Category: Life

Every other post.

  • My name in the New York Times.

    Indeed I will be in the New York Times.

    This feat is due to the SpreadFirefox effort, which aims at bringing the attention of the masses to the everyday hacker’s favourite browser, Firefox. They are going to achieve this PR stint by placing a full-page ad in the New York Times.

    For anyone who doesn’t know, Firefox is a program to surf webpages, much like Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. However, unlike the latter product, Firefox has virtually nill in the way of overly gaping security holes. When security issues do crop up, the Mozillateam behind Firefox come up with an update virtually overnight, wheras updates for Internet Explorer can take up to 6 months to appear, if at all. Furthermore, Firefox also supports “tabbed-browsing” (a feature that once you get used to, you won’t go back), supports tons of cool little extensions (such as “mouse gestures”: the ability to give commands via a wand-like movement of the mouse), has plenty of slick skins, and best of all is completely free! The whole project is supported via donations.

    Back on track: to promote this excellent utility, donating $10 (Student Rate) to the project will earn you a spot on that advertisement that will appear in the New York Times. If you wish to make a contribution, you still have 9 days to do so.

  • GEO2334 Spe-lun-king Pictures

    Here are the pictures for the last GEO2334 Fieldtrip. They can be accessed here.

    Fun Stuff! grin emoticon

  • Tired…

    I got up at 5AM this morning to study for a Climatology midterm some more. All day its been straight work, from 6AM pretty much to 10PM. Now it’s 2AM and I’m continuing work on 2 labs due tomorrow.

    Back to the climatology:
    – Spent 8 hours studying. Mostly reading the whole textbook in the concerned area, reading notes.
    – This midterm was worth 20% of my final mark.

    AND I BOMBED IT!!! I DID HORRIBLY!!!

    Uuuughh… Sucks. Anyways, I’m still a tad drunk from a liiiiittle break I took from 10-11PM. And tomorrow, it doesn’t end either. Right after the long school day I got to work my job at night.

    Anyways, for those in my GEO2334 class, I’ll have some pictures of this last ‘fun’ fieldtrip on later. Right after I recover from the drinking, the labs, the sleeping, the everything. On a side note: my bandwidth shoots up the roof every night right before a lab is due… I wonder why :p

     

  • Life & RIAA…

    Came home by 3AM. Had a fun night 🙂
    Thanksgiving was basically a work day spiced by the events of the night.
    That is to say if I’m right in assuming Thanksgiving is on a Sunday (and not Monday) O_o

    Apart from that, not much new. Well that’s not true. There’s alot new, I just can’t share it here because it would end up insulting someone or other. That’s the inherent problem with a blog: the more popular it is, the more impossible to upkeep its original integrity and purpose without first making sacrfices. Eh well.

    Anyone who knows me will know that I’m a huge proponent of the other side of the copyright battle; the one against the RIAA and MPAA. They wish to appeal the US high court decision that makes fileswapping networks legal. The thing that the RIAA wish to make people ignore is the fact that from a general standpoint, filesharing networks are extremely beneficial. It is an extremely efficient system with which to transfer data, reguardless of what the data is. If the RIAA existed in medieval times, they would wish to make sailing illegal because the oceans [filesharing networks] also allow pirates to go on them as well. Now if we look on a less idealistic standpoint of the current major use of filesharing networks, one would say that piracy is rampant.

    Yet if it wasn’t for that piracy, I would not own a tenth of the music collection I have now. How so? This is better answered through another question:
    With radio and TV only playing the most mainstream pop music, with music stores refusing to allow you to taste-test music, how is one expected to try music from a lesser known band?

    Answer: They Can’t. And given the currently exhorbitant and artificially inflated price of music CDs, how is one even expected to dabber in the unknown? The price payed for getting something that they might not like is simply prohibitive. Now the RIAA is responsible for this inflated pricing and thus the dilema, but they rather choose to blame and sue their fans (and then after suing them: still blame them).

    So how does filesharing fit in? It is the perfect system to allow people to taste-test music. Once they like it, they go buy the CD. It’s a risk free environment that brings the RIAA great revenue despite them ignoring this facet. There is also payed filesharing, but thanks to the RIAA again, the pricing is much more infuriously expensive for each track (therefore too expensive for the taste-testing bit). If it wasn’t for filesharing, I would of never listened to ACDC, Tragically Hip, U2, Coldplay, Nine Inch Nails, Blur, Dave Matthews, etc. If it wasn’t for filesharing, I would not have bought all the CDs/DVDs I did.

    What about the losses we’ve been hearing about? They’re lies! Well by any reasonable person’s definition that is. Despite all that the RIAA has done against its customers, they’ve made more money last year than any other. What they meant by the losses is that in fact the sales have decellerated from the years before. Piracy? Hardly. The decelleration is due to the slowing economy, the fact that less original records have been released last year than any other.

    Classic example of RIAA’s greed: The demise of the single. A single. It costs here $8. For one frickin song. The RIAA blames piracy, but c’mon: who in their right mind would pay $8 for a 2 minute song when they can go see a much more fulfilling 2 hour movie for the same price? And speaking of price: despite the production costs, a DVD movie costs less on average than a music CD. They make money from theatres you might say. Well then: take videogames. All their immense production costs must be had from the product they place on retail shelves. They don’t have the luxury of cash-cow concerts like music groups. And yet, they often charge the same. So really: who is truly ripping who off? The RIAA.

    Now let’s look at the RIAA as an organisation:
    – They’ve been charged of artificially boosting prices of CDs, despite the dramatically falling production prices.
    – They give virtually none of the royalties to the musicians they supposedly cater to.
    – They’ve sued 6000 customers and settled all of the cases at $3,000 each.
    – They’ve pushed congress to make laws that:
    >> Make any infrastructure that could hamper their sales illegal.
    >> Make any tool could hamper their sales illegal. [INDUCE Act]

    Think its ok? Take it from this perspective: had the RIAA shown up 10 years earlier in their current states, it is highly probable that they would of pushed congress to make the internet as a whole illegal. Back when no one cared but geeks (sound familiar?). So if they can destroy such an ultimately good technology then (because it may hamper sales), think of the damage they can do today with future advancements. This cannot be allowed. This isn’t about just music. It’s about out-of-control corporations. It’s about the politicians in their pockets. It’s about the mass of people out there who have no clue about this because the techno-war is supposedly too complicated for them.

    Why my emphasis on the United States? Because it is the principle front where these horrid actions are taking place. Once things set in action there, other nations will follow. Therefore, its critical that the right thing be done there.

  • Site Update – ‘Server Load’

    You might notice on the right navigational bar the addition of a nifty new ‘Server Load’ display. It was devised as a means to display the current strain on my server after noticing the large amount of bandwidth spent lately (due to the popularity of the Geology lab photos). The ‘System’ tab displays the current amount of RAM in use, which judges how hard the 200MHz machine is crunching the PHP/MySQL requests. The ‘Bandwidth’ tab is supposed to measure the speed of upload over the last 10 seconds; however; it does not seem to be functioning correctly at the present time.

    The tab is displayed via the use of a great [free] program called Samurize Server. It basically takes data that I configured it to check up on, puts it on a nice pre-rendered photochopped picture I designed, and finally saves the whole as an image somewhere onto the root of my HTTP server. The webpage then makes use of the image.