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Saturday, July 07, 2007
WordPerfect Lightning
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
US messes up in middle east -- again !
Obviously, US being on the side of democracy, supplied arms and training to Fatah militant Mohhamed Dahlan in a clandestine manner. Hamas was supposed to sit idly by and watch. In stead, they dared to destroy Dahlan's organization and take control of the area that they were elected to govern. So, with US backing, Abbas sacked the Hamas government (never mind that he has no power on the ground). Immediately, the pro-democratic Western forces came to Abbas's aid with promises of lots of money. This is supposed to turn a hostile Palestinian population pro-US and pro-Israel.
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Tuesday, May 22, 2007
From dual-boot to vmware with minimal changes
I didn't want to set up a new hard disk for Ubuntu. So I downloaded VMware server and VMware player. Installed the first, created a virtual machine using my existing hard disk as the VMware hard disk. Then I uninstalled VMware server and installed VMware player. The server software is older. Networking and sound didn't work. I edited the .vmx file ( C:\Virtual Machines\Ubuntu\Ubuntu.vmx ) to enable sound
sound.enable = "TRUE"
VMware player took off from where VMware server left off. And I am posting this from Ubuntu inside VMware.
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Friday, May 18, 2007
Setting up bluetooth headset under Linux
- Install bluetooth-alsa and libsbc packages (feisty backports not there yet)
- Put the headset in pairing mode
- bdaddr=$(hcitool scan | awk '/BT150/ {print $1}')
- sudo hcitool info $bdaddr
- cat /usr/share/doc/bluetooth-alsa/sample.asoundrc >> ~/.asoundrc
- Change the default BDADDR in .asoundrc
- headsetd
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Thursday, May 03, 2007
US Supreme Court raises bar for obviousness in patents
May be one day we will see the length of exclusivity granted under a patent depend on the industry it is in. A patent about cars is useful for 20 years. A patent on software (which shouldn't be patentable anyways) is not.
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Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Somalia in tatters again
The EU has appealed to the Somali President to intervene! Wow, the same president that had no real power until Ethiopia showed up to help it.
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=71805
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Sunday, April 22, 2007
Matrubhoomi
The movie has a really tragic story, which is sadly much closer to reality than I would like. It is about a young girl who is "married" to a five brothers (there were some press reports similar to this) and her survival through regular rape and torture. Horrors like this are still going on in this world and most of us turn a blind eye. How do we get out of these nightmares?
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Saturday, April 21, 2007
Could Naboj save scientific publication?
Anyone who has tried to read a scientific journal knows how complicated getting access to them is. If you don't live in the US or Europe, you have to working at a pretty wealthy organization to be able to access the latest research. It is mostly because of the established publishing clique that the inefficient practice still abounds. I would love to see the day that all scientific articles are published to be freely accessible by all citizens of the world. Science advances not by restricting information but by making it available to everyone. Open systems would also allow automated tools for information harvesting (did I make that term up?).
The physics and math people had understood this long back. So they set up http://arxiv.org . arXiv is a great resource with all the latest research available for free and on time. But it has the drawback that the articles haven't been refereed. Now there is a new open reviewing system -- Naboj. Naboj allows anyone to review the papers on arXiv. It will be interesting to see how well this process works. I hope someday every technical publication will be similarly available.
IEEE needs to reform
Vision
To advance global prosperity by fostering technological innovation, enabling members' careers and promoting community worldwide.
Mission
The IEEE promotes the engineering process of creating, developing, integrating, sharing, and applying knowledge about electro and information technologies and sciences for the benefit of humanity and the profession.
Let's check that with reality:
- They require the copyright for papers to be transferred to them and preprints to be taken down once the article is published. Of course, their journal subscriptions are so cheap that most people in the world can't afford them. Section 7 of their copyright policy allows use of public domain articles. But see http://cr.yp.to/writing/ieee.html for contrary actual practice.
- They don't disclose how much they spend on lobbying efforts. In the latest financial report, I saw $60m for membership and public services. I am assuming public services includes lobbying.
- IEEE opposes H1B visa program. They also oppose "off-shoring". The idea of being able to protect domestic wages by simply restricting others from coming in is bogus. People need to wake-up and realize that national economies are slowly giving way to international economies. Protectionism is also another name for inefficiency. Markets may not be entirely efficient, but the increasing possibility of separating the workers from the market means, protectionism is only going to hurt the US economy. The US is still a pretty good place to do business in spite of higher wages because of lower taxes, consistently enforced laws and highly skilled worker pool. Try protectionism and that's going end pretty soon.
- They support software patents.
- They support tax credits for a whole array of things. Tax system has been overused over the years as an instrument of policy instead of a revenue collection system. No need to burden the system with credits for things that companies want to do anyway. The trouble with the R&D scenario today is not incentives, but disincentives of the quarterly reporting phenomenon.
- They support reverse engineering.
- They have come out somewhat in support fair-use limitations on DMCA, though I think their stance is not strong enough.
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Thou and You
Friday, April 20, 2007
Economics and Political Weekly
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