IntyOS

Just something very geek-cool: someone is working on coding — in assembly language, no less — an OS for the old Intellivision gaming platform!

IntyOS is not a port of Contiki and does not have the same desktop environment, nor the same built-in tools. It was written from scratch in CP-1600 assembly language in order to fit exactly to the hardware specificities of the Intellivision. Its main goal is now to see how far it’s possible to go with today’s technologies on such a limited system from the early 80’s…

(via /.)

$300/minute

According to the San Francisco Gate, the Bush re-election campaign is gearing up to spend at least \$426,640 a day, seven days a week, between now and November 2004.

That’s \$17,776.67 an hour.

Or \$296.27 — 3/4 of my weekly income — every minute.

As 18 1/2 Minute Gap pointed out, more money every day than 99% of Americans earn in a year.

Might this be a good time to mention that this would be an excellent time to donate to your preferred Democratic candidate (like, oh, say, Howard Dean)? I thought so.

(via August Pollak)

One Thousand Reasons

The top ten reasons to vote against Bush in the 2004 elections:

  1. Honesty\
    Bill Clinton was impeached for lying about his sex life. George Bush is applauded for overthrowing two governments (and counting) based on lies. He lied about the threat, he lied about the cost, and he lied about the expected outcome. He lied about the purpose of his tax cuts, he lied about education, the environment, energy, and his own past. Everything he says is written and choreographed by people with brains to achieve political gain. In Bush’s administration, truth takes a back seat to power.
  2. War\
    History will not be kind to George Bush. In two years he overthrew two governments, and has his eyes on several others. He has ignored the UN, the US public, and 90% of the rest of the world, including millions who protested in the streets. He has violated the US Constitution and international law. In his empire-building march across the Middle East, he has wasted the lives of thousands. History will wonder why no one stopped him.
  3. Economy\
    As soon as people saw that Bush might get elected in 2000, the economy started to fall, helped by Bush’s talk of recession. He, of course, tried to blame Clinton. Since then, the economy has dipped in and out of recession, jobs are evaporating in huge numbers, deficits are soaring, and Bush’s only response is to cut taxes for the wealthy. We must get someone in the Whitehouse who is not bent on destroying the very institution he heads.
  4. Liberties\
    Yes, we need to catch terrorists, but we don’t need a police state to do it. Ashcroft has no concern for personal liberties, only catching the bad guys. Is it really necessary for the government to know what books you read? Is it necessary to read your e-mail? Must librarians be gagged? This slide toward Fascism is as scary as anything else Bush does.
  5. Taxes\
    No one likes taxes, but we all pay them in hopes that the government will provide the services we need and want: schools, highways, bridges, and security. Bush, like Reagan before him, intends to choke the government down to size. By cutting taxes, primarily for the wealthy, deficits soar and nothing is left for education, the environment, social programs (including Social Security) or necessary regulation of corporations. After spending \$400 billion a year on an obscenely bloated military, there is no money for books, no money for highways. There is no money. But schools must remain open, roads must be repaired, and the sick must find treatment; all this is left to the state and local governments, which are now raising taxes.
  6. Environment\
    One of his first acts as president was to raise the allowable level of arsenic in drinking water. Since then, we have seen a continuous assault on the forests, the air, the water, and the land. This fits perfectly with the far-right groups that Bush answers to. They have no use for tree huggers. Why can’t we just put up with foul air and water? Aren’t we tough enough?
  7. International Relations\
    When you’re the strongest nation by a factor of ten, you don’t need to play nice. You can be a bully, and if other countries don’t like it, too bad. Under Bush, we’ve seen this arrogant attitude regularly. He walked away from Kyoto, from the land mine treaty, from the international women’s rights treaty, and the international criminal court. He ignored the pleas of long-time allies, insulting them childishly. It will be decades before we can regain the respect of the world.
  8. Secrecy\
    This is the most secret administration in memory. Decisions are clearly being made by corporations and far-right interest groups, but Bush refuses to admit it or to say who is behind such important policies as energy. Government can only be trusted in the sunlight, and this government hides at undisclosed locations.
  9. Attitude\
    There’s nothing wrong with cowboys. They need to be tough and independent to be successful on the ranch. All those cows and snakes and such. Unfortunately, this attitude doesn’t work as well for the leader of a country. Mix in hubris, arrogance, and the control of a huge military, and watch out. You get George Bush.
  10. Military\
    We spend far more than any other single country on our military, more even that the next ten countries. While most of us appreciate the sense of security a strong military brings, we also question the wisdom of such spending when we have no clear enemy. Iraq was overthrown for about \$100 billion. We spend four times that every year. And now Bush wants to build a magical missile shield that no one believes will actually work. Oh, it will cost many billions, and a few select corporations will get rich, but meanwhile we have other needs, desperate needs, that are not being met. We don’t even have health care for all our children. We can’t even provide breakfast for all our children, or books, or decent schools. But we can kill bad guys better than anyone. And if Bush has his way, we will soon be dropping tactical nuclear bombs on them.

Not enough for you? There’s 990 more reasons at One Thousand Reasons to Dump Bush.

(via Len)

Truth is the Weapon…

…of Bush’s Self-Destruction: The Superpower of Peace Has the Ultimate Force

The Bush assault is foundering on the shoals of Truth.

The Republicans have seized control of the American judicial, legislative and executive branches. Their immensely effective corporate mass media misinforms, misleads and manipulates. They control the world’s most powerful army, and are glad to use it without provocation.

Having stolen the election of 2000, Bush’s minions are rigging America’s voting machines and erasing countless suspected Democrats from voter rolls nationwide.

Their goal is to shock and awe the opposition into extinction.

If image is everything, Bush sits atop a dictatorial fortress, not likely to fall soon.

But history teaches that, ultimately, Truth is more powerful than image: All the people can’t be fooled all the time.

Globally, George W. Bush has become history’s most hated US president. After being gifted near-total support by Osama bin Laden, Bush has sunk to unprecedented scorn. In the global village, American’s unelected chief is under quarantine.

Why? Because outside the United States, the Truth is being told. The world media and the internet seethe with serious reporting and outrage against escalating deceit.

[…]

It’s been said a lie can circle the global before Truth gets its boots on.

But once shod, Truth and only Truth can crush tyrants, kick down prison doors and walk the world back into the sunshine of freedom.

Bush himself has handed an organized, focused and optimistic Superpower of Peace the tools it needs to get stomping.

So let’s roll.

(via Bob Harris)

Alive again

There was some unintended downtime here last night through mid-day today — unfortunately, I don’t really know much more than that. In the midst of browsing around last night, I lost my connection, and nothing I could do had much of an effect. My DSL modem appeared to be working, but my machine insisted that there was no Internet to be found.

I called Speakeasy and opened a service ticket with them. They couldn’t figure out what the situation was, so they passed it on to Covad (the next company upstream).

Here’s the gory details from the service ticket:

Customer is sync no surf, no E2E ping. Checked TCP/IP settings on multiple computers. Isolated 1 PC, powercycled, checked cables to no avail. CFI, DSL light show sync but cannot E2E ping. Some traffic incrementing on line. Please reset DSLAM card, thanks!

Upstream Cells Received from CPE: 764 ( 130271135 )
Downstream Cells Transmitted to CPE: 140 ( 97056973 )
ATM HEC Errors: 0 ( 53 )
Upstream Line Errors: 5 ( 2063 )
Downstream Line Errors: 0 ( 624 )
Training Starts: 1 ( 10 )
Time Since Snapshot Counters Reset: 8 Min. 57 Sec.

What all that means, I’m not entirely sure of, but at some point during the day, things kicked in again. I’m not sure when, as I wasn’t checking in on a regular basis, but I did get a response from my webserver at about 7pm. From the response on the service ticket, though, Covad looks a bit confused themselves as to what the issue was…

Status changed from NEW to OPEN-Pending Partner Testing
DSLAM Trunk Status: OK
Technology: DMT8-2
Card Status: OK
Port Status: Up
Actual Port Rates: 1536 kbps Downstream / 768 kbps Upstream
Margin: 20.0 dB Downstream / 9.5 dB Upstream
the dslam shows the loop up with no errors

ATM pinging the backhaul was successfull
ATM pinging the cpe and it failed
I reprovisioned and that didn’t help
The dslam, transport and backhaul switch show increments of 1 to 2 cells at a time
I put the z-link in a loop back and the atm ping passed
At this point this looks like a cpe issue
Please have the end user power cycle and try again if still unable to surf then we need to RMA the end user anew KIT. Thank you

Ah, well. All’s well that ends well, and everything appears to be back up and running.

Thankfully

I finally got a new digital camera last week…. It’s pretty nice. I wish I could download pictures to my PC. Thankfully, I have a Mac now. (I hated when annoying people said things like that before I had a Mac. ;)

— Evan Williams, Back Behind the Lens

'Hands-free' isn't accident free

I’ve got a habit of hanging up on people if I know that they’re calling me from a cell phone in their car. I’ve been grumbled at this on more than a few occasions, especially lately when they can use the excuse that they’re using a ‘hands free’ headset, so they don’t have to have one hand on the phone. I’ll still get off the phone — I’ve never believed that jabbering on a cell phone while driving, with or without a headset, is safe.

Looks like researchers agree with me.

Talking on a mobile phone while driving your car is just as dangerous when using hands-free equipment as when holding the phone in your hand, according to a Swedish study published on Monday.

The National Road Administration (SNRA) tested 48 people in driving simulators, dividing them into two groups — one with and the one without hands-free mobile phone devices.

The drivers in both groups received about 10 phone calls each during 1.5 hours of simulated driving in different conditions. The test revealed almost no difference in reaction time between the two groups.

“It is the distraction of the phone conversation that is the problem,” Ingemar Skogo, the SNRA director general, told Reuters.

So, please — if you’re going to call me — get out of the damn car first.

Quickies!

I’ve been having a lot of fun with my guests — hence the lack of posts lately. I’ve got to go off to work, so I don’t have time for a wrapup right now, but I can point you over to Kirsten’s account of the last two days.

Of primary interest, however, is the public unveiling of a drink I came up with a few years back, and had been quite popular among my friends since then. We’ve just finally given it a name:

Quickie (shot)\
Equal parts Jagermeister and Aftershock or Goldschlager.

This is, by far, the most devious shot I have ever had. Babycakes says he came up with the idea for the shot when Jagermeister and Aftershock were both popular shots on their own. He decided to try and mix them – a stab in the dark he figured would either be a horrific failure or a gleaming success. Let me tell you – it’s definitely a gleaming success. You take this shot, wait about five or ten seconds, and then wham! It’s like you’ve just been right fucked and got hit up with a delayed orgasm. It had also not been named, this was the one I suggested. I think Babycakes may have previously referred to it as a Jagershock.

Enjoy!

Drool

Everyone else on the ‘net has reported this already, but hey, I’ve got visitors — I’m allowed to be a bit slow.

Steve Jobs announced the usual slew of goodies during his WWDC keynote speech. To sum up:

  • A ‘sneak preview’ of Panther, the next major update to Mac OS X, due to be released before the end of the year. Some parts look brilliant (Exposé), some I’m not sold on yet (the new Finder).
  • Safari updates to v1.0. All the previous Safari goodness, plus it finally renders Kirsten’s site correctly. Yay!
  • iChat becomes iChat AV, with audio and video conferencing in addition to text chat. Looks nifty, I just don’t have a camera for my mac.
  • Good thing Apple also introduced the iSight camera! Again, looks nifty, but I don’t have the \$150 to drop on that at the moment.
  • PowerMac G5: God, I need more money. 1.6Ghz G5 at the low end, 1.8Ghz G5 for the midrange, and dual 2.0Ghz G5 for the high end.