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CHAOS MANOR MAILMail 288 December 15 - 21, 2003 |
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| This week: | Monday
December 15, 2003 In the course of the Mac discussions I got this which seems useful: DHCP, per its own specification, is inherently insecure. Most OS vendors--Apple and Microsoft among them--tie other services on top of DHCP. Services that are very useful, but which can lead to being compromised by a "rogue DHCP server." Rogue DHCP servers were fairly easy to handle in the wired days. But in an era of shared wireless "hot spots", it's entirely possible the fellow in the next booth at Starbucks is setting up to find out more about your machine. If you run any DHCP network, and especially if you ever run wireless, you ought to read John Welch's analysis: http://www.bynkii.com/networking/archives/000099.html#more Steve Setzer ========================= Subject: Well, Duh! Scholars see Christian values in Tolkien's 'Lord of the Rings' http://www.sltrib.com/2003/Dec/12132003/saturday/saturday.asp Tomorrow's lead: "Pournelle, Niven, Heinlein's
interest in Rod McFadden Scholarly scholars indeed.... ======================= I happened to watch the cable news channels this morning on the aftermath of the Saddam capture, and noticed something quite amusing. All the commentators---including those on the web---had stressed that Baghdad immediately witnessed organized demonstrations of jubilation following Saddam's capture, which was hardly surprising to me. But the newsclips of those demonstrations seemed to show all those demonstrators waving pure bright red flags. After I looked more closely, I noticed the flags weren't absolutely pure red---they also contained large hammer-and-sickle symbols. None of the commentators seemed to notice this, or perhaps they had been told by Bill Kristol and Max Boot that in Iraq, red hammer-and-sickle flags are well-known as symbols of Jeffersonian democracy, much like the Goddess of Liberty statue had been among the Beijing students. Earlier this week, I'd seen news reports that large
"pro-democracy" Not sure I know anything about that at all. Thanks ===================== This came up in another place, but we have had discussions of The Flynn Effect here before, and it seemed relevant. Published with permission: From: Chris Brand [mailto:crispian@chris-brand.co.uk] Subject: The Flynn effect and the Bell Curve It is ludicrous to say the London School has tried to ignore the Flynn/Lynn effect (Lynn, 1982, Nature; Flynn, 1984, Psychological Bulletin). Secular IQ score rises were known from 1949 and result from the bicycle (outbreeding), better nutrition and, above all, a willingness to guess and risk the occasional mistake -- the right approach to many IQ tests, for the tests were designed precisely to identify intelligence in children whose accuracy/obsessionality/academicism was not high. I reviewed Flynn's work in Nature as soon as it was published in the 1980's and began an ongoing argument with him in the Irish Journal of Psychology. Budding fans of Flynn can read Chapter 4 of my 1996/2000 book for an easy summary of the whole matter -- available FREE (thanks to Philippe Gouillou) at http://www.douance.org/qi/brandtgf.htm. In the past decade, leftists have relied almost entirely on Flynn to argue via the media with the London School -- but they show no sign of having read what either Flynn or I have said. Since my book's 1996 publication, Charles Murray has shown the B-W test-score gap has NOT been decreasing (contrary to every Flynnite expectation); Phil Rushton has shown that the Flynn-type rises were largely in NON-g-components of IQ tests; and I have noted that top sociologists Christopher Jencks and (Black) Meredith Phillips quite failed* to account for the B-W difference in their major 1998 tome (my review was in 'Heredity' in March this year and I will post it to HBD if people want). Stalwart trooper of the liberal-left that he is, Jim Flynn has kept going with his thesis that 'problem solving ability' might one day improve in Blacks and he has had the Brookings Institute on his side. But N.B. HE DOES NOT CLAIM AN intelligence RISE! -- Flynn lately told me face-to-face he thinks his own great-grandfather would NOT have had intelligence different from himself (allowing for regression to the mean). Also, I have replied to him (and he to me) at http://www.crispian.demon.co.uk/dickensflynn2001.html and my reply was appparently enough to make Science desist from publishing more from him pro tem. Best to all readers here, -- Chris Brand. * From my review: "....their 500 pages of scholasticism will not fool any serious reader. The truth is that these authors have nothing serious which they can demonstrate. Let Jencks and Phillips speak for themselves: "We recognize that few readers will find our sketchy agenda for reducing the black-white test score gap entirely persuasive."" The disparity in IQ scored between races remains despite attempts to explain it away. It is a tragedy ONLY if you consider the intellectual professions greatly superior to those of craftsmanship, and if you think that racial equality in a republic depends entirely on equality of results. We know that black scholars can reach the highest levels: my former student William Allen is a prime example, although many others come to mind. The real tragedy is in assuming that unless everyone is eligible to be an intellectual then tragedy results. It's not true. People should do what they are good at, and education ought to be directed at getting better at what you can do, not at sort of being able to do something you aren't good at. And it is as true for whites as blacks that half the population is below average. To say that if you can't be a college educated professional you have no future is to say that a great number of people of all races are doomed to have no future. The Flynn Effect is that test scores are getting higher. That says a lot about the tests, but perhaps not so much about the concept of 'g'. As nutrition improves, average 'g' levels improve: many tropical peoples are stunted by early protein deprivation not to mention parasite infestation; but there comes a time when those improvements cease because the causes are removed. The Flynn effect finds those gains of course, but they aren't enough to account for the rise in IQ scores on tests. Precisely why that should be is a matter of debate, and gets very technical. But: When everyone is at maximum potential, half the population will be below average in "g" no matter what we do. If we don't have jobs, meaningful jobs, for those on the left side of the bell curve, we will be in trouble. Giving people largess from the public treasury is not the way to make a republic of independent citizens. There was a lot of discussion of this some time ago, including comments from Charles Murray. =================== Dear Jerry: In Mac's DVD player if you let your mouse pointer hover over the "fast forward" or "rewind" buttons a hint will appear to press to go to next (last) chapter, press AND HOLD to scan forward (or back). No slider but this works just as well. Also Macs have two sound level settings, a system level set when you are in the Finder and an application level when you are in an application like iTunes or DVD player. I suspect you had one set low while the other might have been high; with both set to high I think you'll have plenty of volume. As for Haiti, it is different from Iraq because: A) Haiti has no 5000 year history as a cradle of civilization, or B) Aristide is a creature of the Clinton Presidency and thus very suspect as a leader of anything BUT a mob, or C) Despite having the same location and basic natural resources as it's mirror image, the Dominican Republic, Haiti has a 200 year history of doing absolutely nothing worthwhile with them, or D) All of the above. I say it's "D". Comparing Iraq to Haiti is like comparing Harvard to Cape Cod Community College - I really don't think the same rules apply. They are both based on tribal cultures, however, which I admit does seem to be the kiss of death for democracy. Have you ever thought about why that is? (Genuine question, not rhetorical). All the best-- Tim I found the fast forward. It's not as sensitive as a slider, but it does work. I agree that Haiti is different from Iraq, but I am not sure we have a lot of business building nations to begin with. In this hemisphere we have more than we do in Mesopotamia. I suppose we have no choice but to end what we have begun, but I have far less confidence in our abilities than the authorities have. It's very hard to build a democracy where there never was one. ==================================== This is fairly representative of many letters: Tee Hee! Thanks for the account of your shopping trip [as told in today's release of the column, www.byte.com ]. I wondered if the Dallas/Plano Apple Store was representative of the chain. Apparently so. The company store is supposed to fix the lousy service and uninformed salespeople at CompUSA and Fry's. I'm afraid the Apple stores take their heritage from The Gap much more than a user group. Clerks (sorry, associates they're called nowadays) are selected because they look hot, not because they know anything. The level of technical expertise in the Dallas store is on par with the technical expertise in a Gap store. I went there because I had a problem with my iBook which CompUSA couldn't handle. The service manager at CompUSA told me when I brought the machine in for warranty service, "Oh, I don't know anything about these Macs. I can't say how long it will take. We'll call you in a week or two." I hoped to get a better answer at the Genius Bar. Alas, after waiting an hour and a half for the genius to get through formatting a couple of folks' drives, it turned out he never heard of an iBook that turned itself off as soon as it came awake. He didn't know there was a power management processor, he didn't know how to reset it, and basically didn't know what I was trying to talk to him about. Nor did he care to find out. I had already exhausted all the remedies Apple mentioned on their support web pages, so I was way ahead of him. I had a couple of other questions, but it was clear this genius had become familiar with the Mac less than a year ago, had undergone a couple of days seminars, and was now busy formatting disks and restoring the OS, or shipping the machines to Nashville for service. Alas, CompUSA tried many times over a five month period to fix my 'book, but never succeeded. They replaced the motherboard multiple times with pulls from other dead units in their system, it seems, but it never worked out. Finally, after a bit of prodding and reading their warranty to them, they replaced it with a new unit. Not a total loss, since in the interim the hard disk went from 10 to 30 GB, the CPU nearly doubled speed, the DVD drive learned to burn CDs, and the video interface went from 8MB Rage chip to 32MB ATI 7500. I suspect that my Mac could have been fixed by simply typing in the right incantation to the open firmware bios or reflashing the PMMU. Such information is a sharp blade, however, and Apple shields its customers (and apparently it's techs) from such dangerous tools. Moral; make sure you get AppleCare, not CompUSA's in house warranty. I understand that when you call Apple, they FedX a box next day, you stick your unit inside, give it to FedX, and about 3 days later, your toy is back. I hope you don't test this, however. Also, you'll find Apple prices are remarkably uniform across dealers. The biggest discount I've seen is 5 cents. What you get are freebies if you buy a bundle. Fry's is no cheaper than Apple. The one exception was a $50 price cut on the iPod from Dell's online store, and Apple pulled their franchise for a couple of weeks over it. Last time I remember somebody cutting off the Dell store, it was Bill Gates threatening to pull Windows if Dell kept selling systems with BeOS installed. You'll find Macs are as deep as you want them to be. You can skate along on the hard candy surface, dig into the Unix terminal CLI, or root around beneath the OS in the Open Firmware if you hanker for Forth and bare metal. What help there is is more useful than MS usually provides, but to get to a lot of it, you need to dig into the developers' tools. Neat thing is, with OS X, Apple throws in a complete development kit. You can sign up as a developer for free and get access to the web based developer info also. I'm afraid all personal computers are so complex these days that no user can understand more than the basics. I sometimes wish I could go back to the Apple ][ or CPM, which I knew well enough to write replacements for half the OS. Anyhow, welcome to Mac ownership. I've nodded sympathetically over your Windows exploits for years, and I expect to do the same with MacOS. If you need silly things to try, I can probably suggest a couple of new ones almost any day. Henry Spragens henryspragens(at)swbell(dot)net I did get Applecare. Not cheap. I need an iPod one of these days, both for backup and for audio books for trips. I do not think I will bother going back to the Glendale Galleria store.
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| This week: | Tuesday,
December 16, 2003
This is reasonably typical: Dear Jerry, I just bought the same Mac you did from MacWorld online. I thought I was buying a used car. This rebate that rebate this included that not included. They knew nothing. The salesman was clearly on commission. It was a joke. The price was about exactly the same as everyone else charges because clearly there is no competition. The buying experience alone would slow me down from buying another computer. I bought the machine because we are developing plug & play software that runs off the browser. Mac people have a lock/chokehold on the graphics industry. Mac is/has dropped Microsoft Internet Explorer for their own browser Safari for which practically nothing is written for developers. What is Mac’s purpose in this? Are they going to reinvent the wheel all over again so they can continue to be the undwindows? Perhaps they should hire a marketing guy and figure out how to get some better prices on their machines and how to win some customers over to their operating system. If I didn’t have to I wouldn’t buy one of their machines again. David Brown Which leads one to the reasonable question, why do people put up with all that? You pay for Macs: why don't you get full service for it? Mozilla is also a great browser choice on OS/X, along with Safari. I hate Apple as a company - they just make great stuff. It's worth dealing with the hassle of dealing with them to get their gear and software. ----------- Roland Dobbins Which may say it all... ============================== Subj: SCO won't have to make disputed code public http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/developer/0,39020387,39118559,00.htm ZDNet UK - News - SCO keeps disputed code secret "... SCO public relations director Blake Stowell said this week that the company had secured permission to present the code to a closed court." Rod Montgomery==monty@sprintmail.com I think the world of the law has gone mad. But see below More of the Crazy Years (and, no, I'm not including the idea that Howard Dean will be the Democratic candidate :)) In Florida, four women students were arrested for stealing food from the U cafeteria, and the U is punishing them by ordering them to work in that cafeteria. "It will be during the 'prime time' of the cafeteria," said Kaitlin Sjostedt, one of those arrested. "It's cruel and unusual punishment. http://www.cnn.com/2003/EDUCATION/12/16/srudents.arrested.ap/index.html Joel Rosenberg Crazy years indeed. ================================ Jerry: This interrogation technique sounds a bit like science-fiction, and many will discount the article out of hand because of the originating web site. I have no comment, except it sounds interesting. http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/12/15/145455.shtml Interrogating Saddam Jack Wheeler Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2003 How can the U.S. quickly and effectively extract information from Saddam Hussein’s brain – information about the Baathist guerrilla network, cooperation with al-Qaeda, and WMD programs – yet withstand the watchdog scrutiny of the media and the Red Cross? There is a quite simple way. It works the first time, every time, with everybody – no exceptions. Yet it is harmless, completely reversible, with no aftereffects. ... The neurotransmitter serotonin is synthesized from the amino acid tryptophan. Without tryptophan, the brain cannot make serotonin. This mechanism applies not only to the human brain but also to the brain of every animal in the animal kingdom, from dogs to rats to elephants to birds. There have been numerous experiments that demonstrate the effects of a tryptophan-free diet on brain function in humans. Within about four hours, brain serotonin levels drop like a rock. Lacking the inhibitory regulation of serotonin, the brain becomes incapable of modulation. The individual possessing such a brain rapidly becomes angry, depressed and impulsive – incapable of controlling his emotions. The last thing a captured terrorist or dictator, intent on withholding information and resistant to interrogation, wants is to be uncontrollably impulsive. Such an individual would be putty in the hands of a skilled interrogator. ... With a protein-free meal, blood amino levels will drop, causing the liver and other organs to start extracting aminos from blood albumin, then from muscle, then from organ tissue. Such amino extraction will include tryptophan. In other words, deprived of dietary protein, the body will cannibalize itself in order to supply the brain with tryptophan and other vital aminos. But a meal engineered to provide all necessary aminos except tryptophan exclusively will not cause such cannibalization. The liver has no capacity to notice the lack of one single amino such as tryptophan, just the overall lack of entire assemblies of aminos, or protein. ... Three such TFMs should be given to Saddam over 12 hours, with his not having anything to eat prior to the first TFM for several hours. After four hours, Saddam will become agitated, depressed, angry and impulsive. Over the next eight to 12 hours, his symptoms will increase, and he will become suicidal. Should he be subjected to a TFM diet over a period of several days, Saddam would become fully psychotic. After a round of interrogation during a TFM period, Saddam should then receive a normal meal with complex protein – or simply the TFM with one or two grams of crystalline tryptophan added (it’s tasteless so he won’t notice any difference). He will calm down and feel pleasant. Then a "good cop” interrogator can step in and soothe him. Next mealtime, it’s back to the TFM, and back Saddam goes into uncontrollable impulsiveness – and puttiness in the hands of a "bad cop” interrogator. No one has to lay a finger on Saddam, or threaten to. No threats of any kind need be made. The interrogators do not even need to raise their voices. There are no side effects or aftereffects of TFM Interrogation. It is completely reversible immediately within an hour or less after one regular non-TFM meal. ... ................................Karl Lembke ========================== Here may be an answer to one problem (but the MacSlashers are certain there were no problems other than my incompetence) Panther clients binding to Active Directory: bug and fix. December 16, 2003 --Brandon Edling says he found a problem with Mac OS X 10.3 binding to Active Directory, and a way to fix it: I am testing out adding 10.3 clients to our Active Directory structure. In the Active Directory plugin, I entered the appropriate Forest and Domain information, the computer name (in our case the first letter/last name of the user of the machine), and clicked "Bind..." The machine would successfully bind to the Active Directory domain. I then set the authentication and contacts path, and (though it might not be necessary) rebooted for the changes to take effect. When the user of the machine went to log in (with a username of first initial/last name), the machine would NOT let him log in; the log in screen would shake as if the password was incorrect. I, however, could log in with ANY other account on my AD domain. This struck me as rather odd. After hours of investigation, my Windows Admin and I found the following: When the Mac is bound to the domain, it would successfully create an entry in the "Computer" section of AD, but it seemed to also attempt to create a user account of the same name (for example, the computer is named jdoe.domain.com and the user account it tried to create is jdoe@domain.com). This was found by looking at the Computers section of AD and looking in the "User Account" column. We looked in the AD system log and found an error message saying, in effect "jdoe has multiple accounts created in the domain domain.com". We then searched AD for jdoe and only came up with one account -- a REAL user account that I had manually created months ago. The first thing we tried is killing the user account jdoe and the computer account jdoe, then rebinding it to the domain, to see if the user account it was referencing was actually created. It was not. We then decided to try to create the computer account (and the user account) MANUALLY in the AD domain, BEFORE we bound the OS X machine to the AD domain. This seemed to do the trick! When "Bind..." is clicked on the OS X machine, a message appeared stating that a profile of that name was already in place and if I wanted to use that profile. I stated yes (assuming that canceling would cancel the binding process) and now jdoe can log in to a machine named jdoe. This is an obvious bug, but I don't know if it's with OS X proper or with Samba 3. Aki Heikkinen of Finland also had problems binding to Active Directory, and offers a partial solution: Binding Panther to Active Directory with Apple's new much-hyped AD integration doesn't work in .local domains, even if you disable Rendezvous with methods from Jason Prell and/or Larry Paxton that your report have. By applying these hacks Mac workstations see .local domain correctly (for example in Internet explorer and nslookup), but by running tcpdump you can see that Mac still tries to query only 223.0.0.251:5353 when trying to bind it to AD forest and thus returns "invalid domain/forest". The only partial solution we managed to figure out was to create a different DNS zone in windows domain controller with .company, but then you run into trust and authentication problems because domain controller and dns zone domains are different. Maybe with two AD servers running different zones this could be managed with trusts, but with only one server and limited time we gave up after weekend of hectic trying. From: December 16th I am sure it is all very simple, and it was all my fault... ==================== Subject: Bruce Schneier's CRYPTO-GRAM, December 15, 2003 Do you subscribe to it? If not, you can get back issues at < http://www.schneier.com/crypto-gram.html >. He has an interesting article, "Blaster and the August 14th Blackout" in this issue. It starts: "Did Blaster cause the August 14th blackout? The official analysis says 'no,' but I'm not so sure." Definitely worth reading. I tell my students that the problems we're currently seeing with spamming, malicious hacking, and viruses in large part reflect the operations of criminals on the network. They need to be very careful out there. -- Harry Erwin, PhD, Senior Lecturer of Computing, University of Sunderland. Security engineer and analyst. http://www.theworld.com/~herwin/ == On transferring to Mac Could try: ------ Ian Cottam Actually the network works well enough I can transfer files from the PC. Where do I get this marvel? OK that ought to work. Microsoft had been holding Apple's feet to the fire with Office, IE, etc., so Steve funded a substitute. Microsoft has been a bit lazy about modernizing IE, so Safari, like Opera, is about two years more modern in its features and a good deal more standard-compliant. (Diane switched to Opera this year on her Windows 95 machine, and that machine has been a good deal more stable ever since.) -- Harry Erwin, PhD, Senior Lecturer of Computing, University of Sunderland. Computational neuroscientist modeling bat bioacoustics and behavior. http://osiris.sunderland.ac.uk/~cs0her Interesting. I have been looking at Opera. I confess that IE has worked for what I do: what features do I need that I don't have? Almost all our systems are XP now.
Note that what was in the news today was an unconfirmed rumor. Note that SCO would dearly love some kind of good news right now, and this rumor is the closest thing they can spin to being good news for them. And note that a careful judge will be inclined to grant a motion to seal the code, since it can always be opened later if it turns out that SCO is full of it. I'm certain that we will find out what we need to know about SCO's claims, soon enough. Perhaps the world of law has gone mad, but this latest news isn't really a good example of it. -- Steve R. Hastings "Vita est" steve@hastings.org http://www.blarg.net/~steveha Perhaps, although the notion that you can sue me for plagiarism without telling me what I have plagiarized remains bizarre to me.
There are those who oppose the death penalty for Saddam Hussein. The alternative, life imprisonment, is seen as somehow more humane. I can testify from personal experience that it is nothing of the sort. During my time in the US Army, I was stationed in Berlin. One of the duties of the US Berlin Brigade at that time was the guarding of Spandau Prison, and it's sole inmate, Rudolph Hess. In spite of the crimes he was at least partly responsible for (the evidence of which could still be seen around the city), I and my fellow soldiers could feel nothing but horror and pity for the man, old and broken as he was. Of course, there are those who might say that Saddam Hussein deserves the slow torment of decades in captivity. But I doubt any of them are willing to help carry out the sentence in person. Hang him and be done with it. John Stephens ================================== Jerry, When I read your question about an amp for between your HEADPHONE output and Sharp input I may have stumbled on the problem. The Sharp is probably expecting a Line-In level input which is fairly higher than the level of a headphone output. This would make it normal (and, unfortunately, irritating) that you have too little sound coming out of your speakers. I don't know the Mac (I am a Windoze user so automatically short on intelligence :-) ) but if it has a line out you should use that and if not then a small amplifier between the two would work. Perhaps something used to power speakers from a Walkman. Another idea is to connect the headphone out to microphone-in on a stereo set (try this with volume turned way down at first). Kind regards, Mac Dekker There is no "line out" on the PowerMac. The sound from its speakers is low, too low to make watching movies enjoyable without headphones. Thus I thought to plug in the speakers on the Sharp, which has its own amplifier, and while that is an improvement, it is still not enough. In order to make movies enjoyable (assuming it's a good movie) on the PowerBook, at least for me, I have to use headphones. With the PC I can blow myself out of the room at full volume. Apparently rock music addicts don't use Macs? Now clearly I am more hard of hearing than most, having been that way for a long time. And one remedy is to watch DVD's on the PC systems here. But I thought the problem worth recording. I will probably end up getting a pre-amp of some kind to boost things between the Mac and the speaker system. One mystery is clear: the Sharp 15" doesn't have very good output either. =================== Subject: US Navy vessel used as spam relay by Chinese spammers.
http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/ -------------- Roland Dobbins Aaargh! Powers Phillips, PC is a Denver law firm, owned by bitch-from-hell lawyers (their term, not mine). Their website is hilarious. One example: Obnoxious Disclaimer Due to circumstances beyond our control some documents on this website have not one funny word in the whole document. Worse than that, we have had to rely on our individual lawyers to supply us with their resumes and other biographical information. There is just no telling what kind of lies they may have put in those documents. Our firm is a small firm. We do not have the resources to try to track down every possible lie one of our lawyers may be telling. Just take all that stuff with a grain of salt. Read more (it's very funny...) Ed Hume Better than some I've seen. Thanks.
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| This week: |
Wednesday,
December 17, 2003 From pschrink:Jerry This just had to make its way to the Internet http://www.stopabductions.com/ Ed Yeah, I guess. On Updating the OS in the older PowerMac You can download 7.5.3 free from Apple's web site, and then download the updates to make it 7.5.5 (which is the last version Apple gives away for free). You could then burn all that onto a CD and transfer from Ariadne to the old Book in that way. Or, since I already have all this stuff stashed on my hard drive, I could just burn a CD and mail it out to you. Better yet, I can make an image of the CD, segment it, and email it to you. You can reassemble it on Ariadne, burn a CD, and use that CD to install the fresh System on the PowerBook. Let me know what you'd like to do. Gary Utter -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Freedom of speech isn't working out so well for liberals now that they aren't the only ones with a microphone. It's not so much fun when the rabbit's got the gun." - Ann Coulter Thanks. As I said in reply, I'll give downloading and burning a try, but I'd greatly appreciate a CD in the mail just to be certain I have a backup. When dealing with Roberta's stuff I really like to be able to keep my promises... I blanche a bit at "reassemble" and "segment" but I am sure I will learn what all that means. We may or may not try to "update" to 7.5.5; everything we need for the old PowerMac runs nicely on 7.5.3 and it ain't broke other than that SimpleTalk doesn't work. ====================== Dr Pournelle, This story is irresistible: http://www.nature.com/nsu/031208/031208-13.html No comment, Jim Mangles Chortle! Jerry, Have loved the books, and read your columns religiously. Thanks. Regarding; Bobbing for Apple By Jerry Pournelle December 15, 2003 " FireWire which you won't find on any PC Laptop I know of," I'm two for two with newer laptops. The Dell Latitude 840 I have came with Firewire (IEEE-1394) standard. Checking Dell's web site, many of their notebooks and desktops have it standard. My wife's Sony Vaio 505ax also has the interface, and since Sony uses it for all their digital video products, I suspect it is common on all but their lowest-end PCs. Best wishes for the Holidays!! Cliff Frieler Which shows how little I -- and my tech editors -- know about modern laptops. I confess I have been using my old Compaq for years, and now I use the Tablet PC, so I have not looked much at new PC laptops. And of course now I have the PowerBook. Thanks for the correction and the kind
words. ============== Getting Roberta's program going: Jerry, You wrote... > She has OS version 7.5.3 on the PowerMac. SimpleTalk is hosed. If I > had a copy of 7.5.3 I could reinstall on her PowerMac it might get > that back. Meanwhile in a couple of days we will have a USB floppy drive. Goodness! Mac OS 7.5.3 -is- ancient! However, it is still available on Apple's web site, freely downloadable. < http://www.info.apple.com/support/oldersoftwarelist.html > When you get to that page it's about 3/4 of the way down the page (web page search string = "7.5.3_01of19"). The good news is that's it's all there; the bad news is that it's in the form of 19 floppy disk images. What you should be able to do is to download all of them, put all the individual images inside one folder, and burn that to a CD, carry it over to Roberta's Powermac, and double click the #1 floppy image. It should then mount (and semi-invisibly mount the remaining 'segments' 2-19) and allow you to re-install the 7.5.3 OS on her machine. I have just done this very thing, using my brand-new 15AlBook (the same one you have), and an older PowerMac 7300/180. Open nets... (PS: let us not confuse AppleTalk and EtherTalk. In the words of Gusharan Sidhu (the architect of AppleTalk), "AppleTalk is not a cable." AppleTalk is a full 7-layer protocol suite. Cabling technologies over which AppleTalk can be carried include LocalTalk (what you were probably referring to as AppleTalk), Ethernet (EtherTalk is essentially the driver for AppleTalk over Ethernet), TokenRing (there once was a TokenTalk driver), and of course these days you can even do AppleTalk over 802.11b and 802.11g.) -- Norman Ferguson | Dir. of Technology Services | Tekgnosys Member, Apple Consultants Network | Microsoft Certified Professional Email: ferguson@tekgnosys.com | iChat: fergus1n@mac.com I will try that immediately. I am told there are some problems with the Apple site. We'll see. It doesn't work. I click on the file name, it acts as if it is downloading, it produces the message "mounting failed", and now there is this grayed thing in my download folder. Nineteen of them. I can do nothing with them. I can't MOVE them, I can't copy them, I can't do anything but look at them. Are they shortcuts? Are they copies of files? I have no idea. I would know what I am doing with Windows, but this defeats me. Ah. I found the files. They were on the desktop hidden under the folder called Downloads that was full of the grey ghosts. I could move them into a folder called System 7.5.3 or whatever and I will shortly try to burn a CD with all that in it. But what is this “Downloads” folder which has several REAL files and 19 ghosts in it? How do I get the ghosts out? What good is this? I have the files downloaded but I sure don’t understand what this thing has done. One day I will understand what this Mac thinks it is doing. ===================== Dear Jerry: You can't hear it but I'm typing pretty loudly right now on my new MECHANICAL USB keyboard for the Mac! Made by Kensington, $139 list, $85 sell at Mac Connection. Very much like the old (original) IBM keyboards - tall keys, plenty of stroke, satisfying click, but not quite as much resistance. Not quite up to the standards of the Avant Prime board, but very close (or maybe I'm just not used to it yet). Has the two USB ports (indented so the connector doesn't stick out and snag your mouse like MacAlly's boards), white keys with clear plastic surround, it's the Kensington StudioBoard Mechanical Keyboard. BIG return key, inverse "L" shaped, and there's a power switch on the board like the old Mac keyboards. Anyway I know you're not in the market right now (it doesn't get much better than the PowerBook's keyboard), but if you spring for a G5 you'll want to keep this in mind. And you DO want a G5, don't you??? <grin> Best-- Tim Actually I do have an external keyboard on the PowerMac and I rather like it. But the PowerMac keyboard is very good for a laptop. What I have is an Adesso, which wasn't expensive, and is actually pretty good. But for my PC's I use these hefty programmables from Ortek and they are one reason I may never give up PC's for primary writing engines. ============================== In another discussion one participant said: > Samuel P. Huntington, "The West won the world not by the > superiority of its ideas or values or religion but rather > by its superiority in applying organized violence. > Westerners > often forget this fact, non-Westerners never > do." > John McCarthy replied Historians, other social scientists, journalists, and politicians often ignore technology in making their theories of what happened. So it is with Huntington and Schaeffer. 1. By the time of the Opium War in 1840, which was the first armed clash of the Chinese with a European power if you don't count the Mongol conquests around 1200, the West had steam engines and the resulting steamships, railroads, mine pumps, and factory power. It also had the telegraph. 2. Socially the West was far ahead by 1840. a. In the early 15th century the Chinese reached East Africa in a monstrous expedition. In the late 15th century Vasco da Gama reached East Africa in a single ship, and Columbus reached America in three ships. The social technology, both governmental and commercial that permitted sending a small body of men as agents for many thousands of miles was not achieved in the East. b. By 1840 there was substantial political democracy in Britain, the US, France, and even in South America. There were corporations, and a body of international law sufficient for worldwide trade. c. Slavery had been condemned and was gone from the British Empire. d. Free, universal, and compulsory primary education existed in the advanced countries. So it's not a fact, and China today is advancing, not by increasing the "Peoples Liberation Army" but by implementing Western manufacturing technology on a huge scale. Many Chinese favor Western democracy, represented by the goddess of liberty. I haven't heard of political agitation in China for more military power, although the Chinese military doubtless would like it. The Arabs, on the other hand, do dwell on their grievances with the West, and look what it is getting them - poverty. John McCarthy While the item on education was premature, the rest makes a very succinct reply to the people who say Western Civilization is really only good at winning battles. Published with permission. =================== We had global dimming, now scare yourself some more: Jerry, Sun researchers: Computers do bad math (12-17-03) "There are a lot of errors that happen in machines that go undetected," Papadopoulos said. "Sometimes a machine just goes away and freezes. You always blame it on Microsoft. We do, too. It's convenient. It's convenient for Intel, too." "It's a dirty secret. Floating-point arithmetic is wrong," said John Gustafson, a principal investigator with Sun, based in Santa Clara, California. "It only takes two operations to see that computers make mistakes with fractions." http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/12/17/HNbadmath_1.html As an engineer I regret that these two gentlemen are correct. Life is easier if you believe that something is perfect, like computer math. Life gets harder, and deadlier per the article, when someone pulls back the curtain... Rod Wittler Well well well
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December 18, 2003 Global trends (and see view): Jerry: Here's another bit of coal for the fire: "Some geologists think we ourselves live at the end of a period of orogeny [mountain building], and can look forward to 25 or 50 million years of sinking, shrinking, and warming of the lands we live on." L. Sprague deCamp, =Lost Continents; The Atlantis Theme= (Original copyright 1954) As you have pointed out repeadedly, there are many possible reasons for the planet's warming, and our contribution to the total is probably very little, overall. Steve You can find many opinions and trends: my point has always been that simple Bayes theory analysis will tell you that we ought to be spending more on finding out what is happening, and little to nothing on "doing something" until we have better data on what to do. Perhaps the solar system might be moving through an increasingly dense region of interstellar dust? Karl Voelcker ======== Jerry The last time I looked there were still not enough neutrinos coming from the sun. An explanation is that the rate of solar fusion fluctuates. That would explain global dimming as well as ice ages. We'll see what happens over the next few decades as the atmosphere continues to clear up. If global dimming is due to solar dimming, we should see a slight reduction of global dimming for a time as more sunlight reaches the lower atmosphere, followed by a return of dimming; after all, an atmosphere can't clear beyond full transparency. Interesting times ahead. Fallen Angels indeed (I especially liked the part where they had to walk across the glacier nearly naked because of the microwave laser). Ed Yes I wrote about the missing neutrinos 30 years ago now. Still haven't seen any explanation. But be sure to see below. ==========
See the film first. Good Morning, Yesterday, on the 100th anniversary of powered flight, Burt Rutan's White Knight carried Space Ship One aloft for its first powered flight. The private launch plane, private rocket plane and private rocket engine, all developed without the government or NASA, performed very well. Space Ship One flew in a vertical climb at mach 2+ to an altitude of more than 68000 ft. It then shape shifted to a re-entry mode and shifted again to a glider for a good if not slightly exciting landing. I am honored to be alive and to have learned about such an event. Kudos to Mr. Rutan, Scaled Composites and the continuing success of his efforts. Not surprising, the event was all but neglected by the media. Pat Rollins Materials Engineer ==================== Dear Dr. Pournelle, You've probably already heard, but if not, it was reported that SpaceShipOne has broken the sound barrier. It was also reported as the first manned supersonic flight by a "small company's private non-governmental effort." See http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/12/17/tech/main589204.shtml -- Cheers, Art Russell mailto:artrussell@mindspring.com http://education.gsu.edu/spehar "Geography, group characteristics, and so on influence but do not determine our lives." - Robert D. Kaplan
====== You have been sent this message from twp@kitterman.com as a courtesy of washingtonpost.com Personal Message: Another step on the way... Scott Kitterman Private Rocket Plane Breaks Sound Barrier By Kathy Sawyer A privately funded rocket plane called SpaceShipOne yesterday broke the sound barrier over California's Mojave Desert, achieving what its developer called the first supersonic flight achieved by a nongovernmental effort. Coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first flight, the event was billed as a milestone in the drive by celebrated aircraft designer Burt Rutan to show that human spaceflight can be done economically and without government aid. In addition to SpaceShipOne, which is designed for manned suborbital flights, the research program includes a turbojet aircraft called White Knight that carries the rocket plane aloft. Yesterday, test pilot Peter Siebold flew the White Knight to 48,000 feet, near the desert town of California City, and released the rocket plane at 8:15 a.m. Pacific time. Once SpaceShipOne was in a stable glide, test pilot Brian Binnie fired a hybrid rocket motor and began a climb. Nine seconds later, "SpaceShipOne broke the sound barrier and continued its steep powered ascent," said a spokesman for Rutan's company, Scaled Composites. Binnie reached almost Mach 1.2 (930 mph) before the engine shut down after firing for 15 seconds. He continued in a vertical climb to an altitude of 68,000 feet before gliding to a landing. Rutan is competing for the $10 million X Prize, which will go to the first successful privately funded manned spaceflight. Would you like to send this article to a friend? Go to
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/ =More with pictures: click here ============================= From Richard Doherty Paul G. Allen Confirmed as Long-Rumored Sponsor of SpaceShipOne Allen Sponsors Scaled Composites' Cutting-Edge X-Prize Entry, Attends Today's Successful Test Flight of the First Manned Privately Funded Supersonic Aircraft December 2003 (Newstream) -- Investor Paul G. Allen today confirmed international speculation that he is the long-rumored sponsor behind the innovative SpaceShipOne project, which broke the sound barrier today during its first manned test flight. SpaceShipOne and its White Knight turbojet launch aircraft represent the first private non-government effort to demonstrate a low-cost manned space effort. SpaceShipOne is a contender for the coveted X-prize. "Being able to watch today's successful test flight in person was really an overwhelming and awe-inspiring experience. I'm so proud to be able to support the work of Burt Rutan and his pioneering team at Scaled Composites," said Paul G. Allen, who has funded the effort since he and Rutan joined forces in March of 2001. "As we celebrate the centennial of flight, it's wonderful to be able to capture the spirit of innovation and exploration in aviation. SpaceShipOne is a tangible example of continuing humankind's efforts to travel into space, and effectively demonstrating that private, non-government resources can make a big difference in this field of discovery and invention." "Today's milestone and the SpaceShipOne project would never have been possible without Paul's tremendous support," said Burt Rutan, the acclaimed inventor and aerospace engineer who leads the project along with his research and development team at Scaled Composites, which Rutan founded. "Paul shares our energy and passion for not only supporting one-of-a-kind research, but also a vision of how this kind of space program can shape the future and inspire people around the world." For details about today's test flight, including specifications on speed, altitude, etc., visit www.scaled.com. For details about the X-prize visit www.xprize.com. ABOUT PAUL G. ALLEN Paul G. Allen owns and invests in a suite of companies exploring the potential of digital communications. Allen's business strategy includes encouraging communication and synergy between his portfolio companies for mutual benefit in the areas of technology, new media, biotechnology, entertainment, telecommunications and entertainment. His primary companies include Vulcan Inc. of Seattle and Charter Communications of St. Louis, the nation's fourth-largest cable provider. Allen is owner of the Portland Trail Blazers NBA team and the Seattle Seahawks NFL franchise, and a partner in the entertainment studio DreamWorks SKG. Allen co-founded Microsoft Corporation with Bill Gates in 1975 and served as the company's executive vice president of research and new product development, the company's senior technology post, until 1983. Allen gives back to the community through the six Paul G. Allen Charitable Foundations, which support arts, health and human services, medical research, and forest protection in the Pacific Northwest. He is also the founder of Experience Music Project, Seattle's critically-acclaimed interactive music museum, the forthcoming Experience Science Fiction Museum and Vulcan Productions, the independent film production company. For more information about Paul G. Allen visit www.vulcan.com ABOUT SCALED COMPOSITES Scaled Composites, LLC is an aerospace research company located on Mojave Airport. --------------- Produced for Vulcan, Inc. Contacts: Michael Nank Vulcan Inc. 206-342-2000 michaelna@vulcan.com Jason J. Hunke Vulcan Inc. 206-342-2000 jasonh@vulcan.com Kaye LeFebvre Scaled Composites 661-824-4541 klefebvre@scaled.com ------ Richard F. Doherty, Director The Envisioneering Group 3864 Bayberry Lane Seaford, NY 11783-1503 P (516) 783-6244 F (516) 679-8167 Envisioneering: Informed Intelligence. http://www.envisioneering.net ============================ Subject: Win one, lose one?... Ron Unz here: By a truly remarkable coincidence, right around the time we were digging an old has-been anti-Islamicist dictator out of his grungy foxhole, the pro-American dictator of Pakistan reportedly came within seven seconds of being blown up by a half-ton bomb in a supposedly ultra-secure portion of his capital city. President Musharaf has no obvious successor. A few important points. Pakistan has a population approaching that of the entire Arab world combined, numerous nuclear weapons, medium range missiles, and (I suspect) more violent Islamic fanatics than the rest of the world combined. With the local Madrasas turning out huge cohorts of Taliban-type supporters, the Islamicist political parties some months ago won the relatively free elections in several of Pakistan's more important provinces. As far as I can recall, no Arab army has won any major military victory in the last 1000 years. By contrast, the British regarded the Punjabi Muslims as the best infantrymen in the world. My guess is that Pakistan's army is about an order of magnitude stronger than that of all Arab regimes combined. Sending the U.S. army to occupy Iraq is dumb and dangerous because the Iraqis are violent and disorganized. Sending an American army to occupy Pakistan---namely "fighting a land war in Asia" in Eisenhower's words---would be orders of magnitude more dangerous. I recall that about a year ago I suggested the possible takeover of Pakistan by violent Islamicists as one of the most dangerous possible collateral risks of our planned Adventure in Iraq. If the Presidential convoy had been seven seconds slower, this might well be occurring right now. If Islamicists were on the verge of seizing Pakistan, what would be our best options? It seems to me that many millions might likely die, perhaps with nukes being used for the first time since 1945, and with consequences that might well destabilize the entire planet. Back in the old days, conservatives were actually conservative, and regarded huge, risky leaps into the unknown---whether social or military---with endless potential adverse consequences as the plans of radicals and lunatics. Dispatching hundreds of thousands of Christian soldiers to conquer and occupy a Muslim country for the first time in three generations in the center of the volatile Mid East for no clear reason other than perhaps the ideology of promoting a Worldwide Democratic Revolution really seems like the sort of Socialist Adventurism that once gave the Trotskyites a very bad name in certain circles. What should we do if there is chaos in Pakistan? I continue to advocate energy independence and detachment from that part of the world. ===================== And some later news on neutrinos Re: global dimming, and the solar neutrino flux Dear Dr. Pournelle: Just a note in case someone else does not give you the information-- The current thinking in physics is that we understand the "missing" solar neutrinos and it has nothing to do with changes in the nuclear reactions in the Sun. (Besides, the conventional estimate is that if the nuclear reactions in the Sun changed somewhat it would take of order 1 million years for this to affect the radiation output at the surface. This is just how long it takes then energy to travel out from the core to the surface layers.) See the results from the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory http://www.sno.phy.queensu.ca/sno/results_04_02/ which has a press release about their recent results. It looks like the neutrinos change "flavour" on the way to the Earth so if we try to detect the electron neutrinos we see 1/3 of what is expected. The rest have changed to muon or tau neutrinos. By the way, it is worth remembering that the we have direct measurements of the total solar energy reaching the Earth from space and as far as I know this is not declining 0.3% per year. So the energy still is coming and and it must be absorbed somewhere in the atmosphere. Thus we do not have to worry about another ice age yet, I think. If just plain more haze and aerosols are doing the dimming, then the energy is being absorbed in the lower parts of the atmosphere where there is lots of mixing and we do not have to worry about global cooling. It may effect the weather of course. Another reason not to panic about global cooling is that the mean global temperature is increasing in spite of the global dimming. This we know, as far as I can tell. Of course a few people dispute that there is any global warming. regards, Kevin Volk Well I stopped having a general science beat a long time ago so I didn't follow the neutrino story as closely as I should. Thanks. Comforting words. Sort of. We still don't know what is happening. Baliunas and the Lowell Observatory are convinced that solar output varies, see the figures on the brightness of Venus in the last century... And see below =========================== You wrote: <<So to use the Mac Mail Program properly you must feign insanity: keep trying the same thing over and over until it works. It's really neat when it works. And I can understand mail servers going out. The Earthlink mail server dies; but Windows just tells me it can't make contact with it, not that my password was rejected.>> Dr. Pournelle, The mac.com (or dot.mac) service is terrible and has been since it launched. The server goes up and down with infuriating regularity. That should not prevent you from using and enjoying the Mac Mail *application*, however. It can handle mail from many types of accounts. I kept the Mail application, deleted my mac.com address and just added my Earthlink.net accounts. Works like a charm. Regards, Tim Elliott Interesting. But surely the erroneous error messages come from within the Mac. I continue to learn my way in the Mac world.
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Dear Dr. Pournelle, It may be a bit early, but apparently Asimov's "I Robot" will arrive this summer as a movie. See http://www.irobotnow.com/index.php The website is alone worth the price of admission. -- Cheers, Art Russell mailto:artrussell@ mindspring.com http://education.gsu.edu/spehar "Behavioral Science is not for sissies." - Steven Pinker Neat! I didn't find credits, is it Harlan's script? Subject: info about the movie "I, Robot" buffy willow About the credits and production of "I, Robot," see: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0343818/fullcredits#writers David C. Plunkett Aha. I thought not. No Ellison credit. Harlan wrote a beautiful movie but no one I knew thought it could actually be filmed.
================== Hi, Jerry! When I spied the global dimming story at the Guardian (via SlashDot), I was reminded of this story from Wired: http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,52512,00.html This describes how some climatologists took advantage of the grounding of flights over the US following 9/11/01 and discovered that contrails seemed to have dampened the temperatures over the US by about 1.2 degrees Celsius (that is, without the contrails the temperature range between noon and midnight might have been 1.2 degrees greater during the 9/11-13/01 period). In trying to track down the above story, I came across this site: http://www.contrails.nl/ Perhaps the creator of this site is on to something? Now it may be only coincidental that the period of dimming is roughly the same as the age of jet flight (especially commercial flight), and it lacks an explanation for the equilibrium in dimming that we have had over the past decade (though 2 possibilities come to mind: we may have reached a maximum contrail saturation level along the major flight corridors, or we may not have had a significant increase in number of flights over this period), but I think this might be worthwhile as a direction of inquiry. Arthur Maruyama I think it has been going on longer than that, but contrails may have an effect. Just how much I'd have to calculate. Particulates from coal fired furnaces would affect the albedo more I would think. ================== First, to set the record straight, Al Qaeda had committed acts against the US and its citizens prior to 9/11; the 1993 Trade Tower bombing and the attack on the UISS Cole. Having said that, it is still a miscarriage of justice (at least as I understand it) to effectively outlaw joining any organization by jailing members who have committed no overt act. When I was in Navy basic (Great Lakes, 1971), there was a member of my platoon who was a college grad. He had a major in Russian and a minor in German, and was expected to be assigned to some embassy duty somewhere. Then his background check came back. He had been a member of the Students for a Democratic Society while in college. This was the same organization some of whose members were instrumental in the protests (riots) during the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago. Some of the acts they committed would be recognized today as terrorism. He was lucky to be allowed to stay in the navy but any type security clearance was out of the question. He was not however jailed. He himself, had done nothing unlawful. I have a problem with the way this country is run. There are no candidates that espouse the causes I support and it is financially impossible for the average citizen to run for any office higher than local level. The politicians in office do not listen to the common people as a general rule and when they are forced to, they reward those who protested for their efforts. (The first shuttle was named Enterprise after a massive grassroots effort lead by trekies. The budget cut following that naming resulted in the first shuttle being hung in the Smithsonian rather than launched into space. Thus was the first shuttle lost). The USA Patriot Act and its relatives are ill-conceived legislation, but protesting it will result in negative publicity, and possible arrest, but not in a repeal. The powerful are safe enough, but those of us who have to financially support this country and its adventures are left without protection except that which we can provide for ourselves, and they want to take away our weapons. I have understood for a long time that there is no security except that which you provide for yourself and your loved ones. In the end, we will all die. I have a problem with someone who takes money that I could use for my security so that he can provide it for himself or someone else I have no concern for. I have been accused of being isolationist. I prefer to think of it as minding my own business. I like your idea of Monuments. I also like the idea of destroying any government that supports terrorists. Destruction is inherently easier than building (especially nation building), and can be done from a safe distance that reduces the risk to those at the sharp end. The society that is destroyed will be unsupportive of terrorists as a result of the ensuing chaos. If the terrorists take charge, they now become targets for the next round. Maybe I am too simplistic? Patrick A. Hoage If you post this, edit it as you see fit. I generally don't edit other than using the spell checker, but I will always cut out irrelevant rambles. In your case I just used the spell checker. You're right on the record, and I can't think what kind of lapse caused me to imply otherwise. Al Qaeda has been after us a long time. In another place I'll comment on the Court of Appeals decision today regarding internees. I completely agree with the court. Charge them or release them in the case of citizens, and if they are POW's then which is the war? The Shuttle Enterprise was a boiler plate never intended to go to space -- too heavy. It did fly in air drops to measure stability and flight characteristics, and showed as expected that it had all the gliding capability of a brick with painted stripes. The Trekkies didn't realize this, and used a lot of their clout to get the name changed. They should have waited for Columbia... My sentiments remain unchanged. We are the friends of liberty everywhere but the guardians only of our own. Guarding our own may well include regime change for places that harbor, aid, or abet our enemies. ================ Subject: Saddam's Arrest Brings Humiliation Debate Hi Jerry, I saw this article and thought it interesting. http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-3525555,00.html While I am first to admit that there is an awfully lot I don't understand about Islam and Islamic culture, I cannot conceive why there is a debate on whether Saddam was a dictator. Merry Christmas and best Holiday wishes, Terry Goodrich ===================================== Terry Goodrich CSMG Design "Machine Design & Parametric Modeling" web: www.csmgdesign.com email: terry@ csmgdesign.com Nor I. Merry Christmas indeed. =========================== Dr Pournelle, How’s this for a conspiracy theory?
http://www.gopusa.com/news/ And from a former Secretary of State at that. Jim Mangles You are astonished that the dimmest bulb we have ever had at State would believe anything? She did while in office, too. Subj: Marine Corps Small Wars Manual Your readers might find this interesting: http://www.smallwars.quantico.usmc.mil/sw_manual.asp Rod Montgomery==monty@sprintmail.com And me too. Thanks! ==================== Have you read "For Us, the Living" yet? I imagine many of your readers are interested in your reaction. I'm especially interested your take on social credit theory. Also, a while back when you mentioned that a believed-to-be-destroyed first novel of Heinlein's was scheduled to be put out, you noted that you had a couple of letters by him that you asked for permission to publish. Mr. Heinlein granted permission to do so upon his death, and Mrs. Heinlein requested that you hold off until her death. I conclude that you thought those letters were important, or you would never have asked for that permission. Do you intend now to release them? Will you give us some hint as to what they are about? --William S. Cornell I have not read it, in part because I know that Ginny would have ordered it destroyed if she had known a copy had been "found", and that leaves me with mixed emotions. Apparently Robert and L. Ron Hubbard at one time had planned to collaborate on this work, which complicates it even more. Not long before it was written Robert had run for California State Assemblyman on the Upton Sinclair "Ham and Eggs" platform. He lost in the Democratic Primary to Sam Yorty, later Mayor of Los Angeles. I managed Sam's successful bid for a third term as Mayor and served as his deputy for a period. Robert found that amusing. I will read the book when I get a bit more time. As to Social Credit, that takes a lot longer reply than I have time for. ============== And Joanne Dow says on global dimming Recent studies of Sun spots and overall insolation of the planet seem to be saying that the planet is receiving more energy in the last 50 to 100 years than in the preceding 1000 to 1500 years. If less is reaching the surface that means more is staying in the upper atmosphere. This gets rather interesting. Of course, setting out a pan of water to watch it evaporate and noting it takes longer today than it did some time in the past does not sound like a very scientific technique to me even if you can find standardized pans with standard reflectivity, thickness, materials, and neatly standardized distilled water. Is it standing out over a snow drift or over a black tarmac parking lot? Is the ambient humidity higher or lower today? (That latter is a BIG effect here in Rancho Cucamonga. With all the people irrigating lawns around us the humidity here is getting higher every year. Pans of water left out in the Sun will take longer to evaporate. I also note there is more smog in the air here than 50 years ago. That means less Sun light gets to any photocell detectors that might be used to measure insolation. That report, as far as I can see, is meaningless alarmist palaver more suited to one of Art Bell's guests than your site. {^_^} But I have been one of Art Bell's guests, as you well know! It is certainly the case that we seem to be getting more not less energy from the Sun -- and note that the Lowell's records on the brightness of Venus fit in here. I don't pretend to know what's going on. I do continue to say we should be spending money on facts, not on "remedies", until we have better understanding of what is going on, including effects of contrails, CO2, particulates, and all the rest. =============================== Subject: re: McCarthy vrs Schaeffer on the West What John McCarthy fails to note is that the technological and organizational advantages of the West didn't come up out of the ground. They came from those very ideas that Francis Schaeffer wrote about in his books. Those ideas made modern science and technology possible. Those ideas made freedom possible - that there is one logical transcendent God who created the universe and acts in it is the necessary foundation for science and more than accidental technology. Politically, that this God is *where all final authority rests* - and thus not in the State or the person of the king, and thus we have freedom. Where you have freedom, you don't need an extensive State apparatus - indeed such an apparatus can be seen as blasphemous - and you don't need to take that apparatus with you on a voyage of discovery. So yes, Christendom had superior technology and a more effective organization for voyages of discovery and colonization. But those came from the ideas of Christianity (and which Christianity shares with the other manifestations of Second Temple Judaism). They don't come from blood or soil. Steve Schaper -- Steve <sschaper@qwest.net> =========================== Feel free to use the following as long as you leave in the disclaimer that this is guesswork. I'd really rather not have a lawyer tell me that I'm wrong. This is an odd problem that you've experienced. It's one that I doubt the Apple engineers expected, but it's also one that I'm sure they are trying to work around now. I haven't examined the service or software offerings from Apple with any rigor, so I need to make it very clear that all of the following is guesswork. The symptoms you've described were probably _not_ signs that the "mailserver" itself is down. They were more likely a symptom that the connection between the front end mailserver and the database (be it LDAP or whatever Apple uses to store user information) was broken. This is clearly the worst of all possible worlds. First of all, that mailserver will stay up, accepting connections but unable to authenticate its users. Your client software, when the password is rejected due to some transient failure on the other end, will fall back to its "my user is a dyslexic nincompoop" mode and ask you for the password. I suspect that this happens because the server returns a "450 Authentication Failed" response. This is, unfortunately, one of the side effects of dealing with SMTP (which doesn't have quite the riches of syntax that you will find in the Microsoft mail protocols). Now, if ugly little problem had reared its head across a swath of Apple's inbound servers, I can assure you that any reasonably awake sysadmin would have noticed it -- sysadmins do tend to take an interest in these things when their pretty little graphs start flatlining. It's more than likely, then, that it cropped up on only a very few servers. BUT, Apple clearly does load balancing on their inbound smtp systems. It's also likely that they maintain some client->server affinity for a given period of time. It's also likely that they direct connections to the servers that are completing their sessions quickly. That would mean that, over the course of (say) thirty to sixty minutes, more and more traffic would be routed to the malfunctioning servers. ... And the pretty graph approaches a flat line ... ... And the sysadmins swear prettily and unplug the bad server ... ... Or Apple runs an unusually competent operation, the software notices the unusual activity and takes the odd server out of the load balanced pool ... ... Or the problem magically went away ... In short, this is actually not likely to be a client problem. This is either an operational problem or a protocol problem because the status code that server sends you is "450 Authentication Failed". That's the same error you would get if you actually were a dyslexic nincompoop. Yes, it's a transient failure that is not marked as such. Yes, it's their fault and they should do better. But. Apple's behavior here seems to exactly the same that other software display. I just looked and it's present in the source code for Postfix in the area of code where the smtp server deals with the sasl authentication framework. The good news is that it looks like it can be fixed. The bad news is that it might take a while. The fix would require that the MTA return different error codes for a bad password than it would for a failure of the authentication mechanism. The MUA (Mail.app) would then need to handle those two codes differently. Unfortunately, the problem does not seem to be limited to Apple clients and Apple's own servers. I can duplicate the symptoms locally with Eudora and Mozilla when connecting to Postfix on FreeBSD by inducing failure in the LDAP back-end. Again, however, this is just guesswork. Malachi Kenney Interesting guesses. MY problem at my end is that the error messages were wrong; but Outlook used to do that too. Fortunately Outlook 2003 fixed that particular problem. ===========================
From the blog,
"Jessica's Well"
Nigerian e-mail con-spam: It's America's Fault!
"The image of capitalism now being spread about the world is cowboy stuff: little gleaned from America extols the virtue of regulation, restraint and control. We reap from the third world what we sow: if some Nigerians learned lessons in capitalism from global oil companies that helped corrupt and despoil that land, it is hardly surpising they absorbed some of the Texan oil values that now rule the White House." How stupid does one have to be to write this? This stupid: "With embarrassment, feeling a fool, I [the author] admit I was a victim of a Nigerian fraud."
................................Karl
Lembke
Hmm. Thanks. ====================== Subject: Christianity as seen by modern scholars Dear Dr. Pournelle, Public television had a series fo shows about Jesus and Christianity that is written up in a series of essays and articles at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/ . There is a lot of material explaining the modern viewpoint and includes modern archeological discoveries. It will have to serve as its own comment. regards, William L. Jones wljones(at)dallas.net There is indeed a lot there. I haven't done much of the "new scholarship" and I suppose my views come as much from C. S. Lewis, "The Apostle to the Skeptics", as from anywhere else. That and Paul's rather stark statement: 12: Now if Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how say
some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead? But I am not a writer of apologetics. I can leave that to others more gifted than I. Sir: You may find this of interest (assuming that you haven't read it already)... http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/mccarthy200312190923.asp In a nutshell, Congress *has* given the President the power to "use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons." You may wish to argue that Congress overstepped what was prudent in passing such a joint resolution, but that's a different matter. On an unrelated note, you had stated... But I see no reason to sink $80 billion into Iraq as a gift to Mesopotamia. I would rather put that money into 40 1,000 MegaWatt fission power plants, a small fleet of heavy lift re-usable (single or two stage to orbit) spacecraft capable of restoring our military space assets in the event of an Argus-like event as well as of beginning solar power satellites, and research into the best use of electricity as a substitute for gasoline in transportation systems. ...and would pretty much agree when you replace the $80 billion with the cost of the Medicade bill that was oh-so recently signed.[1] In other words, I don't think that if we *really* wanted to do those things that the price tag would stop us. It certainly hasn't stopped us from doing stupid expensive things in the past. What you are proposing are at least *investments* that will eventually repay us with something useful. Good day to you, sir. Have a great Holiday season! Footnotes: [1] Well, I'm 44 years old and am not holding my breath for Social Security or Medicare to exist when I retire. -- Mark A. Flacy Any opinions expressed above are my own. Any facts expressed above that you could detect means my weasel wording needs work. "He exhibited difficulty operating complicated modern devices such as doorknobs." -- Robert Frezza, "McLendon's Syndrome" Yes, their argument is that the Congress has already passed The Ultimate Decree authorizing the President to save the state by any means necessary. When the Senate of Rome did that, they put time limits on such power; and they worried a lot about such arbitrary power. Cicero put to death without trial some of the Cataline Conspirators -- "They have lived" -- and that was considered a blemish and a shame for the rest of his career; indeed was the reason Mark Anthony put Cicero on the proscription list. Arbitrary power begets more arbitrary power. I do not believe the Congress was foolish enough to have meant this act as The Ultimate Decree, nor do I think Congress has that power even if that is what it meant. I don't know how much more money we can borrow.
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| This week: | Saturday,
December 20, 2003 With her head tucked underneath her arm... Hi Jerry, Do have a look..... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3336299.stm Can ghosts close doors???????? Stay well, Tony Brown And can you record their presence... Russell Kirk used to tell personal encounter ghost stories that so far as I can tell he believed entirely, and Russell was one of the fifty smartest people I have ever known. And I've known some smart ones. ===============================
(image copyright scaled composites)
For those who haven't been following Burt Rutan and the Scaled
Composites group he heads, You may not be aware that on Wednesday,
December 17 - which just happened to coincide with the 100 year
anniversary of the Wright Brothers first flight at Kitty Hawk - he
conducted the first powered flight test of his X prize entry,
SpaceShip One. What made this flight test special was that he ignited
the hybrid rocket engine for the first time. Previous flight tests
had been unpowered drop tests, to check the handling and performance
capabilities of the craft. Ignition of the rocket, and thus powering
the craft, was viewed as a major milestone in the development of
SpaceShip One. As a side issue, the craft blew right through the
sound barrier, thus also becoming the first privately owned aircraft
to do so in the history of Man.
Everything went picture perfect until the landing, at which point a
strut on the landing gear collapsed and sent SpaceShip One off the
runway and into the dirt. The pilot was not injured, and the
spacecraft experienced only minor damage, which the Rutan group
believes they will easily have repaired within a month.
Burt Rutan has a history of highly successful, and highly
unconventional, aircraft. One of his first aircraft was the Long EZ,
a fiberglas composite aircraft whose unconventional design placed a
small wing near the front of the aircraft and moved the large,
conventional wing virtually to the back. In addition, the tail was
highly modified and the engine was moved to the back, where
it acted to push the aircraft through the air, rather than pull it.
The net result was an aircraft that almost looked as if it was flying
backwards - but the high strength and light weight of the fibreglas
design provided sparkling handling characteristics, low manufacturing
cost, and an enviable safety record. In the process, the concept
of mounting a small wing at the front of the aircraft and moving the
large wing back has become known as the Canard design, and the many
advantages of the design have since been adopted by dozens of kit and
specialty aircraft manufacturers. More recently, Richard (Dick) Rutan
and Jeana Yeager flew |