Comment Welcome to 2004. We had the same problem with GRUB (Score 1) 429
Cedilla was baaaad!
Cedilla was baaaad!
A good point, except when small businesses try to extract the best value for money in an expensive IT purchase, counterfeit products can be very tempting - whether you know you're buying fake goods or not is irrelevent when the price is cheap. Cheap counterfeits are [arguabley] not traceable enough. Check out the Reg article on a recent Cisco raid
I remember reading another article on the Chinese fakes, where it was said that the only outward difference was the type of screw used. Scary to think that a specially crafted packet (or more likely, sequence of) could destroy the internet
Exactly!
This is good news and it goes to the heart of the treaty of Rome - that competition is a fundamental part of the EU, and the EU will move mountains to promote it. I suspect this will be in the form of a very long winded piece of guidance regulation that sits in parallel with Art 81. As someone who has read, reread and read again EU competition regulations and their directives from an academic point of view and professional one, it is mightily refreshing to finally see the EU do what I was told it did well... fight concerted practice and actively promote competition where the market fails.
Surely people are missing the next step? Apple want's to bring the SoC design in-house. It's currently a very fragile all-in-one unit provider. You pay for nothing revolutionary in an Apple product, instead you pay for a unique design/interface and the Apple goodwill 'mark-up'. The latter of which is a license the print money. So really Apple need to hit the semi-conductor market to maintain market dominance through R&D. In-house developments don't run the risk of being licenced to your competitor, and give you a technology lead that is hard and expensive to beat.
But did we all forget about the possible purchase of ARM? I don't think it'll happen soon (ARM's stock is higher than 2002). I don't really want it to happen either. ARM licences to far too many companies, therefore there will be monopoly considerations and any deal will be scuppered by a race to it by anyone with £5bln cash: Nokia, Motorola... even IBM or MS. The loss of ARM will actually hurt the "open" fabrication platform they've developed (think of all the individual ARM fabers that are out there... no are licence, no work) and we use benefit from (ARM chip competition has driven down price).
And what about the PowerVR licensing from Imagination Technologies - Apple increased it's shareholding this. I predict that apple will buy ImgTec by the end of the year. Possibly over the summer. They've got an good back catalogue of products, and despite the fact they didn't hire me, I think they're a brilliant acquisition for Apple: real chip fabricating people. A lot of their new stuff is low power which apple lacks experience with. Relying on an ARM development time-table means competitors can get to market relatively quickly, with similar specs. ImgTec are a good fit.
Matt
Clauses are a bitch eh?
The best trick is to word clauses so they're terms of the agreement. Word them backwards, in the double negative, refer to external documents, obscure precedents and maxims etc. In B2B transactions you can pretty much get away with adding whatever you want, and care about litigating to enforce it at a later date - with a little lucky unenforceable clauses might become enforceable through statute or precedent! This doesn't mean a cunning clause is any more enforceable thatn it sound, it just rewards ambiguity and makes it disproportionately expensive to assert or rebut clauses that are more powerful that you first imagined. Often the mere threat of litigation will make a party baulk. Many of these clauses find their way into consumer contracts... like this.
It goes without saying that reserving a right to change the fundamental terms of a contract without enumerating the basis of a change, and the range and frequency of such a change etc, falls foul of good consumer law. Remember that you have no agreement without consent, and there is no consent without the reasonable notification of the ability to obtain and review the conditions - therefore onerous changes require reincorporation by way of signature... the more onerous, the more attention should be made to the clause. Mere silence is not assent. But common law rarely prevails because it costs too much to enforce for such little gain. The end result is a plethora of heavily loaded consumer contracts, everywhere.
If consumer policy dictates, the most offensive types of clause and their effect can be made deliberately dangerous to the drafter if, by inclusion, an entire agreement void where the agreement contains or purports to contain a 'hardcore restriction' that consumers shouldn't burdened based on of their inherent inability to bargain (bargaining positions are never equal in a B2C transaction... ever. When was the last time you bartered for your shopping?). Contrast with individuality severable clauses which a court will strike out but not punish the drafter for including them. What kind of consumer protection legislation actually strikes out entire agreements or puts heavy fines on the evilly minded drafter? None. Absolutely none (to my knowledge). In Europe it's the preserve of the competition articles (ie Art81(3)) - they are the only ones that dare strike out an entire agreement because someone drafted in an evil clause. Imagine if you got a free iPhone simply because Apple drafted an unfair contract? That'd stop them!
So... because you can get away with it, people try. Now we need N bits of consumer protection for every K unfair clauses J number of lawyers contrive.
Software was defined as "goods" long before this under the SGA. Nothing has come of it it except this (only Australia wants to differ), which is a good precent if you understand reasonableness. In a B2B transaction you can contract out the implied terms and warranties/representations of sale and defer to a sale contract. This protects the consumer. It's the sellers fault for promising the world and not giving it - if only they had an Entire Contract Clause and dis-applied the SGA
i paid almost double that
Perl is very simple to learn (check out "Robert's Perl Tutorial"). Perl allows the programmer to do what he wants - regardless of the style. There's even English.pm. Perl has many upsides ie: it's a powerful parser and indispensable toolkit... and highly embeddable. If there was ever a seed language to learn, it's Perl.
There's also the fact that Perl programmers are real unix men - and let's face it, you'd rather have real unix graduates than Ruby fannies?
Can it organise my porn?
lol american.
We've already for gotten Re Anderson! This is historic and something quite relevent to our "constitution".
( facts : http://www.justice.org.uk/images/pdfs/11inter.PDF )
Re Anderson is an ex parte case involving one of the Jamie Bulger killers. The death of this toddler was horrific beyond many people's imagination (I've purposefully kept ignorant of exactly what the killers did because the little i've heard sickens me enough!). The case set a precent however. It involves the HRA - Human Rights Act... A "bit of law" (a fantastic peice of legislation that DOES work - and actually protects your civil rights - see Re MB). The HRA enacts the ECHR - the European Charter on Human Rights - which essentially requires the "law" or officer of the judicary (a distinct and separate entity to the government) to pass judgements on people. Ex p Anderson makes descretionary tariff setting (by a politician or government appointee) illegal. The principle is simple: they are not a fair judge. Anderson proved that the then Home Sec was unfair in giving the individual life (all of it, not a sentence) imprisonment without parol. McKinnon is a prime example of where ee have another case of no judicial oversight into a judicial matter - the whim of a politician is massaged in exactly the same way as Ex p Anderson!
Yadda yadda
Matt
I'm pleased with Windows 7... So in order the counter the FUD i'll explain. Also, don't read this to merely complain I'm spewing crap: I know I am.
I'm an 'old school' zipslack 3.4 user. I not-so-recently installed ubuntu on an away-from-home PC that sits at my parents, and admin a decrepit centos-4 virtual machine. I've come a long way on RH machines.
I'd like to think I know what I talk about when I talk about the desktop: I've tried QNX ("things work"), BeOS (50Mb of "everything works all at once, weee"), and various Linux GDMs - fvwm95 being "good enough" for me. I'm a part-time KDE fanboy too. I'm a Vista-hater, although I do put up with it on my laptop because I have to (came pre-installed/don't want a Linux laptop)
Prior to Windows 7 I ran XP64. I didn't upgrade to XP32 until after Win 98 was largely depreciated and support began to stop (for the first time), as Win 98 was "perfect" for me (so was Communicator 4.72, but that's another story). SP2 was out shortly after I upgraded to XP, so I didn't feel any of the pain people consistently remind me XP had. I upgraded to x64 a few months after it came out, (again missing pre XP SP1 problems since XP64 is Win 2003 + SP1) even though I couldn't use any wireless adaptors, I praised the Win 2003 'core' stability.
So... with all that: I like Windows 7... *BUT* I have a brand new 4-core, 6Gb, dual ATI beast to enjoy it with. My initial reason for buying it outright on preorder (£140!), and not going the student edition upgrade route (£38) was that I wanted the "Pro" edition for gaming, and another licence not an upgrade in situ copy (I've plenty of working license via my MSDNAA membership, but this year I don't have access to Windows because I've switched away from the Computing dept).
I also wanted to experience a newer OS that had multiple cores in mind. As an LWN reader and Con Kolivas fanboy, I knew I wasn't ready to move to a full Linux desktop: I don't want to configure my graphics card to work, and the new open source ATI drivers won't power my games like they do under Windows (I spent money on my graphics card, and I want to make use of it!).
I usually theme to Windows classic without exception, and did the same with Windows 7 until I decided I wanted a transparent taskbar - so although I've small icons, quick launch and zoomed out on my desktop for smaller icons (CTRL-mouse wheel everyone), I'm happy with the Windows 7 UK theme. The new Win-key short-cuts are pretty useful!
It's the little things I'm pleased with. The console defrag has a parallel option, and works great out of the box - I can defrag a HD and watch videos without *any* stuttering. The native h.264 codecs work well (although I haven't tested them much they were the 3rd thing I upgraded b/c of a TV Versity transcoding limitation - ie: upgraded to recent codecs/and TVV needs to be a "user" service etc).
I'm pleasantly surprised with the instantly available/stripped down Media Player: under Windows 7 it's x2 as fast to start as Media Player Classic - the only annoyance I have with it is how small the track bar is, and that I can't use space to pause or my mouse wheel for volume.
oooh time to go to the pub!
Oh please!
It's not a stealth thing at all. The low power SoC market has always been ARMs. It's AMD (Geode... and then Intel's Atom) who decided to bring x86 to the low power market. If anything the article should focus on the troubles ARM is likely to face in the near future: unless RISC can continue to compete for price (aggressively), I doubt that adding more pipelines will make the general purpose platform developers happy - RISC bottlenecks will always be bottlenecks; x86 can simply gun for greater clock speed.
IMO Transmeta had it right: very long instruction words (which ultimately do 'everything'). Unfortunately it came 10 years too soon and no-one was ready because we didn't know "what" we wanted from a clock (or half clock etc if you're talking ARM...).
VLIW will be back soon enough, but I worry that it wont be the right place for ARM.
(nb: I am an ARM fanboy, having 'matured' in an ARM sponsored undergrad lab. it upsets me as much as anyone that ARM haven't tried to reinvent the wheel using the cash from their recent market dominance)
Matt
I thoroughly recommend his book, Bad Science, availible for less £5 on some sites.
We have moved to a service economy, therefore people have to justify their jobs in government.
We have a bloated civil service that commands too much power because they're not on top of their current workload thus submitting stupid proposals based on improper or myopic research is a career move and gives the illusion of competence.
I've met several councillors: they tend to be idiots with some form of aspergers (one is now a registered sex offender!)... Most are more concerned with controlling the incompetent voices rather than getting work done. It's a PR nightmare when you sack someone in public office - more so when you can't say how bad they are without further revelations about the state of the office ("So how long has it been that bad?") - so we're stuck with idiots in charge. But idiots surely wouldn't hide their incompetence would they?
The cabinet members don't have degrees or experience in their roles. There are too many cabinet changes (posts should be for the term of the cabinet, considering the first year of a politician's job is literally getting used to the backlog). If the Government killed some of the BS cabinet posts and put two ministers in charge of the really important stuff, things *might* get done.
In my opinion the problem is career politics and disrespect for the House of Lords and the peerage system (now stopped via the constitutional reform act), because they're too slow and considered, and the last bastion of hope for those pesky civil rights.
A good example is the no right turn sign that's recently appeared outside my flat in Nottingham, in order to make a road bus/bicycle only. There are several thousand people living here in a central city location. Go left and you hit traffic causing chaos (it's also a dangerous left). Go right, and you can ease into traffic via a route predominantly used by buses (coming from the town centre). From what I can tell, someone simply decided to add the no right sign. There was no consultation. We didn't get letters regarding the planning change. And they've added a number plate camera to catch people who continue to use it. If they expected people to continue to use the road (in order to justify the co-installation of the camera), perhaps there was a good reason *not* to make it a bus only route in the first place?
Another example is the decision of Oxfordshire council to change *all* their derestricted roads (national speed limit 60mph) to 50mph. Why?! Because it looks good.
IF I HAD A MINE SHAFT, I don't think I would just abandon it. There's got to be a better way. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.