Slashback: Offshore, Oratory, Goals 129
Not asking, not telling. jeffthompson writes: "The Havenco web site says it is now fully operational and open for business." A lot of people seemed convinced that Havenco wouldn't even be around by this time, but sticking around is the best revenge. I'd like to go aboard one day, promise I'll wear a blindfold and not look at anything ...
GNU, Linux, GNU/Linux, Freedom and the American Way. bkuhn writes: "Now, both the electronic audio and transcript of RMS' NYU talk are available."
The audio is in Ogg format, and the transcription is in blessed plaintext. Thanks!
Sign #37 of the coming apocalypse: Speaking of Mundie, software Freedom (and free-ness), Simone Paddock of O'Reilly writes with news that might raise a few eyebrows:
Michael Tiemann (CTO of Red Hat) will speak after Mundie, and a panel of IP law and software experts (including Tim O'Reilly) will discuss the issues raised. Sounds worth being in San Diego for. If you're interested, there's more information online."Microsoft Senior Vice President Craig Mundie set off a compelling debate recently when he discussed Microsoft's Shared Source Philosophy, which blends the sharing of source code with the preservation of intellectual property rights.Tim O'Reilly invited him to attend the upcoming O'Reilly Open Source Convention (July 23-27, 2001 in San Diego). Mundie not only agreed to attend, he agreed to speak.
Mundie will discuss ways in which shared source differs from open source, and how the Shared Source Philosophy supports a strong software business case for commercial software use."
In the Tolkein, not the endocrinological or Snow White sense. SomeoneYouDontKnow writes: "This is a follow-up on the recently-released LOTR trailer. It's now available for download. Two versions are available to suit your bandwidth and patience. Unfortunately, it's still only available in Real format, but I guess we can't have everything."
Semi-alive and kicking. IEEE Spectrum Associate Editor Stephen Cass writes:
IEEE Spectrum , the house magazine of the IEEE is launching an online forum devoted to the noble sport of robosoccer . Robosoccer is different from things like Battle Bots or Robot Wars in that the robots play in teams and the whole thing is completely autonomous once started. There are a number of competitions, the biggest of which is the annual Robocup tournament, which will be held in Seattle this year. Robosoccer is a great reasearch tool for exploring A.I., automous agent behaviour, computer vision, simulation and mechanical and electrical design. It attracts participants ranging from high school students to academic researchers.Our website (which incidentally runs slashcode) will also be a clearing house for us to award sponsorship money for teams building robosoccer robots as well as a place to exchange information.
Hard to get enough of Robots playing soccer, and prize money means you can buy more marshmallows to roast at your victory bonfire.
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
The DivX codec is a hacked MS codec. MS doesn't like it at all, and it's probably illegal. No legit site would offer downloads in an illegal format.
Re:Big fan, eh? (Score:1)
Sounds worth being in San Diego for... (Score:1)
Not that any of you ever go outside any more....
This could be funny (Score:1)
Oh well. Zealotry can't be helped by truth...
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
If you can get the
For this reason I stopped buying CDs from Amazon - preview tracks only in
I think the slashbots (I don't think much of the brainless Free Software zealots either) would prefer
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
The new divx is currently warmed over MoMuSys (or something like that) reference code; LAME started in a similar way (warmed over refernce code), so there is hope for opendivx yet. It is currently noticeably worse than either divx or the other MS mpeg4 codecs.
Only some of this is mentioned in the opendivx FAQ. Most notably they neglect to mention their previous code theft entirely.
Re:the movie I'm waiting for (Score:1)
Arrowroot (son of Arrowshirt): Martin Short
Goodgulf: John Goodman
Lord of the Nozdrul: Leonardo DiCaprio
Eorache: Rosie O'Donnell
Legolam: Rupert Everett
Can't think of anyone for the Boggies, Bromosel, or Gimlet right now...
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
Nit (Score:1)
That would be really funny, except RMS was after the print driver code, which was installed on the computer he was using.
Wrong back door (Score:1)
There was a backdoor, a secret password in IIS, that was put there by some programmers. It was discovered very recently (say, 3 or 4 weeks ago-- maybe a little longer), and acknowledged by MS as a backdoor.
I'm hardly a zealot (okay, maybe I am, but I'm a rational zealot, damnit).
I guess I should have been more specific for you who don't pay much attention.
Re:Don't read this if you're dumb. (Score:1)
Netcraft report:
The site www.pornking.com is running Microsoft-IIS/5.0 on Windows 2000.
Fool! Do not tempt the porn gods lest the naughty, jiggley bits of young women be hidden from your view for all eternity.
Re:Doh! (Score:1)
I'd hardly call him a linguistic master. Fantastic story teller without a doubt, but linguistically nothing special.
~Cederic
Re:shave (Score:1)
I'd put up some money for this.
Re:the movie I'm waiting for (Score:1)
Frito: Jim Carrey
Dildo: Christopher Lloyd
Moxie: Paul Reubens
Pepsi: Bill Murray
Spam: Bill Murray
Serutan: John Lithgow
Gimlet, son of Groin: John Belushi or (I know, he's dead, but he'd be perfect.)
Schlob: Rosanne
Tim Benzedrine: Robin Williams
Re: "linguistically nothing special"???? (Score:1)
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Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
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I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
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I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations
Re:Hmm.. (Score:1)
Download trailer on cable modem: free.
Watch trailer in theater: $7.
For a three minute trailer, which would YOU pick?
Now, it just so happens that I saw the trailer in the theater and I haven't downloaded it, and that I wouldn't download it in any case until they get it into a rational (MPEG or QuickTime) format. But I didn't go to the theater with the idea of seeing the trailer, and was in fact extremely surprised (and pleased) to see it there.
I don't watch a lot of movies in theaters, but I certainly WILL go see LOTR if I can.
MP3 of RMS Speech (Score:1)
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Re:Microsoft (Score:1)
old /. articles about Haven Co. (Score:1)
Data Haven To Open For Business - Today [slashdot.org]
Ask Havenco's CTO Anything You'd Like [slashdot.org]
Article About Haven Co [slashdot.org]
OGG on a Mac (Score:1)
Then the userbase should expand.
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
Sealand, no (Score:1)
Please
Thank you
Re:Microsoft (Score:1)
I recently read something by him on the web where he talks about the
early days when he and his friends would read any printed source code
they could get their hands on. The object was to learn about programming.
But maybe he could not conceive of returning the favor to future programmers.
Re:perhaps the panel will point out the difference (Score:1)
If you use GPL code with your code, you run the risk of your IP expressed as source code will have to be released.
If you use BSD licensed code with your code, you don't run the risk of having your ip expressed as source code released.
Micro$oft is painting Open Source with a GPL brush. And, well, BSD based OSes don't have the GPL desire to tear down the walls of IP.
Open Source (Score:1)
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:1)
Re:Better than socceer (Score:1)
Instead of trying to make robots that play soccer, why don't they come up with a better goal.
Yeah, lets get them playing Rugby instead. Talk about bone crunching defence!
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
It'll be pretty !#$@ cool when it is tho. Completely open. Need a codec for (insert bizarre coice of operating system here)? Here's the tools! Have fun!
Lord of the Rings Trailer on LIttle Nicky (Score:1)
Re:Hmm.. (Score:1)
To all you robosoccer contenders... (Score:1)
I almost feel bad about this nitpicking ... (Score:1)
RMS famously describes the laser printer episode as a genesis of the Free Software philosophy ...
But later on, he considers some exceptions to FS ...
Now, these excepted examples sound precisely the analogue of the printer episode that started everything off in the first place ...
San Diego (Score:1)
"Self, why don't you go and see Mundie and Tim speek?"
I will not be able to do this though because it costs $895 and the reason I was attracted to Linux in the first place (before I even had a computer to run it on) was because it was free/cheep.
I would loved to have attended even if it ment shelling out $50 to stand in the back or watch it on CCTV and hang out with like minded people. However I have been priced out of Open Souce.
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:1)
Just because it runs on linux, does not make it run on "all of the platforms that end-users use"
Re:OGG on a Mac (Score:1)
Re:Sealand (Score:1)
Re:Sovereignty == power (Score:1)
On the original note, the US does not have pre-existing non-agression treaties with, eg, Ghana. Or even someplace closer to home, like Mexico.
Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:1)
No, wait, I'm sorry, this is an excellent venture! Let's all do it! I've just proclaimed the People's Republic of Scotts Valley, with myself as Supreme Guru. To reserve your space in our data haven, please send US$10,000 via Paypal to the above address!
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Re:Sealand, no (Score:1)
...that will probably sink in the not too distant future unless they make a lot of money out of havenco. (sealand the first dot-com iland?)
Here's a hint: (Score:1)
If you achieved "penetration" I can assure you that the server was IIS. Bonus points if you were using a "trojan" at the time!
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft (Score:1)
I for one like the idea of openly published source code, but I think the GPL is actualyl too restrictive, as opposed to being unrestrictive. The LGPL goes a long way to help, though. The BSD license is great. I think I may like the MPL/NPL the best though. I think people SHOULD be able to make money on their work, and if they see fit to include some piece of someone else's code to make the project bettr, then they should be able to, but with proper credit (and maybe some profit sharing too) for the contributor.
But I feel RMS goes too far. At the risk of precious Karma, I somewhat share JWZ's feelings [jwz.org] on the matter...
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Re:Better than socceer (Score:1)
Hmm.. (Score:2)
I don't get it. (Score:2)
Re:Sovereignty == power (Score:2)
Wow, I didn't know you had to have permission from you opponent before you could declare war on them. Boy, international politics should be a lot easier:
"I declare war on you"
"Sorry, you can't do that, I won't acknowledge it"
"But I really want to, PLEEEASE let me declare war on you"
"Sorry, maybe next year"
On a side note. (WARNING: Rant approaching!) Why do we Americans beat ourselves up constantly over the Indians. It's not like it was the first or last time in history a force with a superior military conquered an idiginous people. Why are we as Americans so hung up on this. Sins of the Father (or Great Grandfather in this case) don't carry down to the family, unless you are a society I guess.
Oh, and before all of the Europeans get high and mighty on us, just remember the Aztecs[1], Pagans, Ottomans, and many others. I don't want to read N posts saying "That's why everyone knows America Sucks" for the umteenth time.
[1] Technically we should blame the Central Americans for this, but I mostly blame the Spanish since they were pretty much wiping out the Aztecs as part of settling on the land instead of waiting until they needed to landgrab the entire country years later.
End Rant Mode
Down that path lies madness. On the other hand, the road to hell is paved with melting snowballs.
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:2)
Quicktime: good quality sound and video, but the player is awfull. In particular I don't like how it does not play videos full-screen. IE if I have a 640x480 vid I want the player to change my screen resolution to 640x480 and play the video. I don't want to see the foolish silver/grey app thingy. My last version of Quick time refused to work as there was a "newer version." I could not dl the new version as apple was hosed. It was needlessly annoying.
Windows media: I haven't used the the player enough.
Personally I like mpeg as it has decent quality, and I can play it full screen.
Re:Microsoft (Score:2)
There's nothing wrong with open source if your #1 priority is the popularity of your application, the user base, and what development model you prefer. But while those are important priorities for free softare, the number one priority is freedom. And somehow I doubt that they're going to have anybody there that's willing to go to bat for freedom. The result is usually a bastardized discussion where "open source" luminaries try to justify their existence to the business world. And while they may sometimes do a good job, they're still missing the point that the reason open source exists is because someone gave a damn about freedom above everything else.
Re:Sovereignty == power (Score:2)
This is your friendly cease and desist letter: (Score:2)
Slashbot: Slashdot user that exhibits knee-jerk reactions to every news story posted without reading the article or understanding the facts.
Thank you and have a nice day!
p.s.
If you do not comply within 30 seconds we will release a pack of rabid slashbots on your email address/website/fax machine/phone number to discourage it's continued use.
*sigh* did I really just post that?
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:2)
h.263 or h.263+ would also be fine for interview type low res-stuff, but all the clients seem orientated towards video conferencing rather than simple playing or streaming.
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:2)
however, mpeg-4 itself will hopefully become more widespread. there are a few mpeg-4 streamers/players starting to appear, so maybe in a year or so it may become a reasonable choice
Re:This could be funny (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft (Score:2)
And why is this noteworthy? People were stealing his software. Of course he got pissed. Who wouldn't?
Re:perhaps the panel will point out the difference (Score:2)
Weeeellll....
It allows for the protection of IP *as long as you agree to allow anybody else to use that IP*. If you are an "original author" that wants to change a license on a large code base, just *try* contacting every single person who touched the source, let alone discover *who* actually contributed *what*. In reality the sheer difficulty of isolating the IP of every single contributor makes the only option to be that people working on an OS project agree ahead of time that any IP they contribute may be licensed differently in the future without notification. In most cases this is true.
the movie I'm waiting for (Score:2)
With Dildo, Pepsi, Moxie, Greytooth, the Green Berets and Vee-Eights, Nozdril and all the rest!
How much of the world is 'up for grabs'? (Score:2)
Or is the idea of 'sovereignty' entirely dependent on your ability to defend the territory you claim by economic, diplomatic and/or military force?
Mpeg 1 with its corresponding layer 2 audio. (Score:2)
Sure mpeg1 is not very suited for modem streaming; but at least it can be saved with ease. Something like mpeg1 video at 160x120 23.976 fps (lowest available); with mpeg audio layer II at 32 kbps mono (toolame encoder [cryogen.com] to the rescue :) could do fine with 512 something kbps or less, maybe 256kbps.
I suggest you check out the Tsunami mpeg encoder [tmpgenc.com] for good quality mpeg1 encodes. Be sure to use a high soften block noise setting and other useful tweaks that improve quality. Oh, and Variable bit rate is there too :)
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Re:Better than socceer (Score:2)
Perhaps you were joking. In that case, well, get funnier.
In the case that you were not joking, the point of the robots playing soccer is to encourage the development of robot technology. What is learned now will make the robots of the future possible.
For example, one of the things that is arising out of robot soccer is artificial teamwork. Perhaps you think "so what?" to that, but consider this: perhaps a single piece of equipment that lays fiber would be too massive, to bulky and to expensive to ever be used. Perhaps the solution is to have a team of robots that can take on different tasks and work together. And if the flagman-bot gets run down, another can easily take it's place.
Jperhaps the panel will point out the difference (Score:2)
Lets see, the argument of Microsoft is "Open Source does not allow for protection of IP" and that is wrong. BSD OSes/licences and others allow *FOR* the protection of IP.
Hopefully at this conference, during the Q and A, someone will stand up and point this out. Point out that Micro$oft's rightful IP \0xBE\0xEF is with the GPL and not Open Source. But the self-love linux press isn't willing to chip away at the edges, point out how Micro$oft is correct about IP and the GPL, then point out how the BSD license, which is Open Source, doesn't ahve the IP-wrecking design.
Your spritiual leader, RMS has said on many occations that the FSF is not Open Source. RMS doesn't WANT to be associated with Open Source. If this is an Open Source conference, and RMS doesn't want to be associated with Open Source, why should he be invited?
Re:Don't read this if you're dumb. (Score:2)
Your values are distinct from others. And even if they were the same as some other people, they may choose alternative actions.
Re:Don't read this if you're dumb. (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft (Score:2)
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
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Re:video formats (OT) (Score:2)
signature smigmature
Winamp and Sonique play Ogg Vorbis audio (Score:2)
Yes, because we all know that Ogg is easily played on any PC since most people already have support for it installed.
These Windows platform media players support Ogg Vorbis [vorbis.com] audio: FreeAMP (natively), Sonique (natively), and Winamp (with a plugin [vorbis.com]). Winamp [winamp.com], from AOL Nullsoft [nullsoft.com], is the most popular audio player on the Windows platform. A drag-and-drop Ogg Vorbis encoder is also available [vorbis.com].
Re:3d Wavelet (Score:2)
DFT: Discrete Fourier Transform. O(N^2). Breaks down a signal into component real and imaginary waveforms (the "real" and "imaginary" components are really kind of illusory... it has to do with a nice property with imaginary exponents breaking down into sine and cosine terms, making the math easier). In real-world phenomina like images and especially sound, sinous waveforms often have a lot of energy concentrated in certain frequencies and little energy elsewhere - thus, you can kill off the low-energy components to save space.
FFT: Fast Fourier Transform: An O(N log N) implementation of the DFT.
DCT: Discrete Cosine Transform: The big problem with using fouriers for compression is that for every piece of data, you get a real and imaginary term back, doubling your amount of data (for compression, that's *bad*). The reason this happens is that, if you look at a cosine, it is symmetrical (so you can't just compress a signal with cosine terms unless the signal itself is symmetrical as well). Sines are antisymmetrical, and fall under the same sort of problem. What the DCT does is builds a new waveform that is neither symmetrical or antisymmetrical, and compresses frequencies 1hz, 3hz, 5hz, etc.
Wavelet: A concept based on using matrices to split up high energy and low energy coefficients so the low energy coefficients can be thrown away. There are many wavelets. My favorite is the Daubechies wavelet, as it is rather adaptable. An easy way to picture wavelets is this: picture a 1d segment of data. Now, picture "averaging" that data down, so it is half the size it was before. Well, you just lost data there. What data did you lose? Well, it is the difference between the adjacent points you averaged, divided by two. That also is half the size. Together, you have the same amount of data as the original, but the energy distribution is different - the higher energy components are on one half, and the low energy components on the other half. Then, you normalize so it has the same total energy as before. That is basicly doing the Haar wavelet for a 1d signal, minus the nifty matrix math that works into it. Wavelet transforms are, for 1, 2, and 3 dimensions respectively, O(X^2), O(X^2)+O(Y^2), and O(X^2)+O(Y^2)+O(Z^2) - so, extending them into 3d doesn't carry much of a performance hit.
Block transformation: DFT, FFT, DCT, and the like suffer from an interesting problem (wavelet transforms suffer from the opposite problem, though not nearly as notably): They record smooth transitions well, but when you have a sharp change in data, it causes ripples of energy throughout the whole area being analyzed... on a 1d signal, it looks something like a city skyline with really tall buildings in the middle, and smaller buildings on the outside, spaced at even intervals. Well, we want our energy levels to be concentrated, not spread out - by concentrating the energy in certain signals, we can get away with not storing other signals. So, ripples are bad
An additional niftiness of both wavelet and DCT-based compression is the ability to do initial loading, and then image refinements, with simple math. When you break down a signal into sinous components, the energy tends to be mostly concentrated in the low-frequency energy, and is only speckled in the high-frequency. The 0,0 hz signal in an image, for example, corresponds to the average color of that image (so, on a block transform, you can assemble all of the 0,0's into a blocky image). Then, as you get more frequencies in (which tend to be weaker and weaker in strength), you can enhance your image. With wavelets, you store the high energy components first, and then progress to the low energy components (on a wavelet transform with multiple iterations, you take the highest energies, then the next highest, then the next, etc).
Oy, that's enough of a lesson for now. If you're interested in the mathematics behind all of this, let me know at _NOSPAM_daystar_setting@myself.com (remove the _NOSPAM_).
Enjoy
- Rei
HavenCo site hasn't changed (Score:2)
Sovereignty == power (Score:2)
If you can't keep your sovereignty, you ain't got it.
Just ask the Native Americans.
Re:Sovereignty == power (Score:2)
Soverignty is not being permitted by your masters to run a casino here and there.
Sovereignty is deciding you want to run a casino, and not needing permission.
Sovereignty is not having to pay tribute to your lords. Ask an Indian friend who he pays taxes to.
The Native American tribes are forbidden to make treaties with any foreign powers. Does that sound like sovereignty?
They are forbidden to declare war against the US. Does that sound like sovereignty?
They are forced to seek redress of grievence in the courts of an occupying military power.
Sovereignty? I don't think so.
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
(I'm not running down the Taiwanese. It's just that their state is the current version of the Republic of China that lost control of the mainland in 1948. The ROC government used to bluster about throwing the commie pirates out, but the current crop of Taiwanese nationalists who run the country could care less.)
Sealand, by contrast, has a theory and nothing else. Supposedly a British court ruled that they really are sovereign, but what does that get them? If they piss off, say, Iceland, are they going to fend off the invading armies with a court order?
And what will Havenco's customers do if their service is not as advertised? Suppose you move a bunch of data to Havenco's server farm and they lose it? Who will you complain to, the "Prince" of Sealand? The same one that owns Havenco?
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Seaborga, Data Havens. (Score:2)
Here's another thought: even if Sealand is a safe place to park your data (which I doubt), and its sovereignty stands up in international court (hasn't really been tested yet), does putting your data there really put it out of reach? Since you can't move your own body to Sealand, you can still be arrested and ordered to turn the data over. That still gives you the option of refusing, but you can get the same level of security by encrypting the data and refusing to divulge the key.
As long as we're discussing pseudocountries, does anybody know why The Kingdom of Patagonia [geocities.com] tried to seize some uninhabited islands off the coast of France, back in 1998? I don't recall which specific islands, but I do recall they are part of the Channel Islands, which Elizabeth II rules, not as Queen of Great Britain, but as Duchess of Normandy. Didn't know that particular Duchy still existed, did you? Imagine what would happen if Liz went to Calais and started demanding Droit de Seigneur [operaed.org]!
__
Re:10 things I hate about you (Score:2)
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< )
( \
X
Alternative formats for the second LOTR trailer (Score:2)
RoboSoccer (Score:2)
I tried to find a link, but it looks like it might only be on locally.
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
GNU/Linux (Score:2)
Re:Don't read this if you're dumb. (Score:2)
OpenSource makes the world plenty of money, just not necessarily (but certainly not prohibitively, either) for the authors of it.
Just ask any porn company. Apache seems to be the server of choice among porn companies.
(Here's a fun challenge:
Let me know when you find an IIS in there. I've tried valiently to find one, but have failed.)
Better than socceer (Score:2)
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
Which reminds me, Sealand - having no natural resources other than salt water and a finite supply of hardened concrete - is particularly vulnerable to siege.
If I were so motivated, it would not be terribly expensive for me to drive up their energy and food costs beyond what they could profitably afford, just by harassing delivery craft/helicopters.
The situation is unbalanced because my tactical objective is open-ended and simple (hassle them any way I can) whereas theirs is specific and complex (get particular supplies to a particular place with a particular minimum volume/frequency). This unbalance remains even if they have sufficient funds to hire mercenary protection. Furthermore, failure on my part has no cost, while failure on their part means the end of their operation.
And that doesn't even get into the fragility of their data link.
If they are taking the position that they are sovereign, and they have no defense arrangements with any actual governments, then from an practical perspective their position is fundamentally untenable in the face of even halfway-determined adversity.
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
Who doesn't recognize Taiwan as a country? Everyone who would otherwise have an embassy in a country of that region/size/trade volume/global significance/proximity has either a "trade office" or a "special liaison office" in Taipei, staffed exactly the same as an embassy (the US uses a fictional department but all the people are drawn from State/DOD/Commerce and of the same ranks you'd find in a real embassy), looking just like an embassy, performing the same functions as an embassy, and run by the respective foreign ministries.
This is not even vaguely similar to Sealand, which retains its unmolested status because it just hasn't been worth anyone's trouble. Taiwan, on the other hand, has been a whole lot of trouble (in terms of difficulties with China) and yet the world's governments have collectively poured billions into their relationship with it. Just no comparison at all.
That's not legitimacy, it's just another example of "not worth the trouble." If I dance around you at a bar throwing peanuts at your head and saying you're my pet monkey, and you make to punch me and then I start scratching at you like a little girl and then you back off in disgust, it doesn't mean you really are my pet monkey. It just means you didn't find it worth your trouble to pummel me.
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
The British government hasn't recognized anything as sovereign until the Foreign Office says so, either explicitly or by establishing formal diplomatic relations.
Just because some judge somewhere made a goofy decision doesn't obligate the entire government to a position on a matter of international significance.
If a traffic judge in North Dakota accepts my home-made Seborga [masterweb.it] driver's license, does that mean that the United States of America suddenly recognizes a third micro-state within Italy's borders? I think not.
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
Re: "linguistically nothing special"???? (Score:2)
Well he did have a copy of the Oxford English Dictionary, he edited the OED for many years. If there was an Oxford Elvish Dictionary, he would have written it.
Someone once questioned his use of the spelling 'dwarves' when the OED specified 'dwarfs', Tolkien replied "I wrote the OED".
In terms of linguistics, Tolkien was the foremost authority in his day on Middle English and the etymology of the English language. He was responsible for keeping study of Middle English compulsory in the English sylabus (together with C.S. Lewis?). Thus he was infamous amongst the undergrads for forcing them to read 'Beowulf'.
The LOTR was essentially an attempt to create an English mythology to replace the one lost as a result of the Norman invasion and the medieval christian church.
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
Absolutely. The British government has recognized that it has lost ownership of the platform but has never recognized the platform as sovereign.
A judge did rule a long time ago that the platform was outside English costal waters and was therefore outside the juridiction of the English courts. That does not entail any statement about sovereignty. Glasgow is outside the juridsiction of the English courts but is still under the British Crown.
The judge's rulling has since been superceeded when the UK government ratified a convention that set uniform boundaries for all the signatories. Under the convention UK sovereignty (and hence English) actually extended to include the platform. The platform is now within UK teritorial waters.
Incidentally, man made platforms do not count for purposes of sovereignty. Otherwise countries could extend their teritorial waters by building strategically placed barges.
A man made platform such as an oil rig falls under marine law and has to be registered in a national shipping registry. Otherwise any state that chooses can exercise sovereignty over it.
Being a stateless platform does not mean that sealand is subject to no national laws, if it were in fact the case (it is not) all that status would mean is that Sealand is not subject to any national protection. The place was taken over by pirates a while back and not surprisingly no government lifted a finger to protect the inhabitants.
US wackos with guns who are still living in shelters in Montana, convinced the Y2K virus is going to bring down civilization will disagree. I could not care less. As another poster pointed out, Sealand will be permitted to exist up to the point they start to be a conduit for organized crime at which point they will be raided.
Re:Microsoft (Score:2)
I'm seriously confused as to what Microsoft is contributing to this debate. They want to give out their source code under an NDA, and make sure people continue to pay for their product. That's fine, but what's new about this, and why is it considered a 'philosophy'? Why don't they just say "hey, we're giving out our source under tightly controlled conditions, not to be modified and republished." Other companies have been doing this for years, and I must say that it hasn't changed the world.
This whole thing sounds like an excuse to generate BS hype for a Microsoft business initiative. I seriouly doubt that Mundie is going to say anything new at this presentation-- more likely he'll just flame a bit more, guaranteeing that MS's "shared source" gets a few more column inches. If someone other than a Microsoft honcho were touting this as a philosophy, we'd be paying them absolutely no attention. The only thing that makes it noteworthy is that it's coming from a massive company that has historically been so tight with their software that few people have even seen the source. That, and that they're using the opportunity to take some cheap shots at GPL-style Open Source Software, which really is a genuinely original phenomenon with some pretty amazing results.
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:2)
Remember, DIVX, Soerensen etc may play on your x86 Linux box with the Windoze libraries, but it won't play on my Alpha, Joe's powerpc or Max' arm.
Re:Sealand! Sealand! What art thou? (Score:2)
As for Sealand or Scotts Valley being countries, that just depends on how well you can defend your plot of land when the stormtroopers arrive to collect taxes. From reading Sealand history, the inhabitants did repel an approaching British boat without repercussion. Some legitimacy there...
Officially, most countries do not recognise Taiwan as a country, although de facto it really is. If Taiwan set up a data haven like havenco has done in Sealand, and distributed data that every other country took offence at, their connections would likely be dropped, and if serious enough, the directors would be subject to arrest once they stepped onto foreign soil. Not a problem for Taiwanese people maybe, but spending my life on Sealand to avoid arrest elsewhere is not a nice situation I'd like to be in.
Re:Microsoft (Score:2)
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Re:This could be funny (or not) (Score:3)
Shared Source won't be accepted by anyone except greedy corporations - oh, wait, that's where most consumer, and a lot of business-accepted software, comes from.
Big deal-- so the most popular software is produced by a corporation. Budweiser is the most-consumed beer, and the Ford Escort is the best-selling car. What's that prove? That advertising beats quality every time.
Microsoft makes the most-popular software. So what? They also make the most-insecure software, with back doors built in... back doors the corporation didn't even know existed. Yeah, that's a great track record to be proud of.
They also make the most popular email client (meaning a lot of people don't know anything but Outlook exists, since that's what their computer comes bundled with). Oddly enough, it's also the only email client that allows emails to control your computer by design. That's just fucking stupid.
This doesn't address your primary point-- that "Shared Source" might be better than the GPL. Let's look at the goals of each license:
Shared Source
Shared source allows you to look at certain pieces of MS source. You can't do a damned thing with it, except perhaps send MS some code of your own, which they then own. This seems to me to have these goals:
1. You can see the code, but not share it. How's that "Shared Source?" Oh, I forget-- you can share your source with Microsoft.
2. You can't really modify the source, nor do anything with it. Any potential modifications must go back to Microsoft, and if it is worth anything, they benefit.
GPL
With the GPL, you get access to the entire body of GPLed code. You can modify it to your heart's content, but iff you decide to make binaries of the modified code available to other people (either by selling the binary to them, or giving it to them), you must make all the code available to them, as well. Then they recieve the same rights which you were given with the GPL.
Tell me, which gives you the most rights? Which gives you the most potential to make money (assuming "you" are not Microsoft)?
Microsoft apologists piss me off when they attack the GPL. Microsoft has the right to make money-- just not the right to steal innovation from people who don't want it usurped. They whinge on and on about "Intellectual property," but they aren't willing to respect the intellectual property of people who choose to use the GPL.
How fucking naive can you get?
Re:Microsoft (Score:3)
Unless you're not mentioning some detail of that transaction, Bill Gates opposing people not paying for his BASIC program has nothing to do with his opinion on open source or free software.
My favorite RMS quote is this - "Just because it's free software doesn't mean that you can afford it". Let's not spread assumptions about free software or open source by acting as if the gratis nature of many open source and free software projects is the only way to do it.
Doh! (Score:4)
T O L K I E N.
3d Wavelet (Score:4)
My the algorithm I plan to use is a 3d Daubechies wavelet algorithm, with effectively infinite iterations (iterates until it's processing a single pixel - its not as slow as it sounds, trust me - its already written, and my test environment was a slow laptop
Additionally, for audio, I plan to experiment. One idea I've toyed with is to write a windowing function, and analyze that. Now, at first, that may seem crazy - it adds a whole new dimension to compress! However, if you look at the windowed data, it is almost entirely on the noise floor, with little sections of energy - and both dimensions are smaller than your original single dimension, so its not really squaring the data there. And, then, when you consider that by compressing the time axis on the windowed image you eliminate the need to store the N blocks you would have had to store during that time period, it starts to seem reasonable. And, instead of doing a block transform and losing the advantage of capturing repeating patterns over time, at regular sinous (benefitted by DCT) or block (benefitted by wavelet) intervals, you can simply do low-res time decomposition while maintaining high-res frequency decomposition of the data. And, windowed data is more accurate in the frequency domain to begin with. Its an idea I plan to toy with, amongst others; I very well may just end up going with a traditional time-encoded block-dct 1d signal, of course
- Rei
P.S. - anyone have any good algorithms to suggest for compressing the data once inaudible (or, in the case of video, unnoticable) signals have been zeroed? I mean, the standard is Huffman encoding, but there has to be something better...
Re:video formats (OT) (Score:4)
10 things I hate about you (Score:5)
Anyways I'd love to see the following 10 robots to be created within the next few years.
video formats (OT) (Score:5)
this comes up just every time a video link is presented on slashdot. i've seen complaints about videos in Windows Media format, Quicktime and Real Video. what i'd like to know is, what format would the slashbots like to see their video in? i know personally as an OS X user i'd like to see videos in Quicktime (and Windows Media is most convenient when i'm using Windows), but are there any decent video formats available to Linux? formats that get reasonable compression rates like the new Windows Media or the newest Sorenson CODECs? if not is there anything that can be done about this apart from continuing to petition Sorenson, Microsoft and the others?
- j
Microsoft (Score:5)
Re:Dropping the Ideology (Score:5)
Strong Free Software types maintain that the issue is freedom ... that the software model is itself a statement about human priorities. I don't subscribe to all of their philosophy, myself, but I think I understand where they're coming from. And I'm glad there is still someone out there saying, "Making money is only one human priority and, moreso, it is not the most important one."
In the end, that's what's both so frustrating and so exhilirating about the Free Software movement: It's about something... something more than hoarding and sleeping and feeding and knowing not a thing.