted, I'll be able to read it.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:On misuse of a tool Vs the tool
So the other way should work too:
Suitland Md. March 22, a man in his house was rudely interrupted by a larger man kicking in the patio door. Homeowner had a pistol, burglar went to the hospital.
DeCSS - I get to watch the movies I paid for.
Gee, there seems to be a large disparity of the good each can do as well. Allowed a homeowner to live Vs watching a movie.
So, the level of positive outcome balances the negative outcome (more so that people use firearms on the order of 5 to 1 at the low end to 40 to 1 on the high end for defensive use Vs criminal use) and both become along the same lines.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:On misuse of a tool Vs the tool
Who even suggested that I was talking about YOU? If you can hold intelligent conversations with those who absolutely disagree with you, then you are one that I would like to talk with. I'm always willing to hear the other side of whatever story I have.
I like the 9th Amendment argument, but it is even more vague than the 2d.
But, this is primarily about DeCSS. So, my original posting was an example of the idea that people get wrapped up in a tool and forget the basis of law that it's actions that break laws, not the ownership or availability of tools.
First amendment grounds:
Anarchists Cookbook, that someone else has already mentioned. Legal to own, legal to sell, legal to have on line etc. Even though if someone built some of the things in it, they could then go do severe harm to themselves or others. Or they could clear their field of stumps. The knowledge or the tool is not the cause of harm, it's the implementation of the tool or knowledge that actually does the harm and that requires action.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Does it have the chip ID number?
Got a Cue Cat(unmodified)? - no
Got a Smart Card Reader? - no
Got a new hard drive? - SCSI only
Got a network card? - yes, but I change the HWADDR
Got Windows? - no, not on any machine
Got MS Office? - no
Got a Microsoft Optical Mouse? - no
Any Matell Software? - no
I'm sorry, you were saying?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
We'll see it in use in about 2050
Around here they're still putting in first generation fibre lines. I'm sure they are putting the cuts in the sidewalk only to bypass my building and run the lines across the street. Why did the telecos not think ahead and pre-position areas to upgrade or put in PVC piping or such so they could run new fibre lines at will instead of ripping up roads, sidewalks etc to put in technology that is three or four steps behind what exists?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
On misuse of a tool Vs the tool
All you who think this is off topic, read it all the way through first.
DeCSS is a tool. Nothing more, nothing less. I wonder about those who holler about free speech, claim that DeCSS is only a tool to be used or misused by the person who has it, then they turn around and claim that guns are evil and should be banned.
The MPAA views DeCSS the same way liberals view guns. 'It can only be used for one thing' 'makes life a whole lot easier for those who will break laws'
If you are for free speech to the point of thinking that the MPAA is full of BS for trying to stop DeCSS, think about those of us who use firearms daily in a non-agressive, non-criminal manner before you decry the use of them because criminals misuse them.
(now THAT's going to annoy some who are less than thrilled with anyone who disagrees with them.)
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
MPAA Stupidity
The original claim was that they were giving away piracy TOOLS. That, in and of itself is BS. Then they slap an injunction for the linking of it. That is beyond anything a 'reasonable man' should even consider sueing for.
I hope this makes it to the Supreme Court and becomes case law of the 1st Amendment variety.
I cannot find anything that holds the MPAA's view, I can only find things in case law that show their claim is invalid.
What was the original Judge smoking to rule against 2600?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Get your DSL from the one everyone's sending to
I would prefer not getting DSL from the telecos just out of principle. Get your DSL from speakeasy. Most of the failed ones (Bazillion comes to mind) have sent their people over to speakeasy anyway. If you don't know the status or don't trust the DSL provider you're with, give them a call.
Not paid by and don't work for them, I'm just a happy customer.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Does it have the chip ID number?
or is that an intel only thing. That tells me which I'm getting.
AMD here I come.
Mix this with the chip cooler from yesterday and we'll have something that will suck electricity like there's no tomorrow.
Oh, it seems the pre-shipments went to California already. About a month or so ago, right? May want to hold off getting one.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Different goals
Apple is a capitalistic company, they have to make money. Their primary goal is to make money.
Linux is a hobby with most people working on it. Their primary goal is to make the best, most stable thing they can.
Apple has to appeal to the lowest common denominator, Linux types appeal to the tech inclined anyway.
This is like... like.... comparing apples to penguins.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Pilots are taking bets
There are conversations on rec.aviation type newsgroups about 'what are the chances...'
We lived through skylab, we live through billions of metorites every day (most microscopic) and we have survived things falling from space since man began, this will be little different.
I like the people who do the chicken little imitation. I also like the greenies who holler about all of this even though most of it will burn up and what doesn't should rust away before too long.
This will be something to look at to see if we can see it fall, though.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Open Source won't cure:
Cancer - why not? if all research facilities required open source, then we wouldn't waste a lot of effort duplicating methods that don't work.
World Hunger - again, it would be a good thing if all the ways to harvest, bring water, etc were open sourced, then even the poorest countries would be able to afford the details and could figure out how to make it happen.
Suicide - so? Do you really want people who commit suicide in the gene pool?
War - as long as there are people, there will be war. That's the way it is.
AIDS - see cancer
Pollution - see cancer
Violence - see war
Britney Spears - umm, you got me there, I'm not sure there is a cure. Maybe Natilie Portman petrified made out of grits?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
How about just choice
Just let me choose what I want, what I want to do, what I want in a software package. I don't give a darn what the ethos is or what the theology is for a software package. I want the best package for the best (not necessarily least) price I can get. I do NOT want stuck with one company (read microsoft) products because they are the only fish in the pond and they squash all competition one way or another.
Open source is another type of competitor. It's better in that MS cannot buy up the IP rights and then jack up the price or kill the project just because it competes with one of their packages. They have to actually play by the best software wins rules and they are not doing a hell of a job of that.
One way or another, let me choose, don't force the choice no matter which side of the house you're on.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
HorseHockey
Most of the non-competes are for exatly what they stated, that a person cannot use the inside information of a company to better another company. It is agreeable that should be restricted. What this and a lot of other 'non-compete' clauses look like any more is the company saying, "you cannot even LOOK for another job, so if we cut your pay/benifits/perks, there is nothing you can do about it because we'll sue the pants off you and you will lose."
This is BS. Just another way for companies to have 'at-will' employment but only the company has the ability to terminate the employment. The employee is stuck without even the ability to be able to leave due to a clause in the agreement.
Don't give me the 'you knew what the agreement was when you joined' because this whole thing is an employee who had the rules changed on him and got screwed for something that was not put out and signed by all the 'agreeing' parties. Sounds like some of these negative agreement mailings you get where if you do nothing you agree to whatever terms they give whether or not you actually received the notice.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Woohoo!!
So that means that they have discovered something that does nothing? Invisible, has no mass and travel at fantastic speeds?
You mean they have finally discovered ill-suited laws that Congress tries to pass? Wow.
Maybe they should have set up camp in Washington DC.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Talked about for years
They've talked about this with grunts with personal voice activated radios, GPS uplinks and smart sights on rifles.
That DARPA is actually doing it is a good thing because the military is where a whole lot of ideas begin their life and make their way into the civilian sector.
The problem with this whole thing is the weight/bulk of all the equipment they want soldiers to carry. Grunts (I was one) already carry a buttload of equipment for everything and now they want to add more stuff.
"But it's only five ounces" you might say, well, that's true, but this is five, that is another ten, the other is a pound itself. Pretty soon you've got the person with 20 Lbs of equipment before they even get to the soldering equipment.
Another problem is battery life. How long do/will the batteries last? Soldier in the field come to depend on this piece of equipment to get his butt out of a sling and the battery dies at the worst possible time? Movement and contact is usually at night so solar is not a reliable backup.
It's worth a try, it's REALLY worth R&D money, I just hope they come up with some good answers to the problems that will creep up. The soldier in the field has already been screwed by a whole bunch of political baggage that has nothing to do with warfighting but the congresscritter has mandated because it'll bring one or two jobs in his/her district. I hope this does not become one of those.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Back to basics
Ahhh, 'with a name like ceesco, it has to be good'
Personally, I took out a $3,000 Cisco and dropped in a P100 RedHat box for about 300 computers. No one has been able to tell the difference for the two years it's been running.
Switches, switches, switches. Got networking on the brain and routers come to mind when I'm thinking about networking equipment.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Back to basics
3Com makes some wonderful networking equipment. They see that there's not going to be much R&D money in the immediate future so they consolidate and go back to what they're best at. Making network cards, routers, switches etc.
This is not news other than "3Com got smart in the declining economy and went back to what they do best and put the R&D onto the back burner."
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Microsoft Made a Movie??
Astro-Turf galore. Why not, they wrote letters to the editor, fan mail etc.
This is the same thing and just as sickning.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Put the MB in the freezer
There was a test of an overclocking team who put the motherboard into a freezer. 486dx25 or somesuch. They had the clock speed up to about 200 before it melted into slag.
But people would look at you strange if you had your cables running into a freezer and just used it as a normal computer. wouldn't they?
Okay, got to say it. I wonder what this would do for a beowulf cluster of overclocked computers...
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Gee, really?
I'm surprised they could find a venture capatilist who would even consider their IPO, or maybe that's why they're pulling it.
The markets are in a slump. It may end up being a full scale recession, but as of right now it's just a slump. IPO is for stable/growing markets.
Too bad people gave Clinton the credit for Regan and Bush's economy and now that Clinton's economic policies are coming home to roost, the same people want to blame someone who has been in office for less than a hundred days.
Now, maybe people will figure out that Democrat's economic policies are BS and maybe we can get the market back to rising and TurboLinux can IPO with a proper market to do it in.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:No Solaris, I have cheap PC hardware
If it's 'too easy to crack' then look at OpenBSD. Out of the box security supposedly and it's a BSD, what's not to like?
Solaris x86 IS a dog, that's true, but for web serving, SPARCStation2 is fine up to a point. Cheap too.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Hey, would FreeBSD make a good DSL web server?
Look at netcraft.com's statistics. xBSD just about owns the entire 'max uptime' and 'number of servers' catagories.
Apparently someone likes xBSD enough to use it as their servers.
I, personally, prefer linux as I'm used to that. Solaris would be my second choice.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
xMach's the spot
amazing how these open source places keep churning out software to publish when no one wants to work on them and they're not 'commercially viable' according to certain software companies.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
This is going to be the way it works
The 'free' as in tv type free with ads or the 'pay-per-view' type with no ads.
I like this in that it's also the way things should be. Choice. That's what makes the 'net a great place. Don't like it? Don't pay for it. Don't bitch about the ads then either. Want to get rid of the ads? It'll cost you.
That sounds like an open market at work. The 'net is evolving, this is yet another branch in the evolution. Let's see if this pans out.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Why?
I see that. Maybe they should team up with the 'pay you a gazillion dollars for prior art' sites and see if there could be a one-source database of such.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Why?
Keep the copyright and leave the IP alone to be distributed amongst the people. What is the value of open source if you cannot use it?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Geek girls?!
There are things other than computers and technical stuff in life? Where? How? Why didn't anyone tell me?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Re:Since when is GNUStep a windowmanager?
But Window Maker is the 'official window manager' of GNUStep. I do not know if it uses the libraries, but GNUStep is keeping that a primary window manager for it's environment.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Since when is GNUStep a windowmanager?
It's the building blocks for windowmaker, but it's not a window manager itself.
It is good to see that the 'other environments' are getting press, though. Especially with the community. I'm a bit tired of hearing about KDE and Gnome as I use AfterStep. Yes, I use KDE and Gnome applications, but I prefer the AfterStep window manager.
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page -
Could you imagine
How utterly dredful 99% of the content a person has to go through. People think their problems are the worst there ever were, people think they are the only ones with THIS problem. Well, anyone with this job has got to see the exact same problems with the names changed a hundred times a day.
Hey, that's a good job for someone who is really depressed. If they figure out that their problems are not unique and that they are not the only ones with that problem, they may realize that others are also overcoming it daily.
Then again, it may not be for those who internalize other's problems. A really good empath would be insane after about an hour.
Oh well, AOL has been looking over all the messages and traffic into and out of their domain. This is supposed to be news?
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page