Slashdot Mirror


Slashback: Favoritism, Alternacy, Moo

Slashback with more on handheld everything-boxes, a softer review of the new Sharp Zaurus, raising money for open technologies, Gateway's singing cow, and getting around with alternative root servers -- all below. Enjoy. Update: 04/12 06:41 GMT by T : There's an update below in the part on alternate root servers, too. A double-barrel of Mossberg. Dave Aiello (author of our recent review of Handspring's Treo all-in-one handheld) writes with nice update for anyone thinking of shelling out for one: "Walter Mossberg did a comparative overview of the Handspring, Kyocera, Samsung, and RIM integrated PDAs and phones in the first edition of 'The Mossberg Solution' (a new column he is writing)."

Speak of the devil -- Arrgh writes: "PC Magazine has posted a more favourable review (4 out of 5 stars) of the Zaurus--they had none of the sync problems Walt Mossberg wrote about."

Give money to these guys, please. Jeff Gerhardt of the American Open Technology Consortium writes after the post about this "GeekPAC" on Slashdot.

"Although the last 24 hours was one hell of a pain in the ass, at 4:00 am we were through with that second draft and in large measure due to the constructive comments from the /. community. Yes I got a lot of nutty emails about how I should be working on more important issues like global warming and ending "greed" (can you believe that one??? how the hell can we do that.), but for the most part the comments were well thought out. As a whole I think that the whole /. community should be proud.

In particular I have pages of operational suggestions and contact names across the US. The suggestion that has tickled me the most is a suggestion for a fund raising methodology for the "PAC" organization. This came from a couple guys who were debating the idea between the two of them, until it really solidified into a plan. And, we are going to do it. The plan is simple and uses the thing we love so much, technology.

We will set up a series of paypal account links, having created a category for every House or Senate member that appeals to our overall goals and objectives. If then there is a news item about an issue and one of these "good guy" politicos does something to help the cause, the PAC will write a 2-3 sentence quote that will happen to have the paypal link included inside the quote. Media sites will then be able to include the link as a part of the quote, because afterall its news right (wink wink)!!!!

This would then facilitate the people _out there_ to throw a buck at the good guy as a impulse purchase to show gratitude. It need some refinement, but I think it provides portals an opportunity to provide a political opportunity to their communities, without looking too overtly political in the process."

No more Portable Monopoly. Dr.Jones writes "...well, not really. It seems Portable Monopoly is being forced to give up their web address 'Due to legal issues with Hasbro over the usage of the word "monopoly"'. Fortunately, they will have a new site up next week (Triton Labs), and they're still on target to ship the lighting kit next month. Seems like a bit of a stretch on Hasbro's part though."

Not as much of a stretch maybe as Parker Brothers claiming the word clue.com.;)

Do cows wake up and smell the Rosen? prostoalex writes: "Newsfactor has a story on Hillary Rosen expressing dissatisfaction with Gateway's ad campaign. Who would have thought?"

... and routing around it. With a nice detailed followup to a recent Ask Slashdot post, Dr. Zowie writes: "For those who want to use alternative DNS roots but are stuck behind port-80 proxies, a simple solution may exist, thanks to several folks who wrote in to suggest it. Section 5 of RFC 2068 gently deprecates using relative URI's in HTTP requests, and in fact most web clients generate absolute URI's even though relative URI's are allowed by the standard. My ISP's not-quite-transparent proxy directs outbound port 80 packets correctly if (and only if) there's a relative URI in the request. A little 10-line local proxy that munges absolute URI's into relative URI's before emitting them to the ISP seems to solve the problem for now: I can retrieve all the nice goodies that most of you can't at www.dev.null, , www.computer.geek, and paradox.null.

Oh, and if you live near the Colorado front range and aren't a purist about routing, Peak to Peak is a pretty good outfit for dialup and DSL service. Their tech support is extremely accessible and quite good (though our views differ on the correctness of payload-switched routing)."

Update: 04/12 06:41 GMT by T : Richard Sexton writes: "While it's great to see your continued coverage of Open Roots can I just put in a quick plug for ORSC? We're older and have way more tlds.

The coordination amongst Open Roots takes place at IRON; for lack of a better term, it's the Open IANA."

Kissing and making nice. panker writes "Sun had previously given JavaRanch a cease and desist order because of a trademark issue. Sun is now backing down and being friends. Slashdot covered the first half of this issue earlier."

11 of 221 comments (clear)

  1. Portable Monopoly by xkenny13 · · Score: 5, Funny
    No more Portable Monopoly. Dr.Jones writes "...well, not really. It seems Portable Monopoly is being forced to give up their web address 'Due to legal issues with Hasbro over the usage of the word "monopoly"'.

    Soooo ... Hasbro has a monopoly on the word Monopoly?

  2. ....and Ogg plays on Zaurus! by xiphmont · · Score: 5, Informative
    Lest we not forget that plugging is divine:

    theKompany released their Ogg player for the Zaurus today. Oh, right, and it plays those legacy mp3s too ;-)

    Another reason to get a Zaurus!

    Monty
    xiph.org

  3. Memo to Hillary Rosen: by Telastyn · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The Gateway commercial is fun, but their Web site is nothing but a gateway to misinformation," Rosen said.


    Do you have any idea how stupid you sound given the blatant fact biasing found in every single RIAA report?

    "If only they would devote a little bit of the millions of dollars they're spending on this ad campaign to help stop illegal downloading ... but that wouldn't help them sell more CD burners, would it?" RIAA president and CEO Hilary Rosen asked rhetorically.


    No, nor if you gave a few million dollars to the underground artists, that wouldn't improve the quality of music available for sale would it?

  4. Ending Greed by Phigs · · Score: 5, Funny
    more important issues like global warming and ending "greed"
    I think he mis-read the e-mail, it was supposed to be ending Creed. I've had enough whinny music to last a lifetime.
  5. I think it is well stated by dJCL · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "If Gateway truly believed that illegal copying hurts all artists and labels who make the music we enjoy, they'd be working with us to find a solution to the piracy problem," Rosen added"


    This pretty well states it all.

    --
    On Arrakis: early worm gets the bird. Magister mundi sum!
  6. Political Action by Alien54 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Michael Moore in his book, Stupid White Men, points out in Chapter One (page 27) that
    [...] in most counties the local Democratic party is run by just a few people, 'cause most people would never think of showing up. Go to the next county or town Party Meeting, and bring ten friends. In most cases, your bunch will constitute a majority. Use the rules and state party by-laws (which can often be found on the Web) and seize control.

    [...]

    The one think you should definitely run for is precint delegate. Every precint in America elects delegates from each party. It may be the lowliest office, but it is the foundation on which the whole house of cards is built. Selected delgates attend the national party conventions to nominate the presidential candiidates. You should be among them.

    And so it should be relatively easy to make an impact on the political parties if you dare to get involved.

    But it would take more dedication then the usual chit chart you see in online forums, etc.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  7. Re: Fun RIAA Quotes by Raetsel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Point... but I like THIS better:
    • "The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has charged that a Gateway (NYSE: GTW) advertising campaign that declares support for digital music downloads uses "misleading scare tactics" to frighten consumers into buying more of the company's products."

      (My emphasis, of course.)

    This from a consortium almost as good at scare tactics as Microsoft! (Meaning when they're convincing congress they need 'protecting' -- tariffs on blank media, copyright extensions, etc...) Oh well. I guess they know 'em when they see 'em.

    --

    "...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
  8. Re:Sharp Zaurus by Arrgh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It does in fact work with Linux, It's just not officially documented or supported. Mac users are in the same boat for now, if not worse off--anyone know whether ethernet-over-USB is supported in Darwin/OSX?

    I'm typing this post on my 802.11b-equipped Zaurus btw... The keyboard isn't so bad--easily 2x faster than Graffiti.

  9. Responsiblity? by Tranvisor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "If only they would devote a little bit of the millions of dollars they're spending on this ad campaign to help stop illegal downloading ... but that wouldn't help them sell more CD burners, would it?"

    Said by Hilary Rosen.

    How is it Gateway's responsiblity to spend actual money to police that? Somehow I don't see Gateway having Morpheous-type software preinstalled on its systems. A computer company sells a computer to its users and provides support for the software it provides with the computer, thats it. No more. Do you actually expect Gateway, Dell, HP or any other OEM to limit its user's options? Its called capitialism Hilary, it means that people sell things to make money. If somebody uses some product you sell for an illegal use, its not your problem. Its the Polices' problem.

    While we are at it, lets sue the gun industry for making things that kill people. Lets sue the beer industry for drunk drivers. Lets sue the auto industry for making 2000 lb. objects that hit people walking on the sidewalk every once and a while. Etc Etc Etc

    Its the users responsibility to police themselves, you break the law, you go to jail, not the person who sold you the computer.

  10. Whip it! by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 5, Funny

    (Sung by a man driving a truck, accompanied by a cow in the passenger seat...)

    The RIAA has you down?
    You must whip it
    When Mr. Rosen comes to town
    You must whip it
    When they manipulate the facts
    You must whip it
    They lobby regulate and tax
    You must whip it

    Here's a box
    For cheap
    Good speakers
    Free blanks
    Mister Rosen
    You can shove
    Senator Hollings
    Up your ass!
    We whip ya!
    We whip ya good!

    (Am I the only one here who believes that Gateway is giving the RIAA exactly what they deserve?)

  11. Mossberg Must Die by fm6 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This typifies the reason I have no time for Mossberg's columns. He makes a fetish of being technically illiterate. This supposedly allows him to critique technology from the end-user's POV. But what it really does is make him incapable saying anything really useful.

    It's like you're revising "Cooking for Dummies." The right person to do that is a good cook who knows how to talk to bad cooks. But by Mossberg's logic, you should hire somebody who can't cook and who doesn't want to learn. Then you end up with a manual on microwave and can-opener operation, padded out with complaints that fresh ingredients are overrated commodities.

    Perhaps Mossberg's sync issues really do represent some design flaw in the Zaurus. But we'll never know for sure. All we have from Walter is the silly assertion that Sharp "doesn't care about synchronization". Not likely, but I guess it's the best explanation he could come up with, given his resources.