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User Journal

Journal Journal: A pet peave:

My .sig says it al, but just to get it out in the open: I hate it when people attack the packaging instead of the content.

God, I could say so much more, but I have the feeling that anything more said on the subject would just decrease the strenght of the argument in itself.

User Journal

Journal Journal: State of the world

Wow...the world is going to shit.

I've always known this, but now it's just self eveident. The mayoity is poor, and I'm rich due to luck of birth. I'm not really rich, but I just happen to belong to that part which has enough money to eat every day, and have a warm place to sleep. Shit, I have enough to worry about whether I'll uypgrade my computer next month or the one after that!!! (granted, it's a piii 550, but that just makes my point!)

And then there's this big brother world we live in after 911. I just had the experienbce of traveling by plane after six years of non-flying. I'd traveled a lot in the past (Brunei, Malaysia, England, Tunisia, Beijing and loads of other places), so I know of what I speak. The world has become less free. I firmly beleive in the fact that whoever gives up freedom fro security doesn't know what he's doing. I just hope that the PATRIOT act and Homeland security act never blow over to the EU. I just wouldn't know wher to move.

Starting my own politicalparty has never been so to the forefront of my mind. I know what's important (famous people endorsing it...PR is all-important now) and I know kind of what I want to acomplish and how. It's the rest which I have to work out.

User Journal

Journal Journal: The future money maker

I've recently had some quite good idea's. Not only are they good because they make life easier but there's also a huge market for them.

One has a large, and stunningly diverse, amount of industries it has potential application in. And it's so good I'm working on it myself...so I won't go into that here :)

The other one is something which is really beyond my ken (well, I have certain idea's, but not the technical knowhow, so that's a bit of a shame). But the market is so huge, it will rival Bill Gates.

"Why", and "what is this thing" you cry? Well, as the situation stands, one can look at it like this:

hardware->OS+applications

where the OS contains device drivers, the filesystem, plus the GUI. MS has gotten us into the paradigm that the OS is the whole shebang, that it's that plus a few applications you run. That is computing according to MS.

Linux, and god knows how many other OS', show me that that's not the case. You have your hardware, and the OS on top of that, which is essentially a collection of device drivers, together with a filesystem. Thing is, the aplications and the filesystem still define the GUI. X-window is nothing more than a glorified MS-desktop.

Now here's the thing. We're aproaching a time where the OS is becoming trivial. Not easy, oh no, but it's trivial to get your hardware, and bung the code onto the hardware to get the hardware to work and display stuff.
Together with this we're coming to a point where data is...too big. There's too much of it and it's not organised as it should. Sure, there's filetree's. Maybe even databases as filesystems. But that's not good enough. We'll never get the Star Trek voice computer that way (god I hate to use that...Star Wars man myself...plus other sci-fi did it first and better...but I've just had a marathon of Enterprise, so that's the comp[arison you're getting).

What's needed is another layer. Something to help us use our data in a meaningfull way. A way to surf the infosphere, if you will, and pull out what we want when we want it with the least amount of hassle. A DWIW-code. As in "Do What I Want" command.

And that's where the money is. It's a clear evolution. We used to make money on hardware. Gates then made it in the OS. But what is now of the essence to companies and users alike is something on top of the OS.
We have the hardware; we have the software that allows the hardware to funtion; we have applications to create data. What we now need is a dataOS. An interface to our data instead of our hardware, if you will. A way to say to our computer: "show me that 3d model of the battle droid I was working on for Jedi Outcast"...or even "Jedi Outcast", where the setup of the dataset 'knows' (better yet, understands, beacause of set based definitions [more on that later] and time info which states that the last time the computer encountered JO was with a certain specific model) that the last times I said that, I was modeling. It would then give me an option to open that model, play the game or browse the web (if I'd already done so in search of JO material).

So how would this work? Well, sets. Remember the "set of whole numbers" and the "set of iurrational numbers"? Well, the data on your HD will have to be catalogued like that. Each bit of data will have a long list of sets it belongs to. And these sets will also be irrational...one set can contain a set which contains the first...selfreferential sets.

Make a system that can handle data this way and you'll render Bill Gates redundant. Because the OS will be irrelevant....or at least transparent. The OS will do what it's supposed to do: keep the hardware working. The InformationalOS (IOS) will be a layer between the OS and it's data and the aplications you run the data on. An Information Abstraction Layer, if you will. Sets will be what we work with, akin to the way a police file contains not only pictures, but also text, bank statements, health info, video.

So if you want to get rich, (and you will; companies need productive workers...whats more productive: rooting around the HD for that file you used last month, or saying "comp, henderson file"?) get programming. Or do it open source. Preferably the last though, because this kind of thing is very user defined...MS' one size fits all does not apply. And we need a stable-as-in-Linux OS to run it on :)

User Journal

Journal Journal: Wow...adversarial bunch, 'round here :)

Well, I've already been called a troll three times for asking what the best way to go about installing linux is.

Says a lot about human nature, getting that kind of a response, on that question, 'round here :)

User Journal

Journal Journal: Linux 3.0 1

Well, I'm gonna go for it. I'm buying a new system in a month or so, and my trusty old box is going in for rejuvination, Torvalds-style.

I tried this once, but got swamped by all the documentation, and I had a life at the time, so I quit.

I'll document what it's like for a dos-loving, windows using technophile to switch to linux, just as soon as I get my new box.

User Journal

Journal Journal: Wow! I've got Freaks!

Cool! I have enemies at /.! I actually had to look thru the FAQ to find out wtf a freak was here (imagine my dissapointment when I did find out ;) ).

But, as they say, the measure of a man is the quality of his enemies. So I hope I have some good freaks :)

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