Yep, that's why I noted some caveats after my asterisk:)
I have shares in a company on roughly this basis myself, only it's a little more complex. Some of my shares are real and issued, some are un-exercised options where the creation of the shares has been pre-approved (and therefore doesn't require agreement from the board to issue them), and some others are held as 'deferred' shares by another shareholder, which means they hold no rights and receive no profits for those shares (but they could be transferred / converted in future if the board agrees).
It's all far too complicated for its own good, and it's an interesting experience watching people argue over the contents of a spreadsheet some of them don't understand... I'm not surprised at all that Gygax could fail to see this coming and/or assume his colleagues wouldn't see it.
The Blume family also exercised options -- which means creating new shares at a price agreed previously.
They needed money to do this, and conveniently Williams' downpayment for their other shares was exactly the same amount.
This is pretty standard: a company will often reserve X amount of notional 'shares' to be issued as options, and the existing investors are aware that their own holding will be diluted when these options are exercised. Until the options are exercised, however, they do not actually exist as shares. *
* There are various caveats on all of this, as shares may be held in treasury by the company, converted from one type to another and various other things in order to avoid tax / split control differently to the profits.
Greg Egan describes a world in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permutation_City where the spam arms race has led to intelligent spam bots, and spam filters which are a simplified simulation of your own brain, which reads the spam to decide if you would want to see it yourself.
(N.B. I wouldn't want to give the impression that's all there is to the book, it's just a very, very small part of it. It's a good read if you think you'd like a novel which explores some of the implications of simulating human brains. The simulation speed is an issue too: if you want to go talk with the AIs you either have to do it 'by post' or slow your own brain down to their speed.)
I think perhaps most people are looking at this the wrong way round.
Very small aircraft are already flying great distances using ground-charged batteries plus solar power. The issue shouldn't be "how do we build a 300-seat version", but "how do we make it possible for everyone to take small planes".
The challenges then become fundamentally different:
1. The pilot: on a two-person plane, one person at least must be a pilot. This is horribly costly, and would make this whole approach uneconomic.
2. The weather: these planes are very susceptible to poor weather, and not just because of the need for power, they would also be more dangerous in poor conditions.
3. Air traffic control: multiply the number of aircraft by several hundred and the existing approach to air traffic control would fail.
However, there are potentially some huge benefits (beyond the energy savings):
- Frequency: if it's just the two of you, the plane may as well leave right now.
- Ubiquity: probably, lots of smaller airports would be a better approach, so they could be closer.
- Less driving: potentially, much smaller flights would make sense, replacing costly ground-based road and rail infrastructure.
I'm not up to solving 1, 2 and 3 above, but my suspicion is that ICT-based solutions are getting closer, i.e. more heavily computer-assisted flight and air traffic control, better weather monitoring and comms so that planes can be routed or grounded as necessary.
Intercontinental travel is still difficult from a safety perspective, because a forced landing at sea would be much more dangerous than on land (gliders like the one in the article would be very capable of ground-based landing even if all power had failed). Maybe large oil-rig-like touch-and-go points along the route could do the job, adding some safety as well as doing more efficient plugged-in recharging.
As for improving the planes themselves, what about a ground-based accelerator, so they're at flight velocity before take off? Isn't take-off itself one of the biggest energy drains?
I agree with everything you say here, but I would like to add that, while hypocrisy is often more annoying than wrongdoing, and is certainly more likely to result in press exposure than unashamed wrongdoing (all other things being equal), it is wrongdoing itself which actually does the damage.
Galling as it may be, I think we should make more effort to be accepting of occasional hypocrisy. After all, there's plenty of evidence that our thoughts are context-dependent, so it's entirely possible to be hypocritical without realising it.
That said, in the case you're describing people are being both hypocritical and harmful, which is clearly to be frowned upon.
I heartily agree with this, and would add that 'sales and marketing' is a very general term, and like any general term it masks a huge variety of approaches.
In the past I have been involved in lowest-level coalface kind of work (approaching people in the street - and this was not a temporary thing, I was starting a local business, and canvassing in this way was part of our overall lead generation strategy for three years), and in some of the most high-level (and often ill-defined) 'relationship building' that professional services firms ply Fortune 500 / FTSE 100 companies with.
The difference between the first and the second of these is stark indeed, for all that they rely on the same fundamental skills: reading people and convincing people. One of them you have about five seconds to hook someone, the other you can easily take a year, meeting them every three months, before anything comes of the connection.
(For the record, I disliked working in both of these roles, and although I could force myself to be 'on', I much prefer programming and other structured work; the lesson I took - addressing your weaknesses is useful up to a point, but playing to your strengths is more rewarding and more fun!)
It would be nice to see this combined with something like Apple's new voice interface (I'm sure there are other equivalents) to parse a more complex grammar.
Even something like "left" vs "left a bit" vs "left a lot" would be enough to make this a more natural interface.
Great stuff though, nonetheless. I remember ten years ago when I was at Cambridge the engineers having a competition to build robotic arms to pick up screws, half of them couldn't get it to work, and that was in a reproducible situation, no controls, as many attempts as needed etc.
One of the big things George Orwell didn't include in 1984 was the chiasmus: the government watches everyone, everyone watches the government. All sorts of things, from mobile phone recordings of police malpractice to the MPs' expenses scandal (I'm a Brit) show how technology cuts both ways in this regard.
We might also reach a stage where the ability to tailor things in both directions based on individuals makes government start to seem less like a monolith and more like what it really is: a very large group of people doing a whole bunch of things, some of whom are mostly up front and some of whom are mostly underhand.
Yep, it absolutely is Keynesian, and you're quite right a lot of people don't like it or don't agree with it. I'm certainly not saying it will happen, I'm just being wildly optimistic about killing two birds with one stone!
Flip side is that if and when climate change is disrupting economic activity in a sufficiently significant manner, it will doubtless generate a bunch of defensive, as you put it, R&D. Probably be a big stimulus, in the same way that war destroying things can be a big stimulus. My suggestion is that we try to preempt things a bit...
Your point that building the same old crap is low risk is absolutely spot on, and is actually what technology bubbles are very good at disrupting. Only everyone becoming convinced that X is the next big thing can overthrow all the entrenched business models that X will wipe out. This is arguably why boom-and-bust continues to be the pattern: despite many negatives, it actually is better than the alternative at ushering in each new development.
I knew the chap who founded SPRU, looking into just such things back when it was largely being ignored. I also worked briefly with a colleague of his on technology bubbles and the positive transformative effects they can have in the long term, despite 'short-term' financial crises.
Firstly, they are of course of the opinion that R&D is vital. Indeed my limited understanding of their position is that almost all 'real' economic growth can be said to come from technological change. Everything else is either population growth or accumulating fixed assets like materials; the former dilutes per capita growth and is effectively a wash (distribution of wealth aside - yes that's a big issue too, but bear with me...), the latter only have value because of how they are used in technology (market value is of course determined by perception, and that's another reason it gets out of kilter from time to time).
More significantly, perhaps, is their way of looking at tech bubbles: they exist because of R&D, and all sorts of people get overexcited and there's a bubble followed by a collapse but, in the meantime, some entire infrastructure has been replaced. Rail bubble is a good example, the transition to mass production is another, various colonial bubbles etc. In these cases, the real economic growth (of the kind that benefits everyone, not just a financial elite) tends to occur only after the collapse.
I think we are in the middle of this collapse right now, and it may be protracted. Arguably the last similar collapse involved WWII before upward movement was restored. Anyway, the point is this fellow from IBM is absolutely correct, but if history is anything to go by there may well be a serious hiatus in R&D before the next wave of real growth starts, and him saying it ain't so might not do a hell of a lot...
(Just as an aside, a lot of R&D post Wall Street crash started as part of the military-industrial complex, effectively funded by governments as part of the war effort. There are many economists who suggest that, when private enterprise fails, governments have to step in and spend spend spend, but the reactionary governments such crises often engender have difficulty justifying this sort of expense without, say, a huge war. A more positive alternative might be putting large parts of the world economy onto a 'war footing' against climate change: printing money, creating jobs, building infrastructure and so on. Even if climate change isn't happening, this could be no more pointless than developing ways of actively destroying people and infrastructure...)
This is not my area at all, but I attended a lecture a couple of years ago by one of the top UK quantum computing researchers (I think it was one of these guys), and I asked him at the end of the lecture how they got the answers 'out' of the quantum element of the computer and into something more conventional to be looked at by humans, processed further etc; he conceded that this was very difficult, and when I pushed him on the hardest question they'd actually solved he wryly admitted that the best they'd done was to factorize 15.
Of course, I'm sure that's a huge acheivement to have proved the principle in practice even in a small way, but it is funny everyone heralding the end of cryptography when it seems to be quite some way off.
Ah, no, that's a very good point. My experience is of rendering for video, where there is no penalty for breaking up an object. However I'd therefore assume it's not using pre-calculated structures to speed up collision testing (and is therefore slower).
On point 1, a ray-tracer would probably not incur much additional rendering load shattering the glass (physics is another matter), so long as it remains the same number of polygons.
There might be some additional calculation as multiple pieces of glass passed in front of each other, but most raytracing engines put an absolute limit on the number of ray interactions. This is generally not perceptible because, as you point out, screens have a resolution;)
I've worked on reviews of these policies and employee adherence to them, and you're quite right they're of little use if people don't know.
Truth is though, simply having these policies is often enough to reduce the level of culpability a corporation can be considered to have in the event of a breach. Getting people to sign stuff would also help, as you say, but the big prize here is not to defend against suits brought by your employees, but to prevent some government body coming down hard on you.
Yes this is a good point. It would get a bit difficult if people all had N layers of false data to traipse through, and everyone knew this was a liklihood. I'm sure there are people out there who do it, though.
What about a false PIN in case you get frog-marched to an ATM and forced to take out money at gunpoint? A code that a) alerts the police and b) limits the apparent balance might be useful. Then again, I suppose CCTV would probably catch it near a bank, and you can be insured against that sort of thing.
What about f(hash(hash(nameOfSite)+hash(username)+hash(key))) ?
f() is a function to transform the hash according to the requirements of the password. I've started using a version of this I wrote myself for my passwords. I can change the key every six months or whatever and just remember the previous one for any occasionally-used logins.
My next step is to get it in a form I can use locally on my phone, so not even the source code is trivially available to others (it's a web page at the mo). Paranoid? Moi? (Actually, can you run a local html/js file on Symbian? Presumably the iPhone would do this happily, anyone know?)
I was thinking the other day about protection for really secret stuff (far more secret than anything I have, obviously). If you're likely to get tortured what you really need is a second password that gives access to extensive but fake data, to throw them off the trail!
It's worth mentioning the analysts who don't think the numbers justify the valuations (in any given bubble). In a market where these stocks are climbing due to the actions of even a limited number of morons/dodgy folk, it's silly not to buy in and make money yourself (not to mention you'll likely get fired if you don't). The trick is getting out at the right time, and there are a number of groups who became bearish before the last peak, and made a killing. Sadly, it's most often the amateurs who fail to do this and get burned, which enhances the reputation for evil of Wall Street types (they probably are evil in other ways too).
It's also worth mentioning that according to research I've done (on behalf of http://www.cerf.cam.ac.uk/) not as many companies went properly bust as many as people tend to assume. A large proportion were bought out, and a lot had to delist (hence the sting for investors).
The summary of the project I helped with (http://www.cerf.cam.ac.uk/projectdetail.php?proje ctid=6) talks a bit about some relevant points. It's possible these bubbles may be the only workable mechanism for large infrastructure changes: they simply can't be justified by rational behaviour, so irrational behaviour is the only option. The fact that capital markets can generate this can be seen as a strength - the US is still the biggest economy in the world, after all. The problem, again, is that it tends to be the inexperienced investors who lose most.
In my opinion, the next big bubble of significance is more likely to be China. US investors and businesses are getting better at accepting (if not avoiding) the downturns, but the Chinese are new to this. With the number of registered share-trading accounts in China now larger than the number of Communist party members, would the government survive a crash?
Yup, VHS tapes have to be 'blacked' if you want a consistent timecode. So called because one often 'zeroed' the audio and video tracks to black/silent while laying down the timecode track, rather than having them as static (not sure if that actually helped when recording, but it was a good way to tell if you had a timecode). I wasn't aware that it had an effect on single-frame operations, but then I always worked on blacked tapes when I did that. The deck we had could fine-tune to less than a frame's length of tape, so it may have been a moot point.
Anyone noticed their regular VHS deck occasionally jumping from one time to another? I found it quite useful for working out where different episodes started on the tape, and some decks have a 'search' function which I guess is based on that principle.
Yup, I'm on my Mac now and I meant the second one. Didn't realise it was new as I upgraded OS at the same time I got wireless. The property list editor is okay - I've never found an OSX XML editor I felt improved my workflow beyond a good text editor plus grep. There's a few Java based ones but I didn't like them.
I thought there might be some trolling going on, but I tend to give people the benefit of the doubt, plus I was concerned that someone else might read it and believe him!
Oh good grief, yes I did miss that completely. The apples-to-apples joke came to me half way through reading your post and I clearly didn't digest the rest!
Your other points about Apple's strategy are very good, and I agree that licensing was far from being Apple's sole error. My point (irrelevant as it may have been!) would be better cast as: even now, in a position of strength, it still would not make sense for Apple to license the OS. As you say, last time it revealed weakness, and at the moment there is strength, but cross-subsidising from the iPod or suchlike is exactly the sort of financial pollution in diversified companies that often kills innovation, IMO, regardless of how well they are doing overall.
I think he was talking about setting an order-of-preference list automatically, rather than choosing manually. However, I think you can drag the order of access points in the Network control panel to determine this (on work PC right now so can't test), so you may still be right that the GP hasn't looked very hard.
Yep, that's why I noted some caveats after my asterisk :)
I have shares in a company on roughly this basis myself, only it's a little more complex. Some of my shares are real and issued, some are un-exercised options where the creation of the shares has been pre-approved (and therefore doesn't require agreement from the board to issue them), and some others are held as 'deferred' shares by another shareholder, which means they hold no rights and receive no profits for those shares (but they could be transferred / converted in future if the board agrees).
It's all far too complicated for its own good, and it's an interesting experience watching people argue over the contents of a spreadsheet some of them don't understand... I'm not surprised at all that Gygax could fail to see this coming and/or assume his colleagues wouldn't see it.
The Blume family also exercised options -- which means creating new shares at a price agreed previously.
They needed money to do this, and conveniently Williams' downpayment for their other shares was exactly the same amount.
This is pretty standard: a company will often reserve X amount of notional 'shares' to be issued as options, and the existing investors are aware that their own holding will be diluted when these options are exercised. Until the options are exercised, however, they do not actually exist as shares. *
* There are various caveats on all of this, as shares may be held in treasury by the company, converted from one type to another and various other things in order to avoid tax / split control differently to the profits.
Greg Egan describes a world in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permutation_City where the spam arms race has led to intelligent spam bots, and spam filters which are a simplified simulation of your own brain, which reads the spam to decide if you would want to see it yourself.
(N.B. I wouldn't want to give the impression that's all there is to the book, it's just a very, very small part of it. It's a good read if you think you'd like a novel which explores some of the implications of simulating human brains. The simulation speed is an issue too: if you want to go talk with the AIs you either have to do it 'by post' or slow your own brain down to their speed.)
I think perhaps most people are looking at this the wrong way round.
Very small aircraft are already flying great distances using ground-charged batteries plus solar power. The issue shouldn't be "how do we build a 300-seat version", but "how do we make it possible for everyone to take small planes".
The challenges then become fundamentally different:
However, there are potentially some huge benefits (beyond the energy savings):
I'm not up to solving 1, 2 and 3 above, but my suspicion is that ICT-based solutions are getting closer, i.e. more heavily computer-assisted flight and air traffic control, better weather monitoring and comms so that planes can be routed or grounded as necessary.
Intercontinental travel is still difficult from a safety perspective, because a forced landing at sea would be much more dangerous than on land (gliders like the one in the article would be very capable of ground-based landing even if all power had failed). Maybe large oil-rig-like touch-and-go points along the route could do the job, adding some safety as well as doing more efficient plugged-in recharging.
As for improving the planes themselves, what about a ground-based accelerator, so they're at flight velocity before take off? Isn't take-off itself one of the biggest energy drains?
I agree with everything you say here, but I would like to add that, while hypocrisy is often more annoying than wrongdoing, and is certainly more likely to result in press exposure than unashamed wrongdoing (all other things being equal), it is wrongdoing itself which actually does the damage.
Galling as it may be, I think we should make more effort to be accepting of occasional hypocrisy. After all, there's plenty of evidence that our thoughts are context-dependent, so it's entirely possible to be hypocritical without realising it.
That said, in the case you're describing people are being both hypocritical and harmful, which is clearly to be frowned upon.
I heartily agree with this, and would add that 'sales and marketing' is a very general term, and like any general term it masks a huge variety of approaches.
In the past I have been involved in lowest-level coalface kind of work (approaching people in the street - and this was not a temporary thing, I was starting a local business, and canvassing in this way was part of our overall lead generation strategy for three years), and in some of the most high-level (and often ill-defined) 'relationship building' that professional services firms ply Fortune 500 / FTSE 100 companies with.
The difference between the first and the second of these is stark indeed, for all that they rely on the same fundamental skills: reading people and convincing people. One of them you have about five seconds to hook someone, the other you can easily take a year, meeting them every three months, before anything comes of the connection.
(For the record, I disliked working in both of these roles, and although I could force myself to be 'on', I much prefer programming and other structured work; the lesson I took - addressing your weaknesses is useful up to a point, but playing to your strengths is more rewarding and more fun!)
It would be nice to see this combined with something like Apple's new voice interface (I'm sure there are other equivalents) to parse a more complex grammar.
Even something like "left" vs "left a bit" vs "left a lot" would be enough to make this a more natural interface.
Great stuff though, nonetheless. I remember ten years ago when I was at Cambridge the engineers having a competition to build robotic arms to pick up screws, half of them couldn't get it to work, and that was in a reproducible situation, no controls, as many attempts as needed etc.
This is bang on.
One of the big things George Orwell didn't include in 1984 was the chiasmus: the government watches everyone, everyone watches the government. All sorts of things, from mobile phone recordings of police malpractice to the MPs' expenses scandal (I'm a Brit) show how technology cuts both ways in this regard.
We might also reach a stage where the ability to tailor things in both directions based on individuals makes government start to seem less like a monolith and more like what it really is: a very large group of people doing a whole bunch of things, some of whom are mostly up front and some of whom are mostly underhand.
Yep, it absolutely is Keynesian, and you're quite right a lot of people don't like it or don't agree with it. I'm certainly not saying it will happen, I'm just being wildly optimistic about killing two birds with one stone!
Flip side is that if and when climate change is disrupting economic activity in a sufficiently significant manner, it will doubtless generate a bunch of defensive, as you put it, R&D. Probably be a big stimulus, in the same way that war destroying things can be a big stimulus. My suggestion is that we try to preempt things a bit...
Your point that building the same old crap is low risk is absolutely spot on, and is actually what technology bubbles are very good at disrupting. Only everyone becoming convinced that X is the next big thing can overthrow all the entrenched business models that X will wipe out. This is arguably why boom-and-bust continues to be the pattern: despite many negatives, it actually is better than the alternative at ushering in each new development.
I knew the chap who founded SPRU, looking into just such things back when it was largely being ignored. I also worked briefly with a colleague of his on technology bubbles and the positive transformative effects they can have in the long term, despite 'short-term' financial crises.
Firstly, they are of course of the opinion that R&D is vital. Indeed my limited understanding of their position is that almost all 'real' economic growth can be said to come from technological change. Everything else is either population growth or accumulating fixed assets like materials; the former dilutes per capita growth and is effectively a wash (distribution of wealth aside - yes that's a big issue too, but bear with me...), the latter only have value because of how they are used in technology (market value is of course determined by perception, and that's another reason it gets out of kilter from time to time).
More significantly, perhaps, is their way of looking at tech bubbles: they exist because of R&D, and all sorts of people get overexcited and there's a bubble followed by a collapse but, in the meantime, some entire infrastructure has been replaced. Rail bubble is a good example, the transition to mass production is another, various colonial bubbles etc. In these cases, the real economic growth (of the kind that benefits everyone, not just a financial elite) tends to occur only after the collapse.
I think we are in the middle of this collapse right now, and it may be protracted. Arguably the last similar collapse involved WWII before upward movement was restored. Anyway, the point is this fellow from IBM is absolutely correct, but if history is anything to go by there may well be a serious hiatus in R&D before the next wave of real growth starts, and him saying it ain't so might not do a hell of a lot...
(Just as an aside, a lot of R&D post Wall Street crash started as part of the military-industrial complex, effectively funded by governments as part of the war effort. There are many economists who suggest that, when private enterprise fails, governments have to step in and spend spend spend, but the reactionary governments such crises often engender have difficulty justifying this sort of expense without, say, a huge war. A more positive alternative might be putting large parts of the world economy onto a 'war footing' against climate change: printing money, creating jobs, building infrastructure and so on. Even if climate change isn't happening, this could be no more pointless than developing ways of actively destroying people and infrastructure...)
This is not my area at all, but I attended a lecture a couple of years ago by one of the top UK quantum computing researchers (I think it was one of these guys), and I asked him at the end of the lecture how they got the answers 'out' of the quantum element of the computer and into something more conventional to be looked at by humans, processed further etc; he conceded that this was very difficult, and when I pushed him on the hardest question they'd actually solved he wryly admitted that the best they'd done was to factorize 15. Of course, I'm sure that's a huge acheivement to have proved the principle in practice even in a small way, but it is funny everyone heralding the end of cryptography when it seems to be quite some way off.
It's not entirely word of mouth, there were adverts on the tube (metro) in London UK at least.
Ah, no, that's a very good point. My experience is of rendering for video, where there is no penalty for breaking up an object. However I'd therefore assume it's not using pre-calculated structures to speed up collision testing (and is therefore slower).
On point 1, a ray-tracer would probably not incur much additional rendering load shattering the glass (physics is another matter), so long as it remains the same number of polygons. There might be some additional calculation as multiple pieces of glass passed in front of each other, but most raytracing engines put an absolute limit on the number of ray interactions. This is generally not perceptible because, as you point out, screens have a resolution ;)
Slutty girls have been done before, oh like a trillion quintillion times.
Well quite.
I've worked on reviews of these policies and employee adherence to them, and you're quite right they're of little use if people don't know.
Truth is though, simply having these policies is often enough to reduce the level of culpability a corporation can be considered to have in the event of a breach. Getting people to sign stuff would also help, as you say, but the big prize here is not to defend against suits brought by your employees, but to prevent some government body coming down hard on you.
They "literally" have them by the balls? I don't think ISP stands for what I thought it stood for.
Yes this is a good point. It would get a bit difficult if people all had N layers of false data to traipse through, and everyone knew this was a liklihood. I'm sure there are people out there who do it, though.
What about a false PIN in case you get frog-marched to an ATM and forced to take out money at gunpoint? A code that a) alerts the police and b) limits the apparent balance might be useful. Then again, I suppose CCTV would probably catch it near a bank, and you can be insured against that sort of thing.
My apologies, the content of my reply was to the parent of your post, but it was your mention of hashes that set me off.
What about f(hash(hash(nameOfSite)+hash(username)+hash(key))) ?
f() is a function to transform the hash according to the requirements of the password. I've started using a version of this I wrote myself for my passwords. I can change the key every six months or whatever and just remember the previous one for any occasionally-used logins.
My next step is to get it in a form I can use locally on my phone, so not even the source code is trivially available to others (it's a web page at the mo). Paranoid? Moi? (Actually, can you run a local html/js file on Symbian? Presumably the iPhone would do this happily, anyone know?)
I was thinking the other day about protection for really secret stuff (far more secret than anything I have, obviously). If you're likely to get tortured what you really need is a second password that gives access to extensive but fake data, to throw them off the trail!
It's worth mentioning the analysts who don't think the numbers justify the valuations (in any given bubble). In a market where these stocks are climbing due to the actions of even a limited number of morons/dodgy folk, it's silly not to buy in and make money yourself (not to mention you'll likely get fired if you don't). The trick is getting out at the right time, and there are a number of groups who became bearish before the last peak, and made a killing. Sadly, it's most often the amateurs who fail to do this and get burned, which enhances the reputation for evil of Wall Street types (they probably are evil in other ways too).
e ctid=6) talks a bit about some relevant points. It's possible these bubbles may be the only workable mechanism for large infrastructure changes: they simply can't be justified by rational behaviour, so irrational behaviour is the only option. The fact that capital markets can generate this can be seen as a strength - the US is still the biggest economy in the world, after all. The problem, again, is that it tends to be the inexperienced investors who lose most.
It's also worth mentioning that according to research I've done (on behalf of http://www.cerf.cam.ac.uk/) not as many companies went properly bust as many as people tend to assume. A large proportion were bought out, and a lot had to delist (hence the sting for investors).
The summary of the project I helped with (http://www.cerf.cam.ac.uk/projectdetail.php?proj
In my opinion, the next big bubble of significance is more likely to be China. US investors and businesses are getting better at accepting (if not avoiding) the downturns, but the Chinese are new to this. With the number of registered share-trading accounts in China now larger than the number of Communist party members, would the government survive a crash?
Yup, VHS tapes have to be 'blacked' if you want a consistent timecode. So called because one often 'zeroed' the audio and video tracks to black/silent while laying down the timecode track, rather than having them as static (not sure if that actually helped when recording, but it was a good way to tell if you had a timecode). I wasn't aware that it had an effect on single-frame operations, but then I always worked on blacked tapes when I did that. The deck we had could fine-tune to less than a frame's length of tape, so it may have been a moot point.
Anyone noticed their regular VHS deck occasionally jumping from one time to another? I found it quite useful for working out where different episodes started on the tape, and some decks have a 'search' function which I guess is based on that principle.
Yup, I'm on my Mac now and I meant the second one. Didn't realise it was new as I upgraded OS at the same time I got wireless. The property list editor is okay - I've never found an OSX XML editor I felt improved my workflow beyond a good text editor plus grep. There's a few Java based ones but I didn't like them.
I thought there might be some trolling going on, but I tend to give people the benefit of the doubt, plus I was concerned that someone else might read it and believe him!
Oh good grief, yes I did miss that completely. The apples-to-apples joke came to me half way through reading your post and I clearly didn't digest the rest!
Your other points about Apple's strategy are very good, and I agree that licensing was far from being Apple's sole error. My point (irrelevant as it may have been!) would be better cast as: even now, in a position of strength, it still would not make sense for Apple to license the OS. As you say, last time it revealed weakness, and at the moment there is strength, but cross-subsidising from the iPod or suchlike is exactly the sort of financial pollution in diversified companies that often kills innovation, IMO, regardless of how well they are doing overall.
My apologies again.
I think he was talking about setting an order-of-preference list automatically, rather than choosing manually. However, I think you can drag the order of access points in the Network control panel to determine this (on work PC right now so can't test), so you may still be right that the GP hasn't looked very hard.