not sure they get it

Canonical, the leading backer of the Ubuntu version of Linux, is hiring a team to help make open-source software on the desktop more appealing and easier to use.
The company plans to sign up designers and specialists in user experience and interaction to lead Canonical’s work on usability and to contribute to other free and open-source desktop-environment projects, including Gnome and KDE, Mark Shuttleworth, Canonical chief executive and founder of the Ubuntu project, wrote in a blog post on Wednesday.

He wrote: “We are hiring a team who will work on X, OpenGL, GTK, Qt, Gnome and KDE, with a view to doing some of the heavy lifting required to turn those desktop-experience ideas into reality.”

Shuttleworth has said recently that usability is the top priority for open-source software. Free Linux desktops should have “a user experience that can compete with Apple in two years”, he said at the O’Reilly Open Source Convention last week.

[From Shuttleworth: Open-source desktops need a facelift | Tech News on ZDNet]

This isn’t solved by a team, though some developers will be needed: what makes this work is a design czar, someone who can tell people when to stop. Citing Apple makes sense if they are going to get deeper than the GUI (and since all the projects named are window managers/desktops, it doesn’t look like it). Will the next two years be different from the last 10 or so?

stay on target

9-9-08 sarah palin is my reason to wake up

This morning I was lying in bed unable to wake up, and NPR came on with Sarah Palin’s shrill voice berating democrats and “community organizers”…

I happen to be a “community organizer”, and I work over 80 hours a week and i have a HUGE amount of responsibility, and people who count on me every day. I used to be a procrastinator, but at this job I don’t even have time to procrastinate, because there is always some deadline and people who will be let down if I don’t do my part.

And I know Barack Obama’s job as a community organizer had MUCH MORE responsibility than mine, he was working with large groups of people, different organizations within the community: churches, unions, neighborhood groups, unemployed workers, factories cutting jobs, blacks, whites, latinos, etc….

I challenge Sarah Palin to work for 102 days in a row 13+ hours a day, because that is what my current job as a “community organizer” is. I do not have a day off until after the election. No weekends. No nothing.

So anyway, hearing her obnoxious voice made me so angry I was wide awake and ready to jump out of bed and start my work for the day!

I decided her smiling face would be good motivation for us here at the office. This is what we will get if we don’t work hard enough — Someone who thinks the idea of organizing diverse groups and trying to come to a consensus about how to deal with unemployment and social unrest is a completely laughable occupation.

“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Take that step today!” is taped to my laptop.

The work we do here will save us from leaders like McCain/Palin. They claim to be “regular people”, yet Palin makes fun of community organizers and is married to oil wealth, and McCain come from a long line of rich Navy men and also married into wealth, and doesn’t even know how many houses he has.

There is nothing wrong with their life stories or their wealth OTHER THAN the fact that they continually claim to be “just like regular Americans”, and make fun of a Democrat who actually grew up in poverty raised by a single mother, and devoted his early career to helping a troubled community on the South Side of Chicago. I don’t understand how the Republicans try to brand Obama as “elitist” and McCain as “just a regular guy”, considering their backgrounds.

And though Palin may have been a reformer in her own state, her addition to the national stage made her decide that community organizing — volunteering for a campaign, working at a homeless shelter, or any other community-based occupation — is completely laughable.

Republicans say they want to get rid of big government and let people work things out on their own — pull yourself up by your bootstraps, deal with your own problems, be responsible for yourself and your family rather than counting on government handouts. Fine. Great. I’m all for it. But someone like Obama who chose a low-paying and difficult job to improve the lives of ordinary Chicagoins — that is somehow not ok either, event though he was not part of government at that time.

So what IS ok? No government.. No community organizers. What are we — as a community or as individuals — supposed to do about our problems? Pray that they will go away? Stop trying to work out solutions and retreat to our bunkers with our guns and hope that we never have a problem that is too big for us to figure out on our own? Hope that we never need the help of our elected government or our community or our neighbors? Because apparently that is the world that Sarah Palin wants to live in. God bless her.

THIS IS WHY I WAKE UP IN THE MORNING.


Genius?

This is a pretty good playlist, all based on the first track in the list.

Weirdo | The Charlatans | Between 10th and 11th | 3:38
Way Down Now | World Party | Goodbye Jumbo | 3:50
Bull in the Heather | Sonic Youth | Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star | 3:05
Start Choppin’ | Dinosaur Jr | Ear-Bleeding Country: Best Of Dinosaur Jr | 5:37
Perfect Skin | Lloyd Cole & The Commotions | 1984-1989 | 3:14
I Love a Man in Uniform | Gang of Four | Songs of the Free | 4:05
What Difference Does It Make? | The Smiths | The Best Of The Smiths, Vol. 1 | 3:51
Take the Skinheads Bowling | Camper Van Beethoven | Telephone Free Landslide Victory | 2:32
Hey Dude | Kula Shaker | K | 4:09
The Bottom Line | Big Audio Dynamite | Planet BAD: Greatest Hits | 3:46
Rejoice | U2 | October | 3:40
Ship Of Fools | World Party | Private Revolution | 4:30
This Is Not a Love Song | Public Image Ltd. | Public Image Ltd.: The Greatest Hits, So Far | 4:13
Generals And Majors | XTC | Black Sea | 4:04
Herculean | The Good, The Bad And The Queen | Herculean – Single of the Week | 4:00
Alec Eiffel | Pixies | Wave Of Mutilation: Best Of Pixies | 2:47
Locked Out | Crowded House | Recurring Dream | 3:19
These Days | R.E.M. | Life’s Rich Pageant | 3:25
Out of the Blue | Roxy Music | Country Life | 4:46
Love Spreads | The Stone Roses | The Very Best of The Stone Roses | 5:47
Disappointed | Public Image Ltd. | 9 | 5:34
King For A Day | XTC | Oranges & Lemons | 3:38
Dirty Boots | Sonic Youth | Goo | 5:29
I’m Free (feat. Junior Reid) | The Soup Dragons | Lovegod | 3:24
Put The Message In The Box | World Party | Goodbye Jumbo | 4:16

the people who need this most won’t see it

Small towns, while they still exist . . .

Leave the fantasy land of convention rhetoric, and you will find that small-town America, this legendary place of honesty and sincerity and dignity, is not doing very well. If you drive west from Kansas City, Mo., you will find towns where Main Street is largely boarded up. You will see closed schools and hospitals. You will hear about depleted groundwater and massive depopulation.

And eventually you will ask yourself, how did this happen? Did Hollywood do this? Was it those “reporters and commentators” with their fancy college degrees who wrecked Main Street, U.S.A.?

No. For decades now we have been electing people like Sarah Palin who claimed to love and respect the folksy conservatism of small towns, and yet who have unfailingly enacted laws to aid the small town’s mortal enemies.

Without raising an antitrust finger they have permitted fantastic concentration in the various industries that buy the farmer’s crops. They have undone the New Deal system of agricultural price supports in favor of schemes called “Freedom to Farm” and loan deficiency payments — each reform apparently designed to secure just one thing out of small town America: cheap commodities for the big food processors. Richard Nixon’s Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz put the conservative attitude toward small farmers most bluntly back in the 1970s when he warned, “Get big or get out.”

[From The GOP Loves the Heartland To Death – WSJ.com]

good reads

Chosen Chosen by Mark Millar


My review

rating: 5 of 5 stars
This is a dangerously good book, and one of the many reasons why these books w/ pictures, graphic novels, comix, whatever are so good. I think of them as paper movies sometimes, as the action and imagery are driven by the writer but the artist(s) can add so much, just as a good cinematographer and team of actors can do. It’s a quick but substantial read, and there are “behind the music” tidbits that will make you read over it in detail to see what you may have missed.

View all my reviews.