Archive | April, 2006

250 x Sex & Drugs – No Rock’n'Roll

Comments have been turned off, since I have received some 250 spam comments in a week. If you want to send feedback, send an E-Mail to Stefan@Waidele.info

Die Komentarfunktion wurde abgeschaltet, da ich in einer Woche ungefär 250 Werbe-Kommentare erhalten habe. Wer etwas zu meinen Artikeln sagen möchte, kann mir gerne eine E-Mail senden: Stefan@Waidele.info

Google Maps has older pictures now?

When I wanted to take a look at my new house, I did not believe my eyes: On maps.google.com, my new neighbors roof is not blue. Two weeks ago, it was!

Checking my old neighborhood: 13 houses and new high school have vanished! They all had already been shown on Google-Maps.

What a petty. The blue roof of my neigbor is not pretty, but sure helped finding my new house from space…

Google Maps wechselt zu älteren Bildern?

Als ich heute mein neues Haus aus der Luft betrachten wollte, traute ich meinen Augen nicht: Bei maps.google.com ist das Dach meines neuen Nachbarn nicht blau. Vor zwei Wochen war es das noch.

Also in meine alte Nachbarschaft: Dort sind 13 Reihenhäuser und das komplette Kreisgymnasium verschwunden! Alles war bereits auf Google-Maps zu sehen.

Schade auch. Das blaue Dach meines neuen Nachbarn ist zwar nicht schön, war aber eine prima Orientierungshilfe…

Apple gets the hype while VMware delivers since years!

In his article “Easy DOS It: Apple’s Plan to Provide the Best Darned Windows Experience Anywhere — Even Better Than Microsoft”, Robert X. Cringley explains how virtualization can provide a quick way to “reinstall” Windows under OS X in order to get rid of malware fast.

VMware already does this for years. Under Linux and Windows. I still use my two licenses of Win98 in virtual machines, and I love it. So why give all the hype to Apple? VMware is giving the technology away for free, you can use existing hardware and you are hardware-vendor-independent. VMware Workstation (which still costs money) even has a niffty “snapshot managent” which allows you to save different states of the virtual computer and choose which one you want to revert to.

Do I need to mention, that in VMware, you cannot only run Windows, but also other OSs for PC-hardware, like Linux, BSD, DOS. The question is: “When will OS X run under VMware?”
I don’t get money for this link: www.VMware.com :)

Paul Graham on software patents – IMO, he’s very wrong!

This is my anwser to Paul Graham’s “Are Software Patents Evil?”. No, I am not vain enough to think he needs my oppinion or he will read this. But it has to be said. And I need to say it, even if nobody reads it.

This is what he has to say:

“There’s nothing special about physical embodiments of control systems that should make them patentable, and the software equivalent not.”

I think there is: Physical machines are much more limited that computer-programs. I have the greatest respect for anybody who build a mechanic washing machine (just an example). The control over water, temperature, movement in different speeds and everything is something which is not trivial to do mechanically.

But if you just have to write a program which controlls the given hardware (with sensors and stuff), then I could have done so in high-school. There is nothing special about a loop and some conditional statements. Controlling a washing machine in software is trivial!

“Since software patents are no different from hardware patents, people who say “software patents are evil” are saying simply “patents are evil.”"

No. That is just derived from the faulty premise above. Many things that are tough in hardware are easy in software.

“Where Amazon went over to the dark side was not in applying for the [1-Click] patent, but in enforcing it. A lot of companies (Microsoft, for example) have been granted large numbers of preposterously over-broad patents, but they keep them mainly for defensive purposes. Like nuclear weapons, the main role of big companies’ patent portfolios is to threaten anyone who attacks them with a counter-suit. Amazon’s suit against Barnes & Noble was thus the equivalent of a nuclear first strike.”

Yes. “Mainly for defense purposes”. Especially with nuclear weapons, I would prefer something like “exclusively for defense purposes”. And then, still, we have the question about what they want to defend…

And if Paul goes as far as comparing software patents with nukes, I think he has a notion about how destructive software patents in the wrong hands can be. I don’t want totalitarian regimes to have nukes in order to protect themselves. I don’t want big companies to have software patents in order to protect themselves.

Especially since the next big company (Microsoft) is hinting that they want to use their “defensive patent portfolio” in order to nuke/sue Linux out of existence.

“Hockey allows checking. It’s part of the game. If your team refuses to do it, you simply lose. So it is in business. Under the present rules, patents are part of the game.”

While it is true that patents are part of today’s business practise, the big problem is that companies applie for patents in a way which they should not. Even while algorithms are not patentable in most legislations today, software patents (even trivial ones) are applied for and granted regularly. Paul Graham sais that this is the patent office’s fault, but anyway: If a hockey player convinces the referree that it is ok to hit somebody with the stick against the helmet, does that make it “allowed by the rules”? If a company can convince the patent-office to grand a patent which they should not, does that make it right? (I guess you are calling me a dreamer by now :)

“[MS and Oracle] win by locking competitors out of their sales channels. If you do manage to threaten them, they’re more likely to buy you than sue you.”

That is the problem: The big software companies are right now in the process of getting all their algorithm/software patents validated. Because in many areas of the world, a portfolio of software patents is not as effective as in the USA. But once it is, they can use patents to look those out of the market-place who they cannot buy: Free Software.

They call it “harmonization”, but in reality it is just a process of changing the rules of the game to their favour. It is just like trying to make “hitting against the head with the club” part of the hockey rules. It will favour the teams with the big, strong bullies against those with the quicker players.

“The third reason patents don’t seem to matter very much in software is public opinion– or rather, hacker opinion. In a recent interview, Steve Ballmer coyly left open the possibility of attacking Linux on patent grounds. But I doubt Microsoft would ever be so stupid.”

In my opinion, this only shows how big a part they play. And to pick up Paul’s comparisson to nuclear weapons: Jaques Chiraque did not say “France will nuke Iran off the face of the earth!”. Just like Ballmer, he merely mentioned the fact that France ownes nuclear weapont and that they will not hessitate to use them, should the need arise.

I think the paralells in phrasing is very revealing and shows how important nukes and patents are – for those who own them, for those who want them, and for those who would like to get rid of them completely.

“The only real role of patents, for most startups, is as an element of the mating dance with acquirers. There patents do help a little. And so they do encourage innovation indirectly, in that they give more power to startups, which is where, pound for pound, the most innovation happens. But even in the mating dance, patents are of secondary importance. It matters more to make something great and get a lot of users.”

I just want to give you this to think about: If patents on software where so meaningless, why are the big companies so keen on getting them through legislation? Why did MS threaten to move their european headquarter out of Denmark if the danish government would not vote in their favor on the issue of patents?

Just a thought of mine…

Freedom of Speech

There is a common missunderstanding between “Freedom of Speech” and “Obligation to Distribute”. I was reminded of that when I read “Conscientious Objection in P2P“, an interesting article by Ed Felton. Ed explains how anybody could refuse to help finding “bad files” while downloading “good files” using BitTorrent. With BitTorrent, you only distrubute what you download, but your downloading PC also holds index-information about a small subset of all files on the network. Thus you might help others to find out who is offering files you would rather not see distributed. By refusing to share index information about such “bad files”, you could keep you conscience clean. After explainig this, Ed backs up with the following quote:

By now, some of you are jumping up and down, shaking your fingers at me. This is an affront to free speech, you’re saying — every file should be available to everybody. To which I reply: don’t blame me.

But wait a moment…this is not “Free Speech”, is it? Free speech is you right to say something. You might even go so far and extend it to the right to spread files across the internet, although IMO that is quite a stretch. But your right to free speech, which is guaranteed in many countries’ constitutions, does not go so far as you could tell me what I have to say.

If you say something that I don’t like, I don’t need to give you a stage for it. If you think I am stupid, well you can go ahead and tell anybody about it. You can even post it to the internet. But I don’t heve to provide the webspace for you to do so. On my blog, I can write just about anything I like. But you are not obliged to link to my site, are you?
So, if I chose not to index files I don’t like (or might even be illegal where I live!), I am not restricting free speech. If many in a community decide not to index a certain file and as a result it may become harder to access, nobody limits free speech.

Or as Coach Prejean always said in my high-school civics-class: “The freedom of my fist ends where your nose begins.” – How true !

April, April

Hier eine Liste von Aprilscherzen, die ich beim heutigen Streifzug durch meine abonnierten RSS-Feeds gefunden habe. Interssant, dass in den englischsprachigen Feeds keine offensichtlichen Falschmeldungen sind. Entweder sind die Engländer und Amerikaner subtiler oder seriöser. Bin ja gespannt, was die c’t heute auf Lager hat…

Andere interesannte Fundestellen (wahrscheinlich kein Aprilscherz):

Eigentlich könnte vieles von dem, was man das ganze Jahr bei BoingBoing findet, Aprilscherz sein… ;)