Archive for category Technology

Google Vs. DOJ

America has developed a bit of a privacy fetish. When we woke up one morning and realized that computers know everything about us, we got paranoid. I’m all for privacy, but when every company I do business with puts in inserts every month telling me about their “privacy policy” and people worry about anyone knowing where they live or that anyone can get pictures of their house, then things have gone a bit overboard.

And that brings us to Google vs. the DOJ. The DOJ is involved in case defending a web pornography law and they have asked leading search engines to provide a random sample of searches and indexed sites with no connection to who made the searches. The DOJ was conducting a science experiment about how well filters worked vs. how well a law would work at keeping p0rnography from minors. The other search engines have complied, but Google got up on it’s hind legs and claimed that they were worried about their users privacy and their own trade secrets. The mere mention of users privacy was enough to set off the baying of the hounds about how the DOJ wanted to violate web users secrecy and made Google out to be the good guys.

It strikes me that what Google is really and only concerned about is their trade secrets here (or perhaps their image if it became known just how much of their business is p0rn related). I say this for two reasons – one is that Google has already violated their users privacy by keeping track of what everybody searches; and the other is that they’ve already sold out their Chinese users. The only person interested in keeping your privacy is you. Don’t ever forget that.

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Up Up and Away

Move over Virgin Galactic, here comes Space Adventures. OK, there are more than two firms trying to be the first commercial space tourism firms to actually put tourists into space on their own equipment (a few people have flown on Russian government flights). Good luck gentlemen. The question is if you can get enough people to pay a million dollars to have a suborbital fight that it will fund the development and develop the confidence so that you can offer orbital flight for $100,000.

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The Zombies Are Coming!

I couldn’t resist the headline: FBI arrest Zombie pusher. 3 quick guesses as to what they mean – by zombie pusher – if the first two have to do with people turned into “zombies” like in The Serpent and the Rainbow or drug dealers, you still have one left. Actually it’s a good news/bad news kind of thing. The FBI arrested and charged one Jeanson James Ancheta for taking over computers and forming a “zombie network” that he used to install adware and send spam. He may have made roughly $60,000 but made the mistake of taking over Defense Department computers. So now he faces up to 50 years in jail (hanging’s too good). That’s the good news. The bad news is that “‘Zombie botnets are a growing security problem”. That sure doesn’t sound good. So can we go to Internet 2.0 with security designed in from the start? Please?

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Apple = Headlines

Apple is making their own waves again, this time with a filing with the SEC detailing a deal with Freescale (which used to be a part of Motorola) to continue to supply PowerPC processors until 2008. This comes after Steve Jobs shocking announcement in June that Apple was switching to Intel chips and the move would be complete by the end of 2007. Analysts were unsure of the meaning of the announcement; here at funmurphys our crack team of Apple watchers concludes that the announcement means Mr. Jobs wanted publicity and nothing else, as the news about a revolutionary (for Apple) new mouse didn’t garner enough buzz.

Branding Done Wrong

Eight months of searching for a product name for the latest incarnation of Windows, and Microsoft comes up with Vista. How I would love to be a consultant. How MS could take eight months and not come up with an improvement on Longhorn (who really wants their computer OS named after a large, stupid ruminant) is beyond me. Accurate maybe, but we’re talking marketing here. Heck, I could have made random picks out of the dictionary until I got a better name much quicker and cheaper. 

I guess MS is hoping that Windows Vista turns out better than AltaVista, which was once a cutting edge search engine, dethroned by Google (for those of you too young to remember.) 

I suppose that the boring, focus group driven name fits the boring, focus group driven product. And hopefully diverts attention for just how late the product is. I have to wonder what the effect of all the top management of a company being rich beyond the dreams of avarice have on a company; in the case of Microsoft, it would appear that the combination of money and a lack of competition have caused it to become downright lazy.

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Fast Is Good

Apparently “Broadband” doesn’t convey the speed of what a Finnish company will be able to bring to cable networks next year, so now we have “Super Fast Broadband”. Will DSL come back with “Faster than Fast DSL” I wonder? As a cable internet subscriber, I’m happy at the announcement of 100 megabits a second for cable, although I’ll still probably be just a bronze subscriber which puts me at about 25 megabits a second. And while the Finns are at it, can they bring down the price on the really big plasma and LCD screens (“Big Honking Screen TV”). Thanks.

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Nitro Stat

I’m still reeling from the Apple’s announcment that they were switching to Intel processors. Whatever Apple may say, I think the only reason is that the AIM alliance (Apple, IBM, Motorola) didn’t work out the way Apple had hoped when they started it to make PowerPC chips (which are popular not just in gaming consoles, but lots of military applications as well). The two companies that actually manufacture the darn things have pretty much lost interest in making PowerPCs for personal computers and have often left Apple with egg on its face.

Apple faces a significant short term hurdle – will people buy PowerPC computers now knowing that software support for them may be problematic in a few years? The only bright spot is that Apple has tackled this problem before, when they switched from 6800 chips to PowerPC, and even when they switched from the old System 9 to the new System X. 

And finally, the most important question:  How will this affect Mac gaming?

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How Very Yeah

It’s all about hitting what you want, and only what you want.

Faded Glory

Why doesn’t the space program get much coverage these days? I know I’m a tech head and all, but our endevours in space get much less coverage than it deserves. How many people even know we have a crewed international space station, let alone we just had a change in crew up there?

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What Are They Thinking?

I’m filing this under solution in search of a problem — Google will keep track of all your search requests for you. Thanks Google, but that helps me how? If I want to keep track of something I’ve found, I use a bookmark. Very handy, those. Perhaps Google hasn’t heard of them. 

It’s not a savvy public relations move – Americans are down right privacy paranoid these days, and few of us are comfortable with the thought of anybody keeping track of every search we ever make. Now I understand that you have to register and then log in to have your searches remembered, but the perception is going to be that Google is keeping track. And if people get to thinking and consider that their ISPs can keep track of that plus all the web sites they’ve ever visited, the country is going to get one great big queesy feeling — I could even see a bout of legislation coming on. Nope, somethings are best left unremarked and hopefully unthought of.

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